登陆注册
4809000000065

第65章 BY-ENDS(1)

'Ye seek Me, not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves.'--Our Lord.

In no part of John Bunyan's ingenious book is his strong sense and his sarcastic and humorous vein better displayed than just in his description of By-ends, and in the full and particular account he gives of the kinsfolk and affinity of By-ends. Is there another single stroke in all sacred literature better fitted at once to teach the gayest and to make the gravest smile than just John Bunyan's sketch of By-ends' great-grandfather, the founder of the egoistical family of Fairspeech, who was, to begin with, but a waterman who always looked one way and rowed another? By-ends'

wife also is a true helpmate to her husband. She was my Lady Feigning's favourite daughter, under whose nurture and example the young lady had early come to a quite extraordinary pitch of good breeding; and now that she was a married woman, she and her husband had, so their biographer tells us, two firm points of family religion in which they were always agreed and according to which they brought up all their children, namely, never to strive too much against wind and tide, and always to watch when Religion was walking on the sunny side of the street in his silver slippers, and then at once to cross over and take his arm. But abundantly amusing and entertaining as John Bunyan is at the expense of By-

ends and his family and friends, he has far other aims in view than the amusement and entertainment of his readers. Bunyan uses all his great gifts of insight and sense and humour and scorn so as to mark unmistakably the road and to guide the progress of his reader's soul to God, his chiefest end and his everlasting portion.

It was no small part of our Lord's life of humiliation on the earth,--much more so than His being born in a low condition and being made under the law,--to have to go about all His days among men, knowing in every case and on every occasion what was in man.

It was a real humiliation to our Lord to see those watermen of the sea of Tiberias sweating at their oars as they rowed round and round the lake after Him; and His humiliation came still more home to Him as often as He saw His own disciples disputing and pressing who should get closest to Him while for a short season He walked in the sunshine; just as it was His estate of exaltation already begun, when He could enter into Himself and see to the bottom of His own heart, till He was able to say that it was His very meat and drink to do His father's will, and to finish the work His Father had given Him to do. The men of Capernaum went out after our Lord in their boats because they had eaten of the multiplied loaves and hoped to do so again. Zebedee's children had forsaken all and followed our Lord, because they counted to sit the one on His right hand and the other on His left hand in His soon-coming kingdom. The pain and the shame all that cost our Lord, we can only remotely imagine. But as for Himself, our Lord never once had to blush in secret at His own motives. He never once had to hang down His head at the discovery of His own selfish aims and by-ends.

Happy man! The thought of what He should eat or what He should drink or wherewithal He should be clothed never troubled His head.

The thought of success, as His poor-spirited disciples counted success, the thought of honour and power and praise, never once rose in His heart. All these things, and all things like them, had no attraction for Him; they awoke nothing but indifference and contempt in him. But to please His Father and to hear from time to time His Father's voice saying that He was well pleased with His beloved Son,--that was better than life to our Lord. To find out and follow every new day His Father's mind and will, and to finish every night another part of His Father's appointed work,--that was more than His necessary food to our Lord. The great schoolmen, as they meditated on these deep matters, had a saying to the effect that all created things take their true goodness or their true evil from the end they aim at. And thus it was that our Lord, aiming only at His Father's ends and never at His own, both manifested and attained to a Divine goodness, just as the greedy crowds of Galilee and the disputatious disciples, as long and as far as they made their belly or their honour their end and aim, to that extent fell short of all true goodness, all true satisfaction, and all true acceptance.

By-ends was so called because he was full of low, mean, selfish motives, and of nothing else. All that this wretched creature did, he did with a single eye to himself. The best things that he did became bad things in his self-seeking hands. His very religion stank in those men's nostrils who knew what was in his heart. By-

ends was one of our Lord's whited sepulchres. And so deep, so pervading, and so abiding is this corrupt taint in human nature, that long after a man has had his attention called to it, and is far on to a clean escape from it, he still--nay, he all the more--

languishes and faints and is ready to die under it. Just hear what two great servants of God have said on this humiliating and degrading matter. Writing on this subject with all his wonted depth and solemnity, Hooker says, 'Even in the good things that we do, how many defects are there intermingled! For God in that which is done, respecteth especially the mind and intention of the doer.

Cut off, then, all those things wherein we have regarded our own glory, those things which we do to please men, or to satisfy our own liking, those things which we do with any by-respect, and not sincerely and purely for the love of God, and a small score will serve for the number of our righteous deeds. Let the holiest and best things we do be considered. We are never better affected to God than when we pray; yet, when we pray, how are our affections many times distracted! How little reverence do we show to that God unto whom we speak! How little remorse of our own miseries! How little taste of the sweet influence of His tender mercy do we feel!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 毒医邪妃之王妃太妖娆

    毒医邪妃之王妃太妖娆

    身为21世纪的传奇人物,却败在了最信任的人手里,还好阎王不愿收她,重生归来,却遇到个不要脸的家伙“臭不要脸的家伙,你走开”某男邪魅一笑“我只对你不要脸
  • 人生的秋季:王真波散文选

    人生的秋季:王真波散文选

    作者是伟人毛泽东故乡——湖南湘潭一位较有影响的实力派作家。他的散文气势雄奇,语言精炼,笔力遒劲,条理明畅,颇具特色。收入这部《人生的秋季——王真波散文选》的55篇散文,总计近14万字,反映了作家厚积薄发的创作状态。这是他直面现实又特别深刻的力作,证明他始终恪守着关注现实的文学主张……
  • 玄教大公案

    玄教大公案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 成长比成功更重要:创业版

    成长比成功更重要:创业版

    《成长比成功更重要》主要内容:成功正如大海对岸的一座“金山”,如果想拥有它,唯有用顽强不息、置之死地而后生的勇气来磨炼自己,在成长中掌握横渡大海的本领,最终才能如愿以偿。否则不是淹死在大海,就是遥不可及,空想一场……,唯有成长了,成功才能水到渠成。
  • 一品寡妇

    一品寡妇

    年轻俊美的大将军出征西南,生死不明。安顺王爷深明大义,坚持把婚约已定的女儿顾心然出嫁。…古代的顾心然悬梁自尽。……她能蹦能跳的怎么会是先天性的心脏病?这玩笑开的大了。……不嫁不成?那就嫁吧!那儿养着不一样。寡妇要钱不要是非!瞧,衣服漂亮吧?那是!有机会看一眼,人更漂亮!大将军没有成亲,却有个六岁大的儿子?将军府里一大家子热闹非凡?公公,婆婆,小叔子,小姑子,人多找不到寂寞啊。……一年半后,大将军没死?没死的大将军,带回个心上人?!……推荐新文:《盛世桃花》
  • 竞技体育博览:畅享2008:百年盛会话源头

    竞技体育博览:畅享2008:百年盛会话源头

    本书共分9章,主要内容包括:奥运史话、现代奥林匹克运动诞生、不灭的奥运圣火、运动员的最高奖赏、奥运会会徽、和平和团结的象征、与夏奥运“平起平坐”的冬奥会及致敬残奥会等。
  • 血脉基因主宰

    血脉基因主宰

    基因的本质就是信息!以信息为基本,蛋白质为手段,成就改变宇宙的生命。基因的本能就是侵蚀!大地,深海,天空,乃至真空宇宙,基因的造物无处不在,它们是单一物质世界唯一的色彩。基因的渴望就是永生!生命繁衍生息,生死交替,唯有基因永生不灭!那么基因的终点是什么?一即是全,全即是一!
  • 末世强女之沈清和

    末世强女之沈清和

    沈清和正吃着冰棍,手里还提着打包好的酸汤面走在回家路上,走着走着她对面一对情侣竟然当众“亲吻”起来,正当沈清和感叹世风日下的时候那对情侣却突然双双向她瞪直了眼扑向她!妈呀!沈清和大呼一声也不忘一口咬完她手上的冰棍狂奔起来。于是一场末日变强之旅便由此开始!(本文爽文,女主非圣母,有异能、空间文。)
  • 假婚隐爱:无你不欢

    假婚隐爱:无你不欢

    他低调、冷酷、无情却能宠她上天,他温柔如棉,却如一把刀捅着她的心,她无心无肺的活着却偏偏又执着得要命。他苦涩地弯弯嘴角垂下眼眸,暗哑地说道:“那我等你一辈子,或者我们就这样过一辈子。”“这样的话你太不划算了……”他的脸一寸寸深沉下去,如泼了墨的黑,“什么划不划算?娶一得二,怎么个不划算了?”