Sometimes the Holy Spirit holds before my sight pictures
of divine things, and as I feast the eyes of my enlightened understanding upon
them, my mind is absorbed, my heart is all aglow, and there are moments when my
eyes glisten with tears of sacred blessedness.
A few days ago, I had considerable pleasure in
contemplating Luke 22:61-62. "And the Lord turned, and looked upon
Peter. And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how He had said unto him,
before the cock crow thou shalt deny me thrice. And Peter went out and wept
bitterly." This is one of those pictures that faith can look upon, and
ever be finding new and touching beauties.
If you will take a glance at the scenes preceding this, we
may be able to see better the excellencies of the Grace of God so strikingly
exhibited. Look at the multitude coming with swords and staves to apprehend
Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane. Who is he that springs in the front, and
with his sword cuts off the ear of Malchus, the servant of the high priest? It
is Peter. (John 18:10) Bold as a lion, he felt he could slay the whole
multitude that should dare lay a finger upon the Christ of God. Look again. There
sits a man warming himself by the fire. A certain maid peers into his face, and
says, "This man was also with Him," and he denied Him, saying, "Woman,
I know Him not." Another recognizes him and confidently affirmed,
"Of a truth this fellow was with him; for He is a Galilean." Again, he
denies. See, there comes in that man whose ear Peter cut off, and saith unto
him, "Did not I see thee in the garden with Him?" Perhaps the
ear of Malchus tingled somewhat. Perhaps he wanted to pick a quarrel with that
man who sits warming himself by the fire. Ah, Peter is not shivering with cold
now; he is heated in every evil way, and now with cursing and swearing
says, "I know not the man." Who is this fellow cursing and
swearing, and denying Jesus? It is Peter. What, the very Peter that cut the
man’s ear off in the garden? Hark! There is the sound of the cock crowing!
"and the Lord turned, and looked upon Peter and Peter remembered the
word of the Lord, how lie had said unto him, 'Before the cock crow, thou shalt
deny me thrice.’ and Peter went out, and wept bitterly."
A few minutes ago, we beheld a man lying and cursing and
swearing, and now, in floods of tears, he wept as though his heart were
breaking. Let us take a few glimpses at our picture. "The Lord turned
and looked upon Peter." Amidst all his humiliations, the Son of God is
mindful of that sinner who is lying, and cursing, and swearing, and denying him.
In our carnal thought, we would say, Christ Jesus the
incarnate Son of God will have nothing more to do with such a man; he will
utterly turn from him; and never more will that worthless wretch get the least
glimpse of regard from the meek and lowly injured Lamb of God. Jehovah saith,
"My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,
saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than your ways, and my thoughts
than your thoughts." The Savior of sinners knows all that is passing
around that fire; he knows Peter better than Peter knows himself. Had he not
told him a few hours before this scene, "Simon, Simon, behold Satan
hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat? But I have prayed for
thee, that thy faith fail not; and when thou art converted, strengthen thy
brethren." "The Lord turned and looked upon Peter."
David tells us, "He inclined unto me, and heard
my cry." Ah, when the moment comes that the Lord turns unto us, then
we are turned unto him. He visits us with the almighty transforming power of
his grace, and our hearts are turned and flow unto him as rivers of water. Look
at this astonishing language of the Lord toward backsliding Ephraim, "Is
Ephraim my dear son? Is he a pleasant child? For since I spake against him, I
do earnestly remember him still: therefore my bowels are troubled for him: I
will surely have mercy upon him, saith the Lord." Jer. 31:20. How
often has my sinful heart turned from the Lord?
"Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it, Prone to leave
the God I love."
We read, "They have turned their back unto me,
and not their face." Jer. 2:27. Does the Lord then turn his back upon
us and cast us off forever? O No! The new covenant relationship subsists
between Christ and the Church, between Christ and Peter. Once, twice, thrice,
thou hast denied Jesus, O Peter! This is the foretold, the decreed limit.
Enough; no further shalt thou go; thine iniquity shall be checked; the flood of
thy sinfulness restrained. Thou hast been in Satan’s sieve long enough. All thy
bravery in the garden has vanished. At the voice of a maiden thy courage has
left thee. Thou art a poor, weak, sinful man. Thou hast a heart deceitful above
all things and desperately wicked, and thou shalt know it. "The Lord
turned and looked upon Peter." Not a word he spoke, but, O, the
language that was in that look! What was in that look? Can you tell? I have
tried, I have longed to read all the languages that were in that book. But
there is no end to it; volumes of speech cannot tell it all. Can you tell how
Peter looked? Can you describe the emotions that agitated the breast of Peter
the moment their eyes met? The loving, compassionate, grieved, forgiving eyes
of the Lord, the man of sorrows, and the eyes of that poor wretch, poor vile
weak backsliding Peter. It passes a telling! Indescribable! What was in that
look of the Lord? Was it a look of loathing, of anger, of vengeance, to drive
the poor sinner from his presence? into the blackness of despair forever? Did
it say, "Depart from me, ye cursed into everlasting fire?" A
long time ago at the Red Sea, "In the morning watch the Lord looked
unto the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of cloud and
troubled the host of the Egyptians." It was another look than this; it
was a piercing look; it searched Peter through and through; his heart was naked
before the gaze of the Holy One. "All things are naked and opened unto
the eyes of him with whom we have to do." Heb. 4:13, Prov. 15:11.
"One glance of thine, eternal God, Pierces all
nature through; Nor heaven nor earth nor hell afford A shelter from thy view."
That piercing look of Jesus penetrated down into the
lowest hell where Satan had Peter in his sieve. It pierced through all
opposition, all the malice of Satan, all the vile, dense sinfulness of Peter.
Hell could not hide him, sin could not shut out that look; what could obstruct
the look of the Redeemer? O beloved saints, I have been in some low-down, dark
places, and in my infirmity I have said, "I am cast out of thy sight."
I have feared the Lord would never look upon me again. But better than all my
fears, the Lord has been with me. Once Jerusalem was in a low and perishing
state. No eye pitied thee, O Jerusalem. But thy God appeared; he looked upon
thee in his love and pity, and redeemed thee. In the record it is written,
"When I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I
said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee when
thou wast in thy blood Live. I have caused thee to multiply as the bud of the
field, and thou hast increased and waxen great, and thou art come to excellent
ornaments: thy breast is fashioned, and thine hair is grown, whereas thou wast
naked and bare. Now, when I passed by thee, and looked upon thee, behold thy
time was the time of love; and I spread my skirt over thee, and entered into a
covenant with thee, saith the Lord God, and thou becamest mine."
Ezek.16:6-8.
That look that Jesus gave Peter was the look of
tenderness, of eternal, unquenchable love, so powerful, subduing, conquering,
and heart-warming. One look of thine, Emmanuel, dear Savior, can heal in a
moment our backslidings, one glance of thine can curb and quell our headstrong,
vile passions. Our murmurings are hushed, our hearts are brought low and melted
before our God.
"Thy mercy is more than a match for my heart,
Which wonders to feel its own hardness to depart: Dissolved by thy goodness, I
fall to the ground, And weep to the praise of the mercy I’ve found."
That look of eternal love from Jesus said, "I
love thee still." It was a look of such surpassing compassion, of such
tender pity, it revived such memories that Peter might exclaim in the language
of the heavenly Solomon, "Turn away thine eyes from me, for they have
overcome me." Solomon’s Song 6:5. Jesus' eyes were as a flame of fire.
Rev. 1:14. With flames of unutterable love, he looked upon Peter. John Newton
tells us a sacred story, saying:
"In
evil long I took delight,
Unnawed by shame or fear,
Till a new object struck my sight,
And stopped my mad career.
I saw one hanging on a tree,
In agonies, in blood:
He fixed his languid eyes on me,
As near the cross I stood.
Sure, never till my latest breath
Can I forget that look;
It seemed to charge me with his death
Though not a word he spoke.
A second look he gave, and said
I freely all forgive,
This blood is for thy ransom paid:
I die that thou mayest live."
Let
us look at our picture again.
"And Peter remembered the word of the Lord, how
he had said unto him, Before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice. And Peter
went out and wept bitterly." 2 Peter now thinks upon what Jesus had
told him that very night. When it was told to him, he could not believe it was
possible that he should act so base a part. Then he was all on fire with love
and loyalty to Christ, and willing to devote himself even unto death in behalf
of his Lord and Master. "He spake the more vehemently, if I should die
with thee, I will not deny thee in any way. Likewise, they also said all."
He meant every word he said, but his own frailties he did not fully know. I do
such and such things, but in some measure I have learned that I am so vile, and
so weak, I know that unness under the sun, but I might fall into. As the deless
I am kept by omnipotent grace there is no wicked-pravity of my heart has been
discovered to me, how I have trembled, and in my fears, out of the anguish of
my heart, I have cried unto the Lord to have mercy upon me, Lead me not into
temptation, but deliver me from evil. Jabez cried unto the Lord, "O
that thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me." I
Chron. 4:10. "Peter remembered the word of the Lord." Jonah
says, "When my soul fainted within me, I remembered the Lord,"
and in the Psalms it is written, "I remembered the Lord, and was
troubled: I complained, and my spirit was overwhelmed." "Jerusalem
remembered in the days of her affliction and of her pleasant things that she
had in the days of old." O! that look of the Savior has stirred up
such remembrances. Beneath that look, his hard heart is dissolved and broken.
Could he ever forget that look? Away from the fire, outside the palace of the
high priest, out in the darkness of the chilly night, behold a man with
streaming eyes sobbing forth his bitter grief. O sin is a bitter thing to those
who are born again! "Alas! for that day is great, so that none is like
it: it is even the time of Jacob’s trouble; but he shall be saved out of it."
Jer. 30:7. We might for a long while look upon the sight of weeping Peter. He
wept over his base conduct, he grieved over his sins; he was in bitterness over
the dear suffering Savior, mocked, spit upon, crowned with thorns. "He
turned and looked upon Peter." O, how Peter mourned! Do we not love
him? Can we not take to our bosom that heart-stricken, contrite, weeping man? O
yes!
Well, dear children of God, I have sketched but a few glimpses. You may look, and look, and look again; and the more you look and ponder, the more your heart will wonder over the most surprising grace that shines forth in Jesus’ face.
Frederick W. Keene, 1926
Sovereign Grace & Pilgrim
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