<h2><SPAN name="chapter_vi" id="chapter_vi">VI</SPAN></h2>
<h3>DOCTOR DAVIDSON'S TEXT</h3>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>There are only two things worth mentioning
in connection with Dr. Davidson, but they are both
of them very beautiful. The one was his life: the
other was his death. Ian Maclaren tells us that the
old doctor had spent practically all his days as minister
at Drumtochty. He was the father of all the
folk in the glen. He was consulted about everything.
Three generations of young people had, in
turn, confided to his sympathetic ear the story of
their loves and hopes and fears; rich and poor had
alike found in him a guide in the day of perplexity
and a comforter in the hour of sorrow. And now
it is Christmas Day--the doctor's last Christmas--and
a Sunday. The doctor had preached as usual
in the kirk; had trudged through the snow to greet
with seasonable wishes and gifts one or two people
who might be feeling lonely or desolate; and now,
the day's work done, was entertaining Drumsheugh
at the manse. All at once, he began to speak of his
ministry, lamenting that he had not done better
for his people, and declaring that, if he were spared,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
he intended to preach more frequently about the
Lord Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>'You and I, Drumsheugh, will have to go a long
journey soon, and give an account of our lives in
Drumtochty. Perhaps we have done our best as
men can, and I think we have tried; but there are
many things we might have done otherwise, and
some we ought not to have done at all. It seems
to me now, the less we say in that day of the past,
the better. We shall wish for mercy rather than
justice, and'--here the doctor looked earnestly over
his glasses at his elder--'we would be none the
worse, Drumsheugh, of a Friend to say a good word
for us both in the Great Court!'</p>
<p>'A've thocht that masel'--it was an agony for
Drumsheugh to speak--'a've thocht that masel mair
than aince. Weelum MacLure was ettlin' aifter the
same thing the nicht he slippit awa, and gin ony
man cud hae stude on his ain feet yonder, it was
Weelum.'</p>
<p>It was the doctor's last conversation. When his
old servant entered the room next morning, he
found his master sitting silent and cold in his chair.</p>
<p>'We need a Friend in the Great Court!' said the
doctor.</p>
<p>'A've thocht that masel!' replied Drumsheugh.</p>
<p>'Weelum MacLure was ettlin' after the same
thing the nicht he slippit awa!'</p>
<p>'<i>For there is one God, and one Mediator between
God and men, the Man Christ Jesus.</i>'</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>My Bible contains two stories--one near its beginning
and one near its end--which to-day I must
lay side by side. The <i>first</i> is the story of a man
who feels that he is suffering more than his share
of the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.
He thinks of God as very high and very holy; too
wise to err and too good to be unkind; yet he cannot
shake from his mind the conviction that God
has misunderstood him. And, in his agony, he
cries out for one who can arbitrate between his
tortured soul and the God who seems to be so
angry with him. Oh, for one a little less divine
than God, yet a little less human than himself, who
could act as an adjudicator, an umpire, a mediator
between them! But neither the heavens above nor
the earth beneath can produce one capable of ending
the painful controversy. 'There is no daysman who
can come between us and lay his hand upon us
both!'</p>
<p><i>A God!</i></p>
<p><i>But no Mediator!</i></p>
<p>That is the <i>first</i> story.</p>
<p>The <i>second</i> story, the story from the end of the
Bible, is the story of an old minister whose life-work
is finished. He writes, in a reminiscent vein,
to a young minister who is just beginning; and
earnestly refers to his own ordination. 'Whereunto,'
he asks, 'was I ordained a preacher and an
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
apostle and a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and
verity?' What is his message? He answers his
own question. It is this. '<i>For there is one God,
and one Mediator between God and men, the Man
Christ Jesus.</i>'</p>
<p><i>A God!</i></p>
<p><i>And a Mediator!</i></p>
<p><i>Job</i> needed a Friend in the Great Court; but,
alas, he could not find one!</p>
<p><i>Paul</i> tells Timothy that he was ordained for no
other purpose than to point men to Him who alone
can intercede.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>'<i>One God--but no Mediator!</i>' cries Job.</p>
<p>'<i>One God--and one Mediator!</i>' exclaims Paul.</p>
<p>In one respect these two thinkers, standing with
a long, long file of centuries between them, are in
perfect agreement. They both feel that if there is
a God--and only one--no man living can afford to
drift into alienation from Him. If there is <i>no</i> God,
I can live as I list and do as I please; I am answerable
to nobody. If there are <i>many gods</i>, I can offend
one or two of them without involving myself
in uttermost disaster and despair. But if there is
<i>one</i> God, and only one, everything depends upon
my relationship with Him. And if I am already
estranged from Him, and if there be no Mediator
by whose good offices a reconciliation may be effected,
then am I of all men most miserable.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'<i>One God--but no Mediator!</i>' cried Job in
despair.</p>
<p><i>'One God--and one Mediator!</i>' exclaims Paul,
in delight.</p>
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>'<i>One God--and one Mediator!</i>'</p>
<p>It is the glory of our humanity that it needs both
the one and the other. We need a God and cannot
be happy till we find Him. The instinct of adoration
is in our blood, and we are ill at ease until we
can find One at whose feet we can lay the tribute
of our devotion. We need a Mediator, too, and are
at our best when we recognize and confess our
need of Him. It is, I say, the glory of a man that
he can yearn for these two things. The most
faithful and intelligent of the beasts feel no desire
for either the one or the other. We know how Dr.
Davidson died. I said that his conversation with
Drumsheugh was his last. I was mistaken. His
last conversation was with Skye, his dog. When
John, the serving-man, paid his usual visit to the
study before he went to bed, the doctor did not hear
him enter the room. He was holding converse with
Skye, who was seated on a chair, looking very wise
and deeply interested.</p>
<p>'Ye're a bonnie beastie, Skye,' exclaimed the doctor,
'for a' thing He made is verra gude. Ye've
been true and kind to your master, Skye, and ye 'ill
miss him if he leaves ye. Some day ye 'ill die
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
also, and they 'ill bury ye, and I doubt that 'ill be
the end o' ye, Skye! Ye never heard o' God, Skye,
or the Saviour, for ye're just a puir doggie; but
your master is minister of Drumtochty and--a sinner
saved by grace!'</p>
<p>Those were his last words. In the morning the
doctor was still sitting in his big chair, and Skye
was fondly licking a hand that would never again
caress him.</p>
<p>Skye, the noblest dog in the world, had no sense
of sin and no sense of grace, no need of a God and
no need of a Saviour!</p>
<p>Dr. Davidson, Skye's master, is a sinner saved
by grace. And it is his sense of sin and his sense
of grace, his need of a God and his need of a
Saviour, that remove him by whole infinities from
the faithful brute on the chair. 'A sinner,' as our
fathers used to sing:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">A sinner is a sacred thing,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The Holy Ghost hath made him so.<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>When the soul feels after God, and the heart cries
out for a Saviour, it is proof positive of the divinity
that dwells within us.</p>
<h3>V</h3>
<p>'<i>One God--but no Mediator!</i>' sighs Job.</p>
<p>'<i>One God--and one Mediator!</i>' cries Paul.</p>
<p>None! One! The difference between <i>none</i> and
<i>one</i> is a difference of millions. <i>None</i> means nothing,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
<i>one</i> means everything. <i>None</i> means failure: <i>one</i>
means felicity. <i>None</i> means despair: <i>one</i> means
delight. <i>None</i> means perdition: <i>one</i> means paradise.
The difference between '<i>no Mediator</i>' and '<i>one Mediator</i>'
is a difference that can never be worked out
by arithmetic.</p>
<p>'<i>One God</i>'--and only one!</p>
<p>'<i>And one Mediator!</i>'--only one!</p>
<p>But one is enough. It is only in the small things
of life that I long for a selection; in the great
things of life I only long for satisfaction. When my
appetite is sated, and food is almost a matter of
indifference to me, I like to be invited to choose
between this, that, and the other. But when I am
starving, I do not hanker after a choice. I do not
want to choose. Put food before me, and I am content.
If I am taking a stroll for the mere pleasure
of walking, I like to come to a place where several
roads meet, and to select the path that seems to be
most tempting. But if, weary and travelworn, I
am struggling desperately homewards, I do not want
to have to choose my path. I dread the place where
many roads meet--the place where I may go astray.
My felicity lies in simplicity: I want but one road
if that road leads home. Robinson Crusoe climbs
the hills of his island solitude and shades his eyes
with his hand as he sweeps the watery horizon. He
is looking for a sail. <i>One</i> ship will do: he does not
want a fleet. There is but <i>one</i> way of salvation for
my storm-tossed soul: there is but <i>one</i> Name given
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span>
under heaven among men whereby we must be
saved: '<i>there is one God and one Mediator between
God and Men</i>'--and <i>one</i> is ample. The difference
between '<i>no Mediator</i>' and '<i>one Mediator</i>' is a difference
that has all eternity within it.</p>
<h3>VI</h3>
<p>But it is time that we came to close quarters.
There are two people in every congregation with
whom the minister finds it very difficult to deal.
There is the man upon whose conscience sin lies
very heavily, and there is the man upon whose soul
it sits very lightly.</p>
<p>The <i>first</i> of these two perplexing individuals is
afraid to approach the Mediator. He feels it to
be a kind of presumption. It is difficult to argue
with him. It is better to introduce him to Robert
Murray McCheyne. McCheyne had the same feeling.
'I am ashamed to go to Christ,' he says. 'I
feel, when I have sinned, that it would do no good
to go. It seems to be making Christ a Minister of
Sin to go straight from the swine-trough to the
best robe.' But he came to see that there is no
other way, and that all his plausible reasonings were
but the folly of his own beclouded heart. 'The
weight of my sin,' he writes, 'should act like the
weight of a clock; the heavier it is, the faster it
makes it go!'</p>
<p>And the <i>second</i> of these difficult cases--the man
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span>
upon whose conscience sin sits so lightly--I shall
introduce to Dr. MacLure. As Drumsheugh told
Dr. Davidson on that snowy Christmas night, 'if
ever there was a man who could have stood on his
own feet in the Day of Judgment, it was William
MacLure.' Through all his long years in the glen,
the old doctor had simply lived for others. As
long as he could cure his patients he was content;
and he was never happier than in handing the sick
child back to its parents or in restoring the wife
to the husband who had despaired of her recovery.
If ever there was a man who could have stood on
his own feet in the Day of Judgment, it was William
MacLure. Yet when the old doctor came to
the end of his long journey, his soul was feeling
after the same thing--a Friend in the Great Court,
an Intercessor, a Mediator between God and men!</p>
<p>'We have done our best,' said the old minister,
in that last talk with his elder, 'we have done our
best, but the less we say about it the better. We
need a Friend to say a good word for us in the
Great Court.'</p>
<p>'A've thocht that masel,' replied the agonized
elder, 'mair than aince. Weelum MacLure was
'ettling aifter the same thing the nicht he slippit
awa, an' gin ony man cud hae stude on his ain feet
yonder, it was Weelum.'</p>
<p>And for minister and elder and doctor--and me--'<i>there
is one God and one Mediator between God
and men, the man Christ Jesus</i>.'</p>
<p style="page-break-before: always">
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span></p>
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