Part 12 (1/2)

x.x.xI

THE BIG TASK

Say, fellows, some years ago France gave a man a large task. The man's name was De Lesseps, and the task was to cut a ditch seventy-two feet wide across Panama, to unite the two great oceans. Part of the cutting was to be through hills two hundred and fifty feet high. It was a big order, and although De Lesseps had the resources of a great republic back of him, he failed to deliver. Aside from the gigantic feat of digging and removing stone and earth, there were malaria and yellow fever in the swamps, which killed thousands of labourers, and there were theft and bribery in the financial management, which swallowed up the money. These things were like giants invincible, blocking the way against success.

Twenty-two years later the United States tackled that same job.

General Goethals was sent to Panama, and he put it through. Himself a skillful engineer, confident of the success of the enterprise, and with all the resources of Uncle Sam back of him, he set to work.

Surgeon-General Gorgas stamped out yellow fever and malaria by draining the swamps and eliminating the mosquito, making the ca.n.a.l zone practically a health resort.

Thus, with unlimited financial power, the latest discoveries of science and invention, skill, and an ample supply of labour, coupled with faith in the plan and an unconquerable spirit, the man cut through, two oceans came together, and the world's commerce pa.s.sed back and forth in an endless stream.

It was a big order, n.o.bly executed.

Yet, fellows, there was an infinitely bigger order given to those twelve faithful, believing men, when our Lord calmly told them to go out and do five things, namely: ”Preach the Gospel, heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, and cast out devils”--infinitely bigger, in that it required infinitely more power. Jesus furnished the power, the disciples furnished the faith and effort, and the five things were done.

There was the malaria of sin in the way, and mountains of unbelief, but they _cut through_, and the ocean of G.o.d's love, on one side, and the ocean of man's need, on the other, were united!

Had you thought of it, fellows, that every Christian is challenged and commissioned to do a big, hard task for Jesus? The task is big and hard because it requires Almighty Power, but Jesus supplies the power.

Our part is simply to throw ourselves into the job. We hesitate because we forget that G.o.d gives no task but that He sees us through, and the bigger and harder the job the more abundant and free is the supply of power. Our part is to _proceed_. He will see that we succeed. We take a step at a time; we go by the blueprints while He holds the future in His hand.

”A man went down to Panama, Where many men had died, To slip the sliding mountain And lift the eternal tide.

A man went down to Panama, And the mountain stood aside.”

That's the poetry of it, fellows, but the practical prose is like this:

A shovel.

A pick.

And dig.

And dig.

And dig.

_Read Matthew 17:14-21._

x.x.xII

POWER

Say, fellows, Marconi has succeeded in lighting an incandescent bulb eight miles away without the use of a wire. It is the transmission of power by wireless. Experiments have also been successful in electrically guiding, starting, and stopping, without visible connection, a torpedo or even a battles.h.i.+p from the land or from a s.h.i.+p. The human voice has been projected through the ether from Was.h.i.+ngton, D.C., to San Francisco, by wireless telephone.

These things are sufficiently marvellous to make us gasp--and yet how far they fall short of the things which Jesus did, as recorded in the eighth and ninth chapters of Matthew. The centurion's servant was sick some distance away. It would have been miracle enough if Jesus had gone to him, touched him, and healed him; but Jesus met a new brand of faith in the centurion, and He more than matched it with a new sample of His divine power.

He simply spoke, and the man in the distance was instantly made well.