John Macduff Collection: MacDuff, John - Grapes Of Eschol: 05 Many Mansions (part 2)

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John Macduff Collection: MacDuff, John - Grapes Of Eschol: 05 Many Mansions (part 2)



TOPIC: MacDuff, John - Grapes Of Eschol (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 05 Many Mansions (part 2)

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MANY MANSIONS.



"What though the tempest rage—

Heaven is my home!

Short is my pilgrimage—

Heaven is my home!



And Time's wild wintry blast

Soon shall be overpast;

I shall reach Home at last—

Heaven is my home!"



"In my Father's house there are many mansions."—John 14:2.



In our last, we considered the "many mansions" of coming glory as betokening Multiplicity; Permanency; Diversity; Unity.



Let us revert to the same figure, as still further suggestive of SAFETY.

Where can a child be so safe as in his Father's house? Trials, buffetings, discouragements, unkindness he may experience elsewhere; here at least he is secure and happy.



What music is there even on earth in that word "Home!" The garner of happiness—the haunt of tender affections—the cherisher of bright hope—the hallowed spot where the spent spirit's weary wing folds itself to rest—the glad retreat in "the dark and cloudy day." What must be the Home of Heaven? With what surpassing tenderness does that one word invest these many mansions, "My Father's house!" and how does it link us to the Savior, when He thus addresses each heavenward and homeward-bound pilgrim—"My Father and your Father, my God and your God!" (John 20:17.)



To enter Heaven, the dwelling-place of the great Jehovah—to be ushered into the presence-chamber of "the High and Lofty One who inhabits eternity!"—there might be much to awe and overwhelm the spirit in such a contemplation. But this beauteous home-word deprives it of all its dreadfulness, and invests it with all that is winning and captivating. Each believer, in the prospect of these bright mansions, may, without irreverence, adopt the words of the Redeemer, and say, "If you loved me, you would rejoice, because I said, I go unto my Father."



Would that we oftener realized Heaven as such; and, amid earth's troubles and vicissitudes and sorrows, were led to regard every new trial, every new epoch of existence, every returning week and month and anniversary, as fresh chimes of celestial music floating from the towers of glory, and sounding in our ears, "Nearer home, nearer home!" Our Lord has taught us, while we "desire" in our daily prayer "a better country," to make it a filial aspiration—"Our Father, who is in heaven," "Your kingdom come." Heaven, in the noblest sense, is "the Church in the House," (Col. 4:15.)



The verse still further speaks of HONOR.

It speaks of admission into God's presence, and to stand in that presence in the relation of children to a father. Even to be laid, like Lazarus, at the portals of heaven, and fed with the crumbs falling from the table, would have been more than what, as sinners, we deserve. What will it be to be "within the house," honored with a place at the King's own banquet?



There are two Greek words used in the New Testament to describe the believer's relation to God. Both are significant. The former literally means a slave, and such His redeemed child really is. He is the willing slave of righteousness, "bought with a price" by a gracious Master. He feels it to be alike his highest honor and obligation to be called "the servant of God." The other word, though translated by the same term, (servant,) has a higher meaning. It has rather reference to the believer's heavenly calling. It speaks of His lofty designation and employment in His Father's house, when He becomes a "ministering one," (John 12:26.) His earthly service is over—"Henceforth I call you not servants, but friends," (John 15:15.)



"In my Father's house!" "Yes," said a dying believer, as he quoted these words; "our Lord tells me, You have been an out-door servant long enough, I will now make you an in-door servant, and take you out of the wind and rain, to give you a glorified body and better wages and a better mansion."



What a wondrous transition from the clay tenement to the everlasting mansions! Well may the poet exclaim, describing the emancipated spirit—



"O change! O wondrous change!

Burst are the prison-bars—

This moment there—so low,

In mortal prayer—and now,

Beyond the stars!



"O change! stupendous change!

There lies the senseless clod—

The soul from bondage breaks,

The new immortal wakes,

Awakes with God!"



Finally, the verse tells us that all these wondrous home-mansions JESUS has gone to make ready for us.



"I go to prepare a place for you." No, more, He confers them as a right. He speaks as the "Heir of all things." Observe, it is not "your Father's house," but "my Father's house." As "the Son of the everlasting God," He seems to say, "I am not ashamed to call you brethren; and for my sake He will not be ashamed to own and welcome you as sons and daughters. My name, as 'the Beloved of the Father,' and my work, as the surety Redeemer, will form a passport and title to every room in these paternal halls!"



The value of a gift is enhanced by the character and worth of the donor. The gift of an earthly sovereign would be highly prized. Here is a gift bestowed by the "Prince of the kings of the earth," purchased by blood and toil and agony. These blood-bought mansions form the crown and consummation of all His other gifts. "This is THE gift, that God has given us eternal life, and that life is in His Son." "Everything else that He 'did and taught and suffered,' had a reference to the opening of the kingdom of heaven to all believers. His coming from heaven was to show heaven to us. His going again there was to prepare a place for us. His sitting at the right hand of God is to promote our interest in heaven. His coming in judgment is to take us back with Him to it." (Manton.)



If He has gone "to prepare this place" for us, be it ours to endeavor to be prepared for "the place;" seeking every returning morning to have our tent pitched "a day's march nearer home"—nearer the house of our Father. "Yet a little while, and he that shall come will come, and will not tarry," (Heb. 10:37.) "He will not stay," says Goodwin, "a minute longer than needs must. He tarries only until He has, throughout all ages, by His intercession, prepared every room for each saint, that He may entertain them altogether, and have them all about Him."



And shall we pause to ask, Where is that glorious home? where these sparkling waters, these palms ever green, these robes ever bright? Does the spirit at the hour of death wing its arrowy flight to some distant province of creation? Or may Heaven be some mysterious, impalpable spirit-world around us? Though we hear no gush of the crystal waters, and gaze on no "city of the crystal sea," may it not be that angel-wings are hovering over us, and that it is only these dull senses of ours that hide from us the celestial vision?



But what though we can observe no dim outline of the everlasting hills? What though we look in vain for the lights gleaming in the distant windows of these "many mansions? " It is enough to know that One has gone to prepare them for us. And when completed, His voice will be heard, saying, "Come, for all things are ready!" "THEN shall the righteous shine forth as the sun in the kingdom of THEIR FATHER," (Matt. 13:43.)



"Here in an inn a stranger dwelt,

Here joy and grief by turns he felt:

Poor dwelling, now we close your door!

The talk is o'er,

The sojourners return no more.



"Now of a lasting Home possest,

He goes to seek a better rest.

Yes, for each saint does Christ prepare

A place with care;

Your Home is waiting, brother, there!"