Absorbed with the idea of the immediate establishment
of His kingdom, they were poorly prepared to grasp all the
truth He tried to set before them. They thought that
the right was His to reign as king; they desired that He
should be king, and they were ready to give Him
the homage of loving hearts. But a little later we see their King a
helpless victim on Calvary's cross, and their
hopes dying within them. But now the scene has changed. The
bands of death have been broken, and He that
was dead is alive again, and is once more with them. They hear His
own sweet voice; they listen to the gracious words
that fall from His lips; and by His resurrection they were
begotten "again unto a lively hope." 1 Peter
1:3. He bade them go into all the world and preach the gospel to
every creature, but how little did they comprehend
the meaning of all that! "Lord, wilt thou at this time," said
they, "restore again the kingdom to Israel?"
Acts 1:6. "Ye shall receive power," said He, "after that the Holy
Ghost is come upon you, and ye shall be witnesses
unto Me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria,
and unto the uttermost part of the earth."
In this commission He entrusted to them, and through
them to us, a mighty work to be accomplished--a work
beyond the power of man to perform. He bade them
go; the command was imperative; but, thanks be to His dear
name, before the command was the promise of power
to perform it. "Ye shall receive power" and then you can "be
witnesses unto Me." Acts 1:8. St. Matthew presents
the same thought and in precisely the same order. "Jesus came
and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto Me in heaven and in
earth. Go ye therefore, and teach all
nations,...and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world."
Why were they to go? Because He had commanded
it. How were they to fulfill this high and holy commission, and do this
work which was beyond man's power to perform?
The answer is found in this, that He had promised to be with them till
the end, and He who made the promise possessed
all power, and had said, "Ye shall receive power" and "ye shall be witnesses
unto Me." "And when He had spoken these things, while
they beheld, He was taken up; and a cloud received Him
out of their sight."
Shortly before this He bade them tarry "in the
city of Jerusalem until ye be endued with power from on high." But
now what a spectacle is this! He, their great
Leader in whom they trusted, is "taken up" and a cloud received
"Him out of their sight," and they--they so poor
and weak and erring--are left to carry on the mightiest work ever
committed to mortals. I do not wonder that those
disciples tarried in Jerusalem, and prayed till the day of
Pentecost came; for just in proportion as they
felt that the command to do the work was imperative, so must they
have realized that Divine power would be
a necessity. And when in response to their prayers and their faith, that
power came and they rehearsed before the people
the recent scenes of Calvary, and presented in its simplicity the
Gospel of Christ, the effect of that power was seen
in the conversion of three thousand souls on that same day. And
the same power which existed then exists still, and awaits the demands
of the people of God today. Personal consciousness
on our part that without Him we can do nothing, and a self-surrender to
His will, is the pathway that leads to success
in the work assigned us; and the result will be the salvation of souls,
and glory and honour to His name who has promised
to endue His servants with power from on high.