 Chapter 1, Part 1 of the Hope of the Gospel. This is a LibriVox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Recording by Jordan. The Hope of the Gospel by George MacDonald, Chapter 1. Salvation from Sin, Part 1. And thou shalt call his name Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins. Matthew, Chapter 1, Verse 21. I would help some to understand what Jesus came from the home of our Father to be to us and do for us. Everything in the world is more or less misunderstood at first. We have to learn what it is and come at length to see that it must be so, that it could not be otherwise. Then we know it, and we never know a thing really, until we know it thus. I presume there is scarce a human being who resolved to speak openly would not confess to having something that plagued him, something from which he would gladly be free, something rendering it impossible for him at the moment to regard life as an altogether good thing. Most men, I presume, imagine that free of such and such things antagonistic, life would be an unmingled satisfaction, worthy of being prolonged indefinitely. The causes of their discomfort are of all kinds, and the degrees of it reach from simple uneasiness to a misery such as makes annihilation the highest hope of the sufferer who can persuade himself of its possibility. Perhaps the greater part of the energy of this world's life goes forth in the endeavour to rid itself of discomfort. Some, to escape it, leave their natural surroundings behind them, and with a strong and continuous effort keep rising in the social scale to discover, at every new ascent, fresh trouble, as they think, awaiting them, whereas in truth they have brought the trouble with them. Others, making haste to be rich, are slow to find out that the poverty of their souls, nonetheless that their purses are filling, will yet keep them unhappy. Some caught endless change, nor know that on themselves the change must pass, that will set them free. Others expand their souls with knowledge, only to find that content will not dwell in the great house they have built. To number the varieties of human endeavour to escape discomfort would be to enumerate all the modes of such life as does not know how to live. All seek the thing whose defect appears the cause of their misery, and is but the variable occasion of it, the cause of the shape it takes, not of the misery itself. For when one apparent cause is removed, another at once succeeds. The real cause of his trouble is a something the man has not perhaps recognised as even existent. In any case, he is not yet acquainted with its true nature. However absurd the statement may appear to one who has not yet discovered the fact for himself, the cause of every man's discomfort is evil, moral evil. First of all evil in himself, his own sin, his own wrongness, his own unrightness, and then evil in those he loves. With the latter I have not now to deal, the only way to get rid of it is for the man to get rid of his own sin. No special sin may be recognisable as having caused this or that special physical discomfort, which may indeed have originated with some ancestor. But evil in ourselves is the cause of its continuance, the source of its necessity, and the preventive of that patience which would soon take from it or at least blunt its sting. The evil is essentially unnecessary and passes with the attainment of the object for which it is permitted, namely the development of pure will in man. The suffering also is essentially unnecessary. But while the evil lasts, the suffering, whether consequent or merely concomitant, is absolutely necessary. Foolish is the man and there are many such men who would rid himself or his fellows of discomfort by setting the world right, by waging war on the evils around him, while he neglects that integral part of the world where lies his business, his first business. Namely, his own character and conduct. Were it possible, an absurd supposition, that the world should thus be rioted from the outside, it would yet be impossible for the man who had contributed to the work, remaining what he was, ever to enjoy the perfection of the result, himself not in tune with the organ he had tuned. He must imagine it still a distracted, jarring instrument. The philanthropist who regards the wrong as in the race, forgetting that the race is made up of conscious and wrong individuals, forgets also that wrong is always generated in and done by an individual. That the wrongness exists in the individual, and by him is passed over as tendency to the race, and that no evil can be cured in the race, except by its being cured in its individuals. Tendency is not absolute evil. It is there that it may be resisted, not yielded to. There is no way of making three men right, but by making right each one of the three. But a cure in one man, who repents and turns, is a beginning of the cure of the whole human race. Even if a man's suffering be a far inheritance, for the curing of which, by faith and obedience, this life would not be sufficiently long, faith and obedience will yet render it indurable to the man, and overflow in help to his fellow sufferers. The groaning body, wrapped in the garment of hope, will, with outstretched neck, look for its redemption and endure. The one cure for any organism is to be set right, to have all its parts brought into harmony with each other. The one comfort is to know the cure in process. Rightness alone is cure. The return of the organism to its true self is its only possible ease. To free a man from suffering, he must be set right, put in health, and the health, at the root of man's being, his rightness, is to be free from wrongness, that is, from sin. A man is right when there is no wrong in him. The wrong, the evil, is in him. He must be set free from it. I do not mean set free from the sins he has done, that will follow. I mean the sins he is doing, or is capable of doing, the sins in his being which spoil his nature, the wrongness in him, the evil he consents to, the sin he is which makes him do the sin he does. To save a man from his sins is to say to him, in sense perfect and eternal, rise up and walk, be at liberty in thy essential being, be free as the Son of God is free. To do this for us, Jesus was born and remains born to all the ages. When misery drives a man to call out to the source of his life, and I take the increasing outcry against existence as a sign of the growth of the race toward a sense of the need of regeneration, the answer, I think, will come in a quickening of his conscience. This earnest of the promised deliverance may not, in all probability, will not be what the man desires. He will want only to be rid of his suffering, but that he cannot have, save in being delivered from its essential root, a thing infinitely worse than any suffering it can produce. If he will not have that deliverance, he must keep his suffering. Through chastisement he will take at last the only way that leads into the liberty of that which is and must be. There can be no deliverance but to come out of his evil dream into the glory of God. It is true that Jesus came in delivering us from our sins to deliver us also from the painful consequences of our sins. But these consequences exist by the one law of the universe, the true will of the perfect. That broken, that disobeyed by the creature, disorganization renders suffering inevitable. It is the natural consequence of the unnatural, and in the perfection of God's creation the result is curative of the cause. The pain at least tends to the healing of the breach. The Lord never came to deliver men from the consequences of their sins while yet those sins remained. That would be to cast out of window the medicine of cure while yet the man lay sick to go dead against the very laws of being. Yet men, loving their sins and feeling nothing of their dread hatefulness, have, consistently with their low condition, constantly taken this word concerning the Lord to mean that he came to save them from the punishment of their sins. The idea, the miserable fancy rather, has terribly corrupted the preaching of the Gospel. The message of the good news has not been truly delivered. Unable to believe in the forgiveness of their father in heaven, imagining him not at liberty to forgive, or incapable of forgiving forthright, not really believing him God our Saviour, but a God bound, either in his own nature, or by a law above him and compulsory upon him. To exact some recompense or satisfaction for sin, a multitude of teaching men have taught their fellows that Jesus came to bear our punishment and save us from hell. They have represented a result as the object of his mission. The said result, no wise to be desired by true man, save as consequent on the gain of his object. The mission of Jesus was from the same source and with the same object as the punishment of our sins. He came to work along with our punishment. He came to side with it and set us free from our sins. No man is safe from hell until he is free from his sins. But a man to whom his sins, that is, the evil things in him, are a burden, while he may indeed sometimes feel as if he were in hell, will soon have forgotten that ever he had any other hell to think of than that of his sinful condition. For to him his sins are hell. He would go to the other hell to be free of them. Free of them hell itself would be indurable to him. For hell is God's and not the devil's. Hell is on the side of God and man, to free the child of God from the corruption of death. Not one soul will ever be redeemed from hell, but by being saved from his sins, from the evil in him. If hell be needful to save him, hell will blaze and the worm will writhe and bite until he takes refuge in the will of the Father. Salvation from hell is salvation as conceived by such to whom hell and not evil is the terror. But if even for dread of hell a poor soul seek the Father, he will be heard of him in his terror and taught of him to seek the immeasurably greater gift, will in the greater receive the less. There is another important misapprehension of the work of the messengers of the good tidings, that they threaten us with punishment because of the sins we have committed, whereas their message is of forgiveness, not of vengeance, of deliverance, not of evil to come. Not for anything he has committed do they threaten a man with the outer darkness. Not for any are all of his sins that are past shall a man be condemned. Not for the worst of them needs he dread remaining unforgiven. The sin he dwells in, the sin he will not come out of, is the sole ruin of a man. His present, his live sins, those pervading his thoughts and ruling his conduct, the sins he keeps on doing and will not give up, the sins he has called to abandon and clings to, the same sins which are the cause of his misery, though he may not know it, these are they for which he is even now condemned. It is true the memory of the wrongs we have done is, or will become very bitter, but not for those is condemnation, and if that in our character which made them possible were abolished, remorse would lose its worst bitterness in the hope of future amends. This is the condemnation that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. It is the indwelling badness ready to produce bad actions that we need to be delivered from. Against this badness, if a man will not strive, he is left to commit evil and reap the consequences. To be saved from these consequences would be no deliverance. It would be an immediate, ever deepening damnation. It is the evil in our being, no essential part of it, thank God, the miserable fact that the very child of God does not care for his father and will not obey him, causing us to desire wrongly, act wrongly, or where we try not to act wrongly, yet making it impossible for us not to feel wrongly. This is what he came to deliver us from, not the things we have done, but the possibility of doing such things anymore. With the departure of this possibility, and with the hope of confession hereafter to those we have wronged, will depart also the power over us of the evil things we have done, and so we shall be saved from them also. The bad that lives in us, our evil judgments, our unjust desires, our hate and pride and envy and greed and self-satisfaction, these are the souls of our sins, our live sins, more terrible than the bodies of our sins, namely the deeds we do, inasmuch as they not only produce these loathsome things, but make us loathsome as they. Our wrong deeds are our dead works, our evil thoughts are our live sins, these, the essential opposites of faith and love, the sins that dwell and work in us are the sins from which Jesus came to deliver us. When we turn against them, and refuse to obey them, they rise in fierce insistence, but the same moment begin to die. We are then on the Lord's side, as He has always been on ours, and He begins to deliver us from them. Anything in you which, in your own child, would make you feel Him not so pleasant as you would have Him, is something wrong. This may mean much to one, little or nothing to another. Things in a child which, to one parent, would not seem worth-minding, would feel another with horror. After His moral development, where the one parent would smile, the other would look aghast, perceiving both the present evil and the serpent brood to follow. But as the love of Him who is love transcends, ours as the heavens are higher than the earth, so must He desire in His child infinitely more than the most jealous love of the best mother can desire in hers. He would have Him reared of all discontent, all fear, all grudging, all bitterness in word or thought, all gauging and measuring of His own with a different rod. From that He would apply to another's. He will have no curling of the lip, no indifference in Him to the man whose service in any form He uses, no desire to excel another, no contentment at gaining by His loss. He will not have Him receive the smallest service without gratitude, would not hear from Him atone to jar the heart of another, a word to make it ache, be the ache ever so transient. Such as from all other sins Jesus was born to deliver us, not primarily or by itself from the punishment of any of them. When all are gone the holy punishment will have departed also. He came to make us good and therein blessed children. End of chapter 1 part 1 Chapter 1 part 2 of the Hope of the Gospel This LibriVox recording is in the public domain, recording by Jordan. The Hope of the Gospel by George MacDonald Chapter 1 Salvation from Sin Part 2 One Master Sin is at the root of all the rest. It is no individual action or anything that comes of mood or passion. It is the non-recognition by the man and consequent inactivity in him of the highest of all relations, that relation which is the root and first essential condition of every other true relation of or in the human soul. It is the absence in the man of harmony with the being whose thought is the man's existence, whose word is the man's power of thought. It is true that, being thus his offspring, God, as Saint Paul affirms, cannot be far from any one of us. Were we not in closest contact of creating and created, we could not exist. As we have in us no power to be, so have we none to continue being. But there is a closer contact still, as absolutely necessary to our well-being and highest existence as the other to our being at all, to the mere capacity of fearing well or ill. For the highest creation of God in man is his will, and until the highest in man meets the highest in God, their true relation is not yet a spiritual fact. The flower lies in the root, but the root is not the flower. The relation exists, but while one of the parties neither knows, loves, nor acts upon it, the relation is, as it were, yet unborn. The highest in man is neither his intellect, nor his imagination, nor his reason. All are inferior to his will, and indeed, in a grand way, dependent upon it. His will must meet God's, a will distinct from God's, else were no harmony possible between them. Not the less, therefore, but the more is all God's. For God creates in the man the power to will his will. It may cost God a suffering man can never know, to bring the man to the point at which he will will his will. But when he is brought to that point, and declares for the truth, that is, for the will of God, he becomes one with God, and the end of God in the man's creation, the end for which Jesus was born and died, is gained. The man is saved from his sins, and the universe flowers yet again in his redemption. But I would not be supposed, from what I have said, to imagine the Lord without sympathy for the sorrows and pains which reveal what sin is, and by means of which he would make men sick of sin. With everything human, he sympathizes. Evil is not human. It is the defect and opposite of the human. But the suffering that follows it is human, belonging of necessity to the human that has sinned. While it is by cause of sin, suffering is for the sinner, that he may be delivered from his sin. Jesus is in himself aware of every human pain. He feels it also. In him too is pain. With the energy of tenderest love, he wills his brothers and sisters free, that he may fill them to overflowing with that essential thing, joy. For that they were indeed created. But the moment they exist, truth becomes the first thing, not happiness, and he must make them true. Were it possible, however, for pain to continue after evil was gone, he would never rest while one ache was yet in the world. Perfect in sympathy, he feels in himself, I say, the tortured presence of every nerve that lacks its repose. The man may recognize the evil in him only as pain. He may know little and care nothing about his sins, yet is the Lord sorry for his pain. He cries aloud, come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. He does not say, come unto me, all ye that feel the burden of your sins. He opens his arms to all weary enough to come to him in the poorest hope of rest. Right gladly would he free them from their misery, but he knows only one way. He will teach them to be like himself, meek and lowly, bearing with gladness the yoke of his father's will. This is the one, the only right, the only possible way of freeing them from their sins, the cause of their unrest. With them the weariness comes first, with him the sins. There is but one cure for both, the will of the father, that which is his joy will be their deliverance. He might indeed, it may be, take from them the human, send them down to some lower stage of being, and so free them from suffering. But that must be either a descent toward annihilation, or a fresh beginning to grow up again toward the region of suffering they have left, for that which is not growing must at length die out of creation. The disobedient and selfish would feign in the hell of their hearts possess the liberty and gladness that belong to purity and love, but they cannot have them. They are weary and heavy laden, both with what they are, and because of what they were made for, but are not. The Lord knows what they need. They know only what they want. They want ease. He knows they need purity. Their very existence is an evil, of which, but for his resolve to purify them, their maker must rid his universe. How can he keep in his sight a foul presence? Must the Creator send forth his virtue to hold alive a thing that will be evil, a thing that ought not to be, that has no claim but to cease? The Lord himself would not live, save with an existence absolutely good. It may be my reader will desire me to say how the Lord will deliver him from his sins. That is like the lawyers who is my neighbour. The spirit of such a mode of receiving the offer of the Lord's deliverance is the root of all the horrors of a corrupt theology, so acceptable to those who love weak and beggarly horn books of religion. Such questions spring from the passion for the fruit of the tree of knowledge, not the fruit of the tree of life. Men would understand. They do not care to obey. Understand where it is impossible they should understand, save by obeying. They would search into the work of the Lord, instead of doing their part in it, thus making it impossible, both for the Lord to go on with his work and for themselves to become capable of seeing and understanding what he does. Instead of immediately obeying the Lord of life, the one condition upon which he can help them, and in itself the beginning of their deliverance, they set themselves to question their unenlightened intellects as to his plans for their deliverance, and not merely how he means to effect it, but how he can be able to effect it. They would bind their Samson until they have scanned his limbs and fuse. Incapable of understanding the first motions of freedom in themselves, they proceed to interpret the riches of his divine soul in terms of their own beggarly notions. To paraphrase his glorious verse into their own paltry commercial prose, and then, in the growing presumption of imagined success, to insist upon their neighbour's acceptance of their distorted shadows of the plan of salvation, as the truth of him in whom is no darkness, and the one condition of their acceptance with him. They delay setting their foot on the stair, which alone can lead them to the house of wisdom, until they shall have determined the material and mode of its construction. For the sake of knowing, they postpone that which alone can enable them to know, and substitute for the true understanding which lies beyond a false persuasion that they already understand. They will not accept, that is, act upon their highest privilege, that of obeying the Son of God. It is on them that do his will that the day dawns. To them the day-star arises in their hearts. Obedience is the soul of knowledge. By obedience, I intend no kind of obedience to man, or submission to authority claimed by man, or community of men. I mean obedience to the will of the Father, however revealed in our conscience. God forbid I should seem to despise understanding. The New Testament is full of urgings to understand. Our whole life, to be life at all, must be a growth in understanding. What I cry out upon is the misunderstanding that comes of man's endeavour to understand while not obeying. Upon obedience, our energy must be spent. Understanding will follow. Not anxious to know our duty, or knowing it, and not doing it. How shall we understand that which only a true heart and a clean soul can ever understand? The power in us that would understand were at free lies in the bonds of imperfection and impurity, and is therefore incapable of judging the divine. It cannot see the truth. If it could see it, it would not know it, and would not have it. Until a man begins to obey, the light that is in him is darkness. Any honest soul may understand this much, however, for it is a thing we may, of ourselves, judge to be right, that the Lord cannot save a man from his sins while he holds to his sins. An omnipotence that could do and not do the same thing, at the same moment, were an idea too absurd for mockery. An omnipotence that could at once make a man a free man, and leave him a self-degraded slave, make him the very likeness of God, and good only because he could not help being good, would be an idea of the same character. Equally absurd. Equally self-contradictory. But the Lord is not unreasonable. He requires no high motives where such could not yet exist. He does not say, you must be sorry for your sins or you need not come to me. To be sorry for his sins a man must love God and man, and love is the very thing that has to be developed in him. It is but common sense that a man longing to be freed from suffering, or made able to bear it, should be take himself to the power by whom he is. Equally is it common sense that if a man would be delivered from the evil in him, he must himself begin to cast it out, himself begin to disobey it and work righteousness. As much as either is it common sense that a man should look for and expect the help of his father in the endeavour. Alone he might labour to all eternity and not succeed. He who has not made himself cannot set himself right without him who made him. But his maker is in him and is his strength. The man, however, who instead of doing what he is told, broods speculating on the metaphysics of him who calls him to his work, stands leaning his back against the door by which the Lord would enter to help him. The moment he sets about putting straight the thing that is crooked, I mean doing right where he has been doing wrong, he withdraws from the entrance, gives way for the master to come in. He cannot make himself pure, but he can leave that which is impure. He can spread out the defiled discoloured web of his life before the bleaching sun of righteousness. He cannot save himself, but he can let the Lord save him. The struggle of his weakness is as essential to the coming victory as the strength of him who resisted unto death, striving against sin. The sum of the whole matter is this. The son has come from the father to set the children free from their sins. The children must hear and obey him that he may send forth judgment unto victory. Son of our father, help us to do what thou sayest, and so with thee die unto sin, that we may rise to the sonship for which we were created. Help us to repent, even to the sending away of our sins. End of chapter 1 part 2 Chapter 2 part 1 of The Hope of the Gospel This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Jordan The Hope of the Gospel by George MacDonald Chapter 2 The Remission of Sins Part 1 John did baptize in the wilderness and preached the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins. Mark chapter 1 verse 4 God and man must combine for salvation from sin, and the same word here and elsewhere translated remission seems to be employed in the New Testament for the share of either in the great deliverance. But first let me say something concerning the word here and everywhere translated repentance. I would not even suggest a mistranslation, but the idea intended by the word has been so misunderstood and therefore mistort that it requires some consideration of the word itself to get at a right recognition of the moral fact it represents. The Greek word then of which the word repentance is the accepted synonym and fundamentally the accurate rendering is made up of two words, the conjoined meaning of which is a change of mind or thought. There isn't it no intent of or hint at sorrow or shame or any other of the mental conditions that not unfrequently accompanying repentance have been taken for essential parts of it, sometimes for its very essence. Here the last of the prophets, or the evangelist who records his doings, qualifies the word as if he held it insufficient in itself to convey the Baptist's meaning with the three words that follow it. Ice aphesin amartion, Kyroson baptisma, Metaoyos ice aphesin amartion. Preaching a baptism of repentance unto ascending away of sins. I do not say the phrase aphesis amartion never means forgiveness, one form at least of God sending away of sins. Neither do I say that the taking of the phrase to mean repentance for the remission of sins, namely repentance in order to obtain the pardon of God, involves any inconsistency, but I say that the word ice rather unto than for, that the word aphesis translated remission means fundamentally ascending away, a dismissal, and that the writer seems to use the added phrase to make certain what he means by repentance, a repentance namely that reaches to the ascending away or abjurement of sins. I do not think a change of mind unto the remission or pardon of sin would be nearly so logical the phrase as a change of mind unto the dismission of sinning. The revised version refuses the word for and chooses unto, though it retains remission, which word now conveys no meaning except the forgiveness of God. I think that here the same word is used for man's dismission of his sins, as is elsewhere used for God's dismission or remission of them. In both uses it is ascending away of sins, with the difference of meaning that comes from the differing sources of the action. Both God and man send away sins, but in the one case God sends away the sins of the man, and in the other the man sends away his own sins. I do not enter into the question whether God's aphysis may or may not mean as well the sending of his sins out of a man as the pardon of them, whether it may not sometimes mean dismission and sometimes remission, I am sure the one deed cannot be separated from the other. That the phrase here intends repentance unto the ceasing from sin, the giving up of what is wrong, I will try to show at least probable. In the first place the user of the phrase either defines the change of mind he means as one that has for its object the pardon of God or as one that reaches to a new life. The latter seems to me the more natural interpretation by far. The kind and scope of the repentance or change and not any end to be gained by it appears intended. The change must be one of will and conduct, a radical change of life on the part of the man. He must repent, that is, change his mind, not to a different opinion, not even to a mere betterment of his conduct, not to anything less than a sending away of his sins. This interpretation of the preaching of the Baptist seems to me, I repeat, the more direct, the fuller of meaning, the more logical. Next in St. Matthew's Gospel, the Baptist's buttressing argument or imminent motive for the change he is pressing upon the people is that the kingdom of heaven is at hand. Because the king of heaven is coming, you must give up your sinning. The same argument for immediate action lies in his quotation from Isaiah. Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God. The only true, the only possible preparation for the coming Lord is to cease from doing evil and begin to do well, to send away sin. They must cleanse not the streets of their cities, not their houses or their garments, or even their persons, but their hearts and their doings. It is true the Baptist did not see that the kingdom coming was not of this world, but of the higher world in the hearts of men. It is true that his faith failed him in his imprisonment because he heard of no martial movement on the part of the Lord, no assertion of his sovereignty, no convincing show of his power, but he did see plainly that righteousness was essential to the kingdom of heaven. That he did not yet perceive that righteousness is the kingdom of heaven, that he did not see that the Lord was already initiating his kingdom by sending away sin out of the hearts of his people is not wonderful. The Lord's answer to his forerunner's message of doubt was to send his messenger back an eyewitness of what he was doing, so to wake or clarify in him the perception that his kingdom was not of this world, that he dealt with other means to another end than John had yet recognized as his mission or object. For obedient love in the heart of the poorest he healed or persuaded was his kingdom come. Again observed that when the Pharisees came to John, he said to them, Bring forth, therefore, fruits meat for repentance. Is not this the same as repent unto the sending away of your sins? Note also that when the multitudes came to the prophet and all with the classes most obnoxious to the rest, the publicans and the soldiers asked what he would have them do, thus plainly recognizing that something was required of them. His instruction was throughout in the same direction. They must send away their sins and each must begin with the fault that lay next to him. The kingdom of heaven was at hand. They must prepare the way of the Lord by beginning to do as must be done in the kingdom. They could not rid themselves of their sins, but they could set about sending them away. They could quarrel with them and proceed to turn them out of the house. The Lord was on his way to do his part in their final punishment. Those who had repented to the sending away of their sins, he would baptize with a holy power to send them away indeed. The operant will to get rid of them would be baptized with a fire that should burn them up. When a man breaks with his sins, then the wind of the Lord's fan will blow them away. The fire of the Lord's heart will consume them. I think, then, that the part of the repentant man and not the part of God in the sending away of sins is intended here. It is the man's one preparation for receiving the power to overcome them, the baptism of fire. Not seldom what comes in the name of the gospel of Jesus Christ must seem, even to one not far from the kingdom of heaven, no good news at all. It does not draw him. It wakes in him not a single hope. He has no desire after what it offers him as redemption. The God it gives him news of is not one to whom he would draw nearer. But when such a man comes to see that the very God must be his life, the heart of his consciousness, when he perceives that rousing himself to put from him what is evil, and do the duty that lies at his door, he may fearlessly claim the help of him who loved him into being, then his will immediately sides with his conscience. He begins to try to be, and first thing toward being, to rid himself of what is antagonistic to all being, namely wrong. Multitudes will not even approach the appalling task, the labor and pain of being. God is doing his part, is undergoing the mighty toil of an age-long creation, endowing men with power to be. But few as yet are those who take up their part, who respond to the call of God, who will to be, who put forth a divine effort after real existence. To the many the spirit of the prophet cries, Turn ye and change your way, the kingdom of heaven is near you, let your king possess his own, let God throne himself in you, that his liberty be your life, and you free men, that he may enter, clear the house for him, send away the bad things out of it, depart from evil and do good, the duty that lie at thy door, do it, be it great or small. For indeed in this region there is no great or small. Be content with your wages, said the Baptist to the soldiers. To many people now the word would be, Rule your temper, or be courteous to all, or let each hold the other better than himself, or be just to your neighbour that you may love him. To make straight in the desert a highway for our God, we must bestow ourselves in the very spot of the desert on which we stand. We must cast far from us our evil thing that blocks the way of his chariot wheels. If we do not, never will those wheels roll through our streets, never will our desert blossom with his roses. The message of John to his countrymen was then, and is yet, the one message to the world. Send away your sins, for the kingdom of heaven is near. Some of us, I cannot say all, for I do not know, who have already repented, who have long ago begun to send away our sins, need fresh repentance every day. How many times a day, God only knows, we are so ready to get upon some path that seems to run parallel with the narrow way, and then take no note of its divergence. What is there for us when we discover that we are out of the way, but to rethink ourselves and turn? By those who need no repentance, the Lord may have meant, such as had repented perfectly, had sent away all their sins, and were now with him in his father's house, also such as have never sinned, and such as no longer turn aside for any temptation. Chapter 2 The Remission of Sins Part 2 We shall now, perhaps, be able to understand the relation of the Lord himself to the baptism of John. He came to John to be baptized, and most would say John's baptism was of repentance for the remission or pardon of sins. But the Lord could not be baptized for the remission of sins, for he had never done a selfish, an untrue, or an unfair thing. He had never wronged his father any more than ever his father had wronged him. Happy, happy son and father who had never either done the other wrong in thought, word, or deed. As little had he wronged brother or sister, he needed no forgiveness. There was nothing to forgive. No more could he be baptized for repentance. In him repentance would have been to turn to evil. Where, then, was the propriety of his coming to be baptized by John, and insisting on being by him baptized? It must lie elsewhere. If we take the words of John to mean the baptism of repentance unto the sending away of sins, and if we bear in mind that in his case repentance could not be inasmuch as what repentance is necessary to bring about in man was already existent in Jesus, then altering the words to fit the case and saying, the baptism of willed devotion to the sending away of sin, we shall see at once how the baptism of Jesus was a thing right and fit. That he had no sin to repent of was not because he was so constituted that he could not sin if he would. It was because of his own will and judgment he sent sin away from him, sent it from him with the full choice and energy of his nature. God knows good and evil, and, blessed be his name, chooses good. Never will his righteous anger make him unfair to us, make him forget that we are dust. Like him, his son also chose good, and in that choice resisted all temptation to help his fellows otherwise than as there and his father would. Instead of crushing the power of evil by divine force, instead of compelling justice and destroying the wicked, instead of making peace on the earth by the rule of a perfect prince, instead of gathering the children of Jerusalem under his wings whether they would or not, and saving them from the horrors that anguished his prophetic soul, he let evil work its will while it lived. He contented himself with the slow, unencouraging ways of help essential. Making men good, casting out, not merely controlling Satan, carrying to their perfect issue on earth the old primeval principles of which the father honoured him. Thou hast loved righteousness and hated iniquity, therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows. To love righteousness is to make it grow, not to avenge it, and to win for righteousness the true victory he, as well as his brethren, had to send away evil. Throughout his life on earth he resisted every impulse to work more rapidly for a lower good, strong perhaps when he saw old age and innocence and righteousness trodden under foot. What but this gives any worth of reality to the temptation in the wilderness, to the devils departing from him for a season, to his coming again to experience a like failure? Ever and ever in the whole attitude of his being, in his heart always lifted up, in his unfailing readiness to pull with the father's yoke, he was repelling, driving away sin, away from himself and, as Lord of men and their saviour, away from others also, bringing them to abjure it like himself. No man, least of all any Lord of men, can be good without willing to be good, without setting himself against evil, without sending away sin. Other men have descended away out of them, the Lord had descended away from before him, that it should not enter into him. Therefore is the stand against sin common to the captain of salvation and the soldiers under him. What did Jesus come into the world to do? The will of God in saving his people from their sins, not from the punishment of their sins, that blessed aid to repentance, but from their sins themselves, the paltry as well as the heinous, the venial as well as the loathsome. His whole work was, and is, to send away sin, to banish it from the earth, yea, to cast it into the abyss of non-existence, behind the back of God. His was the holy war. He came carrying it into our world. He resisted unto blood. The soldiers that followed him, he taught and trained to resist also unto blood, striving against sin. So he became the captain of their salvation, and they freed themselves, fought and suffered for others. This was the task to which he was baptised. This is yet his enduring labour. This is my blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many unto the sending away of sins. What was the new covenant? I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah, not according to the covenant which they break, but this. I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts, and will be their God, and they shall be my people. John baptised unto repentance, because those to whom he was sent had to repent. They must bethink themselves and send away the sin that was in them. But had there been a man aware of no sin in him, but aware that life would be no life were not sin kept out of him, that man would have been right in receiving the baptism of John unto the continuous dismission of the sin ever wanting to enter in at his door. The object of the baptism was the sending away of sin. Its object was repentance only where necessary to, only as introducing, as resulting in that. He to whom John was not sent, he whom he did not call, he who needed no repentance was baptised for the same object, to the same conflict, for the same end, the banishment of sin from the dominions of his father, and that first by his own sternest repudiation of it in himself. Thence came his victory in the wilderness. He would have his father's way, not his own. Could he be less fitted to receive the baptism of John that the object of it was no new thing to him, had been about it from the beginning? Yea, from all eternity? We shall be about it, I presume, to all eternity. Such then, as were baptised by John, were initiated into the company of those whose work was to send sin out of the world, and first by sending it out of themselves, by having done with it. Their earliest endeavour in this direction would, as I have said, for that help to enter without which a man could never succeed in the divinely arduous task. Could not, because the region in which the work has to be wrought, lies in the very roots of his own being, where, knowing nothing of the secrets of his essential existence, he can immediately do nothing, where the maker of him alone is potent, alone is consciously present. The change that must pass in him more than equals a new creation, in as much as it is a higher creation, but its necessity is involved in the former creation. And thence we have a right to ask help of our creator, for he requires of us what he has created us unable to effect without him. Nay, nay, could we do anything without him? It were a thing to leave undone. Blessed fact that he hath made us so near him, that the scale of our being is so large, that we are completed only by his presence in it, that we are not men without him, that we can be one with our self-existent creator, that we are not cut off from the original infinite, that in him we must share infinitude, or be enslaved by the finite. The very patent of our royalty is that not for a moment can we live our true life without the eternal life present in and with our spirits. Without him at our unknown root, we cease to be. True, a dog cannot live without the presence of God, but I presume a dog may live a good dog life without knowing the presence of his origin. Man is dead if he know his cause, his deepest selfing self, the presence which is not himself and is nearer to him than himself, which is infinitely more himself, more his very being, than he is himself. The being of which we are conscious is not our full self. The extent of our consciousness of our self is no measure of our self. Our consciousness is infinitely less than we. Well God is more necessary, even to that poor consciousness of self, than our self-consciousness is necessary to our humanity. Until a man become the power of his own existence, become his own God, the sole thing necessary to his existing is the will of God. For the well-being and perfecting of that existence, the sole thing necessary is that the man should know his maker present in him. All that the children want is their father. The one true end of all speech concerning holy things is the persuading of the individual man to cease to do evil, to set himself to do well, to look to the Lord of his life, to be on his side in the new struggle. Supposing the suggestions I have made correct, I do not care that my reader should understand them, except it be to turn against the evil in him and begin to cast it out. If this be not the result, it is of no smallest consequence whether he agree with my interpretation or not. If he do thus repent, it is of equally little consequence for setting himself to do the truth, he is on way to know all things. Real knowledge has begun to grow possible for him. I am not sure what the Lord means in the words, thus it becomeeth us to fulfil all righteousness. Baptism could not be the fulfilling of all righteousness. Perhaps he means we must, by a full act of the will, give ourselves altogether to righteousness. We must make it the business of our lives to send away sin and do the will of the Father. That is my work as much as the work of any man who must repent, ere he can begin. I will not be left out when you call men to be pure as our Father is pure. To be certain whom he intends by us might perhaps help us to see his meaning. Does he intend all of us men? Does he intend my Father and me? Or does he intend you and me, John? If the saying mean what I have suggested, then the us would apply to all that have the knowledge of good and evil. Every being that can must devote himself to righteousness. To be right is no adjunct of completeness. It is the ground and foundation of existence. But perhaps it was a lesson for John himself whom mighty preacher of righteousness as he was did not yet count at the all of life. I cannot tell. Note that when the Lord began his teaching he employed neither using nor inculcating any right the same words as John. Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. That kingdom had been at hand all his infancy boyhood and young manhood. He was in the world with his father in his heart. That was the kingdom of heaven. Lonely man on the hillside, or boy the signager of Dr. Eyes, his father was everything to him. Wisdy not that I must be in my father's things? End of chapter 2, part 2. Chapter 3, part 1 of the Hope of the Gospel This LibriVox recording in the public domain recording by Jordan The Hope of the Gospel by George MacDonald Chapter 3 Jesus in the World Part 1 Son why hast thou thus dealt with us? Behold, thy father and I have sought thee sorrowing, and he said unto them how is it that ye sought me? Wisdy not that I must be about my father's business? And they understood not the saying which he spake unto them. Luke, chapter 2 verses 48 to 50 Was that his saying? Why did they not understand it? Do we understand it? What did his saying mean? The Greek is not absolutely clear whether the Syriac words he used were more precise who in this world can tell. But had we heard his very words, we too, with his father and mother, would have failed to understand them. Must we fail still? It will show at once where our initial difficulty lies if I give the latter half of the saying as presented in the revised English version. Its departure from the authorised reveals the point of obscurity. Wisdy not that I must be in my father's house. His parents had his exact words, yet did not understand. We have not his exact words and are in doubt as to what the Greek translation of them means. If the authorised translation be true to the intent of the Greek and therefore to that of the Syriac, how could his parents, knowing him as they did, from all that had been spoken from all they had seen in him, from the ponderings in Mary's own heart, and from the precious thoughts she and Joseph cherished concerning him have failed to understand him when he said that wherever he was he must be about his father's business. On the other hand supposing them to know and feel that he must be about his father's business would that have been reason sufficient in view of the degree of spiritual development to which they had attained for the Lord's expecting them not to be anxious about him when they had lost him? Thousands on thousands who trust God for their friends in things spiritual do not trust him for them in regard of their mere health or material well-being. His parents knew how prophets had always been treated in the land or if they did not think in that direction there were many dangers to which a boy like him would seem exposed to rouse an anxiety that could be met only by a faith equal to saying whatever has happened to him death itself it can be no evil to one who is about his father's business and such a faith I think the Lord could not yet have expected of them that what the world counts as fortune might befall him on his father's business would have been recognized by him I think as reason for their parental anxiety so long as they had not learned God that he is what he is the thing the Lord had come to teach his father's men and women his words seem rather to imply that there was no need to be anxious about his personal safety fear of some accident to him seems to have been the cause of their trouble and he did not mean I think that they ought not to mind if he died doing his father's will but that he was in no danger as regarded accident or misfortune this will appear more plainly as we proceed so much for the authorized version let us now take the translation given us by the revises wish ye not that I must be in my father's house are they authorized in translating the Greek thus I know no justification for it but am not loaned enough to say they have none that the Syriac has it so is of little weight seeing it is no original Syriac but retranslation if he did say my father's house could he have meant the temple and his parents not have known what he meant and why should he have taken it for granted they would know or judge that they ought to have known that he was there so little did the temple suggest itself to them that either it was the last place in which they sought him or they had been there before and had not found him if he meant that they might have known this without being told why was it that even when he set the thing before them they did not understand him I do not believe he meant the temple I do not think he said or meant in my father's house what then makes those who give us this translation prefer it to the phrase in the authorized version about my father's business one or other of two causes most likely both together an ecclesiastical fancy and the mere fact that he was found in the temple a mind ecclesiastical will presume the temple the fittest therefore most likely place for the son of god to take himself to but such a mind would not be the first to reflect that the temple was a place where the father was worshipped neither in spirit nor in truth a place built by one of the vilest rulers of this world less fit than many another spot for the special presence of him of whom the prophet bears witness thus saith the high and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity whose name is holy I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones Jesus himself with the same breath in which once he called at his father's house called it a den of thieves his expulsion from it of the buyers and sellers was the first waft of the fan with which he was come to purge his father's dominions nothing could ever cleanse that house his fanning rose to a tempest and swept it out of his father's world for the second possible cause of the change from business to house the mere fact that he was found in the temple can hardly be a reason for his expecting his parents to know that he was there and if it witnessed to some way of thought or habit of his with which they were acquainted it is, I repeat, difficult to see why the parents should fail to perceive what the interpreters have found so easily but the parents looked for a larger meaning in the words of such a son whose meaning at the same time was too large for them to find when according to the greek the lord on the occasion already alluded to says my father's house he says it plainly he uses the word house here he does not let us see what lies in the greek to guide us to the thought in the mind of the lord when he thus reasoned with the apprehensions of his father and mother the greek taken literally says wish g not that I must be in the blank of my father the authorised version supplies business the revised house there is no noun in the greek and the article though is in the plural to translate it as literally as it can be translated making of it an english sentence the saying stands wish g not that I must be in the things of my father the plural article implies the english things and the question is then what things does he mean the word might mean affairs or business but why the plural article should be contracted to mean house I do not know in a great wide sense no doubt the word house might be used as I am about to show but surely not as meaning the temple he was arguing for a confidence in god on the part of his parents not for a knowledge of his whereabout the same thing that made them anxious concerning him prevented them from understanding his words lack namely of faith in the father this the one thing he came into the world to teach men those words were meant to teach his parents they are spirit and life involving the one principle by which men shall live they hold the same core as his words to his disciples in the storm oh ye of little faith let us look more closely at them why did you look for me did you not know that I must be among my father's things what are we to understand by my father's things the translation given in the authorised version is I think as do the words themselves a thoroughly justifiable one I must be about my father's business or my father's affairs I refuse it for no other reason than that it does not fit the logic of the narrative as does the word things which besides opens to us a door of large and joyous prospect of course he was about his father's business and they might know it and yet be anxious about him not having a perfect faith in that father but as I have said already it was not anxiety as to what might befall him because of doing the will of the father he might well seem to them as yet too young for danger from that source the vague perils of life beyond their sight that appalled them theirs was just the uneasiness that possesses every parent whose child is missing if they, like him had trusted in their father they would have known what their son now meant when he said that he was in the midst of his father's things namely that the very things from which they dreaded evil accident were his own home surroundings and he was not doing the father's business in a foreign country but in the father's own house understood as meaning the world or the universe the phrase my father's house would be a better translation than the authorised understood as meaning the poor miserable god forsaken temple no more the house of god than a dead body is the house of a man it is immeasurably inferior it seems to me I say that the lord meant to remind them or rather to make them feel for they had not yet learned the fact that he was never away from home could not be lost as they had thought him that he was in his father's house all the time where no hurt could come to him the things about him were the furniture and utensils of his home he knew them all and how to use them I must be among my father's belongings the world was his home because his father's house he was not a stranger who did not know his way about in it he was no lost child but with his father all the time here we find one main thing wherein the lord differs from us we are not at home in this great universe in our father's house we ought to be and one day we shall be but we are not yet this reveals Jesus more than man by revealing him more man than we we are not complete men we are not anything near it and are therefore out of harmony more or less with everything in the house of our birth and habitation always struggling to make our home in the world not yet succeeded we are not at home in it because we are not at home with the lord of the house the father of the family not one with our elder brother who is his right hand it is only the son the daughter that abideth ever in the house when we are true children if not the world then the universe will be our home felt and known as such the house we are satisfied with and would not change hence until then the hard struggle the constant strife we hold with nature as we call the things of our father a strife invaluable for our development at the same time manifesting us not yet men enough to be lords of the house built for us to live in we cannot govern or command it as did the lord because we are not at one with his father therefore neither in harmony with his things nor rulers over them our best power in regard to them is but to find out wonderful facts concerning them and their relations and turn these facts to our uses on systems of our own for we discover what we seem to discover by working inward from without while he works outward from within and we shall never understand the world until we see it in the direction in which he works making it namely from within outward this of course we cannot do until we are one with him in the meantime so much are both we and his things his that we can air concerning them only as he has made it possible for us to air we can only wonder in the direction of the truth if but to find that we can find nothing end of chapter 3 part 1 chapter 3 part 2 of the hope of the gospel this LibriVox recording is in the public domain recording by Jordan the hope of the gospel by George McDonald chapter 3 Jesus in the world part 2 think for a moment how Jesus was at home among the things of his father it seems to me I repeat a spiritless explanation of his words that the temple was the place where naturally he was at home does he make the least lamentation over the temple it is Jerusalem he weeps over the man of Jerusalem the killers the stoners what was his place of prayer not the temple but the mountaintop where does he find symbols whereby to speak of what goes on in the mind and before the face of his father in heaven not in the temple not in its rights not on its altars not in its holy of holies he finds them in the world and its lovely lowly facts on the roadside in the field in the vineyard in the garden in the house in the family and the commonest of its affairs the lighting of the lamp the leavening of the meal the neighbors borrowing the losing of the coin the straying of the sheep even in the unlovely facts also of the world which he turns to holy use as the unjust judge the false steward the faithless laborers he ignores the temple see how he drives the devils from the souls and bodies of men as we the wolves from our sheepfolds how before him the diseases scaly and spotted hurry and flee the world has for him no chamber of terror he walks to the door of the sepulchre the sealed cellar of his father's house and calls forth its four days dead he rebukes the mourners he stays the funeral and gives back the departed children to their parents arms the roughest of its servants do not make him wince none of them are so arrogant as to disobey his word he falls asleep in the midst of the storm that threatens to swallow his boat here how, on that same occasion he rebukes his disciples the children to tremble at a gust of wind in the house God's little ones afraid of a storm hear him tell the watery floor to be still and no longer toss his brothers see the watery floor obey him and grow still see how the wandering creatures under it come at his call see him leave his mountain closet and go walking over its heaving surface to the help of his men of little faith see how the world's water turns to wine how its bread grows more bread at his word see how he goes from the house for a while and returning with fresh power takes what shape he pleases walks through its closed doors and goes up and down its invisible stairs all his life he was among his father's things either in heaven or in the world not then only when they found him in the temple at Jerusalem he is still among his father's things everywhere about in the world everywhere throughout the wide universe whatever he laid aside to come to us to whatever limitations for our sake he stooped his regal head he dealt with the things about him in such lordly, childlike manner as made it clear they were not strange to him but the things of his father he claimed none of them as his own would not have had one of them his except through his father only as his father's could he enjoy them only as coming forth from the father and full of the father's thought and nature had they to him any existence that the things were his father's made them precious things to him he had no care for having as men count having all his having was in the father I wonder if he ever put anything in his pocket I doubt if he had one did he ever say this is mine not yours did he not say all things are mine therefore they are yours oh for his liberty among the things of the father only by knowing them the things of our father can we escape enslaving ourselves to them through the false the infernal idea of having of possessing them we make them our tyrants make the relation between them and us an evil thing the world was a blessed place to Jesus because everything in it was his father's what pain must it not have been to him to see his brothers so violently misuse the father's house by grasping each for himself at the family things if the knowledge that a spot in the landscape retains in it some pollution suffices to disturb our pleasure in the whole how must it not have been with him how must it not be with him now in regard to the disfigurements and defilements caused by the greed of men by their haste to be rich in his father's lovely house whoever is able to understand Wordsworth or Henry Vaughn when either speaks of the glorious insights of his childhood will be able to imagine a little how Jesus must in his eternal childhood regard the world hear what Wordsworth says our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting the soul that rises with us our life's star hath had elsewhere its setting and cometh from afar not in entire forgetfulness and not in utter nakedness but trailing clouds of glory do we come from God who is our home heaven lies about us in our infancy shades of the prison house begin to close upon the growing boy but he beholds the light and whence it flows he sees it in his joy the youth who daily father from the east must travel steal his nature's priest and by the vision splendid is on his way attended at length the man perceives it die away and fade into the light hear what Henry Vaughn says happy those early days when I shined in my angel infancy before I understood this place appointed for my second race or taught my soul to fancy ought but a white celestial thought when yet I had not walked above a mile or two from my first love and looking back at that short space could see a glimpse of his bright face when on some gilded cloud or flower my gazing soul would dwell an hour and in those weaker glories spy some shadows of eternity before I taught my tongue to wound my conscience with a sinful sound or had the black art to dispense a several sin to every sense but felt through all this fleshly dress bright shoots of everlastingness oh how I long to travel back and tread again that ancient track that I might once more reach that plain where first I left my glorious train from whence the enlightened spirit sees that shady city of palm trees whoever has thus gazed on flower or cloud whoever can recall poorest memory of the trail of glory that hung about his childhood must have some faint idea how his father's house and the things in it always looked and must still look to the Lord with him there is no fading into the light of common day he has never lost his childhood the very essence of childhood being nearness to the father and the outgoing of his creative love whence with that insight of his eternal childhood of which the insight of the little ones here is a fainter repetition he must see everything as the father means it the child sees things as the father means him to see them as he thought of them when he uttered them for God is not only the father of the child but of the childhood that constitutes him a child therefore the childness of the divine nature the child may not indeed be capable of looking into the father's method but he can in a measure understand his work has therefore free entrance to his study and workshop both and is welcome to find out what he can with fullest liberty to ask him questions there are men too who at their best sees as they are as God sees them always Jesus saw things just as his father saw them in his creative imagination when willing them out to the eyes of his children but if he could always see the things of his father even as some men and more children see them at times he might well feel almost at home among them he could not cease to admire cease to love them I say love because the life in them the presence of the creative one would ever be playing to him in the perfect would familiarity ever destroy wonder at things essentially wonderful because essentially divine to cease to wonder is to fall plum down from the childlike to the commonplace the most undivine of all moods intellectual our nature can never be at home among things that are not wonderful to us could we see things always as we have sometimes seen them and as one day we must always see them only far better should we ever know dullness greatly as we might enjoy all forms of art much as we might learn through the eyes and thoughts of other men should we fly to these for deliverance from Anwi from any haunting discomfort should we not just open our own child eyes look upon the things themselves and be consoled Jesus then would have his parents understand that he was in his father's world among his father's things where was nothing to hurt him he knew them all was in the secret of them all could use and order them as did his father to this same I think all we humans are destined to rise though so many of us now are ignorant what kind of home we need what a home we are capable of having we too shall inherit the earth with the sun eternal doing with it as we would willing with the will of the father such a home as we now inhabit only perfected and perfectly beheld we are travelling never to reach it saved by the obedience that makes us the children therefore the heirs of God and thank God there the father does not die that the children may inherit for bliss of heaven we inherit with the father all the dangers of Jesus came from the priests and the learned in the traditional law whom his parents had not yet begun to fear on his behalf they feared the dangers of the rugged way the thieves and the robbers of the hill road for the scribes and the Pharisees, the priests and the rulers they would be the first to acknowledge their messiah, their king little they imagined when they found him where he ought to have been safest had it been indeed his father's house that there he sat amid lions the great doctors of the temple he could rule all the things in his father's house but not the men of religion the men of the temple who called his father their father true he might have compelled them with a word withered them by a glance with a finger touch made them grovel at his feet but such supremacy over his brothers the lord of life despised he must rule them as his father ruled himself he would have them know themselves of the same family with himself have them at home among the things of God caring for the things he cared for loving and hating as he and his father loved and hated ruling themselves by the essential laws of being because they would not be such he let them do to him as they would that he might get at their hearts by some unknown unguarded door in their diviner part I will be God among you I will be myself to you you will not have me then do to me as you will the created shall have power over him through whom they were created that they may be compelled to know him and his father they shall look on him whom they have pierced his parents found him in the temple they never really found him until he entered the true temple their own adoring hearts the temple that knows not its builder is no temple in it dwells no divinity but at length he comes to his own receive him comes to them in the might of his mission to preach good tidings to the poor to heal the broken hearted to preach deliverance and sight and liberty and the Lord's own good time End of Chapter 3 Part 2