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Overland Monthly / OV199 - Be Content With Your Wages
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OV199 BE CONTENT WITH YOUR WAGES
BY C. T. RUSSELL Pastor of Brooklyn and London Tabernacles
"The soldiers likewise demanded of
John the Baptist, saying, What shall we do? And he said unto them, Do
violence to no man, neither accuse any falsely, and be content with
your wages."—#Lu 3:14.
WE HAVE our Lord JesusÂ’ words to the
effect that John, His forerunner, was a Prophet of the very highest
order: "There hath not arisen a greater Prophet than John the Baptist."
John was not preaching to Christians; he was not preaching the Message
that Jesus preached, namely, that "If any man will be My disciple, let
him deny himself, take up his cross, and follow Me." He was preaching
merely the demands of the Jewish Law; he was telling the Jews that
their long expected Messiah was about to be presented to them, and that
only the holy, faithful ones would be in readiness to receive Him, and
would be accepted by Him and be blessed. Various classes asked what
they should do to manifest their obedience, and to show a fruitage of
repentance of sin. The words we are considering were a reply to the
soldiers. It is just such advice as would be applicable to a soldier
to-day.
The declaration, "Do violence to no man,"
did not signify that they were to prove unfaithful to the duties
devolving upon them as soldiers; it did not mean that if a man were
ordered to be arrested that they should let him go free. It did not
mean that if he attempted to escape he might not suffer violence at
their hands.
They were soldiers, and a soldier is a
representative of the Law, and he is under orders from his superior;
and, unless the matter would be very exceptional indeed, he should obey
the commands of his superior to the very letter. The responsibility is
with the superior. Having enlisted, he is responsible to the terms and
conditions of that contract. When his period of service shall expire,
he may use his judgment and liberty about re-enlistment, but until then
he is a servant of the government, and bound by its general
regulations. "Do violence to no man" must, therefore, be understood to
mean, "Do not use your position of authority and power improperly,
unnecessarily. If you are a soldier, be a good soldier, a kind soldier,
a gentle soldier, a patient soldier, a generous soldier, an obedient
soldier, ‘enduring hardness as a good soldier of the Lord Jesus
Christ.Â’" The general difficulty in our day is, not that the law
requires soldiers to do violent things, but that they frequently take
advantage of the situation and give greater violence than the law
permits or sanctions. All who desire to walk in the way of
righteousness should take heed of this wise counsel, "Do violence to no
man"—violate no man’s rights or interests, nor even his feelings or his
reputation.
Accuse No Man Falsely.
In olden times, most of the military duty
was in the nature of police service. It could scarcely be within the
province of any soldier to-day to falsely accuse any one. A policeman,
however, would have such an opportunity. Either spite, or revenge, or
malice, or affronted dignity, might lead
OV200 some police officer to exaggerate
some fault, and thus to falsely accuse—to accuse more than would be
proper, or to make an accusation out of whole cloth. All this, of
course, would be contrary to the principles of righteousness, and hence
contrary to the Divine will.
Be Content With Your Wages.
We are not to understand that those who
love righteousness and seek to do the LordÂ’s will must take whatever
wages are offered to them, and therewith be content.
If in slavery, this might be proper
enough—to be thankful and content with the best that could be done
under all the circumstances, desirous, nevertheless, and patiently
waiting for an improvement of conditions. The thought of the Prophet
evidently is, You have enlisted for a certain period of time; you
bargained for a certain amount of wage. If later on you wish you had
done otherwise, it is too late to alter the matter until your
enlistment term expires. If your wages seem small, and you see others
about you with no more ability earning much more, nevertheless be
content with your wages, because it is what you bargained for. You
have, therefore, agreed to accept it as right, and are not at liberty
to denounce it, or to murmur, or to demand more. If your faithful
service is appreciated, and a larger compensation than agreed upon
comes to you, be thankful correspondingly. But in any event, and always
be content.
Godliness With Contentment.
St. Paul declares, "Godliness with
contentment is great gain." With intelligent people there can scarcely
be contentment without godliness. Only the unintelligent could be
content without godliness. Why? Because all persons of intelligence
have hopes, aims, aspirations and ambitions. If their hearts be set
upon these ambitions they can only be content while success is with
them, and they are apparently attaining their desires. As a matter of
fact, comparatively few people find themselves very successful in
attaining their ambitions. More or less of disappointment seems to come
to nine out of every ten. It is difficult for the intelligent under
such conditions to be content. The greater the intelligence the
stronger the ambitions, and the more there will be of discontent in
their frustration, and a feverish desire to overcome all difficulties,
or to wear out life in the attempt to gain the ideal, the ambition. It
is here that godliness comes in, as a great assistance, to a
comparatively small portion of humanity. The godly are those who desire
to do GodÂ’s will, and who desire GodÂ’s will to be done in them, and in
respect to all of their affairs. To these alone it is possible to have
contentment, even "when all around the soul gives way," and
disappointment and disaster to desires, ambition and hopes comes, and
yet not thereby be crushed. These concede the LordÂ’s will, and trust in
the Divine promise that "all things will work together for their good,"
because they love God, and because they have been "called according to
His purpose" —these can be calm and serene in the midst of all the
storms of life. They have an anchorage "within the veil, whither Jesus
has for them entered."
Godly Contentment a Growth.
Nor do any find that this blessed state
of godly contentment can be reached in a moment. It is a result of
growth in grace and in the knowledge and in the love of God. It marks a
development of knowledge and faith and of obedience as children of God,
to which the majority of mankind are strangers. This is, however, the
ideal Christian life. It can be entered only by the straight and narrow
way—by a full consecration to the service of the Redeemer—the doing of
the Divine will.
Gradually, day by day, this
OV201 character or disposition, which was
so marked in the Lord Jesus, becomes impressed upon those who are
seeking to walk in His steps, and thus, day by day, they are being made
meet, fit, "for the inheritance of the saints in light." Those who are
of the world, who have not made a consecration, and who therefore are
not "heirs of God and joint-heirs with Jesus Christ" to the Heavenly
inheritance, are, nevertheless, to partake of a great blessing which
God promised nearly four thousand years ago, saying to Abraham, "In thy
Seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed." This promise
guarantees that when the Church shall have reached the plane of glory,
and shall have become the spiritual Seed of Abraham, all mankind will
receive a blessing through the glorified Church. The blessing will
consist of an opportunity for a return to human perfection and all that
was lost by AdamÂ’s disobedience, and redeemed by the obedience of
Jesus; they will not only have an earthly perfection, but,
additionally, everlasting life and a share in the world-wide Eden, in
which there will be no more sighing, no more crying, no more dying.
But, be it noted, the attitude of each individual in the present life
is either that of maintaining what he has received of his parents of
honor, justice, truth, righteousness and mercy, or a degradation of
these qualities more or less, or an increase of them. And, according as
he shall use well, or fail to use wisely the opportunities and
experiences of this present life, will be his state or condition in the
life to come, when Messiah shall be King, and the Church shall be with
Christ on the Throne—when the promise to Abraham shall be fulfilled
through them.
IN THE PRESENCE OF THE KING
IF we could always feel each little thing We do, each hour we spend Within the presence of the King, What dignity ‘twould lend!
If we could realize our every thought
Is known to Him, our King, With how great carefulness would it be
fraught, And what a blessing bring!
If, when some sharp word leaves a
cruel sting, Our faith could know and feel ‘Twas heard within the
presence of the King, How soon the wound would heal!
Oh, when the song of life seems hard
to sing, And darker grows the way, —Draw nearer to the presence of the
King, And night shall turn to day!
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