t was a great mistake." And we take the words of
Judas and say, "Why this waste?"
But after all, was it a mistake? He lost his crown, but he won his
friend. He helped banish the discord and increased the melody of the
world. He threw aside his scepter of temporal power to lay hold on an
eternal scepter. He threw aside the crown that he might have worn for
a day to lay hold on a crown that will last forever more.
If ever I get to Heaven I expect to give particular attention to the
Visitors' Gallery. I think there is going to be an especial place, a
very choice place in Heaven for the visitors. Not, you will
understand, for those who are visiting Heaven, but those who were good
at visiting here. For mark you, the Lord has spoken of a special
reward that He is going to give to those of whom He could say, "Ye
visited me." And about the handsomest, the loveliest face I expect to
find among the immortal and blood-washed visitors is the face of this
man Jonathan.
And now, will you hear this closing word? Jonathan uncrowned himself
for his friend. And he won his friend and he won an immortal crown.
But there was another who gave up infinitely more than Jonathan. And
He came to you and me when we were in an infinitely worse plight than
that in which David was. He came to us when we were dead in trespasses
and in sin. And what He says to us this morning is this, "I have
called you friends. Ye are my friends."
The Prince who did that for us was not the son of Saul, but the Son of
God. Through His renunciation He was crowned. By His stooping He was
forever elevated. "Wherefore God has highly exalted Him and given Him
a name that is above every name." But what I ask is this: Have you
responded to His friendship as David responded to that of Jonathan? He
has been a friend to you. Have you, will you be a friend to Him? That
is what He is seeking. That is what He is longing for to-day as for
nothing else in earth or Heaven.
You know why He came. You know why He is here now. Why did Jonathan
visit David in the gloomy wood that day and uncrown himself for him?
It was just this reason: It was because he loved him. Again and again
the story had said that Jonathan loved David as his own soul. I
thought it was a mere hyperbole at first. I thought it might be a kind
of poetic way of putting it, but it was only sober truth. And David
spoke sober truth in that noble and manly lamentation when he said,
"Th
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