I was sitting about a fortnight ago, in a very lovely garden, in the midst of
all kinds of flowers which were blooming in delightful abundance all
around. Screening myself from the heat of the sun under the overhanging
boughs of an olive tree, I cast my eyes upon palms and bananas, roses and
camellias, oranges and aloes, lavender and heliotrope. The garden was full
of color and beauty, perfume and fruitfulness. Surely the gardener,
whoever he might be, who had framed, and fashioned, and kept in order
that lovely spot, deserved great commendation. So I thought, and then it
came to me to meditate upon the church of God as a garden, and to
suppose the Lord Jesus to be the gardener, and then to think of what
would most assuredly happen if it were so. "Supposing him to be the
gardener," my mind conceived of a paradise where all sweet things
flourish and all evil things are rooted up. If an ordinary worker had
produce such beauty as I then saw and enjoyed on earth, what
bounty and glory must surely be brought forth "supposing him to
be the gardener"! You know the "him" to whom we refer, the ever
blessed Son or God, whom Mary Magdalene in our text mistook for
the gardener. We will for once follow a saint in her mistaken track;
and yet we shall find ourselves going in a right way. She was mistaken
when she fell into "supposing him to be the gardener"; but if we are
under his Spirit's teaching we shall not make a mistake if now we
indulge ourselves in a quiet meditation upon our ever-blessed Lord,
"supposing him to be the gardener."
It is not an unnatural supposition, surely; for if we may truly sing
"We are a garden walled around, Chosen and made peculiar ground,"
that enclosure needs a gardener. Are we not all the plants of his right hand
planting? Do we not all need watering and tending by his constant and
gracious care? He says, "I am the true vine: my Father is the husbandman,"
and that is one view of it; but we may also sing, "My well beloved has a
vineyard in a very fruitful hill: and he fenced it, and gathered out the
stones thereof, and planted it with the choicest vine" -- that is to say,
he acted as gardener to it. Thus has Isaiah taught us to sing a song of
the Well-beloved touching his vineyard. We read of our Lord just now
under these terms -- "You that dwell in the gardens, the companions
hearken to your voice." To what purpose does he dwell in the vineyards
but that he may see how the vines flourish, and care for all the plants?
The image, I say, is so far from being unnatural that it is most pregnant
with suggestions and full of useful teaching. We are not going against
the harmonies of nature when we are "supposing him to be the gardener."
Neither is the figure unscriptural; for in one of his own parables our Lord
makes himself to be the dresser of the vineyard. We read just now that
parable so full of warning. When the "certain man" came in and saw the
fig tree that it brought forth no fruit, he said unto the dresser of his
vineyard, "Cut it down: why cumbers it the ground?" Who was it that
intervened between that profitless tree and the axe but our great
Intercessor and Interposer? He it is who continually comes forward
with "Let it alone this year also until I shall dig about it and dung it."
In this case he himself takes upon himself the character of the
vine-dresser, and we are not wrong in "supposing him to be the gardener."
If we would be supported by a type, our Lord takes the name of "the
Second Adam," and the first Adam was a gardener. Moses tells us that the
Lord God placed the man in the garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it.
Man in his best estate was not to live in this world in a paradise of indolent
luxury, but in a garden of recompensed toil. Behold, the church is Christ's
Eden, watered by the river of life, and so fertilized that all manner of fruits
are brought forth unto God; and he, our second Adam, walks in this
spiritual Eden to dress it and to keep it; and so by a type we see that we are
right in "supposing him to be the gardener." Thus also Solomon thought of
him when he described the royal Bridegroom as going down with his
spouse to the garden when the flowers appeared on the earth and the fig
tree had put forth her green figs; he went out with his beloved for the
reservation of the gardens, saying, "Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that
spoil the vines: for our vines have tender grapes." Neither nature, nor
Scripture, nor type, nor song forbids us to think of our adorable Lord Jesus
as one that cares for the flowers and fruits of his church. We err not when
we speak of him, "supposing him to be the gardener." And so I sat me still,
and indulged the suggested line of thought, which I now repeat in your
hearing, hoping that I may open many roads of meditation for your hearts
also. I shall not attempt to think out such a subject thoroughly, but only to
indicate in which direction you may look for a vein of precious ore.
I. "Supposing him to be the gardener," we have here
THE KEY TO MANY WONDERS in the garden of his church.
The first wonder is that there should be a church at all in the world; that
there should be a garden blooming in the midst of this sterile waste.
Upon a hard and flinty rock the Lord has made the Eden of his church to grow.
How came it to be -- here an oasis of life in a desert of death? how came
faith in the midst of unbelief, and hope where all is servile fear, and love
where hate abounds? "You are of God, little children, and the whole world
lies in the wicked one." Whence this being "of God" where all beside is
fast shut up in the devil? How came there to be a people for God,
separated, and sanctified, and consecrated, and ordained to bring forth fruit
unto his name?
Assuredly it could not have been so at all if the doing of it had been
left to man. We understand its existence, "supposing him to be the gardener,"
but nothing else can account for it. He can cause the fir tree
to flourish instead of the thorn, and the myrtle instead of the briar; but no
one else can accomplish such a change. The garden in which I sat was
made on the bare face of the rock, and almost all the earth of which its
terraces were composed had been brought up there, from the shore below,
by hard labor, and so upon the rock a soil had been created. It was not by
its own nature that the garden was found in such a place; but by skill and
labor it had been formed: even so the church of God has had to be
constructed by the Lord Jesus, who is the author as well as the perfecter of
his garden. Painfully, with wounded hands, has he built each terrace, and
fashioned each bed, and planted each plant. All the flowers have had to be
watered with his bloody sweat, and watched by his tearful eyes. The nail-prints
in his hands, and the wound in his side are the tokens of what it cost
him to make a new Paradise. He has given his life for the life of every plant
that is in the garden, and not one of them had been there on any other
theory than "supposing him to be the gardener."
Besides, there is another wonder. How comes the church of God to
flourish in such a climate? This present evil world is very uncongenial to
the growth of grace, and the church is not able by herself alone to resist the
evil influences which surround her. The church contains within itself
elements which tend to its own disorder and destruction if left alone; even
as the garden has present in its soil all the germs of a tangled thicket of
weeds. The best church that ever Christ had on earth would within a few
years apostatize from the truth if deserted by the Spirit of God. The world
never helps the church; it is all in arms against it; there is nothing in the
world's air or soil that can fertilize the church even to the least degree.
How is it, then, that notwithstanding all this, the church is a fair garden
unto God, and there are sweet spices grown in its beds, and lovely flowers
are gathered by the Divine hand from its borders? The continuance and
prosperity of the church can only be accounted for by "supposing him to be
the gardener." Almighty strength is put to the otherwise impossible work of
sustaining a holy people among men; almighty wisdom exercises itself upon
this otherwise insuperable difficulty. Hear you the word of the Lord, and
learn hence the reason for the growth of his church below. "I, the Lord,
do keep it: I will water it every moment; lest any hurt it, I will keep it night
and day." That is the reason for the existence of a spiritual people still in
the midst of a godless and perverse generation. This is the reason for an
election of grace in the midst of surrounding vice, and worldliness, and unbelief.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," I can see why there should be fruitfulness,
and beauty, and sweetness even in the center of the wilderness of sin.
Another mystery is also cleared up by this supposition. The wonder is that
ever you and I should have been placed among the plants of the Lord. Why
are we allowed to grow in the garden of his grace? Why me, Lord? Why
me? How is it that we have been kept there, and borne with in our
barrenness, when he might long ago have said, "Cut it down: why
cumbers it the ground?" Who else would have borne with such
waywardness as ours? Who could have manifested such infinite patience?
Who could have tended us with such care, and when the care was so
ill rewarded, who would have renewed it so long from day to day, and
persisted in designs of boundless love? Who could have done more for his
vineyard? Who could or would have done so much? Any mere man would
have turned of his good intention, provoked by our ingratitude. None but
God could have had patience with some of us! That we have not long ago
been chopped off as fruitless branches of the vine; that we are left still
upon the stem, in the hope that we may ultimately bring forth fruit, is a
great marvel. I know not how it is that we have been spared, except upon
this ground -- "supposing him to be the gardener" -- for Jesus is all gentleness
and grace, so slow with his knife, so tardy with his axe, so hopeful if we do
but show a bud or two, or, perchance, yield a little sour berry -- so hopeful,
I say, that these may be hopeful prognostics of something better by-and-by.
Infinite patience! Immeasurable forbearance! Where are you to be found
except in the breast of the Well-beloved? Surely the hoe has spared many
of us simply and only because he who is meek and lowly in heart is the gardener.
Dear friends, there is one mercy with regard to this church which I have
often had to thank God for, namely, that evils should have been shut out
for so long a time. During the period in which we have been together as
pastor and people, and that is now some twenty-nine years, we have
enjoyed uninterrupted prosperity, going from strength to strength in the
work of the Lord. Alas! we have seen many other churches that were quite
as hopeful as our own, torn with strife, brought low by declension, or
overthrown by heresy. I hope we have not been apt to judge their faults
severely; but we must be thankful for our own deliverance from the evils
which have afflicted them. I do not know how it is that we have been kept
together in love, helped to abound in labor, and enabled to be firm in the
faith, unless it be that special grace has watched over us. We are full of
faults; we have nothing to boast of; and yet no church has been more
divinely favored: I wonder that the blessing should have lasted so long,
and I cannot make it out except when I fall into "supposing him to be the
gardener."
I cannot trace our prosperity to the pastor, certainly; nor even
to my beloved friends the elders and deacons, nor even to the best of you
with your fervent love and holy zeal. I think it must be that Jesus has been
the gardener, and he has shut the gate when I am afraid I have left it open;
and he has driven out the wild boar of the woods, just when he had entered
to root up the weaker plants. He must have been about at nights to keep
off the prowling thieves, and he must have been here, too, in the noontide
heat to guard those of you who have prospered in worldly goods, from the
glare of too bright a sun. Yes, he has been with us, blessed be his name!
Hence all this peace, and unity, and enthusiasm. May we never grieve him
so that he shall turn away from us; but rather let us entreat him, saying,
"Abide with us. You that dwell in the gardens, let this be one of the
gardens in which you do deign to dwell until the day break and the
shadows flea away." Thus our supposition is a key to many wonders.
II. Let your imaginations run along with mine while I say that
"supposing him to be the gardener" should be A SPUR TO MANY DUTIES.
One of the duties of a Christian is joy. That is a blessed religion which
among its precepts commands men to be happy. When joy becomes a duty,
who would wish to neglect it? Surely it must help every little plant to drink
in the sunlight when it is whispered among the flowers that Jesus is the
gardener. "Oh," you say, "I am such a little plant; I do not grow well; I do
not put forth so much leafage, nor are there so many flowers on me as on
many round about me!" It is quite right that you should think little of
yourself: perhaps to droop your head is a part of your beauty. Many
flowers had not been half so lovely if they had not practiced the art of
hanging their heads. But supposing him to be the gardener," then he is as
much a gardener to you as he is to the most lordly palm in the whole
domain.
In the Mentone garden right before me grew the orange and the aloe,
and others of the finer and more noticeable plants; but on a wall to
my left grew common wallflowers and saxifrages, and tiny herbs such as
we find on our own rocky places. Now, the gardener had cared for all of
these, little as well as great. In fact, there were hundreds of specimens of
the most insignificant growths all duly labeled and described. The smallest
saxifrage could say, "He is my gardener just as surely as he is the gardener
of the Gloire de Dijon or Marechal Neil." Oh feeble child of God, the Lord
takes care of you! Your heavenly Father feeds ravens, and guides the
flight of sparrows: should he not much more care for you, oh you of little
faith? Oh little plants, you will grow rightly enough. Perhaps you are
growing downward just now rather than upward. Remember that there are
plants of which we value the underground root much more than we do the
hull above ground. Perhaps it is not yours to grow very fast; you may be a
slow-growing shrub by nature, and you would not be healthy if you were
to grow quickly. Anyhow, be this your joy, you are in the garden of the
Lord, and, "supposing him to be the gardener," he will make the best of
you. You cannot be in better hands.
Another duty is that of valuing the Lord's presence, and praying for it. We
ought whenever the Sabbath morning dawns to pray our Well-beloved to
come into his garden and eat his pleasant fruits. What can we do without
him? All day long our cry should go up to him, "O Lord, behold and visit
this vine, and the vineyard which your right hand has planted." We ought
to agonize with him that he would come and manifest himself to us as he
does not unto the world. For what is a garden if the gardener never comes
near it? What is the difference between it and the wilderness if he to whom
it belongs never lifts up spade or pruning-hook upon it? So that it is our
necessity that we have Christ with us, "supposing him to be the gardener;"
and it is our bliss that we have Christ walking between our beds and
borders, watching every plant, training, tending, maturing all. "Supposing
him to be the gardener," it is well, for from him is our fruit found.
Separated from him we are nothing; only as he watches over us can we
bring forth fruit. Let us be done with confidence in man, let us forego all
attempts to supply facts of his spiritual presence by routine or rant,
ritualism or rowdyism; but let us pray our Lord to be ever present with us,
and by that presence to make our garden grow.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," there is another duty, and that is, let
each one of us yield himself up entirely to him. A plant does not know how
it ought to be treated; it knows not when it should be watered or when it
should be kept dry: a fruit-tree is no judge of when it needs to be pruned,
or dug, or fertilized. The wit and wisdom of the garden lies not in the
flowers and shrubs, but in the gardener. Now, then, if you and I are here
today with any self-will and carnal judgment about us, let us seek to lay it
all aside that we may be absolutely at our Lord's disposal. You might not
be willing to put yourself implicitly into the hand of any mere man (pity
that you should); but, surely, you plant of the Lord's right-hand planting,
you may put yourself without a question into his dear hand. "Supposing
him to be the gardener," you may well say, "I would neither have will,
nor wish, nor wit, nor whim, nor way, but I would be as nothing in the
gardener's hands, that he may be to me my wisdom and my all. Here, kind
gardener, your poor plant bows itself to your hand; train me as you will.
Depend upon it, happiness lives next door to the spirit of complete
acquiescence in the will of God, and it will be easy to exercise that perfect
acquiescence when we suppose the Lord Jesus to be the gardener. If the
Lord has done it; what has a saint to say? Oh you afflicted one, the Lord
has done it: would you have it otherwise? No, are you not thankful
that it is even so, because so is the will of him in whose hand your life is,
and whose are all your ways? The duty of submission is very plain,
"supposing him to be the gardener."
One more duty I would mention, though others suggest themselves.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," then let its bring forth fruit to him. I
do not address a people this morning who feel no care as to whether they
serve God or not. I believe that most of you do desire to glorify God; for
being saved by grace, you feel a holy ambition to show forth his praises
who has called you out of darkness into his marvellous light. You wish to
bring others to Christ, because you yourselves have been brought to life
and liberty in him. Now, let this be a stimulus to your fruit bearing, that
Jesus is the gardener. Where you have brought forth a single cluster, bring,
forth a hundred! "supposing him to be the gardener." If he is to have the
honor of it, then labor to do that which will give him great renown. If our
spiritual state were to be attributed to ourselves, or to our minister, or to
some of our fellow Christians, we might not feel that we were under a
great necessity to be fruitful. But if Jesus be the gardener, and is to bear
the blame or the honor of what we produce, then let us use up every drop
of sap and strain every fibre, that, to the utmost of which our manhood is
capable, we may produce a fair reward for our Lord's travail. Under such
tutorship and care we ought to become eminent scholars. Does Christ train
us? Oh let us never cause the world to think lowly of our Master.
Students feel that their alma mater deserves great things of them, so they
labor to make their university renowned. And so, since Jesus is tutor and
university to us, let us feel that we are bound to reflect credit upon so great
a teacher, upon so divine a name. I do not know how to put it, but surely
we ought to do something worthy of such a Lord. Each little flower in the
garden of the Lord should wear its brightest hues, and poor forth its rarest
perfume, because Jesus cares for it. The best of all possible good should be
yielded by every plant in our Father's garden, supposing Jesus to the
gardener. Thus much, then, on those two points -- a key to many wonders,
and a spur to many duties.
III. Thirdly, I have found in this supposition
A RELIEF FROM CRUSHING RESPONSIBILITY.
One has a work given him of God to do, and if he does it rightly he cannot do
it carelessly. The first thing when he wakes he asks, "How is the work prospering?"
and the last thought at night is, "What can I do to fulfill my calling?" Sometimes
the anxiety even troubles his dreams, and he sighs, "O Lord, send prosperity now!"
How is the garden prospering which we are set to tend? Are we broken-hearted
because, nothing appears to flourish? Is it a bad season? or is the soil lean and
hungry? It is a very blessed relief to an excess of care if we can fall into the
habit of "supposing him to be the gardener." If Jesus be the Master and Lord
in all things it is not mine to keep all the church in order.
I am not responsible for the growth of every Christian, nor for every backslider's
errors, nor for every professor's faults of life. This burden must not lie on me so
that I shall be crushed thereby. "Supposing him to be the gardener," then, the
church enjoys a better oversight than mine; better care is taken of the garden
than could be taken by the most vigilant watchers, even though by night the
frost devoured them, and by day the heat. "Supposing him to be the gardener,"
then all must go well in the long run. He that keeps Israel does neither slumber
nor sleep; we need not fret and despond. I beg you earnest workers, who are
becoming depressed, to think this out a little.
You see it is yours to work under the Lord Jesus; but it is not yours to take
the anxiety of his office into your souls as though you were to bear his
burdens. The undergardener, the work-man in the garden, needs not fret
about the whole garden as though it were all left to him. No, no; let him
not take too much upon himself. I beg you, bound your anxiety by the
facts of the case.
So you have a number of young people around you, and you are
watching for their souls as they that must give account. This is well;
but do not be worried and wearied; for, after all, the saving and the
keeping of those souls is not in your hands, but it rests with One far more
able than yourself. Just think that the Lord is the gardener. I know it is so
in matters of providence. A certain man of God in troublous times became
quite unable to do his duty because he laid to heart so much the ills of the
age; he became depressed and disturbed, and he went on board a vessel,
wanting to leave the country, which was getting into such a state that he
could no longer endure it. Then one said to him, Mr. Whitelock, are you
the manager of the world? No, he was not quite that. "Did not God get on
pretty well with it before you were born, and don't you think he will do
very well with it when you are dead?" That reflection helped to relieve the
good man's mind, and he went back to do his duty. I want you thus to
perceive the limit of your responsibility: you are not the gardener himself;
you are only one of the gardener's boys, set to run on errands, or to do a
bit of digging, or to sweep the paths. The garden is well enough managed
even though you are not head manager in it.
While this relieves us of anxiety, it makes labor for Christ very sweet,
because if the garden does not seem to repay us for our trouble we say to
ourselves, "It is not my garden after all. ‘Supposing him to be the
gardener,' I am quite willing to work on a barren piece of rock, or tie up an
old withered bough, or dig a worthless sod; for, if it only pleases Jesus, the
work is for that one sole reason profitable to the last degree. It is not mine
to question the wisdom of my task, but to set about it in the name of my
Master and Lord. ‘Supposing him to be the gardener,' lifts the ponderous
responsibility of it from me, and my work becomes pleasant and
delightful."
In dealing with the souls of men, we meet with cases which are extremely
difficult. Some people are so timid and fearful that you do not know how
to comfort them; others are so fast and presumptuous that you hardly
know how to help them. A few are so double-faced that you cannot
understand them, and others so fickle that you cannot hold them. Some
flowers puzzle the ordinary gardener: we meet with plants which are
covered with prickles, and when you try to train them they wound the hand
that would help them. These strange growths would make a great muddle
for you if you were the gardener; but "supposing him to be the gardener,"
you have the happiness of being able to go to him constantly, saying,
"Good Lord, I do not understand this singular creature; it is as odd a plant
as I am myself. Oh, that you would manage it, or tell me how. I have
come to tell you of it."
Constantly our trouble is that we have so many plants to look after that we
have not time to cultivate any one in the best manner, because we have
fifty more all needing attention at the time; and then before we are done
with the watering pot we have to fetch the hoe and the rake and the spade,
and we are puzzled with these multitudinous cares, even as Paul was when
he said, "That which comes upon me daily, the care of all the churches."
Ah, then, it is a blessed thing to do the little we can do and leave the rest to
Jesus, "supposing him to be the gardener."
In the church of God there is a discipline which we cannot exercise. I do
not think it is half so hard to exercise discipline as it is not to be able to
exercise it when yet you feel that it ought to be done. The servants of the
householder were perplexed when they might not root up the tares. "Did
you not sow good seed in your field? From whence then has it tares?" "An
enemy has done this." "Will you then that we go and gather them up?"
"Not so," said he, "lest you root, up the wheat with them." This afflicts the
Christian minister when he must not remove a pestilent, hindering weed.
Yes, but "supposing him to be the gardener," and it is his will to let that
weed remain, what have you and I to do but to hold our peace? He has a
discipline more sure and safe than ours, and in due time the tares shall
know it. In patience let us possess our souls. And then, again, there is that
succession in the garden which we can not keep up. Plants will die down,
and others must be put into their places or the garden will grow bare, but
we know not where to find these fresh flowers. We say, "When yonder
good man dies who will succeed him?" That is a question I have heard
many a time, until I am rather weary of it. Who is to follow such a man?
Let us wait until he is gone and needs following. Why sell the man's coat
when he can wear it himself? We are apt to think when this race of good
brethren hall die, that none will arise worthy to unloose the latchets of
their shoes. Well, friend, I could suppose a great many things, but this
morning my text is, "Supposing him to be the gardener," and on that
supposition I expect that the Lord has other plants in reserve which you
have not yet seen, and these will exactly fit into our places when they
become empty, and the Lord will keep up the true apostolical succession
until the day or his second advent. In every time of darkness and dismay,
when the heart sinks and the spirits decline, and we think it is all over with
the church of God, let us fall back on this, "Supposing him to be the gardener,"
and expect to see greater and better things than these. We are at the end
of our wits, but he is not at the beginning of his yet: we are nonplussed,
but he never will be; therefore let us wait and be tranquil, "supposing him
to be the gardener."
IV. Fourthly, I want you to notice that this supposition will give you
A DELIVERANCE FROM MANY GLOOMY FEARS.
I walked down the garden, and I saw a place where all the path was strewn
with leaves and broken branches, and stones, and I saw the earth upon the
flower beds, tossed about, and roots lying quite out of the ground: all was in
disorder. Had a dog been amusing himself? or had a mischievous child been at
work? If so, it was a great pity. But no: in a minute or two I saw the gardener
come back, and I perceived that he had been making all this disarrangement.
He had been cutting, and digging, and hacking, and mess-making; and all for
the good of the garden. It may be it has happened to some of you that you
have been a good deal clipped lately, and in your domestic affairs things have
not been in so fair a state as you could have wished: it may be in the Church
we have seen ill weeds plucked up, and barren branches lopped, so that
everything is in shambles. Well, if the Lord has done it out, gloomy fears are
idle. "Supposing him to he the gardener," all is well.
As I was talking this over with my friend, I said to him -- "Supposing him
to be the gardener," then the serpent will have a bad time of it. Supposing
Adam to be the gardener, then the serpent gets in and has a chat with his
wife, and mischief comes of it. But supposing Jesus to be the gardener,
woe to you, serpent: there is a blow for your head within half a minute if
you do but show yourself within the boundary. So, if we are afraid that the
devil should get in among us let us always in prayer entreat that there may
be no space for the devil, because the Lord Jesus Christ fills all, and keeps
out the adversary. Other creatures besides serpents intrude into gardens;
caterpillars and palmerworms, and all sorts of destroying creatures are apt
to devour our churches. How can we keep them out? The highest wall
cannot exclude them: there is no protection except one, and that is,
"supposing him to be the gardener." Thus it is written, "I will rebuke the
devourer for your sakes, and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground;
neither shall your vine cast her fruit before the time in the field, says the
Lord of hosts."
I am sometimes troubled by the question, 'What if roots of bitterness should
spring up among us to trouble us?' We are all such fallible creatures, supposing
some brother should permit the seed of discord to grow in his bosom, then
there may be a sister in whose heart the seeds will also spring up, and from
her they will fly to another sister, and be blown about until brethren and
sisters are all bearing wormwood in their hearts.
Who is to prevent this? Only the Lord Jesus by his Spirit. He can keep out
this evil, "supposing him to the gardener." The root which bears
wormwood will grow but little where Jesus is. Dwell with us, Lord, as a
church and people: by your Holy Spirit reside with us and in us, and never
depart from us, and then no root of bitterness shall spring up to trouble us.
Then comes another fear. Suppose the living waters of God's Spirit should
not come to water the garden, what then? We cannot, make them flow, for
the Spirit is sovereign, and he flows where he pleases. Ah, but the Spirit
of God will be in our garden, "supposing our Lord to be the gardener."
There is no fear of our not being watered when Jesus undertakes to do it.
"He will pour water on him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry
ground."
But what if the sunlight of his love should not shine on the garden?
If the fruits should never ripen, if there should be no peace, no joy
in the Lord? That cannot happen "supposing him to be the gardener;" for
his face is the sun, and his countenance scatters those health-giving beams,
and nurturing warmths, and perfecting influences which are needful for
maturing the saints in all the sweetness of grace, to the glory of God. So,
"supposing him to be the gardener" at this the close of the year, I fling
away my doubts and fears, and invite you who bear the church upon your
heart to do the same. It is all well with Christ's cause because it is in his
own hands. He shall not fail nor be discouraged. The pleasure of the Lord
shall prosper in his hands.
V. Fifthly, here is A WARNING FOR THE CARELESS, "supposing him to be the
gardener." In this great congregation many are to the church what weeds
are to a garden. They are not planted by God; they are not growing under
his nurture, they are bringing forth no fruit to his glory. My dear friend, I
have tried often to get at you, to impress you, but I cannot. Take heed;
for one of these days, "supposing him to be the gardener," he will reach you,
and you shall know what that word means, "Every plant which my heavenly
Father has, not planted shall be rooted up." Take heed to yourselves, I pray.
Others among us are like the branches of the vine which bear no fruit. We
have often spoken very sharply to these, speaking honest truth in
unmistakable language, and yet we have not touched their consciences.
Ah, but "supposing him to be the gardener," he will fulfill that sentence:
"Every branch in me that bears not fruit he takes away." He will get at you,
if we cannot. Would God, before this old year were quite dead, you would
turn unto the Lord with full purpose of heart; so that instead of being a
weed you might become a choice flower; that instead of a dry stick, you
might be a sappy, fruit bearing, branch of the vine. The Lord make it to be
so; but if any here need the caution, I beg them to take it to heart at once.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," there will be no escaping from his
eye. There will be no deliverance from his hand. As "he will thoroughly
purge his floor, and burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire," so he will
thoroughly cleanse his garden and cast out every worthless thing.
VI. Another set of thoughts may well arise as
A QUIETUS TO THOSE WHO COMPLAIN.
"Supposing him to be the gardener." Certain of us have been
made to suffer much physical pain, which often bites into the spirits, and
makes the heart to stoop. Others have suffered heavy temporal losses,
having had no success in business, but, on the contrary, having had to
endure privation, perhaps even to poverty. Are you ready to complain
against the Lord for all this? I beg you, do not so. Take the supposition of
the text into your mind this morning. The Lord has been pruning you
sharply, cutting off your best boughs, and you seem to be like a thing
despised that is constantly tormented with the knife. Yes, but "supposing
him to be the gardener," suppose that your loving Lord has wrought it all,
that from his own hand all your grief has come, every cut, and every gash,
and every slip: does not this alter the case? Has not the Lord done it?
Well, then, if it be so, put your finger to your lip and be quiet, until you are
able from your heart to say, "The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away,
blessed be the name of the Lord." I am persuaded that the Lord has
done nothing amiss to any one of his people; that no child of his can rightly
complain that he has been whipped with too much severity; and that no
one branch of the vine can truthfully declare that it has been pruned with
too sharp an edge. No; what the Lord has done is the best that could have
been done, the very thing that you and I, if we could have possessed infinite
wisdom and love, would have wished to have done! Therefore let us stop
each thought of murmuring, and say, "The Lord has done it," and be glad.
Especially I speak to those who have suffered bereavement. I can hardly
express to you how strange I feel at this moment when my sermon revives
a memory so sweet dashed with such exceeding bitterness. I sat with my
friend and secretary in that garden some fifteen days ago, and we were
then in perfect health, rejoicing in the goodness of the Lord. We returned
home, and within five days I was smitten with disabling pain; and worse,
far worse than that, he was called upon to lose his wife. We said to one
another as we sat there reading the word of God and meditating, "How
happy we are! Dare we think of being so happy? Must it not speedily end?"
I little thought I should have to say for him, "Alas, my brother, you are
brought very low, for the delight of your eyes is taken from you." But
here is our comfort: the Lord has done it! The best rose in the garden is
gone! Who has taken it? The gardener came this way and gathered it. He
planted it and watched over it, and now he has taken it. Is not this most
natural? Does anybody weep because of that? No; everybody knows that it
is right, and according to the order of nature that he should come and
gather the best in the garden. If you are sorely troubled by the loss of your
beloved, yet dry your grief by supposing him to be the gardener." Kiss the
hand that has wrought you such grief? Brethren beloved, remember the
next time the Lord comes to your part of the garden, and he may do so
within the next week, he will only gather his own flowers, and would you
prevent his doing so even if you could?
VII. "Supposing him to be the gardener," then there is
AN OUTLOOK FOR THE HOPEFUL.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," then I expect to see in the garden
where he works the best possible prosperity. I expect to see no
flower dried up, no tree without fruit. I expect to see the richest, rarest
fruit, with the daintiest bloom upon it, daily presented to the great Owner
of the garden. Let us expect that in this church, and pray for it. oh, if we
have but faith we shall see great things. It is our unbelief that straitens
God. Let us believe great things from the work of Christ by his Spirit in
the midst of his people's hearts, and we shall not be disappointed.
"Supposing him to be the gardener," then, dear friends, we may expect
divine communion of unspeakable preciousness. Go back to Eden for a
minute. When Adam was the gardener, what happened? The Lord God
walked in the garden in the cool of the day. But "supposing him to be the
gardener," then we shall have the Lord God dwelling among us, and
revealing himself in all the glory of his power, and the plenitude or his
Fatherly heart; making us to know him, that we may be filled with all the
fullness of God. What joy is this!
One other thought. "Supposing him to be the gardener," and God to come
and walk among the trees of the garden, then I expect he will remove the
whole of the garden upward with himself to fairer skies; for he arose, and
his people must rise with him. I expect a blessed transplantation of all
these flowers below, to a clearer atmosphere above, away from all this
smoke and fog and damp, up where the sun is never clouded, where
flowers never wither, where fruits never decay! Oh, the glory we shall
then enjoy up yonder, on the hills of spices in the garden of God.
"Supposing him to be the gardener" what a garden will he form above,
and how shall you and I grow therein, developing beyond imagination."
It does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he
shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Since he
is the author and finisher or our faith, to what perfection will he conduct
us, and to what glory will he bring us! Oh, to be found in him! God grant
we may be! To be plants in his garden, "Supposing him to be the gardener,"
is all the heaven we can desire!