The Gospel of the Pentateuch by Charles Kingsley
page 111 of 186 (59%)
page 111 of 186 (59%)
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But if so, what does this first lesson--the chapter of Exodus from
which my text is taken--what does it teach us concerning God? Does it teach us that his name is love? At first sight you would think that it did not. At first sight you would fancy that it spoke of God in quite a different tone from the second lesson. In the second lesson, the words of Jesus the Son of God are all gentleness, patience, tenderness. A quiet sadness hangs over them all. They are the words of one who is come (as he said himself), not to destroy men's lives, but to save them; not to punish sins, but to wash them away by his own most precious blood. But in the first lesson how differently he seems to speak. His words there are the words of a stern and awful judge, who can, and who will destroy whatsoever interferes with his will and his purpose. 'I will at this time send all my plagues upon thine heart, and on thy servants, and all thy people, that thou mayest know that there is none like me in all the earth.' The cattle and sheep shall be destroyed with murrain; man and beast shall be tormented with boils and blains; the crops shall be smitten with hail; the locusts shall eat up every green thing in the land; and at last all the first-born of Egypt shall die in one night, and the land be filled with mourning, horror, and desolation, before the anger of this terrible God, who will destroy and destroy till he makes himself obeyed. Can this be he who rode into Jerusalem, as on this day, meek and |
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