[Table of Contents] [Previous] [Next] |
Philip Mauro Life in the Word (1918) |
III.
PERENNIAL FRESHNESS.
HE Bible differs radically from all other books
in its perpetual freshness. This characteristic
will be recognised only by those who know the
Book in that intimate way which comes from living
with it, as with a member of one's family. I mention
it first because it was one of the first unique
properties of the Bible which impressed me after
I began to read it as a believer in CHRIST. It is a
very remarkable fact that the Bible never becomes
exhausted, never acquires sameness, never diminishes
in its power of responsiveness to the quickened
soul who comes to it. The most familiar
passages yield as much (if not more) refreshment
at the thousandth perusal, as at the first. It is
indeed as a fountain of living water. The fountain
is the same, but the water is always fresh, and
always refreshing. We can compare this to nothing
but what we find in a living companion, whom
we love and to whom we go for help and fellowship.
The person is always the same, and yet without
sameness. New conditions evoke new responses;
and so it is with the Bible. As a living Book it
adapts itself to the new phases of our experience,
and the new conditions in which we find ourselves. [27]
From the most familiar passage there comes again
and again a new message; just as our most familiar
friend or companion will have something new to
say, as new situations require it.
This is true of no other book. What man's book has to say we can get the first time; and the exceptions arise merely from lack of clearness on the writer's part, or lack of apprehension on the part of the reader. Man can touch only the surface of things, and he cares only about surface appearances. So, in all his writings, whatever substance they contain lies on the surface, and can be gathered by a capable reader at once. If the Word of GOD may be compared in this particular to a living person, the books of men may be compared to pictures or statues of living persons. However beautifully or artistically executed, a single view may readily exhaust the latter, and a second and third look will be mere repetitions. The difference is that which exists between the living and the dead. The Word of GOD is living.
But while the Bible resembles, in this important respect, a living person, who is our familiar, sympathetic, and responsive companion, it differs from such a human companion in that the counsel, comfort, and support it furnishes are far above and beyond what any human being can supply; and the only explanation of this is that the source of its life and powers is not human, but Divine. [28]
[LIWE 27-28]
[Table of Contents] [Previous] [Next] |
Philip Mauro Life in the Word (1918) |