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The First Christmas Carol
by Charles H. Spurgeon
"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men."—Luke
2:14.
It is superstitous to worship
angels; it is but proper to love them. Although it would be a high sin,
and an act of misdemeanor against the Sovereign
Court
of Heaven to pay the slightest adoration to the mightiest angel, yet it would
be unkind and unseemly, if we did not give to holy angels a place in our heart's
warmest love. In fact, he that contemplates the character of angels, and marks
their many deeds of sympathy with men, and kindness towards them, cannot resist
the impulse of his nature—the impulse of love towards them.
The one incident
in angelic history, to which our text refers, is enough to weld our hearts
to them for ever.
How free from envy the angels
were! Christ did not come from heaven to save their compeers when they
fell. When Satan, the mighty angel,
dragged with him a third part of the stars of heaven, Christ did not stoop
from his throne to die for them; but he left them to be reserved in chains
and darkness until the last great day. Yet angels did not envy men. Though
they remembered that he took not up angels, yet they did not murmur when he
took up the seed of Abraham; and though the blessed Master had never condescended
to take the angel's form, they did not think it beneath them to express their
joy when they found him arrayed in the body of an infant.
How free, too, they
were from pride! They were not ashamed to come and tell the news to humble
shepherds. Methinks they had as much joy in pouring out their songs that
night before the shepherds, who were watching with their flocks, as they
would have
had if they had been commanded by their Master to sing their hymn in the
halls of Caesar. Mere men—men possessed with pride, think it a fine thing to
preach before kings and princes; and think it great condescension now and then
to have to minister to the humble crowd.
Not so the angels. They
stretched their willing wings, and gladly sped from their bright seats
above, to tell
the shepherds on the plain by night, the marvelous story of an Incarnate
God. And mark how well they told the story, and surely you will love them!
Not with
the stammering tongue of him that tells a tale in which he hath no interest;
nor even with the feigned interest of a man that would move the passions
of others, when he feeleth no emotion himself; but with joy and gladness,
such
as angels only can know. They sang the story out, for they could not stay
to tell it in heavy prose. They sang, "Glory to God on high, and on earth
peace, good will towards men." Methinks they sang it with gladness in
their eyes; with their hearts burning with love, and with breasts as full of
joy as if the good news to man had been good news to themselves. And, verily,
it was good news to them, for the heart of sympathy makes good news to others,
good news to itself.
Do you not love the angels?
Ye will not bow before them, and there ye are right; but will ye not love
them? Doth it not make one part
of your anticipation of heaven, that in heaven you shall dwell with the
holy angels, as well as with the spirits of the just made perfect? Oh,
how sweet
to think that these holy and lovely beings are our guardians every hour!
They keep watch and ward about us, both in the burning noon-tide, and in
the darkness
of the night. They keep us in all our ways; they bear us up in their hands,
lest at any time we dash our feet against stones. They unceasingly minister
unto us who are the heirs of salvation; both by day and night they are
our watchers and our guardians, for know ye not, that "the angel of the Lord
encampeth round about them that fear him."
This is an excerpt from a sermon delivered on December 20,
1857, by the Rev. C. H. Spurgeon at the Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
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