MY 28
Back to A Devotional Commentary on the Gospels
May 28
Mark 9:43 to end.   Christ warns his disciples against the unquenchable fire, and  never-dying worm. 
  The Lord ended his private conversation  with his own disciples in this dreadful manner. He knew that ambition was not  cast out of their hearts. It was ambition that led them to dispute who should be the  greatest, and that caused them to forbid the man who followed them not. They  were full of self-importance, and of worldly desires. Though they did possess  some living faith and some sincere love; yet how weak was that faith, how cold  was that love!
  Their Master knew that if they  continued to cherish a worldly and proud spirit, they could not obtain a place  in his kingdom; therefore he earnestly warned them to mortify the sinful  desires of their hearts. He compared those desires to hands, feet, and eyes;  because it is as painful for a person to mortify a darling passion of the  heart, as to cut off a precious limb from the body.
  Are there any desires in our hearts  that must be subdued in order that we may escape eternal fire? Though we may  have tasted of God's grace, yet we may need these warnings. Do we desire to be  much praised, and highly thought of? Do we desire to rise to a higher station  than that we now fill? Do we impatiently desire to possess some earthly good  which God has seen fit to withhold? Are our affections engrossed by some  creature, so that we are more anxious to please that creature than to please  God? 
  Let us carefully examine our own  hearts, and then implore God to give us strength to strive against these  earthly passions. We need not (as Papists often do) reject the gifts of God, because we are prone to abuse them. We need not dress in sackcloth, live upon the  coarsest fare, or withdraw from human society, in order to become humble. The  evil lies not in the objects that  surround us, but in our own hearts. The  struggle against sin will be severe and painful, but the danger is so terrific  that every effort should be made. An unquenchable fire, an undying worm, must  be the eternal portion of those who continue wilfully to harbour sinful passions in their  hearts. Had the disciples persisted in their sins, they would have perished.  One of them did persist in sin; he still indulged in the love of money, and he  perished. He was the son of perdition.
  Our Saviour, in concluding his  admonition, uttered these remarkable words—"Everyone shall be salted with  salt." What did these words mean? The sacrifices, offered in the temple,  were salted with salt. (Lev. 2:13.) Thus the condemned in hell will be kept  from being consumed, even as things are preserved from corruption by salt.  God's wrath will  be as salt, to  render them capable of enduring eternal sufferings. But God's grace is also like salt—it preserves the soul; therefore Jesus said, "Have salt in yourselves." It  was grace the apostles needed to keep them from destruction.
  Then our Saviour concluded with these  words—"Have peace one with another." No longer dispute which shall be  the greatest, but love and serve each other. If we have the salt of grace in our hearts, we shall have the fruit of peace in our lives. "Only by pride comes  contention." (Prov. 13:10.) Let us crucify at the cross of our dying Lord  all those evil passions that disturb our peace now, and which would, if  cherished, destroy our souls.

