Chapter 9
The Pearl
[This chapter is based on
the following verses:
Matt. 13:45, 46]
THE blessings of redeeming love our Savior
compared to a precious pearl. He illustrated His lesson by the parable of the merchantman
seeking goodly pearls "who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold
all that he had, and bought it." Christ Himself is the pearl of great price. In Him
is gathered all the glory of the Father, the fullness of the Godhead. He is the brightness
of the Father's glory and the express image of His person. The glory of the attributes of
God is expressed in His character. Every page of the Holy Scriptures shines with His
light. The righteousness of Christ, as a pure, white pearl, has no defect, no stain. No
work of man can improve the great and precious gift of God. It is without a flaw. In
Christ are "hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge." COL. 2:3. He is
"made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption." 1
Cor. 1:30. All that can satisfy the needs and longings of the human soul, for this world
and for the world to come, is found in Christ. Our Redeemer is the pearl so precious that
in comparison all things else may be accounted loss.
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Christ "came unto His
own, and His own received Him not." John 1:11. The light of God shone into the
darkness of the world, and "the darkness comprehended it not." John 1:5. But not
all were found indifferent to the gift of heaven. The merchantman in the parable
represents a class who were sincerely desiring truth. In different nations there were
earnest and thoughtful men who had sought in literature and science and the religions of
the heathen world for that which they could receive as the soul's treasure. Among the Jews
there were those who were seeking for that which they had not. Dissatisfied with a formal
religion, they longed for that which was spiritual and uplifting. Christ's chosen
disciples belonged to the latter class, Cornelius and the Ethiopian eunuch to the former.
They had been longing and praying for light from heaven; and when Christ was revealed to
them, they received Him with gladness.
In the parable the pearl is
not represented as a gift. The merchantman bought it at the price of all that he had. Many
question the meaning of this, since Christ is represented in the Scriptures as a gift. He
is a gift, but only to those who give themselves, soul, body, and spirit, to Him without
reserve. We are to give ourselves to Christ, to live a life of willing obedience to all
His requirements. All that we are, all the talents and capabilities we possess, are the
Lord's, to be consecrated to His service. When we thus give ourselves wholly to Him,
Christ, with all the treasures of heaven, gives Himself to us. We obtain the pearl of
great price.
Salvation is a free gift, and
yet it is to be bought and sold. In the market of which divine mercy has the management,
the precious pearl is represented as being bought without money and without price. In this
market all may
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obtain the goods of heaven. The treasury of the jewels of truth is open to
all. "Behold, I have set before thee an open door," the Lord declares, "and
no man can shut it." No sword guards the way through this door. Voices from within
and at the door say, Come. The Saviour's voice earnestly and lovingly invites us: "I
counsel thee to buy of Me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich." Rev.
3:8, 18.
The gospel of Christ is a
blessing that all may possess. The poorest are as well able as the richest to purchase
salvation; for no amount of worldly wealth can secure it. It is obtained by willing
obedience, by giving ourselves to Christ as His own purchased possession. Education, even
of the highest class, cannot of itself bring a man nearer to God. The Pharisees were
favored with every temporal and every spiritual advantage, and they said with boastful
pride, We are "rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing"; yet
they were "wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked." Rev. 3:17.
Christ offered them the pearl of great price; but they disdained to accept it, and He said
to them, "The publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of God before you."
Matt. 21:31.
We cannot earn salvation, but
we are to seek for it with as much interest and perseverance as though we would abandon
everything in the world for it.
We are to seek for the pearl
of great price, but not in worldly marts or in worldly ways. The price we are required to
pay is not gold or silver, for this belongs to God. Abandon the idea that temporal or
spiritual advantages will win for you salvation. God calls for your willing obedience. He
asks you to give up your sins. "To him that overcometh," Christ declares,
"will I grant to sit with Me in My throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down
with My Father in His throne." Rev. 3:21.
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There are some who seem to be
always seeking for the heavenly pearl. But they do not make an entire surrender of their
wrong habits. They do not die to self that Christ may live in them. Therefore they do not
find the precious pearl. They have not overcome unholy ambition and their love for worldly
attractions. They do not take up the cross and follow Christ in the path of self-denial
and sacrifice. Almost Christians, yet not fully Christians, they seem near the kingdom of
heaven, but they cannot enter there. Almost but not wholly saved, means to be not almost
but wholly lost.
The parable of the
merchantman seeking goodly pearls has a double significance: it applies not only to men as
seeking the kingdom of heaven, but to Christ as seeking His lost inheritance. Christ, the
heavenly merchantman seeking goodly pearls, saw in lost humanity the pearl of price. In
man, defiled and ruined by sin, He saw the possibilities of redemption. Hearts that have
been the battleground of the conflict with Satan, and that have been rescued by the power
of love, are more precious to the Redeemer than are those who have never fallen. God
looked upon humanity, not as vile and worthless; He looked upon it in Christ, saw it as it
might become through redeeming love. He collected all the riches of the universe, and laid
them down in order to buy the pearl. And Jesus, having found it, resets it in His own
diadem. "For they shall be as the stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign upon His
land." Zech. 9:16. "They shall be Mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day
when I make up My jewels." Mal. 3:17.
But Christ as the precious
pearl, and our privilege of possessing this heavenly treasure, is the theme on which we
most need to dwell. It is the Holy Spirit that reveals to men the preciousness of the
goodly pearl. The time of the
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Holy Spirit's power is the time when in a special sense the
heavenly gift is sought and found. In Christ's day many heard the gospel, but their minds
were darkened by false teaching, and they did not recognize in the humble
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Teacher of
Galilee the Sent of God. But after Christ's ascension His enthronement in His mediatorial
kingdom was signalized by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. On the day of Pentecost the
Spirit was given. Christ's witnesses proclaimed the power of the risen Saviour. The light
of heaven penetrated the darkened minds of those who had been deceived by the enemies of
Christ. They now saw Him exalted to be "a Prince and a Saviour, for to give
repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins." Acts 5:31. They saw Him encircled
with the glory of heaven, with infinite treasures in His hands to bestow upon all who
would turn from their rebellion. As the apostles set forth the glory of the Only-Begotten
of the Father, three thousand souls were convicted. They were made to see themselves as
they were, sinful and polluted, and Christ as their friend and Redeemer. Christ was lifted
up, Christ was glorified, through the power of the Holy Spirit resting upon men. By faith
these believers saw Him as the One who had borne humiliation, suffering, and death that
they might not perish but have everlasting life. The revelation of Christ by the Spirit
brought to them a realizing sense of His power and majesty, and they stretched forth their
hands to Him by faith, saying, "I believe."
Then the glad tidings of a
risen Saviour were carried to the uttermost bounds of the inhabited world. The church
beheld converts flocking to her from all directions. Believers were reconverted. Sinners
united with Christians in seeking the pearl of great price. The prophecy was fulfilled,
The weak shall be "as David," and the house of David "as the angel of the
Lord." Zech. 12:8. Every Christian saw in his brother the divine similitude of
benevolence and love. One interest prevailed. One object swallowed up all others. All
hearts beat in harmony. The only ambition of the believers was to reveal the likeness
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of
Christ's character, and to labor for the enlargement of His kingdom. "The multitude
of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul. . . . With great power gave the
apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus; and great grace was upon them
all." Acts 4:32, 33. "And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be
saved." Acts 2:47. The Spirit of Christ animated the whole congregation; for they had
found the pearl of great price.
These scenes are to be
repeated, and with greater power. The outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the day of
Pentecost was the former rain, but the latter rain will be more abundant. The Spirit
awaits our demand and reception. Christ is again to be revealed in His fulness by the Holy
Spirit's power. Men will discern the value of the precious pearl, and with the apostle
Paul they will say, "What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ.
Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus my Lord." Phil. 3:7, 8.
Preparing For Eternity
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