The Works of George MacDonald

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The Displeasure of Jesus

It is a serious thought that the disobedience of the men he had set free from blindness and leprosy should hamper him in his work for his father. But his best friends did the same. That he should be crucified was a horror to them; they would have made him a king, and ruined his father’s work. He preferred the cruelty of his enemies to the kindness of his friends. The former with evil intent wrought his father’s will; the latter with good intent would have frustrated it. Let us know that the poverty of our idea of Jesus—how much more our disobedience to him!—thwarts his progress to victory, delays the coming of the kingdom of heaven. Many a man valiant for Christ, but not understanding him, and laying on himself and his fellows burdens against nature, has therein done would-be service for which Christ will give him little thanks, which indeed may now be moving his holy anger. Where we do that we ought not, and could have helped it, be moved to anger against us, O Christ! Do not treat us as if we were not worth being displeased with; let not our faults pass as if they were of no weight. Be angry with us, holy brother, when we are to blame; where we do not understand, have patience with us, open our eyes, and give us strength to obey, until at length we are the children of the Father  even as thou. For though thou art lord and master and savior of them that are growing, thou art perfect lord only of the true and the free, who live in the light and are divinely glad. Make us able to be angry and not sin; to be angry nor seek revenge the smallest; to be angry and full of forgiveness. We will not be content till our very anger is love.