From The Millennial Harbinger, Vol. 3, No. 1, 1844 (as republished in Alexander Campbell: A Collection, Volume 2)
This morning being Christmas, and, as the Roman superstition would have it, the nativity of manâs Redeemer; assuming it as true, my thoughts naturally lead me to Bethlehem, Calvary, and the sepulchre of Joseph. And what mysterious, sublime, and animating associations cluster around those three places! How near the point of distance! Eight short miles measured the whole space from the manger to the cross! And how short the interval of time between the first birth from Mary, and the second birth from Josephâs tomb, of Arimathea! Not quite the half of three-score-years-and-ten completes the labors and the life of Heavenâs and Earthâs First Born! And yet what scenes and transactions crowd this narrow space of earth, and this short interval of time!
Other children, earthâs noblest sons, her proudest benefactors, were born to shed a few scattering rays of science over the benighted mind of man; or to wipe a few tears of sorrow or of anguish from the cheek of human woe; or to rescue man from some heartless tyrant that doomed his victims to abject slavery; or to confer some transient honor on some little circle of kindred friends and favorites. But this blest child of a thousand hopes and promisesâthis wonderful offspring of Divinity and humanityâthis Son of God and Son of Man, was born to be a light of all nations, and of all agesâto scatter night away from all eyes within the realms of mercyâto break forever its dark sceptre and annihilate its power over all his friends and brethrenâto dry up the tears of a weeping world by washing away its sins and sorrows in a fountain filled with his own bloodâto deliver man from that fiercest of all tyrants, Death; and to bestow honors on a ransomed race, bright as the throne of God and lasting as the ages of eternity.
And how was all this accomplished! Born in a stableâcircumcised the eighth dayâdedicated on the fortieth, at Jerusalem, in the Templeâpersecuted into Egyptânursed in the land of Hamâbrought back to Bethlehemâremoved to Nazareth, where he lived subject to his parents till he completed his thirtieth year, living so obscurely, too, as not to be mentioned but once after his return till about the time of his immersion; and at that time he is found in the Temple amongst the teachers, listening to their discourses and propounding to them questions.
After his baptism, commenced his public life. And what a period was that between his two baptisms! Did ever so many deeds of renown, so many demonstrations of divine eloquence, majesty, and power, cluster together in such a bright interval around the person of any son of woman! What temptations and triumphs! What miracles of mercy! What words of grace! What acts of condescension fill up the moments of this brightest epoch of Timeâs career! A busier or more active life was never spent. âHe went about continually doing good.â What multitudes were instructed, healed, relieved, fed, feasted! How many discourses, both public and privateâhow many questions answeredâhow many parables spokenâhow many controversies and debates decidedâhow many triumphs gainedâand with what travails, privations, fatigues, exhaustion, fasting, praying, and personal consecration! If all that he did and all that he said had been fully written, the world could neither read nor remember it.
But yet the two greatest victories were not won during his life. He had, indeed, foiled and vanquished Satan. But Death still reigned over all, and the Grave devoured all. The former he killed by dying, and the latter he vanquished by rising out of it and carrying with him its gates and bars up the hill of God.
âTis here that immortality lifts its matin*[1] ray over a slumbering world. âTis here, a second time, that light is the offspring of darkness, and from the sorrows of death spring up eternal joys. What a plot! The Prince of Life submits to be killed, that he might destroy him that had the power of death! He is carried into Deathâs strong prison, which, till that moment, held secure all that ever entered it. But it was not possible that the Prince of Life could be long held under its sway. Like Samsom with extinguished eyes, he stretched forth his hands to seize the pillars, that he might once more try his strength. The third morning came, and with it his almighty power. It was the operation of God. What a victory! The light of the upper world entered the graveâthe shrouds of death were lifted upâand a bright ray gleamed through all the charnel-house. But the dead knew it not. It was consolation to all the living saints. It healed the wounds and dried up the sorrows of six thousand years. It promised a bright day of immortality to all the saints. Its shout of victory was heard by the ear of faith. It echoed through all the regions of the deadâGrave, where now thy victory!
The whole earth is sown with men. Sea and land make but one extended burying ground. What treasures lie hidden in the dust! Diamonds of the richest ray are but ashes compared with the remains of saints incorporated with the soil. What trophies has Death gained in six thousand years! But he will soon be divested of them all. The grave will be left without a tenant before many centuries shall have run their rounds.
But the most pleasing reflection of all is, that all that sleep in Jesus are to be awakened by the noise of his coming. He has many reasons to hasten his return. The earth is yet the receptacle of the bodies of his friends. Its precious mines of precious metals, its richest minerals of every species, with all its varied tenantsâits living beauties, vegetable and animal, when summed up fall infinitely short of equaling, in his eyes, the ashes of a Noah, a Daniel, or a Job.
We have many strong pledges of our Saviorâs return to this planet, but none that strikes more forcibly so many feelings of our nature than that the earth retains so many of our Lordâs dear kindred, whose ashes are still mingled with its soil. We have not only Davidâs sepulchre still with us, but those of the grandees*[2] Abel, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Samuel, Daniel, Jobâall the Prophetsâall the Apostlesâall the Saints and all the Martyrs. They are yet with us; and precious is their dust in the eyes of our kinsman Redeemer. Come he willâcome he must.
How far my musings have led me from my first design! But now when I think of retracing my steps, the cockâs shrill clarion admonishes me that the hour of worship is near; and here I must lay down my pen for the present.
A. Campbell
[1] The first light of the morning.âEditor.
[2] Men of high importanceâEditor.