The Prize of Life, and its Pursuit
Isaiah 54:13
And all your children shall be taught of the LORD; and great shall be the peace of your children.


All thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children. We gather from this text -

I. THE TRUE PRIZE OF LIFE. What is that thing which is most worth having, most worth the thought of our minds, the strenuous striving of our soul, the labour of our hands? Nations, communities, individual men, have given different replies. One has said case, another wealth, another pleasure, another power, another glory. The inspired Hebrew said peace. The blessing he invoked on those he loved, and that which he lauded in speech and song, was peace. And he was right. Peace is the indispensable, the immeasurably precious thing.

1. It is a profound blessing. It goes down to the depth of our compound nature; it is the excellent result of complete rightness - rightness of heart with God, rightness of life with man.

2. It is a lasting thing. Other prizes may be snatched away by untoward circumstances, or their worth dims and lessens with the passing years, or even (with some of them) with the fleeting days. But this abides; prosperity does not injure it, adversity does not remove it, age does not diminish its excellency.

3. It is the condition of holy usefulness. We can serve our race in higher and greater things without the other prizes of life, but not without this. Not until our hearts have found rest in God's truth and in himself can we be and say and do that which will guide the feet of our fellow-men into and along the paths of righteousness and wisdom.

II. THE ONE WAY OF WINNING IT. The children of Zion would have great peace, inasmuch as they would be "taught of the Lord." Nothing else will give to the human heart the peace which it craves.

1. Comfortable circumstances will not ensure it. These circumstances cannot be generally commanded, and, if they could, there would still be a craving of the soul which no comforts or successes of any earthly kind would satisfy.

2. Philosophy is not equal to the task. Stoicism tried its hand, and with some of its disciples there was the appearance of success; but it has no power to minister to the necessities of the multitudes of mankind, to the ordinary human heart, to men and women as we meet and know them every day. To the common, questioning, thirsting human heart it is a fountain without water, a name without the power behind it.

3. A Divine Saviour alone can supply the need. He only who brings everlasting truth to our mind, the sympathy and love of an unfailing friendship to the heart, spiritual excellence to the soul, meaning and worth to human life, a hope bright with immortal glory to the closing hour, - he only is entitled to say, "Come unto me... I will give you rest." "My peace I give unto you." Great peace - peace that passeth understanding, and that outliveth mortal life, have they who learn of him and take his yoke upon them. - C.



Parallel Verses
KJV: And all thy children shall be taught of the LORD; and great shall be the peace of thy children.

WEB: All your children shall be taught of Yahweh; and great shall be the peace of your children.




The Holy Spirit in Relation to the Bible
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