All Saints' Day a Witness of Grace
Revelation 7:13-14
And one of the elders answered, saying to me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes? and from where came they?…


Putting aside those festivals in the Church's year which speak to us of the life and death of our Blessed Lord, there is no festival so sublime as that which we keep to-day. We commemorate to-day, not the life of any one servant of God, but the life and example of all; of those whose very names we know not, save that we know that they are written in the Book of Life. There is a threefold lesson which speaks to all of us through this festival.

1. The lesson of faith. Especially is this a festival which tells of faith, inasmuch as, above all others, it bridges over the gulf which separates this world from the world beyond the grave. This life is to the future state what the bud is to the flower, the blade in the ear to the full corn. This is a truth of especial importance to us to-day, when we commemorate the faithful dead, whose warfare is accomplished. For it teaches us that there is a real fellowship between them and us; that their relation to us is not done away by death; that their souls are not sleeping idly; that they are living more truly, and in a nobler sense, than we ourselves. In this world, men of noble birth desire — and a right feeling it surely is — to keep the brightness of their name untarnished, not to disgrace the title which their fathers bore. "My ancestors," such an one will say, "were brave and pure; they helped to vindicate liberty; I will try to be not less brave, not less upright, not less generous and true, than they." Canst thou remember this, O Christian, and forget of what spiritual lineage thou art come? so noble, so pure, so ancient, that by its side the noblest title of this world is but of yesterday? that thou art of the communion of God's saints, and they thy fathers and ancestors in the faith? Canst thou remain cowardly, remembering that they were brave?

2. But again, the doctrine of this festival is a witness for Christian endurance. It is difficult not to feel sad when we think what multitudes of our fellow-creatures are living sordid burdened lives, whose earthly course seems little else than a constant round of suffering and care. Yet let us observe, that wherever a ray of light shines in on this mystery of suffering, it is from the blessed thought of a life unseen. Or, take the case of one, whose life is often burdened by a consciousness of sin — who finds himself compassed with infirmity; who is often wearied of this constant struggle against besetting sins, "Oh, blessed day," such an one may well say, "when this strife shall cease; when God in His pardoning mercy shall make me to become that which I long and pray to be."

3. But again, this blessed festival, inasmuch as it thus throws rays of brightness on the sorrows of earth, teaches us a lesson of final perseverance and spiritual joy. We need to remember that in the dreariest November, the gloomiest days of the decaying year, there still stands out a festival of summer gladness, telling of that meeting beyond the grave, where no parting shall ever mar the unity of perfect love; that gathering on the eternal shore, as when the apostles beheld on the shore of the Lake of Galilee the presence of their risen Lord.

(J. S. Bartlett, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?

WEB: One of the elders answered, saying to me, "These who are arrayed in white robes, who are they, and from where did they come?"




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