A Talk with Children -- Measures
Revelation 21:15-17
And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.…


What should we do in life without measures? This beautiful building could not have been erected as well as it has been if there had not been a good deal of very precise measuring, so that everything should fit into its proper place, without a chink or crack to be seen anywhere. So, every house that is built, every road that is laid out, and especially every railroad, requires a great deal of measuring. When, too, you have to draw a map, or plan, you must be very precise about your measurements to do it properly. Then, again, the singers' measure. They have so many beats to the bar. Even poetry is governed by different measures. John says the heavenly city had been measured carefully — "And the city lieth four-square,... and he measured the city with the reed." The first measure that people used was just a reed out of the hedge: a very rough and ready sort of thing; but it answered the purpose if it was exactly the right length. But as we get more and more respectable, we adopt more costly measures. They are not necessarily a bit more correct; but they are more imposing. We have our wooden measures; then comes the ivory measure; and in this instance we have the costliest of all materials, namely, gold — a measure to measure the city which is a golden reed. Everything was measured with great precision — "the gates thereof, and the walls thereof," etc. Now I want to show that it is God's will that you should do everything in this way systematically and punctually — not by rule of thumb, as we call it. Some of the old people used to measure with their thumbs. You know there are some who do that to-day. They reckon as inch between the point of the thumb and the first joint. That is the rule of thumb, and is not very exact. Now what God would have us do in life is not to measure anything in that haphazard way, but everything by a certain and infallible standard. Now, this Book is God's law from heaven for life on earth; and there is one great standard of whom this Book speaks, namely, Jesus Christ. The Apostle Paul teaches us that it is possible for us by the grace of God to come up to the stature of the perfect man in Christ Jesus. He is our infallible standard; and nobody else is infallible. There are some very good people whose example it is well for us to imitate, in so far as they follow Christ, but no further. Whenever even they fall short, we must not imitate them. We are to go back to the original standard, even Jesus Christ our Saviour. This Book further teaches us what we ought to do. "Ah," you say, "we so often fail." Yes you do; and there forgiveness comes in. There are many sins. Some fall through ignorance: they do not know any better, and the Lord forgives them freely. Others sin through sheer wickedness; and if even they repent, the Lord will forgive. But our aim should be to come up to the standard; and the Saviour will give us every needful grace to do so. We could not do much without Him; but we can do a great deal through Him.

(D. Davies.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: And he that talked with me had a golden reed to measure the city, and the gates thereof, and the wall thereof.

WEB: He who spoke with me had for a measure, a golden reed, to measure the city, its gates, and its walls.




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