(2) It is the province of law to rectify abuses and remove difficulties: and to effect this among the nations Rome ever felt to be her mission. just as we do now of railways in our Indian and other colonies. That sagacious people recognised the civilising power of good roads through their Empire. (1) It was literally true that, owing to Roman dominion, both in Europe and Asia, the crooked had been made straight and the rough places plain. The chief means employed by that great Empire for consolidating her possessions were her roads and her laws. A second preparation designed by God's providence was - the extent of Roman dominion. But at the very period when Christianity began to be published it found one language generally read and understood from the Alps to the Caucasus and so the Septuagint Version of the Old Testament could now travel, with the gospels and epistles, to the many provinces of the Roman Empire for the valleys had been exalted, and the mountains and hills made low.Ģ. We know that there is no greater harrier separating nations than a difference of language. What a preparation was this for the spread of the Christian religion. At the time when our Saviour was born the knowledge of the Greek language had spread more widely throughout Asia and Europe than has since been the case with any other tongue. Providential agencies were even then at work preparing Christ's way among the Gentiles.ġ. Not only the land of Israel, but the Gentile world, even "all flesh," was then being prepared "to see the salvation of God." The former was accomplished by John's own preaching of the latter he was only the herald.
But even in this day THE WORDS HAD A WIDER SIGNIFICATION. Before this wilderness preacher the mountains of Pharisaic pride were levelled, the valleys of Sadducean unbelief were filled up, the tortuous vices of the courtly Judaean were corrected, and the rude ignorance of the Galilean smoothed and reformed. The homely and heart-searching appeals of the Baptist proved him to be the pioneer of the righteous King. THE TRANSITION IS EASY TO THE PERSONAL TIMES OF THE MESSIAH, AND OF HIS HERALD, JOHN THE BAPTIST. Yea more, he pictures the dawn of the day as ushered in by that return from Babylon. Already foreseeing the seventy years' captivity of Judah, and then the joyful return of the exiles under the decree of Cyrus, Isaiah writes of these events as if himself living and acting among them. Yet by faith he sees afar off, and the seer is himself transported into that bright future. He, too, living now probably in the idolatrous reign of Manasseh, felt himself in a spiritual desert. ISAIAH USES IT AS AN ILLUSTRATION OF HIS OWN MINISTRY. The Comforter must first convince of sin. Our consciences are too easily satisfied. No wonder, then, that the wilderness is so often used as an emblem of this present life, in which you and I must listen to the voice of Heaven's messengers. The thorn and the thistle around him are the emblems of the sin and the sorrow which spiritually mark his nomad state of existence. Ever since man was driven from Eden he has been a wanderer in the desert. Some open new paths to the seekers after wisdom: to others it is given to contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints. The doctrine of others distils as the dew. Some speak with a voice of thunder to arouse a sleeping world. GOD HAS MANY MESSENGERS, AND THEY HAVE OFTEN LIFTED UP THEIR VOICE IN THE WILDERNESS.
The voice of him that cries in the wilderness, Prepare you the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.…