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CHAPTER X.

 
LET us now consider the magnitude of the work Jesus proposed to do as the end of his mission to men.
 
It is the baldest commonplace to say the work Jesus proposed to accomplish all the dreams of the boldest imagination.
 
It is a deep that once, at St. Helena, Napoleon contrasted the work Jesus proposed to do with the dreams that he and Alexander and Julius Cæsar had indulged of world-changing conquests. It is no great thing that selfish, ambitious, and gifted men have dreamed of conquering what we call the world by force. Cæsar, Alexander, Mohammed, Napoleon, even poor wild El Mahdi of the desert, may dream such dreams. But what are such dreams when we think of Jesus and the work he proposed to do and set himself to do?
 
We do not like to think of the dreams of ambition, the loftiest that ever dared or planned a worldwide scheme of conquest, when we are listening to Jesus concerning his mission to men. Jesus speaks of the conquest of all nations, not as they then were, but of all nations for all times. It is nothing less and nothing else than the moral and spiritual re-creation of the human race, the absolute conquest of the love of men’s hearts for time and .
 
Say what men may of Jesus, it was worth dying, in shame and agony, upon a Roman cross to have had such thoughts, even for one moment. No man ever had such thoughts, could originate such thoughts, or for long hold such thoughts in his grasp. The end Jesus proposed to himself is as far above the noblest thoughts of the noblest men as the of the midnight heavens are above the cheap glitter of a toy-shop.
 
The thought of saving a race was as extra-human and superhuman as the thought of the universe; the saving of a race, the saving of one man, is as far beyond man’s power as the creation itself.
 
We cannot grasp the conception Jesus had of the work he came to do; it makes us dizzy when we it ; it is like trying to realize the distances of the stars. Its blinds us; it is like looking at the unclouded sun.
 
No one, whatever may be his opinion of Jesus or attitude toward him, can question that he believed absolutely in the success of the work he proposed to accomplish. His plans embrace the entire race of man and require eternity for their consummation, but he speaks of these stupendous things with the perfect assurance and of a little child: “And I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto me.”
 
It was hard to say which is most unlike a mere man: the character of the work he proposed to do, the magnitude of it, the unhasting with which he set about it, or his absolute confidence, calmness, and simplicity of manner in telling men about it.
 
It is impossible to write on such a theme. Let us, if only for a moment, try to see ho............
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