tion, men with an honest regard for the rights and interests of their fellows, men with firm faith in God! God give us men-then no matter what storms may come, we shall make port! XII JESUS: THE SON OF MAN, THE PERFECT TYPE EHOLD the man!" the man!" "BEHOLD Pilate was a Roman, but he felt in that hour that for the first time in his life he had seen a real man. He was awed by the sight. "I find no fault in him." one! Nor have all the ages since! before us to-day altogether unique. Son of Man, the perfect type! Nor did any He stands Jesus, the "He was found in fashion as a man." What ever else He may have been, He was a man. Holding strongly as I do to the higher view of Christ's person, standing ready to bow before Him in adoration and to hail Him as "Saviour, Redeemer, and Lord," I shall, in this last chapter of a study in temperament, limit my attention to those aspects of His life and service which stand altogether within the human categories. We may dif. |