“He Ordained Twelve”
      
      
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        ment. Christ is the great center, and they would approach one another
      
      
        just in proportion as they approached the center.
      
      
        When Jesus had ended His instruction to the disciples, He gathered
      
      
        the little band close about Him, and kneeling in the midst of them,
      
      
        and laying His hands upon their heads, He offered a prayer dedicating
      
      
        them to His sacred work. Thus the Lord’s disciples were ordained to
      
      
        the gospel ministry.
      
      
        As His representatives among men, Christ does not choose angels
      
      
        who have never fallen, but human beings, men of like passions with
      
      
        those they seek to save. Christ took upon Himself humanity, that He
      
      
        might reach humanity. Divinity needed humanity; for it required both
      
      
        the divine and the human to bring salvation to the world. Divinity
      
      
        needed humanity, that humanity might afford a channel of communi-
      
      
        cation between God and man. So with the servants and messengers of
      
      
        Christ. Man needs a power outside of and beyond himself, to restore
      
      
        him to the likeness of God, and enable him to do the work of God; but
      
      
        this does not make the human agency unessential. Humanity lays hold
      
      
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        upon divine power, Christ dwells in the heart by faith; and through
      
      
        co-operation with the divine, the power of man becomes efficient for
      
      
        good.
      
      
        He who called the fisherman of Galilee is still calling men to His
      
      
        service. And He is just as willing to manifest His power through us
      
      
        as through the first disciples. However imperfect and sinful we may
      
      
        be, the Lord holds out to us the offer of partnership with Himself,
      
      
        of apprenticeship to Christ. He invites us to come under the divine
      
      
        instruction, that, uniting with Christ, we may work the works of God.
      
      
        “We have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the exceeding great-
      
      
        ness of the power may be of God, and not from ourselves.”
      
      
         2 Corinthi-
      
      
        ans 4:7
      
      
        , R. V. This is why the preaching of the gospel was committed
      
      
        to erring men rather than to the angels. It is manifest that the power
      
      
        which works through the weakness of humanity is the power of God;
      
      
        and thus we are encouraged to believe that the power which can help
      
      
        others as weak as ourselves can help us. And those who are themselves
      
      
        “compassed with infirmity” should be able to “have compassion on the
      
      
        ignorant, and on them that are out of the way.”
      
      
         Hebrews 5:2
      
      
        . Having
      
      
        been in peril themselves, they are acquainted with the dangers and
      
      
        difficulties of the way, and for this reason are called to reach out for
      
      
        others in like peril. There are souls perplexed with doubt, burdened