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Genesis Chapter
Twenty-eight
Genesis 28
Chapter Contents
Isaac sends Jacob to Padan-aram. (1-5) Esau marries the
daughter of Ishmael. (6-9) Jacob's vision. (10-15) The stone of Beth-el.
(16-19) Jacob's vow. (20-22)
Commentary on Genesis 28:1-5
Jacob had blessings promised both as to this world and
that which is to come; yet goes out to a hard service. This corrected him for
the fraud on his father. The blessing shall be conferred on him, yet he shall
smart for the indirect course taken to obtain it. Jacob is dismissed by his
father with a solemn charge. He must not take a wife of the daughters of
Canaan: those who profess religion, should not marry with those that care not
for religion. Also with a solemn blessing. Isaac had before blessed him
unwittingly; now he does it designedly. This blessing is more full than the
former; it is a gospel blessing. This promise looks as high as heaven, of which
Canaan was a type. That was the better country which Jacob and the other
patriarchs had in view.
Commentary on Genesis 28:6-9
Good examples impress even the profane and malicious. But
Esau thought, by pleasing his parents in one thing, to atone for other wrong doings.
Carnal hearts are apt to think themselves as good as they should be, because in
some one matter they are not so bad as they have been.
Commentary on Genesis 28:10-15
Jacob's conduct hitherto, as recorded, was not that of
one who simply feared and trusted in God. But now in trouble, obliged to flee,
he looked only to God to make him to dwell in safety, and he could lie down and
sleep in the open air with his head upon a stone. Any true believer would be
willing to take up with Jacob's pillow, provided he might have Jacob's vision.
God's time to visit his people with his comforts, is, when they are most
destitute of other comforts, and other comforters. Jacob saw a ladder which
reached from earth to heaven, the angels going up and coming down, and God himself
at the head of it. This represents, 1. The providence of God, by which there is
a constant intercourse kept up between heaven and earth. This let Jacob know
that he had both a good guide and a good guard. 2. The mediation of Christ. He
is this ladder; the foot on earth in his human nature, the top in heaven in his
Divine nature. Christ is the Way; all God's favours come to us, and all our
services go to him, by Christ, John 1:51. By this way, sinners draw near to the
throne of grace with acceptance. By faith we perceive this way, and in prayer
we approach by it. In answer to prayer we receive all needful blessings of
providence and grace. We have no way of getting to heaven but by Christ. And
when the soul, by faith, can see these things, then every place will become
pleasant, and every prospect joyful. He will never leave us, until his last
promise is accomplished in our everlasting happiness. God now spake comfortably
to Jacob. He spake from the head of the ladder. All the glad tidings we receive
from heaven come through Jesus Christ. The Messiah should come from Jacob.
Christ is the great blessing of the world. All that are blessed, are blessed in
him, and none of any family are shut out from blessedness in him, but those
that shut out themselves. Jacob had to fear danger from his brother Esau; but
God promises to keep him. He had a long journey before him; to an unknown
country; but, Behold, I am with thee, and God promises to bring him back again
to this land. He seemed to be forsaken of all his friends; but God gives him
this assurance, I will not leave thee. Whom God loves, he never leaves.
Commentary on Genesis 28:16-19
God manifested himself and his favour, to Jacob, when he
was asleep. The Spirit, like the wind, blows when and where it listeth, and
God's grace, like the dew, tarrieth not for the sons of men. Jacob sought to
improve the visit God had made him. Wherever we are, in the city or in the
desert, in the house or in the field, in the shop or in the street, we may keep
up our intercourse with Heaven, if it is not our own fault. But the more we see
of God, the more cause we see for holy trembling before him.
Commentary on Genesis 28:20-22
Jacob made a solemn vow on this occasion. In this
observe, 1. Jacob's faith. He trusts that God will be with him, and will keep
him; he depends upon it. 2. Jacob's moderation in his desires. He asks not for
soft clothing and dainty meat. If God give us much, we are bound to be
thankful, and to use it for him; if he gives us but little, we are bound to be
content, and cheerfully to enjoy him in it. 3. Jacob's piety, and his regard to
God, appear in what he desired, that God would be with him, and keep him. We
need desire no more to make us easy and happy. Also his resolution is, to
cleave to the Lord, as his God in covenant. When we receive more than common
mercy from God, we should abound in gratitude to him. The tenth is a fit
proportion to be devoted to God, and employed for him; though it may be more or
less, as God prospers us, 1 Corinthians 16:2. Let us then remember our
Bethels, how we stand engaged by solemn vows to yield ourselves to the Lord, to
take him for our God, and to devote all we have and are to his glory!
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 28
Verse 1
[1] And
Isaac called Jacob, and blessed him, and charged him, and said unto him, Thou
shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan.
Isaac blessed him, and charged him - Those
that have the blessing must keep the charge annexed to it, and not think to
separate what God has joined.
Verses 3-4
[3] And God Almighty bless thee, and make thee fruitful, and multiply thee,
that thou mayest be a multitude of people; [4] And give thee the blessing of Abraham, to
thee, and to thy seed with thee; that thou mayest inherit the land wherein thou
art a stranger, which God gave unto Abraham.
Two great promises Abraham was blessed with,
and Isaac here entails them both upon Jacob. (1.) The promise of heirs, God
make thee fruitful and multiply thee. 1. Through his loins that people should
descend from Abraham which should be numerous as the stars of heaven. 2.
Through his loins should descend from Abraham that person in whom all the
families of the earth should be blessed. (2.) The promise of an inheritance for
those heirs, Genesis 28:4.
That thou mayest inherit the land of thy
sojournings ¡X (So the Hebrew) Canaan was hereby entailed
upon the seed of Jacob, exclusive of the seed of Esau. Isaac was now sending
Jacob away into a distant country to settle there for some time; and lest this
should look like disinheriting him, he here confirms the settlement of it upon
him. This promise looks as high as heaven, of which Canaan was a type. That was
the better country which Jacob, with the other patriarchs, had in his eye when
he confessed himself a stranger and pilgrim on the earth, Hebrews 11:16.
Verse 5
[5] And
Isaac sent away Jacob: and he went to Padanaram unto Laban, son of Bethuel the
Syrian, the brother of Rebekah, Jacob's and Esau's mother.
Rebekah is here called Jacob's and Esau's
mother - Jacob is named first, not only because he had always been his mother's
darling, but because he was now made his father's heir, and Esau was postponed.
Verse 6
[6] When
Esau saw that Isaac had blessed Jacob, and sent him away to Padanaram, to take
him a wife from thence; and that as he blessed him he gave him a charge,
saying, Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan;
This passage comes in, in the midst of
Jacob's story, to shew the influence of a good example. Esau now begins to
think Jacob the better man, and disdains not to take him for his pattern in
this particular instance of marrying with a daughter of Abraham.
Verse 11
[11] And he lighted upon a certain place, and tarried there all night, because
the sun was set; and he took of the stones of that place, and put them for his
pillows, and lay down in that place to sleep.
The stones for his pillow, and the heavens
for his canopy! Yet his comfort in the divine blessing, and his confidence in
the divine protection, made him easy, even when he lay thus exposed: being sure
that his God made him to dwell in safety, he could lie down and sleep upon a
stone.
Verse 12
[12] And
he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached
to heaven: and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it.
Behold a ladder set upon the earth, and the
top of it reached heaven, the angels ascending and descending on it, and the
Lord stood above it ¡X This might represent 1. The providence of
God, by which there is a constant correspondence kept up between heaven and
earth. The counsels of heaven are executed on earth, and the affairs of this
earth are all known in heaven. Providence doth his work gradually and by steps;
angels are employed as ministering spirits to serve all the designs of
providence, and the wisdom of God is at the upper end of the ladder, directing
all the motions of second causes to his glory. The angels are active spirits,
continually ascending and descending; they rest not day nor night. They ascend
to give account of what they have done, and to receive orders; and desend to
execute the orders they have received. This vision gave seasonable comfort to
Jacob, letting him know that he had both a good guide and good guard; that
though he was to wander from his father's house, yet he was the care of
Providence, and the charge of the holy angels. 2. The mediation of Christ. He
is this ladder: the foot on earth in his human nature, the top in heaven in his
divine nature; or the former is his humiliation, the latter is his exaltation.
All the intercourse between heaven and earth since the fall is by this ladder.
Christ is the way: all God's favours come to us, and all our services come to
him, by Christ. If God dwell with us, and we with him, it is by Christ: we have
no way of getting to heaven but by this ladder; for the kind offices the angels
do us, are all owing to Christ, who hath reconciled things on earth and things
in heaven, Colossians 1:20.
Verse 14
[14] And
thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the
west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the south: and in thee and in
thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed.
In thy seed shall all the families of the
earth be blessed ¡X Christ is the great blessing of the world:
all that are blessed, whatever family they are of, are blessed in him, and none
of any family are excluded from blessedness in him, but those that exclude
themselves.
Verse 15
[15] And,
behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest,
and will bring thee again into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I
have done that which I have spoken to thee of.
Behold I am with thee ¡X Wherever we are, we are safe, if we have God's favourable presence with
us. He knew not, but God foresaw what hardships he would meet with in his
uncle's service, and therefore promiseth to preserve him in all places. God
knows how to give his people graces and comforts accommodated to the events
that shall be, as well as to those that are. He was now going as an exile into
a place far distant, but God promiseth him to bring him again to this land. He
seemed to be forsaken of all his friends, but God gives him this assurance, I
will not leave thee.
Verse 16
[16] And
Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the LORD is in this place;
and I knew it not.
Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew
it not ¡X God's manifestations of himself to his
people carry their own evidence along with them. God can give undeniable
demonstrations of his presence, such as give abundant satisfaction to the souls
of the faithful, that God is with them of a truth; satisfaction not
communicable to others, but convincing to themselves. We sometimes meet with
God there, where we little thought of meeting with him. He is there where we
did not think he had been, is found there where we asked not for him.
Verse 17
[17] And
he was afraid, and said, How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the
house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.
He was afraid ¡X So
far was he from being puffed up. The more we see of God, the more cause we see
for holy trembling and blushing before him. Those whom God is pleased to
manifest himself to, are laid and kept very low in their own eyes, and see
cause to fear even the Lord and his goodness, Hosea 3:5.
And said, How dreadful is this place! ¡X That is, the appearance of God in this place is to be thought of, but
with a holy awe and reverence; I shall have a respect for this place, and
remember it by this token as long as I live. Not that he thought the place
itself any nearer the divine visions than any other places; but what he saw
there at this time was, as it were, the house of God, the residence of the
Divine Majesty, and the gate of heaven, that is, the general rendezvous of the
inhabitants of the upper world; as the meetings of a city were in their gates;
or, the angels ascending and descending were like travellers passing and
repassing through the gates of a city.
Verse 18
[18] And
Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he had put for his
pillows, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the top of it.
He set up the stone for a pillar ¡X To mark the place again, if he came back, and erect a lasting monument
of God's favour to him: and because he had not time now to build an altar here,
as Abraham did in the places where God appeared to him, Genesis 12:7, he therefore poured oil on the top
of this stone, which probably was the ceremony then used in dedicating their
altars, as an earnest of his building an altar when he should have
conveniencies for it, as afterwards he did, in gratitude to God, Genesis 35:7. Grants of mercy call for our
returns of duty and the sweet communion we have with God ought ever to be
remembered.
Verse 19
[19] And
he called the name of that place Bethel: but the name of that city was called
Luz at the first.
It had been called Luz, an almond-tree, but
he will have it henceforth called Beth-el, the house of God. This gracious
appearance of God to him made it more remarkable than all the almond-trees that
flourished there.
Verse 20
[20] And
Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way
that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and raiment to put on,
And Jacob vowed a vow ¡X By religious vows we give glory to God, and own our dependance upon him,
and we lay a bond upon our own souls, to engage and quicken our obedience to
him. Jacob was now in fear and distress, and in times of trouble it is
seasonable to make vows, or when we are in pursuit of any special mercy, Jonah 1:16; Psalms 66:13,14; 1 Samuel 1:11; Numbers 21:1; 2,3. Jacob had now had a gracious visit from
heaven, God had renewed his covenant with him, and the covenant is mutual; when
God ratifies his promises to us, it is proper for us to repeat our promises to
him.
If thou wilt be with me and keep me ¡X We need desire no more to make us easy and happy wherever we are, but to
have God's presence with us, and to be under his protection. It is comfortable
in a journey to have a guide in an unknown way, a guard in a dangerous way, to
be well carried, well provided for, and to have good company in any way; and
they that have God with them, have all this in the best manner.
Then shall the Lord be my God ¡X Then I will rejoice in him as my God, then I will be the more strongly
engaged to abide with him.
And this pillar shall be God's house ¡X That is, an altar shall be erected here to the honour of God.
And of all that thou shalt give me I will
surely give the tenth unto thee ¡X To be spent either
upon God's altar or upon his poor, which are both his receivers in the world.
The tenth is a very fit proportion to be devoted to God, and employed for him;
though as circumstances vary, it may be more or less, as God prospers us.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
JACOB¡¦S JOURNEY.
Genesis
28.
Jacob
on his way to Padan-aram, and his being met and encouraged by God, is one of
the brightest features in his life.
¢¹.The Obedient Son. ¡§ Jacob went out from
Beersheba,¡¨ ¡®c. (verse 10). Jacob was
not merely fleeing from Esau¡¦s ire in leaving home, but he was obeying his
father (verse 7), in going to seek for a wife among his uncle¡¦s people. ¡§
Beersheba¡¨ means ¡§ the well of the oath¡¨ (Gen.21:31); and ¡§ Haran¡¨ signifies ¡§
parched, dry.¡¨ It will often be found that the path of obedience will lead us
from some well of prosperity to a parched place of adversity and trial. But
better be there with the Lord than in some pleasant way without Him.
¡§Out
of my stony griefs
Bethel
I¡¦ll raise.¡¨
¢º.
The Weary Man (verse 11). Tired with
his journey, he seeks a resting-place amid his not very inviting surroundings,
for, as Stanley says in speaking of the place, ¡§ The track of the pilgrims
winds through an uneven valley, covered, as with grave-stones, by large sheets
of bare rock, some few here and there standing up like the cromlechs of
Druidical monuments.¡¨ Lonely, tired, home-sick, with the sky for his ceiling,
and a stone for a pillow, he falls asleep, and finds that God gives to His
beloved in sheep (Ps.127:2,R.V.,M).
¢».
The Privileged Dreamer (verse 12).
Jacob sees in vision the way cast up from earth to heaven, thus connecting
heaven and earth, and opening up communication between Jacob and God.
¢¼.
The Enriched Descendant (verse 13).
God reveals Himself as the ¡§ God of Abraham and Isaac,¡¨ and repeats the promise
to Jacob He gave to them, that he and his seed shall possess the land. Thus
Jacob finds the blessedness of a godly ancestry. Grace does not run in the
blood, but notwithstanding there are advantages in having godly parents.
¢½.
The Blessed Seed (verse 14). Here
again is a repeated promise. (See Gen.12:2,3; 18:18; 22:18; 26:4). After the
flesh Israel has been a blessing to al notions (Rom.9:4,5), and they are yet to
be a greater blessing (Rom.11:12; Isaiah 60.)
¢¾.
The Sustained Pilgrim (verse 15).
The presence of the Lord is to be the sustaining power of Jacob in all his
wanderings. Mark what that meant to him, and what it also means to the believer
in Christ.
¢¿.
The Astonished Sleeper (verse 16).
Jacob little expected that the Lord would meet him where He did, but the
unexpected often happens. When we little expect to find the Lord He finds us.
Jacob is astonished as the recalls his dream, and is reminded that God has been
speaking to him. Many who are spiritually asleep would do well to wake up to
the fact that the Lord has spoken to them, and is still speaking (Eph.5:14;
Rom.13:11-14).
¢À.
The Fearful Confessor (verse 17).
Jacob was not the only one who has been afraid in the conscious presence of
God. Moses (Hebrews 12:21), Job ( Job 42:5,6), Isaiah (Isaiah 6:5), Peter (Luke
5:8), and John (Rev.1:17,18),were the same. A holy awe and a filial fear should
ever characterise those who know the Lord (Phil.2:12).
¢Á.
The Early Riser ( verse 18). Jacob
was no laggard or lie-bed. He was up betimes. Sleepy heads never make wise
heads, and sleepy hearts are never warm hearts. The early birds get the worms.
The manna must be gathered in the morning, if there is to be the gathered
manna.
¢Â. The Consecrating Remembrancer (verse
18,19). Jacob changes the name of the place from Luz to Bethel by anointing the
pillar he had used as a pillow. ¡§ Luz¡¨ means ¡§ departure¡¨ or ¡§ perverseness;¡¨
and ¡§ Bethel¡¦ signifies the ¡§ house of God.¡¨ Many a Luz has been made into a
Bethel by the consecrating oil of God¡¦s grace, through faith in Him who died
for sinners. On the 10th of May, 1869, at a place called Promontory
Point, the junction was made completing the railway communication between the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, in the United States of America. A silver spike
was brought by the Governor of Arizona, another was contributed by the citizens
of Nevada. They were driven home into a sleeper of Californian laurel with a
sliver mallet. As the last blow was struck the hammer was brought into contact
with a telegraph wire, and the news flashed and simultaneously saluted on the
shores of two great oceans, and simultaneously saluted on the shores of two
great oceans, and through the expanse of a vast continent, by the roar of
cannon and the chiming of bells. When the awful abyss between God and man had
to be bridged, the junction over the deepest chasm was made by the outstretched
arms of the Son God, and as the spikes crushed through His opened palms, He
cried, ¡§ It is finished,¡¦ and swifter than electric current or lightning¡¦s
flash the tidings were winged to the farthest bounds of three worlds. The
stairway connecting earth with heaven is completed; the awful chasm is bridged.
Luz is transformed into Bethel; Christ by dying has opened up the way to God.
¢w¢w F.E. Marsh¡mFive Hundred Bible Readings¡n
GENESIS
28:15.
¢¹. Presence in loneliness. ¡§ I am with thee¡¨ (Matt.28:20).
¢º. Preservation in danger. ¡§Will keep thee¡¨ (John 17:11,12; 1.Peter
1:5).
¢». Protection at all times. ¡§ In all places¡¨ (John 8:1).
¢¼. Promise fulfilled. ¡§ Will bring thee again into this land¡¨ (John
14:3).
¢½. Perpetual companionship. ¡§ I will not leave thee¡¨ (Heb.13:5).
¢¾. Perseverance in blessing. ¡§ Until I have done,¡¨ ¡®c. (Phil.1:6).
¢w¢w F.E. Marsh¡mFive Hundred Bible Readings¡n
28 Chapter 28
Verses 1-5
And Isaac sent away Jacob: and he went to Padanaram.
The beginning of Jacob¡¦s pilgrimage
I. THE CAUSES
WHICH LED HIM. TO UNDERTAKE HIS PILGRIMAGE.
1. His brother¡¦s anger.
2. His mother¡¦s counsel.
II. THE DIVINE
PROVISIONS FOR HIS PILGRIMAGE.
1. The peculiar blessing of the chosen seed.
2. The ministry of man in conveying this blessing. (T. H. Leale.)
Lessons
1. Good fathers disdain not the wise and gracious advice of mothers
for their children¡¦s good.
2. Good men may change their minds upon God¡¦s convictions for
disposal of blessing.
3. Blessing and command go together from God, by His instruments
unto His covenant ones.
4. Matches of the true seed with the idolaters are expressly
forbidden by God (Genesis 28:1).
5. Fathers have their due power to dispose of children in marriage.
6. It is good for fathers herein to follow the dictates and guidance
of God, to dispose children, where the knowledge of God is (Genesis 28:2.) (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. God¡¦s blessing needs to be repeated and confirmed unto souls, to
answer temptations, and to prevent unbelief.
2. Obedience yielded to the charge of God foregoing, the blessing
shall follow after.
3. God Almighty and All-sufficient is the only fountain of blessing.
4. The issues of good from God Almighty, upon poor creatures, they
are blessings indeed.
5. God¡¦s All-sufficiency gives fruitfulness for the increase of His
Church (Genesis 28:3).
6. Abraham¡¦s blessing from the Almighty is that which passeth from
generation to generation upon the Church.
7. The rest typical as well as spiritual and eternal, is made the
inheritance of God¡¦s Israel from His Almightiness.
8. God¡¦s gift to Abraham is the just title of all the seed of
promise to that inheritance eternal, typed out in Canaan (Genesis 28:4). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Lessons
1. Providence makes parents willing to part with dearest children in
order to accomplish His will.
2. Providence ordereth children¡¦s hearts in readiness to obey the
father¡¦s charge to execute God¡¦s purpose.
3. Providence sometimes sends out creatures naked and helpless the
more to glorify Himself (Genesis 28:5). He keeps them while they
believe on His promises. (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Verses 6-9
Then went Esau unto Ishmael
Esau, the type of worldliness and hypocrisy
I.
HIS
CONDUCT WAS MERCENARY.
II. HIS CONDUCT
WAS ONE-SIDED.
III. HIS CONDUCT WAS
FRAMED BY THE PRINCIPLE OF IMITATION. (T. H.Leale.)
Lessons
1. Hypocrites hearing of blessing upon others, pretend to make to it
as well as any.
2. Hypocrites hearing God¡¦s charge to accompany His blessing, would
seem to observe it (Genesis 28:6).
3. Hypocrites seeing the obedience of saints, would seem to imitate
it (Genesis 28:7).
4. Hypocrites perceiving what is displeasing to God and His
servants, would seem to avoid it (Genesis 28:8).
5. Hypocrites in all their pretences for God, take their own ways
without His counsel.
6. Hypocrites in all their pretended imitations of the saints do but
add sin to sin (Genesis 28:9). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Mistaken imitation
See what awkward work is made when men go about to please others,
and promote their worldly interests, by imitating that in which they have no
delight. Ignorance and error mark every step they take, Esau was in no need of
a wife. His parents would not be gratified by his connection with the apostate
family of Ishmael. In short, he is out in all his calculations; nor can he
discover the principles which influence those who fear the Lord. Thus have we
often seen men try to imitate religious people for the sake of gaining esteem,
or some way promoting their selfish ends; but instead of succeeding they have
commonly made bad worse. That which to a right mind is as plain as the most
public highway, to a mind perverted shall appear full of difficulties. ¡§The
labour of the foolish wearieth every one of them, because he knoweth not how to
go to the city¡¨ (Ecclesiastes 10:15). (A. Fuller.)
Verses 10-15
And he dreamed, and behold, a ladder set up on the earth, and the
top of it reached to heaven
Jacob at Bethel
I.
THE
WANDERER. It had been a desolate day, and there was only desolation at night.
In his weariness he slept, and as he slept, he dreamed. If dreams reflect the
thoughts of the day, a new life must have begun within him. It was not Esau, or
the plotting mother, or the aged father, upon whom he looked. The old tent was
not over him, nor did he long for the pillows of home. It was a new experience,
and the story of his vision has been told all down the centuries for more than
three and a half thousand years. What does it mean?
II. THE
MEETING-PLACE. It was upon the barren mountainside. Tier on tier of rocks
reaching to the mountain-summit were the stairs of nature¡¦s cathedral. The
winds of the mountains roused him not. The audience of that night was asleep.
If the beasts came forth from their retreats, they did not disturb him. His own
sin had driven him into solitude. Voice of friend or foe, there was none. He
was alone; but God was there even when he knew it not. What meetings there have
been alone with God I What night-scenes of grandeur and awe! Amid sufferings
from sin, in deepest trials and in roughest places, many a soul has exclaimed
with the waking Jacob, ¡§Surely the Lord is in this place; and I knew it not
This is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.¡¨
III. THE VISION AND
THE DIVINE COVENANT. Two thoughts are suggested at the outset by this vision:
the reaching up of earth to heaven, and the reaching down of heaven to earth.
IV. THE PILLAR OF
REMEMBRANCE. Gratitude should be the very first fruit of religion. What less
has God reason to expect? What else can man prefer to give? (D. O. Mears, D.
D.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. THE DREAMER.
1. A lonely faith.
2. An exile from home.
3. A fugitive from his brother.
II. THE DREAM.
1. The ladder. Heaven not closed to man.
2. Angels of God ascending and descending. Ministry.
3. God at the summit of the ladder.
III. THE IMPRESSION
OF HIS DREAM.
1. An overpowering sense of the presence of God.
2. His sin rose before him. (G. R. Leavitt.)
Jacob¡¦s vision
I. IT WAS
VOUCHSAFED TO HIM IN A TIME OF INWARD AND OUTWARD TROUBLE.
II. IT SATISFIED
ALL HIS SPIRITUAL NECESSITIES.
1. It assured him that heaven and earth were not separated by an
impassable gulf.
2. It assured him that there was a way of reconciliation between God
and man.
3. It assured him that the love of God was above all the darkness of
human sin and evil.
4. It imparted to him the blessings of a revelation from God.
III. IT REVEALED
THE AWFUL SOLEMNITY OF HUMAN LIFE,
IV. IT RESULTED IN
JACOB¡¦S CONVERSION,
1. He erected a memorial of the event.
2. He resolved to make God supreme in all his thoughts and actions.
(T. H.Leale.)
Jacob¡¦s vision
I. CONSIDER THE
CIRCUMSTANCES under which the vision was granted.
II. LOOK AT THE
NATURE of the vision.
1. The angels are interested in the well-being of God¡¦s people.
2. Heaven is a place of activity.
3. There is a way of communication open between heaven and earth.
This way represents the mediation of Christ.
III. LOOK AT THE
PROMISES which on this occasion were made to Jacob.
1. God promised to be with Jacob.
2. God promised His protection and guidance to Jacob.
3. God promised him final deliverance from all trouble. (A.
D.Davidson.)
Jacob¡¦s dream
I. A way set up
between earth and heaven, making a visible connection between the ground on
which he slept and the sky.
II. The free
circulation along that way of great powers and ministering influences.
III. God, the
supreme directing and inspiring force, eminent over all. Lessons:
1. Every man¡¦s ladder should stand upon the ground. No man can be a
Christian by separating himself from his kind.
2. Along every man¡¦s ladder should be seen God¡¦s angels.
3. High above all a man¡¦s plans and resolves, there must beta living
trust in God. (H. W. Beecher.)
The vision at Bethel
I. The vision at
Bethel was the first step in Jacob¡¦s Divine education--the assurance which
raised him to the feelings and dignity of a man. He knew that though he was to
be chief of no hunting tribe, there might yet come forth from him a blessing to
the whole earth.
II. Jacob¡¦s vision
came to him in a dream. But that which had been revealed was a permanent
reality, a fact to accompany him through all his after-existence. Now the great
question we have to ask ourselves is, ¡§Was this a fact for Jacob the
Mesopotamian shepherd, and is it a phantasm for all ages to come? Or was it a
truth which Jacob was to learn just as he was to learn the truth of birth, the
truth of marriage, the truth of death, that it might be declared to his seed
after him; and that they might be acquainted with it as he was, only in a
fuller and deeper sense?¡¨ If we take the Bible for our guide we must accept the
latter conclusion, and not the former. The Son of Man is the ladder between
earth and heaven, between the Father above and His children on earth. (F. D.
Maurice, M. A.)
What Jacob saw in sleep
Sleeping to see. One may be too wide-awake to see. There are
things which are hidden from us until we lie down to sleep. Only then do the
heavens open and the angels of God disclose themselves.
I. It does not
follow that God is not, because we cannot discern Him. Little do we dream of
the veiled wonders and splendours amid which we move. To Jacob¡¦s mental fret
and confusion, the wilderness where God brooded was a wilderness and nothing
more. But in sleep he grew tranquil and still; he lost himself--the flurried,
heated, uneasy self that he had brought with him from Beer-sheba; and while he
slept the hitherto unperceived Eternal came out softly, largely, above and
around him. We learn from this the secret of the Lord¡¦s nearness.
II. No man is ever
completely awake; something in him always sleeps. There is a sense in which it
may be said with truth that were we less wakeful, more of God and spiritual
realities might be unveiled to us. We are always doing--too much so for finest
being; are always striving--too much so for highest attaining. Our religion
consists too much in solicitude to get; it is continually ¡§ The Lord, the
Father of mercies,¡¨ rather than ¡§The Lord, the Father of glory.¡¨ We require to
sleep from ourselves before the heavens can open upon us freely and richly flow
around us. (S. A. Tipple.)
A ladder between heaven and earth
I. JESUS, THE
LADDER, CONNECTS EARTH WITH HEAVEN.
II. THIS LADDER
COMES TO SINNERS.
III. GOD IS AT THE
TOP, SPEARING KIND WORDS DOWN THE LADDER.
IV. ADVICE TO
CLIMBERS:
1. Be sure to get the right ladder; there are plenty of shams.
2. Take firm hold; you will want both hands.
3. Don¡¦t look down, or you will be giddy.
4. Don¡¦t come down to fetch any one else up. If your friends will
not follow you, leave them behind. (T. Champness.)
Intercourse between earth and heaven
I. The ancient
heathens told in their fables how the gods had all left the earth one by one;
how one lingered in pity, loath to desert the once happy world; how even that
one at last departed. Jacob¡¦s dream showed something better, truer than this;
it showed him God above him, God¡¦s angels all about him.
II. The
intercourse between God and man has been enlarged and made perpetual in Jesus
Christ, the Incarnate Son.
III. When Jacob
awoke he consecrated a pillar, and vowed to build a sanctuary there and give
tithes. We cannot altogether commend the spirit in which he made his vow. He
tried to make a good bargain with the Almighty; yet God accepted him. The place
was holy to him, because he knew that God was there. (R. Winterbotham, M. A.)
The nearness of God to men
I. GOD IS NEAR
MEN WHEN THEY LITTLE THINK IT. ¡§He is near--
1. When we are not aware of it.
2. When sin is fresh upon us.
3. When we are in urgent need of Him.
II. GOD IS NEAR
MEN TO ENGAGE IN THEIR RELIGIOUS TRAINING.
1. God assured Jacob of His abiding presence with him.
2. Jacob was taught to recognize God in all things.
3. He was taught to feel his entire dependence upon God throughout
the journey of life.
III. GOD IS ALWAYS
NEAR MEN TO EFFECT THEIR COMPLETE SALVATION. Intercourse has been established
between earth and heaven; the whole process of man¡¦s salvation is under the
superintendence of God. (D. Rhys Jenkins.)
Jacob¡¦s conversion
I. JACOB¡¦S
IMPRESSIONS. First time of leaving his father¡¦s home. When night came on, and
there was no tent to repose under, and no pillow but a stone on which to lay
his weary head, then a feeling of loneliness came over him, then tender
thoughts awoke. He felt remorse, tears came unbidden. He felt, ¡§I shall never
be in my father¡¦s house the boy I was.¡¨ In all this observe--
1. A solemn conviction stealing over Jacob of what life is, a
struggle which each man must make in self-dependence.
2. But beside this conviction of what life is, Jacob was impressed
in another way at this time. God made a direct communication to his soul. ¡§He
lay down to sleep, and he dreamed.¡¨ We know what dreams are. They are strange
combinations of our waking thoughts in fanciful forms, and we may trace in
Jacob¡¦s previous journey the groundwork of his dream. He looked up all day to
heaven as he trudged along, the glorious expanse of an Oriental sky was around
him, a quivering trembling mass of blue; but he was alone, and, when the stars
came out, melancholy sensations were his, such as youth frequently feels in
autumn time. Deep questionings beset him. Time he felt was fleeting. Eternity,
what was it? Life, what a mystery! And all this took form in his dream. Thus
far all was natural; the supernatural in this dream was the manner in which God
impressed it on his heart. Similar dreams we have often had; but the
remembrance of them has faded away. Conversion is the impression made by
circumstances, and that impression lasting for life; it is God the Spirit¡¦s
work upon the soul.
3. Jacob felt reconciliation with God. There is a distance between
man and God. It is seen in the restlessness of men, in the estrangement which
they feel from Him. Well, Jacob felt all this. He had sinned, overreached his
brother, deceived his father. Self-convicted he walked all day long; the sky as
brass; a solemn silence around him; no opening in the heaven; no sign nor voice
from God; his own heart shut up by the sense of sin, unable to rise. Then came
the dream in which he felt reconciliation with God. Do not mind the form but
the substance. It contains three things:
II. THE
RESOLUTIONS WHICH HE MADE.
1. The first of these was a resolution to set up a memorial of the
impressions just made upon him. He erected a few stones, and called them
Bethel. They were a fixed point to remind him of the past.
2. Jacob determined from this time to take the Lord for his God. He
would worship from henceforth not the sun, or the moon, not honour, pleasure,
business, but God. With respect to this determination, observe first¡¨ that it
was done with a kind of selfish feeling; there was a sort of stipulation, that
if God would be with him to protect and provide for him, that then he would
take Him for his God (Genesis 28:20-21). And this is too much
the way with us; there is mostly a selfishness in our first turning to God. A
kind of bargain is struck. If religion makes me happy then I will be religious.
God accepted this bargain in Jacob¡¦s case; He enriched him with cattle and
goods in the land whither he went (Genesis 31:18): ¡§for godliness has the promise
of the life that now is.¡¨ Disinterested religion comes later on. Observe,
secondly, what taking God for our God implies. It is not the mere repetition of
so many words; for as our Lord has said, ¡§Not every one that saith unto Me,
Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of God.¡¨ To have God for our God is
not to prostrate the knee but the heart in adoration before Him. God is truth:
to persist in truth at a loss to ourselves, that is to have God for our God.
God is purity: resolve to shut up evil books, turn a countenance of offended
purity to the insult of licentious conversation; banish thoughts that conjure
up wicked imaginations; then you have God for your God. God is love: you are
offended; and the world says, resent; God says, forgive. Can you forgive? Can
you love your enemy, or one whose creed is different from your own? That is to
have God for your God. (F. W. Robertson, M. A.)
The heavenly pathway and the earthly heart
I. CONSIDER THE
VISION AND ITS ACCOMPANYING PROMISE. We are to conceive of the form of the
vision as a broad stair or sloping ascent, rather than a ladder, reaching right
from the sleeper¡¦s side to the far-off heaven, its pathway peopled with
messengers, and its summit touching the place where a glory shone that paled
even the lustrous constellations of that pure sky. Jacob had thought himself
alone; the vision peoples the wilderness. He had felt himself defenceless; the
vision musters armies for his safety. He had been grovelling on earth, with no
thoughts beyond its fleeting goods; the vision lifts his eyes from the low
level on which they had been gazing. He had been conscious of but little
connection with heaven; the vision shows him a path from his very side right
into its depths. He had probably thought that he was leaving the presence of
his father¡¦s God when he left his father¡¦s tent; the vision burns into his
astonished heart the consciousness of God as there, in the solitude and the
night. The Divine promise is the best commentary on the meaning of the vision.
The familiar ancestral promise is repeated to him, and the blessing and the
birthright thus confirmed. In addition, special assurances, the translation of
the vision into word and adapted to his then wants, are given--God¡¦s presence
in his wanderings, his protection, Jacob¡¦s return to the land, and the promise
of God¡¦s persistent presence, working through all paradoxes of providence, and
sins of his servant, and incapable of staying its operations, or satisfying
God¡¦s heart, or vindicating his faithfulness, at any point short of complete
accomplishment of his plighted word. Jacob¡¦s vision was meant to teach him, and
is meant to teach us, the nearness of God, and the swift directness of
communication, whereby His help comes to us and our desires rise to Him. These
and their kindred truths were to be to him, and should be to us, the parents of
much nobleness. Here is the secret of elevation of aim and thought above the
mean things of sense. It is the secret of purity too. It is also the secret of
peace.
II. NOTICE THE IMPERFECT
RECEPTION dream indicates a very low level both of religious knowledge and
feeling. Nor is there any reason for taking the words in any but their most
natural sense; for it is a mistake to ascribe to him the knowledge of God due
to later revelation, or, at this stage of his life, any depth of religious
emotion. He is alarmed at the thought that God is near. Probably he had been
accustomed to think of God¡¦s presence as in some special way associated with
his father¡¦s encampment, and had not risen to the belief of His omnipresence.
There seems no joyous leaping up of his heart at the thought that God is here.
Dread, not unmingled with the superstitious fear that he had profaned a holy
place by laying himself down in it, is his prevailing feeling, and he pleads
ignorance as the excuse for his sacrilege. He does not draw the conclusion from
the vision that all the earth is hallowed by a near God, but only that he has
unwittingly stumbled on His house; and he does not learn that from every place
there is an open door for the loving heart into the calm depths where God is
throned, but only that here he stands at the gate of heaven. So he misses the
very inner purpose of the vision, and rather shrinks from it than welcomes it.
Was that spasm of fear all that passed through his mind that night? Did he
sleep again when the glory died out of the heaven? So the story would appear to
suggest. But, in any ease, we see here the effect of the sudden blitzing in
upon a heart not yet familiar with the Divine Friend, of the conviction that He
is really near. Gracious as God¡¦s promise was, it did not dissipate the
creeping awe at His presence. It is an eloquent testimony of man¡¦s
consciousness of sin, that whensoever a present God becomes a reality to a man,
he trembles. ¡§This place¡¨ would not be ¡§dreadful,¡¨ but blessed, if it were not
for the sense of discord between God and me. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
The angel-ladder
I. THE
CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH THIS REVELATION WAS MADE TO HIM.
1. Jacob was lonely.
2. Jacob was standing on the threshold of independence.
3. Jacob was also in fear.
II. THE ELEMENTS
OF WHICH THIS REVELATION CONSISTED.
1. The ladder.
2. The angels.
3. The voice of God. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Bethel: a picture and its lesson
I. THE PICTURE.
1. A solitary man.
2. A guilty man. Sin pierced his hand more than his staff did.
3. An injured man. ¡§A child may have more of his mother than her
blessing.¡¨
4. A fugitive man. ¡§He had, like a maltreated animal, the fear of
man habitually before his eyes.¡¨ He cringes one moment, and dodges the next;
deprecating the blow he invites, expects, and gets.
5. He is a weary man. There he lies. Now look at him. Mark
these--the nameless spot, the shelterless couch, the comfortless pillow, the
restless slumber.
II. THE LESSON.
1. In this world wicked success is real failure. No security after
sin save in repenting of it.
2. In this world God pays in kind, but blesses sovereignly. That is
to say, retribution is often like crime, but grace is a surprise.
3. Turning over a new leaf does not always show a fresh page. It
does no good to take up a journey from Beer-sheba to Padan-aram when one means
to do the same thing right along. God demands a change in the heart, not in the
habit; not so much in the record and show of the life as in the life itself.
4. Sometimes unhappiness is our chief felicity. Jacob has one good,
valuable characteristic--he cannot sleep soundly when the angels of covenant
grace are coming for him. It was a grand thing for this fugitive that he was
restless while the ladder of love was unfolding over him.
5. Retribution is lifted only by redemption. God¡¦s mercy gave Jacob
chance of becoming a new man that night. It would have saved him Penuel and a
forty years¡¦ wreck had he accepted it. He might have beckoned an ascending
angel to his side, and sent by him a prayer up the ladder; and then an angel
descending along the shining rounds would have instantly brought him a message
of pardon. Surely any man can show some sign of a penitent heart. We can be
sorry we do not sorrow. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
A man asleep
I. Jacob is the
type ISRAELITE Of his lineage. From this night Jacob becomes the pattern Jew.
All that is good or bad in his descendants has its natural beginning in him.
II. Jacob is the
type MAN of his race. Far from God. Homesick. What man wants is God.
III. Jacob is the
type CHRISTIAN of the Church.
1. He was chosen even before he was born.
2. He is now in the thick of the conflict between nature and grace.
3. He will eventually be saved in the kingdom of heaven. (C.
S.Robinson, D. D.)
The ladder of doctrine
I. THE PROPHETIC
SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SCENE.
1. It could not have been exclusively personal to Jacob.
3. Furthermore, the vision is not exhausted in any mere engagement
of God¡¦s providential care.
3. Hence the vision must be interpreted as belonging to the kingdom
of grace.
4. This vision, therefore, is discharged of its full weight of
meaning only when we admit it to be a fine, high symbol of Jesus Christ.
II. ITS DOCTRINAL
REACH. The plan of redemption comes out in this symbol. Jesus Christ became the
medium of grace and restoration. If, now, no mistake has been made in our
inquiry thus far, the conclusion we have attained will be fairly corroborated
from the disclosures presented of Jesus¡¦ person and work.
1. Begin with His Person. Surely no more felicitous image could have
been presented. Christ¡¦s double nature is well shown. It would have been only a
mockery to Jacob to disclose a ladder coming almost to this earth, yet falling
short by a round or two, so as to be just out of reach. Then the angels could
not have alighted, and no human foot could have risen. Nor would the case have
been anywise better if he had been made to see that his ladder reached nearly
to heaven, not quite. For then the angels would have had as great need as he,
and an uncrossed gulf would have been beyond them in the air.
2. As to the work of Christ, furthermore, we may remark the same
exquisite aptness of this figure in Jacob¡¦s vision. Examining it closely, we
find that it teaches the sovereign assumption, the perfect completion, the
evident display, and the free offer, of the plan of grace. (C. S.Robinson,
D. D.)
The ladder of life
I. RECONCILIATION
IS NOW OFFERED IN GOOD FAITH TO EVERY INDIVIDUAL OF THE HUMAN RACE.
II. THE NECESSITY
OF AN INSTANT AND DETERMINATE DECISION IN OUR DEALING WITH THE OFFERS OF GRACE.
III. HOW ESSENTIAL
IT IS FOR EVERY SOUL THUS ADDRESSED BY THE GOSPEL OFFER TO MEASURE
ALTERNATIVES.
IV. WHAT
FELICITOUS DISPOSAL THIS VISION MAKES OF THE VEXED QUESTION CONCERNING THE
CONNECTION BETWEEN FAITH AND WORKS.
V. GROWTH IN
GRACE IS ALSO GROWTH IN EXPERIENCE.
VI. RESPONSIBILITY
BEGINS THE MOMENT THE FIRST STEP OF DUTY IS DISCLOSED TO AN INTELLIGENT MAN.
VII. PERSONAL
ACCEPTANCE OF JESUS CHRIST AS OUR SAVIOUR AND SURETY. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
The vision of God
I. ANALYSIS.
1. It is evident that God Himself was the sum and substance, the
centre and glory, of that entire vision. The Almighty was disclosed in presence
and purpose, in prediction and promise, as standing up over the ladder of grace
for a fallen world.
2. See the effect of this discovery upon Jacob.
II. LESSONS. The
truest way to produce conviction of sin is to make a disclosure of Divine
holiness.
2. The uselessness of mere religious emotion without establishment
of principle.
3. God really offers a chance of salvation to every man who will
enter upon the new life. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
A turn in the tide
I. THAT ERRING
MEN NEED DIVINE HELP.
II. THAT THIS
SPECIAL HELP WAS GRANTED TO JACOB IN VIEW OF THE FUTURE. Lessons:
1. The presence of God comes closer than we often think.
2. The earthly may be in unison with the heavenly.
3. Avoid bargain-making with God. Do not say, ¡§I could believe I am
saved if only I felt happy!¡¨ Say, ¡§He calls me to come; and as He will in no
wise cast me out, I must be accepted by Him. What more dare I ask for? ¡§ Do not
say, ¡§If only I had more time, if I were not so pressed with poverty, if I had
but some friend to direct me, I would serve God!¡¨ What I You do not need God
because you are moneyless, friendless! What! You would walk with God in a calm,
but not when a storm was yelling and dashing! Oh, foolish people and unwise!
Away with all reserves! God is for us: Christ is with us. Receive what He proffers.
Do as far as you know of His will, and leave all consequences with Him, sure
that He will secure everlasting blessings. (D. G. Watt, M. A.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. THE VISION
GRANTED TO JACOB.
1. This dream taught Jacob that there is a close connection between
this world and the next.
2. It taught him that God rules over all.
3. It taught him the solemnity of life.
II. THE PROMISES
MADE TO JACOB.
1. That he should be greatly blessed.
2. That he should be a blessing.
3. That God would watch over him.
III. THE
RESOLUTIONS FORMED BY HIM.
1. He resolved to make a memorial of the night vision and the
promises.
2. He resolved to accept the Lord as his God.
3. He also resolved to give back to God a tenth. (W. J. Evans.)
Divine providence
I. THERE IS A
DIVINE PROVIDENCE.
II. THE DIVINE
GOVERNMENT IS VEILED AND SILENT IN ITS OPERATION.
III. THE DIVINE
GOVERNMENT IS ACCOMPLISHED BY MANY AGENTS.
IV. THE DIVINE
PURPOSE IS ACCOMPLISHED AMID MUCH APPARENT CONFUSION.
V. THE DIVINE
GOVERNMENT IS CONTINUED WITHOUT INTERRUPTION OR HINDRANCE.
VI. THE GRAND
DESIGN OF THE DIVINE GOVERNMENT IS MORAL AND SAVING. (W. L. Watkinson.)
Bethel
I. THE PILGRIM.
¡§The way of transgressors is hard.¡¨ He is without a guide, friendless,
defenceless.
II. THE PILGRIM¡¦S
VISION. ¡§In Me is thy help.¡¨ ¡§Lo, I am with you alway.¡¨
III. THE PILGRIM¡¦S
VOW. (T. S. Dickson.)
I. THE
SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS VISION.
1. The close connection between earth and heaven; between things
unseen and things seen.
2. The ministry of heaven to earth; the communication between things
unseen and things seen.
3. The assurance of Divine love and care.
The dreamer
II. WHAT THIS
VISION AND REVELATION OF GOD TAUGHT JACOB.
1. The universal presence of God.
2. The sacredness of common things.
III. WHAT THIS VISION
AND REVELATION LED JACOB TO DO.
1. TO set up a memorial of that night.
2. To consecrate himself to God. (A. F. Joscelyne, B. A.)
Bethel; or, the true vision of life
I. IN THE TRUE
VISION OF LIFE THERE IS A RECOGNITION OF OUR CONNECTION WITH OTHER WORLDS.
II. IN THE TRUE
VISION OF LIFE THERE IS A RECOGNITION OF GOD¡¦S RELATION TO ALL.
1. As the Sovereign of all.
2. As the Friend of man. Two things show this.
III. IN THE TRUE
VISION OF LIFE THERE IS THE RECOGNITION OF A DIVINE PROVIDENCE OVER INDIVIDUALS.
1. This Biblical doctrine agrees with reason.
2. It agrees with consciousness.
IV. IN THE TRUE
VISION OF LIFE THERE IS THE RECOGNITION OF THE SOLEMNITY OF OUR EARTHLY
POSITION. ¡§How dreadful is this place!¡¨
1. Jacob¡¦s discovery introduced a new epoch into his history.
2. Jacob¡¦s discovery introduced a memorable epoch in his life. (Homilist.)
Man¡¦s spiritual capacity
I. THE EXISTENCE
OF A SPIRITUAL CAPACITY IN MAN.
1. Jacob saw angels, and God Himself.
2. He heard the voice of the Infinite.
3. He felt emotions which mere animal existence could not
experience.
II. THE AWAKENING
OF THIS SPIRITUAL CAPACITY IN MAN.
1. It is sometimes unexpected.
2. It is always Divine.
3. It is ever glorious.
4. It is ever memorable. (Homilist.)
Jacob¡¦s vision
I. TAKE NOTE OF
THE SURROUNDINGS OF THE VISION.
1. The ambitious schemings of Jacob and his mother to supplant his
brother Esau.
2. Jacob is an illustration of a man in whose soul faith struggles
with ambition.
II. EMPHASIZE THE
REVELATION WHICH THE VISION CONTAINS.
1. God as the God of providence.
2. The intimate union of the seen and unseen.
III. NOTICE ITS
EFFECT UPON THE MIND OF HIM TO WHOM IT WAS GIVEN.
1. A sense of the universal presence of God.
2. A sense of awe which possesses the sinning soul at the revelation
of God¡¦s presence.
3. A sense of penitence at the revelation of God¡¦s goodness. (R.
Thomas, M. A.)
Jacob¡¦s dream
I. THAT THE MORAL
DISTANCE BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH IS GREAT.
1. Heaven is distant from the thoughts of the ungodly.
2. The conceptions of man prove the same thing.
3. The conduct of sinners seems to confirm this statement.
II. THAT THERE IS
A SPIRITUAL COMMUNICATION BETWEEN HEAVEN AND EARTH.
1. This confers dignity upon our globe.
2. This imparts honour to man.
3. This communication is of Divine origin.
4. Heavenly communications are not dependent on the outward
circumstances of man.
III. THAT THROUGH
THIS COMMUNICATION ALONE MAN CAN HAVE A TRUE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD.
1. Because the human and divine are united.
2. Because through it a covenant relationship is formed between us
and God.
3. It secures to us the protection of God.
4. It provides for the consummation of our highest conceptions of
felicity.
IV. THAT TRUE
COMMUNION WITH GOD PRODUCES REVERENTIAL FEAR IN THE HEART. (Homilist.)
The spirit world
I. THIS VISION
SUGGESTS THE IDEA OF A SPIRIT WORLD.
1. We think of a spirit--
2. That a world of such beings exists may be argued from--
II. THIS VISION
SUGGESTS THAT MAN IS CONNECTED WITH THE SPIRIT WORLD.
1. He is a member of it.
2. He is amenable to its laws.
3. He is now forming a character that will determine his position in
it.
III. THIS VISION
SUGGESTS THAT THERE IS ONE MASTER. (Homilist.)
The solitary one and his visitation
I. THE SITUATION
AND CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH JACOB WAS PLACED when he received this visitation
from heaven.
1. He was solitary.
2. He had a weary body.
3. He had an anxious mind.
4. He was asleep. The Almighty can visit and bless at a time and in
a manner which we little expect.
II. THE GRACIOUS
VISITATION WHICH JACOB HAD FROM GOD.
1. It was in a dream.
2. It was an encouraging visit.
3. It was a glorious visit.
4. It was a gracious visit.
III. THE EFFECTS
PRODUCED ON JACOB¡¦S MIND AND THE LINE OF CONDUCT WHICH HE WAS INDUCED TO PURSUE.
1. He was afraid.
2. He set up a pillar.
3. He changed the name of the place.
4. He entered into a solemn covenant with God.
IV. APPLICATION.
1. In our journey through life we may sometimes be solitary,
dejected, and perplexed; but we often have gracious visits from the Lord.
2. The vows of God are upon us, viz., those of baptism and good
resolution.
3. Do we offer unto God thanksgiving and pay our vows unto the Most
High? (Benson Bailey.)
Jacob¡¦s vision
I. WHAT JACOB SAW
ON THIS OCCASION.
1. A ladder
2. Its position.
3. Its base.
4. The top of it.
5. Above it.
6. Upon it.
II. WHAT JACOB
HEARD.
1. Jehovah proclaimed Himself the God of his fathers.
2. Jehovah promised him the possession of the country where he then
was.
3. He promised him a numerous progeny; and that of him should come
the illustrious Messiah, in whom all the families of the earth should be
blessed.
4. He promised him His Divine presence and protection.
III. WHAT JACOB
FELT.
1. He felt the influence of the Divine presence.
2. He felt a sacred and solemn fear.
3. He felt himself on the precincts of the heavenly world.
IV. WHAT JACOB
DID.
1. He expressed his solemn sense of the Divine presence (Genesis 28:16-17).
2. He erected and consecrated a memorial of the events of that
eventful night.
3. He vowed obedience to the Lord.
4. He went on his way in peace and safety.
Application:
1. The privileges of piety. Divine manifestations, promises.
2. The duties of piety.
3. The delights of public worship. God¡¦s house is indeed the gate of
heaven.
4. How glorious a place is heaven! (J. Burns, D. D.)
The dream of Jacob
I. Here is, first
of all, LARGER SPACE. Jacob saw heaven. Enlargement of space has a wonderful
influence upon mind and spirit of every degree and quality. Go abroad; climb
the hill, and leave your sorrow there. Take in the great revelation of space,
and know that God¡¦s government is no local incident or trifle which the human
hand can take up and manage and dispose of. We perish in many an intellectual
difficulty for want of room. Things are only big because they are near; in
themselves they are little if set up with the firmament domed above them, and
numbered along with other things, which give proportion to all the elements
which make up the circle of their influence. Go into the field, pass over the
waves of the seas, pray when the stars are all ablaze like altars that cannot
be counted, and at which an infinite universe is offering its evening oblation;
take in more space, and many a difficulty which hampers and frets the mind will
be thrown off, and manhood will take a bound forwards and upwards. Space is not
emptiness: space is a possible Church.
II. Enlarging
space never goes alone; it brings with it ENLARGING LIFE. Jacob not only beheld
heaven: he saw the angels coming down, going up--stirred by an urgent business.
It is one thing to talk about the angels: it¡§is¡¨ another to see them.
III. Enlarging.
¡§space brings enlarging life; enlarging life brings AN ENLARGING ALTAR. Jacob
said, Surely the Lord is in this place.¡¨ We cannot enter into Jacob¡¦s meaning
of that exclamation. He had been reared in the faith that God was to be
worshipped in definite and specified localities. There were places at which
Jacob would have been surprised if he had not seen manifestations of God. The
point is, at the place where he did not expect anything he saw heaven; he saw
some form or revelation of God. See how the greater truth dawns upon his opening
mind, ¡§Surely the Lord is in this place,¡¨ and that is the very end of our
spiritual education; to find God everywhere; never to open a rose-bud without
finding God; never to see the days whitening the eastern sky without seeing the
coming of the King¡¦s brightness; so feel that every place is praying ground to
renounce the idea of partial and official consecration, and stand in a universe
every particle of which is blessed and consecrated by the presence of the
infinite Creator.
IV. Immediately
following these larger conceptions of things, we find a marvellous and
instructive instance of THE ABSORBING POWER OF THE RELIGIOUS IDEA. In Jacob¡¦s
dream there was but one thought. When we see God all other sights are
extinguished. This is the beginning of conversion; this is essential to the
reality of a new life. For a time the eye must be filled with a heavenly image;
for a time the eye must be filled with a celestial message; a complete
forgetfulness of everything past, a new seizure and apprehension of the whole
solemn future. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Christ typified by Jacob¡¦s ladder
A beautiful emblem of the Saviour. It may typify--
1. The person of the Saviour.
2. The mediatorial work of Christ.
3. Christ as the only way to the Father.
4. The accessibility of Christ to the perishing sinner.
5. The connection of angels with the work and Kingdom of Christ.
6. The heavenly state to which Christ will exalt His people. (J.
Burns, D. D.)
Jacob at Bethel
1. The office of sorrow--even of remorse, the sorrow of sin--is to
drive us from the visible to the invisible, from earth to heaven, from
ourselves to God.
2. There is a ladder between earth and heaven on which angel
messengers carry up our prayers to God and bring His answers down. Nay! this is
but the hope of our dreams; the reality transcends it; for God is here, and
needs neither ladder nor angel to communicate with us or open to us
communication with Him: here in our hours of sorest need, of bitterest
loneliness, of self-inflicted sorrow, of well-deserved penalty, of more
poignant remorse; here as He was in the burning bush to Moses, and in the
mysterious visitor to Gideon, and in the still, small voice to Elijah, and in
the child wrapped in the swaddling clothes to the stable guests; and still by
most of us unseen and to most of us unknown.
3. But when the veil is taken from our faces and we see Him, then
the ground becomes consecrated ground, the stable a sacred place, the lowing of
the cattle an anthem, Horeb a sanctuary, the land of Midian a holy land, our pile
of stones a Bethel.
4. Yea! more than this; not places only but persons are transformed
by this vision of the invisible, by this awakening to the truth, Lo, God is
here. It here changes Abram, Chaldean worshipper, into Abraham, Friend of God;
Jacob, the supplanter, into Israel, Prince of God; Moses, the impetuous
murderer of the Egyptian, into the meekest man of sacred history; David, the
sensual king, into the sweet singer of spiritual experiences; Jeremiah, the
prophet of lamentation, into the hope and courage of Israel; Saul, the
persecuting Pharisee, into Paul, the self-sacrificing Apostle; John, the son of
thunder, into John the beloved disciple.
5. Finally, the poorest consecration--the gift of ourselves with
even Jacob¡¦s ¡§if¡¨--is accepted by God as a beginning. Whosoever cometh unto Him
He will in no wise cast out. (Lyman Abbott, D. D.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. THE SEVERITY
OF GOD. The pitiable condition of Jacob when he arrived at Bethel illustrates
this. A homeless, helpless, despondent wanderer.
II. THE GOODNESS
OF GOD.
1. In its suggestive symbol (Genesis 28:12).
2. In its encouraging revelation of the Divine presence (Genesis 28:13).
3. In its encouraging promises (Genesis 28:13-15). Inheritance, guidance,
protection, companionship.
III. THE EFFECT
UPON JACOB.
1. It awoke him of his sleep.
2. It filled him with an awe-inspiring sense of the Divine presence.
3. It filled him with a spirit of worship.
4. It led him to a reconsecration of himself to God.
Lessons:
1. Self-seeking even leads to failure.
2. God will never leave nor forsake His child.
3. Let us beware of a partial consecration. (D. C. Hughes, M. A.)
The Christ ladder
The great truth, therefore, that ariseth from hence is, that
Christ is our Ladder of Life and Love, by which we have communion with God upon
earth, while we live, and admission unto God in heaven, when we die. This
ladder hath seven excellent properties. It is--
1. A living ladder, therefore it is called a ladder of life; a
ladder that hath life in it, both intrinsically and objectively.
2. A loving ladder, that will not, cannot easily let go its hold of
any such as sincerely come to it, to climb upon it, and do therein take hold of
it, and thereby embrace it.
3. It is a lively ladder also that will so lovingly embrace us, and
so livelily both take hold and keep hold of us, and not let us go until He has
brought us up to the top of the ladder, and from thence into mansions of glory.
4. It is a lovely ladder.
The posture and end of its erection is for saving from hell, and
sending to heaven.
5. The fifth excellent property is, it is a large ladder; there is
room enough both for saints and angels upon this ladder. It is so large, that
it enlargeth and stretcheth out itself into all lands, as do the great
luminaries of heaven. This ladder is--
6. The sixth excellent property--it is a long and lofty ladder, so
long as to reach from earth to heaven.
7. The seventh excellent property of this ladder is, it is a
lasting, yea, an everlasting ladder. (C. Nose.)
Jacob¡¦s dream: the solution of a mystery
I. THE DUALITY OF
EXISTENCE. Let us pause for a moment and contemplate our own existence; for
each one of us is a little universe, a miniature representation of the great
universe of which we form a part, Now, we carry within ourselves a kind of
double consciousness. We have a higher nature and a lower nature, a spiritual
side and a material side, an immortal element and a mortal element. It is this
double consciousness that has suggested to heathen nations the existence of
another world. Men of thought and reflection among them have discovered in
themselves powers that can never be developed in the present life, desires that
can never be satisfied by any material objects, and hence they have speculated
and discoursed concerning a higher, a nobler, a more permanent state of
existence. But Jacob was not left to grope after this knowledge by the light of
his own reason. In this magnificent vision of the night, the truth is made
known to him in all its imposing details, is revealed to him with marvellous
clearness and emphatic precision. This truth is taught unto you, not by the
uncertain voice of your constitution, as it was to ancient sages; not by
supernatural visions, as it was to Jacob; but by the explicit and authoritative
teaching of God¡¦s word. It was a part of Christ¡¦s mission, when He assumed our
nature, to teach us this truth; for He brought life and immortality to light
through the Gospel. He came to elevate us, by setting us free from the tyranny
of sense, and directing our thoughts to things invisible. Labour not for the
meat which perisheth, but for the meat which endureth unto everlasting life,
which the Son of Man shall give unto you.¡¨
II. THE UNITY OF
EXISTENCE. We know that we possess both a material and a spiritual nature, but
the point at which they come in contact it is impossible to ascertain. You have
a definite reply in the text. Heaven above and earth below are connected by one
great ladder. They are, therefore, not two, but one. ¡§And, behold, the Lord
stood above it.¡¨ The Lord of heaven is also the Lord of earth; heaven End earth
are therefore united into one realm. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland contains different countries; all separate, yet all united; owing
allegiance to the same sovereign. The universe is a vast united kingdom,
embracing different provinces, different principalities, different powers; but
all alike subject to the central government. ¡§And, behold, the angels of God
ascending and descending on it.¡¨ The spirit-world is very near to us, we are
but one step removed from it, were our eyes opened we should perceive that it
stands round about us. Indeed, we are sometimes inclined to believe that
material forms are but symbolical representations of spiritual realities, that
the things which are seen are but outward manifestations of the things which
are not seen. Through its agony and atoning death, the way which sin had shut
up has been reopened. God can have mercy upon us, can hold communion with us,
can send His angels down to comfort us in our troubles, to strengthen us in our
conflicts, and at last to bear our ransomed souls to glory. The unity of
existence! It is a wonderful, and yet a solemn fact. All being is but one vast
territory, broken up into innumerable separate parts, but all united under one
sceptre. Dream not, then, that when you quit this world, you will become the
subject of a different government, or become amenable to different laws. (D.
Rowlands, B. A.)
A ladder of escape
A company of shipwrecked sailors cast on the coast of Scotland at
the bottom of a great precipice, where the water would have broken up their
vessel and drowned them, found a ladder hanging down the precipice, which they
reached from their ship¡¦s mast, and escaped thereby. So Christ is to us a
ladder of salvation, and if we believe on Him we shall be saved from all evil,
and we may rise to be holy, happy, and useful. (D. Rowlands, B. A.)
The God of Bethel
I. CONSIDER WHAT
JACOB SAW.
II. CONSIDER WHAT
HE HEARD.
1. ¡§I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac.¡¨
It is well to have a known God, a tried God, a family God, and a father¡¦s God;
it is well to be able to say, as the Church does in the twenty-second Psalm,
¡§Our fathers trusted in Thee: they trusted, and Thou didst deliver them.¡¨ It is
well for you, when God looks down and sees you walking in the same path that
your fathers did who are gone to heaven before you, ¡§followers of those who
through faith and patience are now inheriting the promises.¡¨
2. ¡§The land whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy
seed.¡¨ God had already given it by promise to Abraham, but at present he had no
inheritance, not so much as to set his foot on. But as God had given it to him
and his seed by promise, it was as sure as if in actual possession. Yet several
hundred years were previously to elapse, and they must suffer much in Egypt,
and must wander forty years in the wilderness. But what of this?
It was the land of promise; God had given them it, and nothing
could hinder their possession of it.
3. ¡§And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt
spread abroad to the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the
south.¡¨ And so it was. You know in a few years they became an innumerable
people, and what millions since have descended from this one patriarch.
4. ¡§And in thee and in thy seed shall all the families of the earth
be blessed.¡¨ This refers to the Messiah. To them as concerning the flesh He
came, God having raised up His Son, even Jesus, who ¡§delivered us from the
wrath to come.¡¨ In His name we are blessed with all spiritual blessings. This
promise has as yet received only a partial accomplishment. Few as yet are
blessed with faithful Abraham. But we read of a nation being ¡§born in a day¡¨;
that all nations of the earth shall be blessed in Him; that all shall know the
Lord from the least even to the greatest.
5. ¡§And, behold, I am with thee.¡¨ So He is with all His people. His
essential presence fills heaven and earth.
6. ¡§And will bring thee again into this land.¡¨ This would be
gladsome tidings to Jacob, for who is he that could not rejoice at such tidings
concerning a country where he was born and bred, the residence of his most
impressive years?
7. ¡§For I will not leave thee until I have done that which I have
spoken to thee of.¡¨ But would He leave him then? Oh no; his anxieties therefore
were entirely unnecessary. Thus it is with Christians: they have exceeding
great and precious promises, ¡§All yea and amen in Christ Jesus,¡¨ and all of
them must be fulfilled before God leaves His people. Will He leave you then?
No, He will never leave you, nor forsake you, to all eternity. As your day is,
so shall your strength be while here; hereafter all tears shall be wiped from
your eyes.
III. OBSERVE WHAT
HE DID.
1. He discovered and acknowledged what he was ignorant of before he
went to sleep.
2. He confessed a privilege.
3. He reared a memorial.
4. He vowed a vow. (W. Jay.)
The vision
I. THE SITUATION
OF JACOB AT THIS PRESENT TIME.
1. And, that we may understand this more accurately, let us notice
his character. According to the chronology of sacred Scripture, Jacob was now
more than seventy years of age; so that his character was not then to be
formed. He had lived sufficiently long to develop all its reigning tendencies;
and though some might be disposed to conclude, from the impropriety of his
conduct on this occasion, that he was yet a stranger to God, and to the
renewing influence of Divine grace, yet an accurate knowledge of human nature,
and an extensive acquaintance with the errors of men of sincere piety, would
hardly sanction so harsh a conclusion.
2. His affliction. A short time previously Jacob had no enemy.
Behind him were the terrors of murderous revenge, and before him the
uninteresting waste of an untried world. To this must be added the sorrows of
separation from all that he had learned to love. These things could not but
press upon him as he went out from Beer-sheba to Haran; and the distress of his
heart would be in a still greater degree aggravated by the consciousness of
guilt. He had defrauded his brother--he had deceived his father--he had lied
unto God. The peace of conscience which he once enjoyed must have been
disturbed. He could not look up with cheerful confidence towards the God of
truth. Sin against God has ever had the same character and effects. It drove
the angels out of heaven, and our first parents out of paradise.
3. His submission. Not a word of murmuring appears on the
record--nothing of the spirit of resistance--no high rebellious contending
against the providence of God; but silently he obeys the injunctions of
parental authority; and with nothing but his staff, he steals unobtrusively
from under his father¡¦s roof, and enters alone upon the pilgrimage, which his
misconduct had rendered necessary. There would be, however, some comfort even
in the spirit of pious submission.
4. His afflicted mind would, in the midst of trial, be in some
measure cheered by the expectation which he had been warranted to encourage. He
was yet, as a matter of grace, encouraged to look upon himself as one ¡§ whom
the Lord had blessed¡¨; and it appears, that in the sorrowful hour of his
departure from home, his father, fearing lest, in his exile, he should ¡§ be
swallowed up of overmuch sorrow,¡¨ gave him even additional encouragement. He
confirmed the blessing to him in language still more distinct¡¨ God Almighty
bless thee, and give thee the blessing of Abraham, to thee, and to thy seed
with thee.¡¨ We see, then, Jacob fallen and afflicted, but submissive, penitent,
and borne up by hope in the promise of God, taking his journey through the
wilderness, till the shadows of evening lengthen round him--till the setting
sun finds him in a solitary spot, remote from the dwellings of man; where the
turf must be his bed-the circle of heaven his canopy--and one of the stones of
the place his pillow; and where, if he finds comfort, it must be from a source
beyond the range of human calculation. We must not attach to such a scene, in a
warm climate, all the desolateness of a houseless wanderer among ourselves; but
still, such a combination of circumstances wears the strong character of
chastening; and we may write upon it that interesting passage of Holy Writ.
¡§Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth.¡¨ Jacob strove to hasten an event which he should have looked for in
the regular course of God¡¦s providence--the result is that he delays it. He
aimed at the pre-eminence in his father¡¦s house, and, in a few hours he is
resting his houseless head upon a stony pillow in the wilderness. Such
dispensations are highly calculated for the advancement of the spiritual
character. God only can make the storm a fertilizing, rather than a desolating
shower.
II. But we come to
consider THE CONSOLATION WHICH WAS MERCIFULLY VOUCHSAFED TO JACOB IN HIS
SOLITUDE. In the failure of all sources of earthly comfort, God generally
appears most especially, for the support of those who trust in Him.
1. The obscure intimation of a gracious reconciliation with God
through a mediator.
2. The second lesson inculcated in this vision was the providential
protection of God. It was shown to him, that He who through a sufficient
mediation was a reconciled God, would also be a father, a protector, a guide.
It is scarcely possible to conceive a more kind and encouraging address, to one
in the circumstances of Jacob. It is calculated to give a very exalted idea of
the mercy of God, who not only blesses beyond what we ask or think; but even
when we think not, meets his erring and disconsolate children with the assurances
of a love that cannot be averted, and a fatherly protection that will never
fail. How blessed are they who have the Lord for their God! In the midst of
outward affliction and inward trial, Jacob was crowned with blessings that
empire could not command, and that wealth could not buy. Let not then the
pilgrim of the cross be discouraged. A rich provision is made for you--a throne
of grace is open to you; a willing helper only waits, and scarcely waits, for
the petition of faith, that he may give you aid. How deeply is their lot to be
regretted who have never sought the Redeemer, the guardian, the guide, the
comforter of Jacob!--how much is the mere man of this present world to be
pitied! (E. Craig.)
Life as a ladder
It was a good while ago that a young man, sleeping one night in
the open air, had a wonderful vision of a ladder that reached up all the way
into heaven. Whatever else it meant, it was at least a vision of what his life
might be, of what every life may be, of what every true and noble life must be.
Its foot rested on the earth; and we must all start very low down. He who would
ascend a ladder, puts his foot first on the lowest round. We cannot start in
life at the top, but must begin at the bottom and climb up. We cannot begin as
angels, nor as holy saints, nor even as moderately advanced Christians. We must
begin in the most rudimentary way, with the simplest duties, just as the wisest
men once sat with primer and spelling-book in hand. But this ladder was not
lying all along on the earth; its foot was on the ground, but its top was up
above the stars, amid the glory of God¡¦s presence. A true life rises
heavenward. It is a poor, an unworthy, life-plan that is all on the earth, that
lifts no eye or thought upward, that does not take heaven into its purpose. The
true life must press upward until it reaches glory. Its aim is the perfection
of character. Its constant aspirations are for holiness and
righteousness--Christlikeness. Its goal is heaven itself. A ladder is climbed
step by step; no one leaps to the top. And no one rises to sainthood at a
bound. No one gets the victory once for all over his sins and faults. It is a
struggle of long years; and every day must have its own victories, if we are
ever to be crowned. It may give some people considerable comfort to think of
life¡¦s course as a ladder, which one must climb slowly, step by step. A ladder
is not easy to ascend. It is toilsome work to go up its rounds. It is not easy
to rise Christward; it is hard, costly, painful. Railroad tracks suggest speed,
but a ladder suggests slow progress. We rise upward in spiritual life, not at
railway speed, nor even at the racer¡¦s rate of progress, but as men go up a
ladder. Then there is another side to this truth. Men do not fly up ladders;
yet they go up step by step. We ought always to be making at least some
progress in Christian life, as the years go on. Each day should show some
slight advance in holiness, some new conquest over the evil that is in us, some
besetting sin or wrong habit gotten a little more under our feet. Every fault
we overcome lifts us a little higher. Every low desire, every bad habit, all
longings for ignoble things, that we trample down, become ladder-rounds on
which we climb upward out of grovelling and sinfulness into nobler being. There
really is no other way by which we can rise upward. If we are not living
victoriously these little common days, we are not making any progress. Only
those who climb are getting toward the stars. Heaven is for those who overcome.
Not that the struggle is to be made in our own strength, or that the victories
are to be won by our own hands; there is a mighty Helper with us always on the
ladder. He does not carry us up, always we must do the climbing; but He helps
and cheers, putting ever new strength into the heart, and so aiding every one
who truly strives in His name to do his best. The ladder did not come to an end
half-way up to heaven; it reached to the very steps of God¡¦s throne. A true
life is persistent and persevering, and ends not short of glory. It is ladder,
too, all the way; it does not become a plain, easy, flower lined path after a
time. A really earnest and faithful Christian life never gets easy. The easy
way does not lead upward; it leads always downward. Nothing worth living for
can be had without pain and cost and struggle. Every step up the way to heaven
is up-hill, and steep besides. Heaven always keeps above us, no matter how far
we climb up toward it. However long we have been climbing, and whatever height
we have reached, there are always other victories to win, other heights to
gain. We shall never get to the top of the ladder until our feet are on
heaven¡¦s threshold. This wonderful vision-ladder was radiant with angels. We
are not alone in our toilsome climbing. We have the companionship and ministry
of strong friends we have never seen. Besides, the going up and coming down of
these celestial messengers told of communication never interrupted between God
and those who are climbing up the ladder. There is never a moment, nor any experience,
in the life of a true Christian, from which a message may not instantly be sent
up to God, and back to which help may not instantly come. God is not off in
heaven merely, at the top of the long, steep life-ladder, looking down upon us
as we struggle upward in pain and tears. As we listen, we hear Him speak to the
sad, weary man who lies there at the foot of the stairway, and He says:
¡§Behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest; I
will not leave thee.¡¨ Not angel championship alone, precious as it is, is
promised, but Divine companionship also, every step of the toilsome way, until
we get home. It is never impossible, therefore, for any one to mount the ladder
to the very summit; with God¡¦s strong, loving help the weakest need never faint
nor fail. (J. M. Miller, D. D.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. JACOB¡¦S DREAM.
1. When he dreamed it.
2. What the dream was.
3. What it meant.
II. JACOB¡¦S WAKING
THOUGHTS.
1. Humble surprise.
2. Reverential awe.
3. A joyful discovery.
III. JACOB¡¦S VOW.
1. The preparation.
2. The vow itself. Jacob dedicates
Right principles
There comes a time when every young man or maiden must start out
upon life. The seed that ripens upon the stalk must be shaken off, and be
planted, and grown upon its own root. The scion is cut away from the parent
branch and grafted upon another stalk. It is at the starting out in life that
every one needs an inspiration, and will have it, either good or bad. It is
just at this point that every one needs, in some way suited to his genius, his
circumstances and condition, that there should happen to him substantially that
which happened to Jacob; that in his vision (which may be upon his bed, or may
be one of those waking visions which men have) there should be a ladder, which,
touching the earth, connects it with heaven; and a vision of God¡¦s angels
passing between the Father and His earthly child. Let me, then, not so much
preach as talk with you of your visions; and I address myself mainly to the
young--to those that are just entering upon life. Shall your ladder, standing
on the earth, reach to heaven? or is your ladder, in its whole length, flat
along the ground? Stop one moment, and think, you who have started out, or are
about starting. By ladder I mean your plans in life. Are they, all of them,
lying upon the ground, or, though they begin there, do they really go up, and
consciously take hold of the future and of the spiritual? Man must not avoid
the world. Every ladder should stand upon the ground. The ground is a very good
place to start from, but a very poor place to stop on. No man can be a
Christian by separating himself from his kind. No man can be a Christian by
avoiding business; and if you transact business, it must be transacted in the
accustomed ways. Activity in earthly things is not inconsistent with true
piety. A right industry, a right enterprise, and right ambitions in these, do
not stand in the way of true religion. They not only perfectly harmonize with
it, but they are indispensable to it. I can scarcely conceive of a lazy man
being a Christian. Even the chronicles of those that have sought by retiring to
caves, and thus separating themselves from human life, to live a Christian
life, show that while they escaped from men, they did not escape from the
temptations which sprang up through the passions of human nature. A human life,
in its ordinary condition in Christian communities, is favourable (if one be
wise enough to employ it) to the production of morality, of virtue, and of true
piety. A man¡¦s ladder, then, should stand on the ground. A man that is going to
be a Christian should be a man among men--joined in interest with them,
sympathising in their pursuits, active in daily duties; not above the
enterprise, the thoughtfulness, and the proper amount of care that belong to
the worldly avocations. This is a part of the Divine economy; and those that
have the romantic notion of piety, that it is something that lifts them out of
the way of and away from actual worldly cares, misconceive totally the methods
of Divine grace. But while man¡¦s plans in this world should be secular, and
adapted to the great laws of that physical condition in which he was born, they
must not end where they begin. Woe be to him that uses the earth for the earth,
or whose plans are wholly material, beginning and ending in secularity and
materiality; who means by fortune--riches, and nothing else; who means by
power--carnal, temporal power, and nothing else; whose pleasure consists in
that which addresses itself to the senses, and in nothing else. Woe be to him
who lays out a plan which has nothing in it but this world. At the very time
when you plant your ladder on the ground, you must see to it that it is long
enough to reach, and that it does reach, and rests its top in heaven. This
world and the other must be consciously connected in every true man¡¦s life.
This world is shallow. Our atmosphere is smotheringly near to us. There is no
manhood possible that does not recognize an existence beyond our horizon, and
that does not stretch itself up into the proportions, at least ideal, which
belong to it as a creature of the Infinite. And even if one were to look only
upon natural results and economic courses, he is best prepared for this life
who considers this life to be made up of this life and of that which is to
come. In every outstarting in life it is not enough that you propose to
yourself to do well in this world--your ¡§this world¡¨ must reach to the other,
Along every man¡¦s ladder should be seen God¡¦s good angels. You are not at liberty
to execute a good plan with bad instruments. When you lay the course of your
life out before you, and say to yourself that you propose to achieve in your
mortal life such and such things, it is not a matter of indifference to you how
you achieve them. God¡¦s angels must ascend and descend on your ladder,
otherwise other and worse angels will. When youth first opens, if it has been
Christianity instructed, I think the impulses generally are noble, and even
romantic. Youth characteristically aspires to do things that are right, and to
do them in a right manner. One of the earliest experiences is that of surprise
and even horror at the world¡¦s ignoble ways, and the temporary withdrawal of
the young soul from its first contacts with life. Its first comprehension of
actual life, and of what must be done in the world, if one would succeed,
violates its romantic notion of manly truthfulness, of straightforwardness, of
honourable dealings. Almost all young men come up to that period of life at
which they are to break away from home, and go out into the world, with the
most generous purposes. They seem inspired by truth, honesty, fidelity,
enterprise, generosity, honour and even heroism. These all belong to youthful
aspirations. They mean never to forsake these things. They mean to carry these
qualities into their lives, and to live by them. Now these are God¡¦s good
angels to you; not that there are none better; but it may be well said that
these nobler incitements, and motives, and aspirations stand along the line of
a young man¡¦s plans in life as so many angelic messengers by which he purposes
to work out his ideal in life. Let every one who begins life, then, have a plan
along which are clearly seen noble sentiments and convictions. No plan is fit
for achievement which you cannot achieve by open, honest, clean, upright
Christian motives. You cannot afford to succeed by any other course. Your
ladder, though standing on the ground, should rest its top in heaven; and there
should be angels constantly passing between the top and the bottom. It is bad
enough to have a plan that begins on earth and stays on earth; but for a man
having a good plan to consent to execute it from base sentiments or by base
influences, is unpardonable. Your life will task and prove you. Do not,
however, let it drive away from you those influences which overhang your
childhood. Have they not already gone from some of you? Has not an enamel
already formed over some of your tender feelings? Have not some of you boasted
of forgetfulness? Have you not boasted that you no longer remembered or were
influenced by those tender impulses? and that you have strengthened yourself
against them? that you have devastated, to some extent, purity, delicacy,
refinement, truth, honour, justice, and rectitude? Are you not already working
down toward the animal conditions of life? Do not, however, trust alone to
those generous sentiments. Morality is not piety. In the vision of Jacob there
was not alone the ladder between the earth and heaven, and the angels ascending
and descending, but brightest, and best, and grandest, and behind all the
angels, stood God, saying to him, ¡§I am thy father¡¦s God.¡¨ Now high above all a
man¡¦s plans, high above all his heroic moral resolves, there is to be a living
trust in God; and there is to be a soul-connection between ourselves or our
business, and our God. All our life long we must not be far from Him. Piety
must quicken morality; then life will be safe, and will be successful. Here,
then, is a general schedule of a right life; something to do that is right; a
plan by which you shall execute a right life by right instruments; and over
all, the benign, genial, stimulating influence of the heavenly Father.
Business, morality, piety--these three should be coupled together. They are the
trinity of influences from which every one should act, and it is transcendently
important that young men should find this out before they find out anything
else. Blessed be that man who, going from his father¡¦s house, and lying down to
sleep, though it be upon the ground, and though the stones be under his head,
sees a ladder between heaven and earth, typifying his future life, and on that
ladder angels ascending and descending, and hears God saying to him, ¡§I am thy
God.¡¨ That is an inspiration on life¡¦s threshold, worth any man¡¦s aspirations.
(H. W.Beecher)
The comfortable vision
Four points present themselves for consideration in the spiritual
meaning of this vision.
I. The perfect
Manhood of our Lord Jesus Christ. The ladder ¡§was set up on the earth.¡¨
II. The eternal
Godhead of our Lord Jesus Christ. ¡§The top of it reached to heaven.¡¨
III. The
mediatorial character of our Lord Jesus Christ, resulting from this union of
two natures in one Person. He is here represented as a ladder between earth and
heaven.
IV. The
communications carried on through the Mediator between earth and heaven. The
angels of God were seen ¡§ascending and descending on¡¨ the ladder. Prayer,
grace, mercy, peace, praise--these are the messages, with which the several
angels are charged respectively. (Dean Goulburn)
.
Jacob¡¦s ladder
I. The appearance
is a ladder; and, now, the dullest of comprehension must at once feel that one
mournful truth is here taught. We are plainly reminded of this emblem that the
natural normal communication between God and man has been destroyed; and that,
by the fall, this planet has been placed in a state of isolation and
non-intercourse with heaven.
II. Having
considered the first truth taught by this vision, let us now pass to the
second, let us examine the medium which God provides to renew this intercourse,
to re-establish this alliance between earth and heaven. We have spoken of a
disruption, of a chasm such as no thunder ever rifted, and over this abyss
angel thoughts must have often hovered in grief and dismay. And, now, can this
breach never be healed? is this yawning gulf for ever impassable? Can no skill
construct, no virtue, no prayers, win a path of return for a single soul? Must
all hope for man be for ever buried in despair? To these questions human reason
could not have given but one answer. Human reason, did I say? Cherub and seraph
must have shuddered as they gazed at the rent sin had made; and, recalling a
frightful tragedy among the celestial hierarchies, they must have felt that for
man all was ¡§lost¡¨--not in danger of being lest--but lost, the soul lost,
heaven lost, hope lost, all lost, and lost for ever. But blessed be God,
hosannah to His grace; everlasting praises to Him who came ¡§to seek and to save
that which was lost,¡¨ these questions have been answered, and so answered that
angels are lost in pondering such mercy. Eternal wisdom and power and love have
solved the problem, and solved it by consecrating for us ¡§a new and living
way.¡¨ In the first place, observe that God, not man, is the architect of this
ladder. Jacob did nothing--could do nothing--towards its construction. And so,
if we ¡§have boldness to enter into the holiest,¡¨ it is ¡§not by works of
righteousness which we have done,¡¨ but ¡§by the blood of Jesus.¡¨ Mark, in the next
place, the form and position of this ladder; its foot is planted on the earth,
and its top reaches to heaven. A third truth taught by this remarkable vision
is the freeness of salvation by Jesus. What conditions are here interposed?
What fitness? What works? Between God and man there is one mediator, Jesus
Christ; but between that mediator and man there is, there can be none.
III. We have thus
seen that the ladder on which Jacob gazed was a type of Christ, of the
mysterious interference by which heaven and earth are reconciled. It is not,
however, only in this district of God¡¦s moral dominion that so wonderful an
interposition is the subject of intense and adoring interest. On this ladder
the patriarch saw an order of beings far superior to man. From top to bottom it
swarmed with radiant cherubim and seraphim, ¡§the angels of God ascending and
descending.¡¨ ¡§Ascending and descending¡¨; exulting that this new avenue has been
opened; and, at once, in eager bands, pouring down to earth as ¡§ministering
spirits to minister to them who are heirs of salvation.¡¨ ¡§Descending¡¨; coming
down to encamp about the righteous, whether they sleep or wake, and deliver
them--as it is written, ¡§He shall give His angels charge over thee to keep thee
in all thy ways; they shall bear thee up in their hands lest thou dash thy foot
against a stone.¡¨ And ¡§ascending¡¨; now to bear the news of a sinner¡¦s
repentance and send a tide of rapture and gratulation along the habitations of
heaven; and now to escort the soul of some Lazarus--to guard it from the
¡§prince of the power of the air,¡¨ who watches like a wolf scared from his
prey--to guide it on its course, some as strong-winged avant couriers, and
some as convoys wafting it up to realms of peace and purity and love, to the
bosom of its God. (R. Fuller.)
The vision in the wilderness
I. THE WEARY
WANDERER.
1. Homeless.
2. Regretful.
3. Apprehensive.
4. Disappointed.
II. THE WONDROUS
VISION.
III. THE WILLING
VOW. Rather a response to God than a bargain with Him. Lessons: Note how Jacob,
in this journey, may represent three stages in spiritual experience.
1. The penitent; feeling the burden of sin.
2. The believer; rejoicing, with trembling, in God¡¦s revelation of
mercy.
3. The worshipper; consecrating his whole life to the service of his
God and Saviour. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
Jacob¡¦s night at Bethel
This sacred story of Jacob¡¦s night at Bethel may serve to teach us
that in our darkest and most desolate moments God may be using our trouble and
despondency as a means of drawing our hearts to Him. We may find Him nearest
when we thought Him farthest off. What the world would call the greatest
misfortune may be found to have been sent in the greatest mercy. There is no
such word as chance or accident in the inspired vocabulary of faith. Nobody but
a sceptic or a misanthrope would say of himself ¡§I am as a weed, Flung from the
rock on ocean¡¦s foam to sail Where¡¦er the surge may sweep, the tempest¡¦s breath
prevail.¡¨ All places are safe, all losses are profitable, all things work
together for good to them that love God. Every experience of the unsatisfactory
nature of earthly things should direct us to the stronghold of hope. Every pang
caused by an uneasy conscience should awaken within us a more intense longing
for the peace which passeth all understanding. Out in mid-ocean there is a ship
tossing on the waves. The night is dark, the winds are high. The angry elements
rage and howl as if determined to tear the shattered vessel in pieces or sink
it in the deep. A sailor-boy has just climbed down from the swinging mast and
crept into his narrow locker, wet and cold, to get a little rest. He sleeps
unconscious of the howl of the storm and the roll of the groaning ship. His
heart is far away in that quiet home which he left for a roving life on the seas.
He hears again the voice of evening prayer offered from the parental lips, and
one fervent, tender petition bears his own name to the throne of the infinite
mercy. The Sabbath bell calls, and he goes in the light of memory, with his
youthful companions, along the green walks and beneath the shade of ancient
trees to the village church. He hears the blessed words of Christ, ¡§Come unto
Me.¡¨ God is speaking to that wanderer upon the seas as He spoke to Jacob at
Bethel in the dreams of the night. And that vision of home and voice of prayer
is sent to that sailor-boy to make the tossing ship to him the house of God and
gate of heaven. When he wakes from that brief and troubled sleep, he has only
to answer the call of Heaven, as Jacob did, with the gift of his heart, and
that night of tossing on the lonely seas shall be to him also the beginning of
a new and a better life. Far away, among the mountains of Nevada, where of old
God¡¦s creative hand locked up veins of gold in the fissures of the rock, the
weary miner lies down in his cheerless cabin to sleep. It is the evening of the
blessed Sabbath, and yet to him it has not been a day of rest. Work, work,
work, with hammer and spade and drill, from morn to eve, through all the week,
has been his life for months and years. His calloused hands, and stiffened
frame, and weary step, tell of hardships such as few can bear and live. And he
has borne them all--with heat and cold, and rain and drought, and famine and
fever--that he might fill his hands with gold. And now, in this wakeful and
lonely hour, something impels him to ask himself what all the treasures of the
mountains would be worth to him if he had not found rest for his soul. To that
tired, Sabbathless worker in his solitude comes a gentle influence, as if it were
an angel¡¦s whisper, to tell him of riches that never perish, and of a home
where the weary are at rest. Thus, all round the earth--on the sea and the
land, in the city and the wilderness, by night and by day--God is calling
wanderers home. (D. March, D. D.)
The angels of God
ascending and descending on it
Ascending and descending angels
I. The first
white-winged angel whom I ask you to look in the face is ADVANCEMENT. From our
earliest to our latest years personal advancement is a keen and noble satisfaction.
It is the antagonism which we have to overcome which makes our effort
interesting and meritorious. When we strive to go up, the force of gravitation
pulls us back. The inertia of our own bodies must be overcome; the lungs,
heart, and brain must be subjected to a greater pressure. And it is just so in
our moral life. Therefore the saint says, ¡§It was good for me that I was
afflicted.¡¨ Therefore we teach that discontent is a good thin, g, that
languorous situations are to be avoided, and that a repletion of any sort is
dangerous to the soul. Just as soon as a man feels that there is no need for
further effort, his angel descends. Perhaps one reason why the angels of little
children always behold the face of their Father who is in heaven is because
children grow so fast and hunger so after knowledge, and ask questions so
far-reaching that they puzzle their too often motionless elders. Biology
teaches that, in the life below our own, the life of the animals, when some
function which has been long and sorely striven for, perhaps through countless
generations, gets fixed in the order of life, its action becomes automatic, and
is no longer a factor in the mental outreaching of the individual. It is so
also with man. You may be advanced beyond your neighbours in generosity of
belief, in the strictness of your veracity, in the extent of your benevolence;
but if you are simply carrying out the spiritual functions which your ancestors
organized in you by toil and tears, if your faith, truthfulness, charity, cost
you no effort, no upward strain, it is not accounted to you for righteousness.
And then we learn from science that everything which can become merely
mechanical has its day and ceases to be. Only that which is subject to
perpetual change can survive.
II. The next angel
is MORALITY. Even morality in us is not always ascending. It proceeds or
recedes. How many times in the world¡¦s history all rights have been determined
and all moralities squared! To-day nothing is more alarming to most people than
the notion that right has been a variable thing with the growing ages.
Conscience is the voice of God in the soul of man; but how has that soul of man
echoed and contorted the voice! The sense of the right is growing, as it long
has grown in the race. Except it is growing in you, as an individual, so that
you feel its birth-pangs, and struggle with them, it is not an ascending angel
for you. Morality is an angel anywhere--in African jungles, where it keeps a
man from killing the members of his household unless they are old or sick, and
in the best neighbour you can call to mind, who is too honourable to take an
unfair advantage of another. Cicero was moral; and we are told that Brutus was
an houourable man. But the stride which morality took from these Roman heroes
to Abraham Lincoln is a very marked one, known and read of all men. Thirty
years since it was immoral in America not to respect the physical rights of
white men. To-day it is immoral not to maintain the rights of men, whatever
their colour. After a little it will be accounted simply moral to give woman
her rights, the custody of her own child, the control of her own earnings and
clothes, the right to express an opinion as to how much she shall be taxed, how
much of her property the public may appropriate, the right to as much civil
consideration as the ignorant Irishman receives who cracks stone on the road.
Some time we shall so enlarge the boundaries of morality that men will be
forbidden to enslave the minds of their fellows, that they may appropriate
their property through the larceny of their brains. Some time it will be
thought as dastardly a deed to slowly unnerve and stamp out men by whiskey as
it was to poison them with wines, perfumes, roses, and fans in the soft days of
luxurious Rome. Some time a man who simply does so much right as custom exacts,
who clamours for the letter, as Shylock for the word of the bond, shall be a
byword and a hissing; for the only claim you can lay upon the future springs
from your individual advance upon the sense of morality you have inherited.
III. The third
angel is INSPIRATION. Of what avail is the evolution of our life below, and the
growth of conduct into better and best, if the Holy Spirit does not
occasionally hold us as the pledge of eternal possession? For, of course, by
inspiration here I mean the filling of your soul and mine with the sweetest
assurance. The inspiration which made our sacred volume, which long since
scented and winged a poet soul in Persia, so that its orisons flew to our day
and clime, which made great India like a sandal-wood chest out of which come
to-day poems and teachings, fragrantly preserved, is only as a faded nosegay
which your aged mother shows as a souvenir of her young days, only as a
pathetic glove which a century since eased a young hand which soon was dust.
But to you there may come an exhilaration before which clover-scented mornings
are but a passing dream. The descending angel of inspiration is going down now
to trouble the waters of ancient Siloam, hovering with a ghost¡¦s dead hands
over interpretations of Scripture long since palsied through disuse, raising
again the widow¡¦s son by the gate of Nain. The ascending angel is wreathing
with an electric flush the human pillar of integrity; it is steadying man¡¦s
moral nerve to translate correctly all that observers see in nature and life;
it is lifting from the dead past capacities which have lapsed in us, in our
forward march, and restoring to man an equable health of body and soul, a
confidence in an all-round Providence, which will make us patient and calm, and
a power of knowing much which is unseen, as animals know, and even inanimate
life, but which is as dropped stitches in our life. The angel of inspiration
bids us look up, and calls, ¡§Come¡¨; but, in looking and going upward, we lift
the world with us. Believe that inspiration is ahead of you and within. It is a
messenger of God. It is the crown of effort and of purity. It does not descend
with family heirlooms, mental or moral. It is the gift of God to the
individual. There are many angels besides those I have named. Belief is one, if
it is allied to inspiration; but let these three lead you--Advancement,
Morality, Inspiration. They can open to you abiding joys of which my word is
but a feeble hint:--
¡§Around
your lifetime golden ladders rise;
And
up and down the skies,
With
winged sandals shod,
The
angels come and go, the messengers of God.¡¨
(A.
S.Nickerson.)
Angelic ministries
I. The most
obvious truth herein conveyed s, of course, the constant presence and activity
of the inhabitants of heaven; and indeed it is the general tenor of Scripture
that God acts upon us men by and through the angelic host. ¡§The providence of
God,¡¨ says Bishop Bull, ¡§in the government of this lower world, is in a great
part administered by the holy angels. These, as Philo terms them, are ¡¥the ears
and eyes of the Universal King.¡¦¡¨ The expression alludes to the government of
earthly monarchs, who have their deputies in all parts of their dominion, who
are, as it were, the eyes by which they see and the hands by which they act.
Now, if we learn to believe in the principle that God deals with us through the
ministrations of angels, we shall have to believe also that we ourselves are in
these days the subject of these ministrations, although we behold them not. It
is not empty space between earth and heaven; the pathways of the air are filled
like the roads and avenues of this world. ¡§The chariots of God are twenty
thousand, even thousands of angels.¡¨ Bound upon unnumbered missions, they hurry
to and fro, those swift and shining forms; now to superintend a kingdom¡¦s
welfare, now to hold up a monarch¡¦s steps; now to guard the head of some mighty
chief in the shock of battle, now to wait beside the sick bed of some houseless
poor one, to suggest thoughts of peace to the heart racked with pain and care;
and eventually, when the last sand has run out, to waft the liberated soul to
the green pastures and the still waters of paradise: for have we not read how
it is that they receive us into the everlasting habitations? And it is as
revealing this general and universal law that the dream of Jacob is especially
remarkable. What he saw then is always, unceasingly, going on. ¡§Ascending and
descending¡¨ I From the beginning of the world¡¦s history until now that
ever-moving host have been rushing to and fro, unseen, save by him who
slumbered on the couch of stone. ¡§He called the place Bethel,¡¨ and supposed
that the particular spot on which he rested was opposite to the gate of heaven.
Ah! vain imagination! in every quarter of creation the same dazzling scene is
being enacted. From every part of the firmament are ever, ever issuing those
¡§watchers and holy ones.¡¨ No foot of earth is unvisited by them, no tract of
air is unswept by their forms of fire. In the bright sunshine they are with us;
in the stilly hours of slumber they keep sentinel watch around us. Do you ask
bow it happens that we feel them not? Yea, sirs, do we not feel their
influence? Have we never experienced strong and irresistible impulses upon our
minds to do certain things, impulses which we cannot explain, but which the
event proves to have been for our good? Have we never been diverted, by sudden
and unexpected accidents cast in our way, from going on some journey which, if
we had pursued, we learn afterwards, would have been productive of loss of life
or limb? What strange ominous forebodings and fears ofttimes seize upon men of
the strongest minds, warnings of approaching perils or of coming death,
warnings which, if listened unto, would enable many a man to prepare for his
meeting with God. And all these things we would have you attribute to nothing
less than the care and tenderness of those guardian spirits, who are never far
absent from the heirs of salvation. And is there nothing more? Have we not seen
or read of death-beds where the sufferer hath been soothed by whisperings
unheard by other ears, and charmed with the melody of strains which none could
catch save the parting soul? Oh, men and brethren, call it not what the infidel
calls it, the wanderings of a disordered mind. Rather believe that angel-guards
are verily near, nerving the soul in the last agony, and beckoning onwards to
its rest. Rather believe that, as the earthly house of this tabernacle decays,
the immortal spirit gets closer converse with celestial things. Rather learn to
hope that ye too, when your last hour arrives, and ye stand trembling on the
brink of eternity, may be calmed and encouraged by the sight of the ministers
of grace, and see in a measure what Jacob saw of old, ¡§the angels of God
ascending and descending¡¨ around you.
II. If we take the
vision as designed to instruct the mind of the patriarch as to angelic
ministries, we cannot suppose ¡§the ladder planted upon the earth¡¨ to be without
significance. What, then, may we hence learn? what further light is hence
thrown upon the mysterious subject of spiritual agency? Now, the first truth
conveyed to us has reference, we think, to the nature of angels. Jacob saw
angels ascending and descending, but he saw this descent and ascent accomplished
by a ladder. There was an external and independent instrumentality. The
language of Scripture does not teach us to regard the angels as purely
spiritual creatures. It is probably the peculiar property of God alone to be
entirely immaterial. ¡§God,¡¨ it is emplastically declared, ¡§is a Spirit.¡¨ He,
and none beside Him, is wholly without bodily parts. It is, indeed, said of the
Almighty, ¡§He maketh His angels spirits¡¨; but we are not hence to conclude that
they have no body at all. When the term spirit is employed to denote the
angelic nature, we must take it in a lower sense, to denote their exemption
from those gross and earthly bodies which the inhabitants of this world
possess. They are not flesh and blood, as we are; nor is their substance like any
of those things that fall under our observation. Yet have they a body, subject,
it would appear, to the action of time; for in the Book of Daniel the angel
Gabriel declares that the command was given him to visit the prophet when he
began his supplications; and it is added that, flying swiftly, he came to him
and touched him about the hour of the evening sacrifice. Now, it is the proper
attribute of a body, as distinguished from a pure spirit, to require time to
convey itself from one locality to another. ¡§God is a Spirit,¡¨ a perfect
Spirit, and He is everywhere at once; a body cannot be in more than one spot at
a time. The angels, then, we conclude, have bodies, but bodies of a most
refined and glorious quality. The bodies of angels, we may conceive, are spiritual
bodies; not like ours, sluggish and inactive, incapable of keeping pace with
the nimble and rapid movements of the mind, but of a wonderful subtlety,
travelling with an inconceivable velocity, possessed of stupendous power. Jacob
saw them ascending and descending upon a ladder, spanning the space between
heaven and earth. He did not behold them moving about in an instant, everywhere
at once; there was the appearance of a material communication, just such as
beings with bodies would require. To delineate purely spiritual creatures as
ascending and descending upon a ladder would be an absurdity. The introduction
of a ladder into the patriarch¡¦s dream is an intimation that the angels, though
vastly more glorious than men, are yet utterly unlike God in their nature; that
they are not, in short, quite free from the burden of matter. And it may be
that higher truths still are taught by the erection of that mystic ladder,
whose foot was upon the ground, and its top reaching unto heaven. We cannot
wholly dissever the text from a remarkable speech of our blessed Lord.
¡§Hereafter,¡¨ said Christ, ¡§shall ye see the heavens opened, and the angels of
God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.¡¨ The Redeemer Himself steps
forward as the interpreter of Jacob¡¦s dream, and represents Himself as
fulfilling the type of the ladder which arrested the patriarch¡¦s gaze. And it
is not hard to understand how this may be. For is it not through Christ, and
for His merits, that the communication between man and God was not quite cut
off at Adam¡¦s fall? Was it not for Christ¡¦s sake alone that the Almighty did
not utterly excommunicate the race of men, and shut up His compassions from
them? Indeed, indeed, if there has been angelic guardianship extended to the
saints, if the seraphim and cherubim have busied themselves with this lower
world, it has only been because Christ Jesus has vouchsafed to take our nature
upon Him. He has been the Way. As none of us can come to the Father save by
Him, so neither angel nor archangel can visit us save by Him. (Bishop
Woodford.)
The Incarnation a helpful fact
Do you think the idea of the Incarnation too aerial and
speculative to carry with you for help in rough, practical matters? The
Incarnation is not a mere idea, but a fact as substantial and solidly rooted in
life as anything you have to do with. Even the shadow of it Jacob saw carried
in it so much of what was real that when he was broad awake he trusted it and
acted on it. It was not scattered by the chill of the morning air, nor by that fixed
staring reality which external nature assumes in the grey dawn as one object
after another shows itself in the same spot and form in which night had fallen
upon it. There were no angels visible when he opened his eyes; the staircase
was there, but it was of no heavenly substance, and if it had any secret to
tell, it coldly and darkly kept it. There was no retreat for the runaway from
the poor common facts of yesterday. The sky seemed as far from earth as it did
yesterday, his tract over the hills as lonely, his brother¡¦s wrath as real; but
other things also had become real; and as he looked back from the top of the
hill on the stone he had set up, he felt the words, ¡§I am with thee in all
places whither thou goest,¡¨ graven on his heart, and giving him new courage;
and he knew that every footfall of his was making a Bethel, and that as he went
he was carrying God through the world. The bleakest rain that swept across the
hills of Bethel could never wash out of his mind the vision of bright-winged
angels, as little as they could wash off the oil or wear down the stone he had
set up. The brightest glare of this world¡¦s heyday of real life could not
outshine and cause them to disappear; and the vision on which we hope is not
one that vanishes at cock-crow, nor is He who connects us with God shy of human
handling, but substantial as ourselves. (M. Doris, D. D.)
Verse 15
I will not leave thee, until I have done all that which I have
spoken to thee of
Renewed pledges
There are two very observable facts which may be gathered from the
joint study of the Bible and our own hearts.
1. That we are prone to distrust the promises of God, though we know
Him to be unchangeable.
2. That God so condescends to our weakness that He reduplicates His
pledges, in order, as it were, to compel us into confidence.
I. God speaks to
His people of sin blotted out; He speaks of the thorough reconciliation which
Christ has effected between Himself and the sinner; He speaks of His presence
as accompanying the pilgrim through the wilderness; of His grace as sufficient
for every trial which may or can be encountered. The things of which God speaks
to His people spread themselves through the whole of the unmeasured hereafter,
and it must follow that the pledge of our not being left until the things
spoken of are done is tantamount to an assurance that we shall never be left
and never forsaken.
II. The text is
thus a kind of mighty guarantee, giving such a force to every declaration of
God, that nothing but an unbelief the most obstinate can find ground for doubt
or perplexity. It does not stand by itself, but comes in as an auxiliary in
declaring God¡¦s glorious intention. It is a provision against human faithlessness,
words which may well be urged when a man is tempted with the thought that,
after all, a thing spoken of is not a thing done, and which bid him throw from
him the thought that God is not bound to perform whatever He has promised. (H.
Melvill, B. D.)
God¡¦s purpose and its fulfilment
1. God has a plan or scheme of life for every one of us, and His
purposes embrace every part of that plan.
2. No words of God about our life will be left unfulfilled.
3. There is no unfinished life. The promise is a promise of--
The companionship of God
I. In what does
the treasure of God¡¦s companionship consist? It consists--
1. In the consciousness of God¡¦s personality.
2. In the precious possessions he gives us--love, reason,
conscience, will. To our conscience new light is given; to our love new spheres
are open; our will receives new strength from the new example of His love and
grace.
II. While these
faculties are taken up the companionship of God becomes a reality of our daily
life and our ¡§exceeding great reward.¡¨ And then, besides, and with all this, we
have the consciousness of communion with the Incarnate Word--¡§Jesus Christ, the
same yesterday, to-day, and for ever¡¨; we know what to do and where to find
Him. In this life we are to walk by faith. Our capacities are not intended to
be satisfied here, but they shall be satisfied hereafter. (Bishop King.)
A fourfold comfort
Against his fourfold cross, here is a fourfold comfort.
1. Against the loss of his friends, ¡§I will be with thee.¡¨
2. Of his country, ¡§I will give thee this land.¡¨
3. Against his poverty, ¡§Thou shalt spread abroad to the east,
west,¡¨ &c.
4. His solitariness; angels shall attend thee, and ¡§thy seed shall
be as the dust,¡¨ &c. And ¡§who can count the dust of Jacob,¡¨ said Balsam Numbers 23:10). Now, whatsoever God spake
herewith Jacob, He spake with us, as well as with him, saith Hoses (Hoses.
12:4). (J. Trapp.)
Purpose in a promise
Every true man¡¦s life is charged with a purpose of God, which will
mould it and master it, so as that it may best work out His glory. He who notes
the fall of the sparrow sees, numbers, and knows each human soul. He has
intrusted it with a certain office and privilege. He has created it that it
might glorify Him. He has endowed that soul with existence that it might be
guided into His all-wise purpose, and afterwards received to share with Him His
glory.
I. Observe, then,
carefully in the first place, that this being the chief end of man, there will
always have to be some secondary and subordinate ends. These must be reckoned
in; for they all tend towards the main end, and indeed receive their entire
value from their connection with that.
II. Observe,
furthermore, that if there be so many subordinate purposes in the one purpose
of God, there must of necessity be many instruments also.
III. Observe, in
the third place, that with a purpose so complicated as God¡¦s is, in order to
introduce every man¡¦s life into it, it will be possible that in some cases more
than half the years which any given person lives will have to be spent just in
rendering him ready to come in efficiently at the exact point when he is
needed.
IV. Observe, once
more, that if these varied instruments employed in carrying out the grand
purpose are so many, and need so much preparation, there will be an evident
necessity that a large number of teachers and trainers shall be kept at God¡¦s
service in instructing them. (C. S.Robinson, D. D.)
The Keeper of Israel
I. THE COMPANY.
Jehovah Himself.
II. THE OFFICE.
The Keeper of Israel.
III. THE MARCH.
¡§All places whither thou goest.¡¨
IV. THE
ENGAGEMENT. ¡§I will not leave thee, until I have done that which I have spoken
to thee of.¡¨ (J. Irons.)
Jacob¡¦s protector
I. GOD¡¦S
PRESENCE.
II. PROTECTION.
III. GUIDANCE.
IV. FAITHFULNESS.
(C. Clayton, M. A.)
Four choice sentences
I. First, turn to
the twenty-eighth chapter of Genesis, at the fifteenth verse, and read of
PRESENT BLESSING. The Lord said to His servant Jacob, ¡§Behold, I am with thee.¡¨
1. Jacob was the inheritor of a great blessing from his fathers, for
this sentence was spoken in connection with the following words,¡¨ I am the Lord
God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac.¡¨ It is an inexpressible
privilege, to be able to look back to father and grandfather, and perhaps
farther still, and to say, ¡§We come of a house which has served the Lord as far
back as history can inform us.¡¨ Descended from Christians, we have a greater
honour than being descended from princes. There is no heraldry like the
heraldry of the saints. Be not satisfied unless you yourself obtain such mercy
as God gave to your ancestors, and hear the Lord saying, ¡§I am with thee.¡¨
2. This mercy was brought home to Jacob at a time when he greatly
needed it. He had just left his father¡¦s house, and he felt himself alone. He
was coming into special trial, and then it was that he received a fuller
understanding of the privilege which God had in store for him. Let me read the
words to you--¡§I am with thee.¡¨ That God should send His angel with Jacob to
protect him would have been much; but it is nothing compared with, ¡§I am with
thee.¡¨ This includes countless blessings, but it is in itself a great deal more
than all the blessings we can conceive of. There are many fruits that come of
it, but the tree that yields them is better than the fruit.
3. Why, when God is with a man there is a familiarity of
condescension that is altogether unspeakable: it ensures an infinite love. ¡§I
am with thee.¡¨ God will not dwell with those He hates.
4. ¡§I am with thee¡¨--it means practical help. Whatever we undertake,
God is with us in the undertaking; whatever we endure, God is with us in the
enduring; whithersoever we wander, God is with us in our wandering. ¡§If God be
for us, who can be against us?¡¨ If God be with us, can we ever be exiled or
banished? If God be with us, what can we not do? If God be with us, what can we
not endure?
II. Now turn to
the thirty-first chapter of Genesis, at the third verse, and read these
words--¡§I will be with thee.¡¨ We will call this FUTURE BLESSING. It is almost
unnecessary to take this second text; for if it is written, ¡§I am with thee,¡¨
you may depend upon it that He will be with us, for God does not forsake His
people.
III. I want to go a
step further, and come, in the third place, to EXPERIENCED BLESSINGS. Let us
look at Jacob¡¦s experience. Did Jacob find God to be with him? Turn to the
thirty-first chapter again, and read the fifth verse. Up to as far as the time
that he was about to leave Laban, he says--¡§The God of my father hath been with
me.¡¨ I have read that testimony with great joy. I thought of Jacob thus--Well,
you certainly were not eminent for grace while with Laban. You were plotting
and scheming--you against Laban and Laban against you; and yet your witness is,
¡§The God of my father hath been with me.¡¨ This is all the more encouraging as
coming from you. Jacob seems to say of his God: It was He that gave me my wife
and my children; it was He that prospered me in the teeth of those who tried to
rob me; the God of my father hath been with me notwithstanding all my
shortcomings. I trust that some of you can bear the like witness. Though you
have net been all that you could wish in the Christian life, yet you can say,
¡§The God of my father has been with me.¡¨ Now, we will look at him a little
further on, in the thirty-fifth chapter, and the third verse: there we shall
find him saying--¡§Let us arise, and go up to Bethel; and I will make there an
altar unto God, who answered me in the day of my distress, and was with me in
the way which I went.¡¨ As I have already said, he left Laban¡¦s house; and it
was a very venturesome journey, but God was with him: Jacob tells us that so it
was. Poor Jacob was full of fear when he heard that Esau was coming to meet
him. You can see that by the way in which he divided his flocks and his herds,
and set apart so large a present for Esau. But God does not leave His people
because of their fears. I am so thankful for that. There was a night of
wrestling with Jacob. On that day, too, I have no doubt, Jacob was very much
cast down, because he remembered his sin. He knew he had ill-treated Esau, and
robbed him of the blessing; but, for all that, he came with a repentant heart
to submit himself before his brother and to do what he could to please him.
Because of this, God was with him. At the close of his life we find Jacob more
fully than ever confessing that the presence of God had been with him. I read
you the passage where he wished that the God that had been with him might be
with his grandsons in the selfsame way--the forty-eighth chapter, at the
fifteenth and sixteenth verses. ¡§He blessed Joseph, and said, God, before whom
my fathers Abraham and Isaac did walk, the God which fed me all my life long
unto this day, the Angel which redeemed me from all evil, bless the lads.¡¨
There is his last testimony to the faithfulness of God. He had lost Rachel--oh,
how it stung his heart! but he says, ¡§God redeemed me from all evil.¡¨ There had
come a great famine in the land; but he says that God had fed him all his life
long. He had lost Joseph, and that had been a great sorrow; but now, in looking
back, he sees that even then God was redeeming him from all evil. He said once,
¡§Joseph is not, and Simeon is not, and ye will take Benjamin away; all these
things are against me¡¨; but now he eats his words, and says, ¡§The Lord hath
redeemed me from all evil.¡¨ He now believes that God had been always with him,
had fed him always, and redeemed him always, and blessed him always. Now, mark
you, if you trust in God, this shall be your verdict at the close of life.
IV. We have had
present blessing; we have had future blessing; we have had experienced blessing
three times over; and now we go to TRANSMITTED BLESSING for we find Jacob
transmitting the blessing to his son and to his grandson. Read in the
forty-eighth chapter, at the twenty-first verse ¡§Behold, I die: but God shall
be with you.¡¨ I commenced by noticing the blessing which passed on from Abraham
to Isaac; and now we see that Jacob hands it on to Joseph, Manasseh, and to
Ephraim--¡§I die: but God shall be with you.¡¨ Blessed be the everlasting God--if
Abraham dies, there is Isaac; and if Isaac dies, there is Jacob; and if Jacob
dies, there is Joseph; and if Joseph dies, Ephraim and Manasseh survive. The
Lord shall never lack a champion to bear His standard high among the sons of
men. Only let us pray God to raise up more faithful ministers. That ought to be
our prayer day and night. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 16
Surely the Lord is In this place, and I knew it not
The sense of God¡¦s presence
I.
This
living sense of God¡¦s presence with us is a leading feature of the character of
all His saints under every dispensation. This is the purpose of all God¡¦s
dealings with every child of Adam--to reveal Himself to them and in them. He
kindles desires after Himself; He helps and strengthens the wayward will; He
broods with a loving energy over the soul; He will save us if we will be saved.
All God¡¦s saints learn how near He is to them, and they rejoice to learn it.
They learn to delight themselves in the Lord--He gives them their hearts¡¦
desire.
II. Notice,
secondly, how this blessing is bestowed on us. For around us, as around David,
only far more abundantly, are appointed outward means, whereby God intends to
reveal Himself to the soul. This is the true character of every ordinance of
the Church: all are living means of His appointment, whereby He reveals Himself
to those who thirst after Him. We use these means aright when through them we
seek after God. Their abuse consists either in carelessly neglecting these
outward things or ill prizing them for themselves and so resting in them, by
which abuse they are turned into especial curses. (Bp. S. Wilberforce.)
Unconscious providences
You cannot understand the annals of the race, unless you employ
the doctrine of special providence for your key. ¡§We need celestial
observations,¡¨ said Coleridge, ¡§whenever we attempt to mark out terrestial
chalets.¡¨ It was reported as great wisdom, though uninspired, when somebody
remarked, ¡§Man proposes, God disposes.¡¨ But wisdom inspired had said long
before that: ¡§There are many devices in a man¡¦s heart; nevertheless, the
counsel of the Lord, that shall stand.¡¨
I. Let us look,
for a moment, through the familiar incidents of the Scriptural story, for the
sake of some quiet illustrations they furnish The only way to look upon
Scripture characters is to contemplate them on the heaven side, to just look up
straight at them. In our conceit, we are sometimes wont to estimate these
worthies of the Old and New Testaments as being altogether such as ourselves,
wilfulest and most blind, moving self-impelled in orbits of earthly history.
Just as a child contemplates the stars it sees far down in a placid lake, over
the surface of which it sails. They do seem mere points of fire under the
water, and an infant mind may well wonder what is their errand there. It ought,
however, to need no more than a mature instructor¡¦s voice to remind the
mistaken boy that these are but images; the true stars are circling overhead,
where the creating Hand first placed them in a system. So these orbs of human
existence, distinct, rounded, inclusive, must be judged, not as they appear
down here in the confused depths of a merely human career, but aloft, where
they belong, orbited in their settled and honourable place in the counsels of
God;--
¡§For
ever singing, as they shine, The hand that made us is Divine.¡¨
II. Nor is the
case otherwise, when we enter the field of secular history for a new series of
illustrations. The Almighty, in building up His architectures of purpose, seems
to have been pleased to use light and easy strokes, slender instruments, and
dedicate took He uses the hands less, the horns coming out of His hands more,
for ¡§there is the hiding of His power.¡¨ He has employed the least things to
further the execution of His widest plans, sometimes bringing them into
startling prominence, and investing them with critical, and to all appearance
incommensurate, importance. What we call accidents are parts of His ordinary,
and even profound, counsels, lie chooses the weakest things of this world to
confound the mighty. Two college students by a haystack began the Foreign
Mission work. An old marine on ship-board commenced the Association for
Sailors. The tears of a desolate Welsh girl, crying for a Testament, led to the
first society for distributing Bibles. Were these events accidents? No; nor
these lives either. God reached the events through the lives. ¡§The Lord¡¨ was
¡§in that place.¡¨ He established those lives, nameless or named, like sentinels
at posts. They did their office when the time came. They may not have
understood it, but the Lord did. And even they understood it afterwards.
III. We might
arrest the argument here. I choose to push it on one step further, and enter
the field of individual biography. In our every-day existence we sometimes run
along the verge of the strangest possibilities, any one of which would make or
mar the history. And nobody ever seems to know it but God. I feel quite sure
most of us could mention the day and the hour when a certain momentous question
was decided for us, the effect of which was to fix our entire future. Our
profession, our home, our relationships all grew out of it. No man can ever be
satisfied that his life has been mere commonplace. Events seem striking, when
we contemplate the influence they have had on ourselves. A journey, a fit of
sickness, a windfall of fortune, the defection of a friend--any such incident
is most remarkable when all after-life feels it. We never appreciate these
things at the time. Yet at this moment you can point your finger to a page in
the unchangeable Book, and say honestly: ¡§The Lord was in that place, and I
knew it not.¡¨ We are ready, now, I should suppose, to search out the use to
which this principle may be applied in ordering our lives.
1. In the beginning, we learn here at once, who are the heroes and
heroines of the world¡¦s history. They are the people who have most of the
moulding care, and gracious presence of God. It may be quite true they know it
not. But they will know it in the end.
2. Our next lesson has to do with what may be considered the sleeps
and stirs of experience. The soul is beginning to battle with its human
belongings, and to struggle after peace under the pressure of high purposes,
the sway of which it neither wills to receive, nor dares to resist. The Lord is
in that place, and the man knows it not. Now what needs to be done, when
Christian charity deals with him? You see he is asleep; yet the ladder of
Divine grace out in the air over him makes him stir. He dreams.
He is sure to see the passing and repassing angels soon, if you
treat him rightly. He must be carefully taught and tenderly admonished.
3. We may learn likewise a third lesson; the text teaches something
as to blights in life. The world is full of cowed individuals; of men and women
broken in spirit, yet still trying to hold on. Some catastrophe took them down.
They cannot right up again. Many a man knows that a single event, lasting
hardly a day or a night, has changed his entire career. He questions now, in
all candour, whether he might not as well slip quietly out under the eaves, and
take his abrupt chances of a better hereafter. If a blight results from one¡¦s
own will and intelligent sin, he deserves a scar and a limp. Pray God to
forgive the past, and try to work the robustness of what remains into new
results. But if we were only sinned against, or were unfortunate, that goes for
nothing. If we only suffered, and no sinew is wrung, we may well have done with
thinking discontentedly of it. While the world stands, all Adam¡¦s sons must
work, and all Eve¡¦s daughters must wail. No life is now, or is going to be,
blighted, that can still take a new start. Begin again. These periods of
reversal will all sweep by and by into the system of purposes. We shall sing
songs of praise about them in heaven.
4. Hence our best lesson is the last; it tells us how to estimate
final results. The true valuation of any human life can be made only when the
entire account shall come in. Oh, how fine it is for any one to be told, as
Jacob was: ¡§I will not leave thee until I have done that which I have spoken to
thee oil¡¨ How it magnifies and glorifies a human life to understand that God
himself is urging it on to its ultimate reckoning! (C. S.Robinson, D. D.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. The first
circumstance we must notice, is THE TIME WHEN THIS DISCOVERY OF GOD TO JACOB
WAS MADE.
1. It was in a season of distress.
2. It was just after he had fallen into a grievous sin.
II. CONSIDER THE
ENDS TO BE ANSWERED BY IT.
1. One design, then, of this vision certainly was to give Jacob at
this time a lively impression of the presence and providence of God, His
universal presence and ever active providence.
2. But God had another design in this vision. It was intended to
renew and confirm to Jacob the promises He had given him.
III. But let us go
on to notice THE EFFECTS PRODUCED ON JACOB BY THIS HEAVENLY VISION.
1. The first of these was just what we might have expected--a sense
of God¡¦s presence; a new, startling sense of it.
2. This vision produced fear also in Jacob. ¡§He was afraid,¡¨ we
read. ¡§How dreadful,¡¨ he said, ¡§is this place!¡¨ And yet why should Jacob fear?
No spectacle of terror has been presented to him. No words of wrath have been
addressed to him. There has appeared no visionary mount Sinai flaming and
shaking before him. All he has seen and heard has spoken to him of peace. We might
have expected him as he waked to have sung with joy. What a change since he
laid himself down on these stones to sleep! The evils he most dreaded, all
averted; the mercies he mourned over as lost, all restored. Happy must his
sleep have been, and happy now his waking! But not one word do we read here of
happiness. The Holy Spirit tells us only of Jacob¡¦s fear. And why? To impress
this truth on our minds, that the man who sees God never trifles with Him; that
the soul He visits and gladdens with His mercy, He always fills with an awe of
His majesty.
3. Notice yet one effect more of this scene--a desire in Jacob to
render something to the God who had so visited him. And this seems to have
risen up in his mind as soon as he awoke, and to have been an exceedingly
strong desire. There is nothing he can do now for God, but he sets up a
memorial of God¡¦s loving kindness to him, and binds himself by a solemn purpose
and vow to show in the days that are to come his thankfulness for it. (C.
Bradley, M. A.)
Jacob¡¦s waking exclamation
I. First, THE
DOCTRINE OF GOD¡¦S OMNIPRESENCE. He is everywhere. In the early Christian Church
there was a wicked heresy, which for a long while caused great disturbance, and
exceeding much controversy. There were some who taught that Satan, the
representative of evil, was of co-equal power with God, the representative of
good. These men found it necessary to impugn the doctrine of God¡¦s universal
power. Their doctrine denied the all-pervading presence of God in the present
world, and they seemed to imagine that we should of necessity have to get out
of the world of nature altogether, before we could be in the presence of God.
Their preachers seemed to teach that there was a great distance between God and
His great universe; they always preached of Him as the King who dwelt in the
land that was very far off; nay, they almost seemed to go as far as though they
had said, ¡§Between us and Him there is a great gulf fixed, so that neither can
our prayers reach Him, nor can the thoughts of His mercy come down to us.¡¨
Blessed be God that error has long ago been exploded, and we as Christian men,
without exception, believe that God is as much in the lowest hell as in the
highest heaven, and as truly among the sinful hosts of mortals, as among the blissful
choir of immaculate immortals, who day without night praise His name. He is
everywhere in the fields of nature. Ye shall go where ye will; ye shall look to
the most magnificent of God¡¦s works, and ye shall say--¡§God is here, upon thine
awful summit, O hoary Alp! in thy dark bosom, O tempest-cloud! and in thy angry
breath, O devastating hurricane!¡¨ ¡§He makes the clouds His chariot and rides
upon the wings of the wind.¡¨ God is here. And so in the most minute--in the
blossom of the apple, in the bloom of the tiny field flower, in the sea-shell
which has been washed up from its mother-deep, in the sparkling of the mineral
brought up from darkest mines, in the highest star or in yon comet that
startles the nations and in its fiery chariot soon drives afar from mortal
ken--great God, Thou art here, Thou art everywhere, From the minute to the
magnificent, in the beautiful and in the terrible, in the fleeting and in the
lasting, Thou art here, though sometimes we know it not.
2. Let us enter now the kingdom of Providence, again to rejoice that
God is there. My brethren, let us walk the centuries, and at one stride of
thought let us traverse the earliest times when man first came out of Eden,
driven from it by the fall. Then this earth had no human population, and the
wild tribes of animals roamed at their will. We know not what this island was
then, save that we may suspect it to have been covered with dense forests, and
perhaps inhabited by ferocious beasts; but God was here, as much here as He is
to-day; as truly was He here then, when no ear heard His foot fall as He walked
in the cool of the day in this great garden--as truly here as when to-day the
songs of ten thousand rise up to heaven, blessing and magnifying His name. And
then when our history began--turn over its pages and you will read of cruel
invasions and wars which stained the soil with blood, and crimsoned it a foot
deep with clotted gore; you will read of civil wars and intestine strifes
between brother and brother, and you will say--¡§How is this? How was this
permitted?¡¨ But if you read on and see how by tumult and bloody strife Liberty
was served, and the best interests of man, you will say, ¡§Verily, God was here.
History will conduct you to awful battle-fields; she will bid you behold the
garment rolled in blood; she will cover you with the thick darkness of her fire
and vapour of smoke; and as you hear the clash of arms, and see the bodies of
your fellow-men, you say, ¡§The devil is here¡¨; but truth will say, ¡§No, though
evil be here, yet surely God was in this place though we knew it not; all this
was needful after all--these calamities are but revolutions of the mighty
wheels of Providence, which are too high to be understood, but are as sure in
their action as though we could predict their results.¡¨ Turn if you will to
what is perhaps a worse feature in history still, and more dreary far--I mean
the story of persecutions. Read how the men of God were stoned and were sawn
asunder; let your imaginations revive the burnings of Smithfield, and the old
dungeons of the Lollards¡¦ Tower; think how with fire and sword, and instruments
of torture, the fiends of hell seemed determined to extirpate the chosen seed.
But remember as you read the bloodiest tragedy; as your very soul grows sick at
some awful picture of poor tortured human flesh, that verily God was in that
place, scattering with rough hands, it may be, the eternal seed, bidding
persecution be as the blast which carries seed away from some fruit-bearing
tree that it may take root in distant islets which it had never reached unless
it had been carried on the wings of the storm. Thou art, O God, even where man
is most in his sin and blasphemy; Thou art reigning over rebels themselves, and
over those who seem to defy and to overturn Thy will. Remember, always, that in
history, however dreadful may seem the circumstance of the narrative, surely
God is in that place.
3. But we now come to the third great kingdom of which the truth
holds good in a yet more evident manner--the kingdom of grace. In yonder province
of conviction, where hard-hearted ones are weeping penitential tears, where
proud ones who said they would never haw this Man to reign over them are bowing
their knees to kiss the Son lest He be angry; where rocky, adamantine
consciences have at last begun to feel; where obdurate, determined,
incorrigible sinners have at last turned from the error of their ways-God is
there, for were He not there, none of these holy feelings would ever have
arisen, and the cry would never have been heard--¡§I will arise and go unto my
Father.¡¨ And in yonder providence which shines under a brighter sun, where
penitents with joy look to a bleeding Saviour, where sinners leap to lose their
chains, sad oppressed ones sing because their burdens have rolled away; where they
who were just now sitting in darkness and in the valley of the shadow of death
have seen the great light--God is in that place, or faith had never come and
hope had never arisen.And there in yonder province, brighter still, where
Christians lay their bodies upon the altar as living sacrifices, where men with
self-denying zeal think themselves to be nothing and Christ to be all in all;
where the missionary leaves his kindred that he may die among the swarthy
heathen; where the young man renounces brilliant prospects that he may be the
humble servant of Jesus; where yonder work-girl toils night and day to earn her
bread rather than sell her soul; where yonder toiling labourer stands up for
the rights of conscience against the demands of the mighty; where yonder
struggling believer still holds to God in all his troubles, saying--¡§Though He
slay me yet will I trust in Him.¡¨ God is in that place, and he that has eyes to
see will soon perceive His presence there. Where the sigh is heaving, where the
tear is falling, where the song is rising, where the desire is mounting, where
love is burning, hope anticipating, faith abiding, joy o¡¦erflowing, patience
suffering, and zeal abounding, God is surely present.
II. BUT HOW ARE WE
TO RECOGNIZE THIS PRESENCE OF GOD? What is the spirit which shall enable us
constantly to feel it?
1. If you would feel God¡¦s presence, you must have an affinity to
His nature. Your soul must have the spirit of adoption, and it will soon find
out its Father. Your spirit must have a desire after holiness, and it will soon
discover the presence of Him who is holiness itself. Your mind
must be heavenly, and you will soon detect that the God of Heaven is here.
The more nearly we become like God, the more Sure shall we be that God is where
we are.
2. Next, there must be a calmness of spirit. God was in the place
when Jacob came there that night, but he did not know it, for he was alarmed
about his brother Esau; he was troubled, and vexed, and disturbed. He fell
asleep, and his dream calmed him; he awoke refreshed; the noise of his troubled
thoughts was gone and he heard the voice of God. More quiet we want, more
quiet, more calm retirement, before we shall well be able, even with
spiritual minds, to discover the sensible presence of God.
3. But then, next, Jacob had in addition to this calm of mind, a
revelation of Christ. That ladder, as I have said in the exposition, was a
picture of Christ, the way of access between man and God. You will never
perceive God in nature, until you have learned to see God in grace.
4. More than this, no man will perceive God, wherever he may be,
unless he knows that God has made a promise to be with him and is able by faith
to look to the fulfilment of it. In Jacob¡¦s case God said, ¡§I will be with thee
whithersoever thou goest, and I will not leave thee.¡¨ Christian, have you heard
the same?
III. THE PRACTICAL
RESULTS OF A FULL RECOGNITION IN THE SOUL OF THIS DOCTRINE OF GOD¡¦S
OMNIPRESENCE. One of the first things would be to check our inordinate levity.
Cheerfulness is a virtue: levity a vice. How much foolish talking, how much
jesting which is not convenient, would at once end if we said, ¡§Surely God is
in this place.¡¨ And you, if you are called to enter a den such as Bunyan called
his dungeon, can say, ¡§Surely God is in this place,¡¨ and you make it a palace
at once. Some of you, too, are in very deep affliction. You are driven to such
straits that you do not know where things will end, and you are in great
despondency to-day. Surely God is in that place. As certain as there was one
like unto the Son of God in the midst of the fiery furnace with Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego, so surely on the glowing coals of your affliction the
heavenly footprints may be seen, for surely God is in this place. You are
called to-day to some extraordinary duty, and you do not feel strong enough for
it. Go to it, for ¡§Surely God is in this place.¡¨ You have to address an
assembly this afternoon for the first time. Surely God is in that place. He
will help you. The arm will not be far off on which you have to lean, the
Divine strength will not be remote to which you have to look. ¡§Surely God is in
this place.¡¨ And, lastly, if we always remembered that God was where we are,
what reverence would it inspire when we are in His house, in the place
particularly and specially set apart for His service! Oh, may we remember ¡§
Surely God is in this place,¡¨ and it will give us awe when we come into His
immediate presence! (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 17
How dreadful is this place I this is none other but the house of
God, and this is the gate of heaven
Reverential awe
I.
It
must have been the freshness of Jacob¡¦s sense of recent sin that made a spot so
peaceful and so blessed seem to him a ¡§dreadful¡¨ place. Everything takes its
character from the conscience. Even a Bethel was awful, and the ladder of
angels terrible, to a man who had just been deceiving his father and robbing
his brother. The gates of our heaven are the places of our dread.
II. Strange and
paradoxical as is this union of the sense of beauty, holiness, and fear, there
are seasons in every man¡¦s life when it is the sign of a right state of mind.
There is a shudder at sanctity which is a true mark of life. The danger of the
want of reverence is far greater than the peril of its excess. Very few, in
these light and levelling days, are too reverent. The characteristic of its age
is the absence.
III. Our churches
stand among us to teach reverence. There are degrees of God¡¦s presence. He
fills all space, but in certain spots He gives Himself or reveals Himself, and
therefore we say He is there more than in other places. A church is such a
place. To those who use it rightly it may be a ¡§gate of heaven.¡¨ (J.
Vaughan, M. A.)
The gate of heaven
I. GOD¡¦S HOUSE IS
ALWAYS WHERE THE LORD¡¦S PRESENCE IS.
1. No forms whatsoever for church organization, or Sunday service,
are given in the Bible.
2. Out-of-the-way places, unusual times, and unexpected assemblages
of people, have been often chosen for extraordinary manifestations of the
Lord¡¦s presence.
3. The Head of the Church has given blessings to all Christians
alike, of every name, when they have fully kept His covenant.
II. THE LORD¡¦S
PRESENCE IN GOD¡¦S HOUSE MAKES IT TO BE THE GATE OF HEAVEN.
1. The figure used. Importance of gates to Eastern cities.
2. The Lord¡¦s presence, so near, so splendid, so significant, made
Jacob seem to himself to be at the very portal of the celestial city.
Practical thoughts:
1. Learn to prize church privileges.
2. Honour the Fourth Commandment.
3. Have done with jargon--sectarian clash and presumption.
4. Do not make the Lord¡¦s house the gate of hell. God¡¦s mercy never
leaves a man where it found him. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
The house of God and the gate of heaven
I. THE PLACE HERE
SPECIFIED.
1. It was a place distinguished by favourable circumstances.
2. It was a place of sacred instruction.
(a) the mediation of Christ;
(b) the Providence of God;
(c) the ministry of angels.
3. This was a place of covenant engagement between God and man.
II. THE NAMES
GIVEN TO IT.
1. The house of God.
2. None other but the house of God.
3. The gate of heaven.
III. THE
REFLECTIONS SUGGESTED BY IT. ¡§How dreadful is this place!¡¨ The worship of God
should be attended with habitual seriousness.
1. With serious consideration.
2. With serious watchfulness against all distractions.
3. With serious concern to obtain present blessings from God.
4. With serious intercession in behalf of others.
5. With serious gratitude for favours received. (Sketches of
Sermons.)
Moral aspect of the world
The world itself is a dreadful place.
I. Because the
visible things that are made display an eternal power and Godhead.
II. Because the
world evidences a design rising above, and superior to, the exhibition of a
power capable of producing a mere physical universe.
III. Because of its
occupancy by an intellectual being. Intellect employs itself in a variety of
ways, but these may all be classed under--
1. Regard of the external or physical world.
2. The intellectual or spiritual.
3. The author of both. Under one of these may be placed all the
subjects which have engaged man from the commencement of the world.
IV. Because man is
a moral being. I cannot think of an intellectual being as other than a moral
one, because I cannot well conceive how a mind free and unconstrained can,
while investigating the works of God, fail to have awakened some of those moral
views and feelings, which to any mind are the legitimate concomitants. I have
therefore adopted the distinction merely for the sake of the different position
from which it enables us to regard man.
V. Because man is
a fallen being.
VI. Because of the
forbearance of God and man¡¦s consequent increased criminality.
VII. Because of
God¡¦s amazing condescension in seeking man¡¦s restoration.
VIII. Because of the
enormous expense at which the means of reconciliation were secured.
IX. Because of the
awful consequences resulting from the neglect of these means. (F. Wright.)
Places of worship
I. IN WHAT LIGHT
ARE WE TO VIEW PLACES OF WORSHIP?
1. The house of God.
2. The gate of heaven. It may be called so--
(1) Because it is ordinarily in places of worship, and in hearing the
gospel, that men begin to think about God and saving their souls.
3. It is said, ¡§This is none other than the house of God.¡¨ And I
trust this house never will be for any other purpose. I never like to see a
place of worship turned to any other use, except it be for a school, for a
place of instruction, or for something analogous to a place of worship.
II. WHAT OUGHT TO
BE OUR SENTIMENTS AND FEELINGS AS TO THE HOUSE OF GOD--AS TO A PLACE OF
WORSHIP.
1. We should reverence it. So did Jacob. ¡§How dreadful,¡¨ said he,
¡§is this place!¡¨ The Hebrew is, ¡§How solemn--how reverential is this place!¡¨ I
never like to see people enter a place of worship heedlessly, lightly, merrily.
2. We should delight to go up to the house of God.
3. We should come full of expectation. The house of God is the scene
of mercy, the region of grace, the very element of salvation.
4. We should endeavour, by every means, to support places of worship
to the best of our ability. (John Stephens.)
Public worship: how it is, and how it ought to be, attended
I. How DO PERSONS
USUALLY ATTEND THE HOUSE OF GOD?
1. Thoughtlessly.
2. Prayerlessly.
3. Faithlessly.
II. How OUGHT
PEOPLE TO COME THITHER?
1. With thought.
2. With prayer.
3. With faith.
It is as faith is in lively and vigorous exercise that God is
apprehended and felt to be really present. It is by faith we embrace the
proffered mercies of the gospel. Concluding remarks:
1. See the true reason why many profit so little from their means of
grace.
2. How abundantly you might profit by a more thoughtful, prayerful,
and faithful use of your means. (W. Mudge, B. A.)
God¡¦s home, heaven¡¦s gate
There are four particular remarks which we have to make upon these
words.
1. First, we observe from them that intercourse with God, instead of
producing levity of mind, produces serious impressions. The man who was not at
all afraid to lie down in this place, surrounded with danger and enveloped in
darkness, is filled with fear in the morning. At what? At the thought of a
present Deity. Not that this was a slavish dread, like that which Belshazzar
felt when he saw the handwriting upon the wall, and his countenance was changed
in him, and the joints of his loins were loosed, and his knees smote together;
but he was filled with what the apostle calls reverence or godly fear. Such the
seraphim know--they cover their faces when they appear before God. Such Isaiah
knew when he said, ¡§Woe is me, for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean
lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for mine eyes have
seen the King, the Lord of Hosts!¡¨ Such Peter felt when he said, ¡§Depart from
me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.¡¨ Such Job felt when he said, ¡§I heard of
Thee by the hearing of the ear, but now mine eye seeth Thee; wherefore I
abhor myself, and repent in dust and in ashes.¡¨
2. Secondly, we observe from these words, that wherever God meets
with His people, that place may be deservedly considered His house. How does
this condemn bigotry! How seldom does God receive anything more than lip
service and formality from those whose attachment to any particular place or
usages induces them to say, The temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the
temple of the Lord are we. Nothing makes a people dear to God but their
conformity to Him; and nothing makes a place of worship sacred but the Divine
presence.
3. The experience of Christians sometimes approximates towards
heaven. Therefore said Jacob--not only, this is the house of God, but--this is
the gate of heaven. There was nothing that was outwardly inviting; but oh, that
land, the angels ascending and descending!--oh, his God above, standing, and
looking down, and addressing him!--oh, such scenery!--oh, such language!--oh,
such communion made Jacob think that, though he saw from the place it was not
heaven, heaven could not be far off.
4. Lastly, the house of God and the gate of heaven are related;
there Jacob mentions them together, and mentions them in their proper
order--this is the house of God--this is the gate of heaven. The one precedes
the other--the one affords us the earnest and foretaste of the other. Philip
Henrywas accustomed to say at the close of his sabbath-day¡¦s exercises, ¡§Well,
if this be not heaven, it is the way to it.¡¨ Those who call the sabbath a
delight, the holy of the Lord, will enjoy an eternal sabbath. They who can now
say, ¡§I have loved the habitation of Thy house, and the place where Thine
honour dwelleth,¡¨ shall serve Him day and night in His temple above, never more
to go out. (W. Jay.)
Beautiful doors
Michael Angelo Buonar-rotti said of the doors of the Baptistery at
Florence, executed by Lorenzo Ghiberti, when asked what he thought of them,
¡§They are so beautiful that they might stand at the gates of paradise.¡¨ (Old
Testament Anecdotes.)
Entrance to heaven
Al Strut is a bridge extending from this world to the next, over
the abyss of hell, which must be passed by every one who would enter the
Mohammedan paradise. It is very narrow, the breadth being less than the thread
of the famished spider, according to some writers; others compare it to the
edge of a sword or of a razor. The deceased cross with a rapidity proportioned
to their virtue. Some pass with the rapidity of lightning; others with the
speed of a horse at full gallop; others still slower, on account of the weight
of their sins; and many fall down from it, and are precipitated into hell. (Wheeler.)
Astronomical heavens
There is a saying of Hazlitt¡¦s, bold, and at first seeming
wondrous true: ¡§In the days of Jacob there was a ladder between heaven and
earth; but now the heavens have gone farther off, and have become
astronomical.¡¨ (George Dawson.)
Verse 18-19
And Jacob rose up early in the morning, and took the stone that he
had put for his pillows, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the
top of it.
And he called the name of that place Bethel
Memorials of blessing
I. First of all,
we are told that Jacob erected a material monument, and planted it as a fixed
landmark on the spot. Concerning which, remark these three things: he did it
immediately, he did it symbolically, he did it religiously. There is
instruction in each.
1. ¡§He rose up early in the morning.¡¨ He took the moment when the
memory of his bright vision was the clearest, and the emotion it aroused was at
its height. He caught the fitful experience when it had most force, as if he
knew it might grow less before long. When Divine grace invites, and kindles,
and stands ready to help, no time must be lost.
2. Remark, again, Jacob ¡§took the stone that he had put for his
pillow, and set it up for a pillar.¡¨ That is to say, he made his affliction the
monument of His mercy. Plenty of stones besides that there were lying about in
that bleak plain. But he chose that one, so as to identify the history, when he
saw the spot. Herein was the very spirit of splendid symbolism. Nothing could
be finer. No emblem could be more pathetically accurate, as a picture of the
utter desolation which he, as a homeless fugitive, had felt the evening before,
than the fragment of rock he had been obliged to lay his head upon to sleep.
Now to make that, the reminder of his friendlessness, the monument also of his
disclosure of Divine adoption, was matchless in ingenuity. When he should see
that pillar in the future, he would say, ¡§Behold the outcast, and the prince!
behold man¡¦s necessity, and God¡¦s opportunity I behold earthly weakness, and
heavenly help I see where I was, and where I am!¡¨
3. But observe, once more, Jacob, having set up his pillar, ¡§poured
oil upon the top of it.¡¨ You are quite familiar with Old Testament uses of oil
in religious service. These were established by direct order. The command
given early to Moses was, ¡§Thou shalt take the anointing off, and anoint the
tabernacle, and all that is therein, and shalt hallow it, and all the vessels
thereof, and it shall be holy.¡¨ This direction was extended so as to cover the
altar and the laver, and even the priests, Aaron and his sons. The spirit of
inspiration laid hold of what was an earlier custom, and so consecrated it. If
Jacob had said, concerning this great incident of his life, It is the
turning-point in my history, and I will not forget it, he would have done no
unimportant thing by itself. But by anointing the pillar he made it a
definitely religious memorial. It recognized not only his extraordinary
blessing, but recorded for ever the fact that God had bestowed it upon him. It
was an act of devotion. There was worship in it. There was self-consecration
in it.
II. The lessons
thus far learned, however, will become clearer and more impressive when we pass
on to consider the second form of perpetuation this patriarch adopted. He
proceeded to invoke the help of his fellow-men. ¡§He called the name of that
place Bethel, but the name of the city was called Luz at the first.¡¨
Conclusion:
1. Count up your mercies for rehearsal and record.
2. Confess Christ openly before men.
3. Set up memorials of blessing.
4. Expect to understand your own biography by and by. When Jacob
next visited Bethel, he could read the meaning of the Divine promise. (C. S.
Robinson, D. D.)
Bethel
I. BETHEL TELLS
OF AN EXILE AWAY FROM HIS FATHER¡¦S HOUSE.
II. BETHEL TELLS
OF A GLORIOUS VISION.
III. BETHEL TELLS
OF A HOLY VOW.
IV. BETHEL TELLS
OF A SACRED MEMORIAL. (W. M. Taylor, D. D.)
The memorial impulse in religion
I. THE TIME,
PLACE, AND CIRCUMSTANCES OF A MAN¡¦S DISCOVERY OF GOD IN HIS LIFE ARE THE MOST
MEMORABLE IN PERSONAL EXPERIENCE.
II. WITH SUCH A
DISCOVERY, THERE ALWAYS RISES AN IMPULSE TO SET UP SOME LANDMARK FOR MEMORY.
III. THE BEST
MEMORIALS ARE THOSE WHICH RISE UP IN A MAN¡¦S HABITS AND CHARACTER. (The
Preacher¡¦s Monthly.)
Jacob at Bethel
I. We must
observe, first, that in the action of the patriarch there was COMMEMORATION. It
was clearly his design in erecting this pillar to commemorate the events which
had recently transpired in his history, and, as far as possible, to give
permanence to their remembrance. Before the invention, or the general use, of
the art of writing, the commemoration of remarkable events by monumental pillars
appeared the most apt and the most effectual that could be designed; and this
mode, therefore, of giving permanence to great events, is a custom also very
generally practised among the nations of antiquity. Although now we erect no
monumental pillars, and although now we chisel not on those pillars any
hieroglyphical symbols, yet we ought to cherish in our hearts the sacred recollection
of the goodness we have received. That our past career has in every
ease been a career of mercy, and that we have all received the bounty of
our common Father, is a fact which it is impossible not to admit; and of which
in our remembrance no time and no change should exhaust the tenderness and the
mercy; but it should continue supreme and paramount, until we are permitted to
unite in the higher commemorations of that world where mercy will be
consummated in salvation. But let us advert more distinctly to the nature of
those mercies which it was the object of the patriarch to commemorate, and
which permits a direct application to ourselves.
1. You will observe, in the first instance, that here was clearly a
commemoration of providential favour.
2. Here was also the commemoration of spiritual blessings.
II. We now require
your attention to observe, secondly, that in the action of the patriarch there
was DEDICATION. It will be observed ¡§he took the stone that he had put for his
pillows, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the top of it ¡§--the
oil being the sign, not merely that he dedicated the pillar for the purpose of
commemoration, but that he also dedicated himself to the service and glory of
that God from whom his marries had been received. This act of the
patriarch, my brethren, very clearly and beautifully sets forth the duty of the
children of men in the review and retrospect of mercies which they have
received from God--even the duty of dedicating themselves wholly to His praise
and to His glory. Let me request you now, under this part of the subject, with
greater distinctnesss, to observe in what this dedication consists, and under
what circumstances this dedication is especially appropriate.
1. Observe in what this dedication consists. It must be regarded, of
course, as founded upon a recognition by men of the right of God, the Author of
all their mercies, to the entire possession of whatever they possess, and of
whatever they are; and comprehends within it certain resolutions which are
intended to constitute a permanent state of heart and life. For, example, it
comprehends a resolution that there shall be firm and unbending adherence to
the truths which God has revealed; and whatever principles He is found to have
announced for your cordial acceptance and belief, will be cordially embraced
and adhered to. Again, it involves a resolution that there shall be anxious and
diligent cultivation of the holiness which God has commanded; and whatever are
the requirements of His law for governing the deportment and the affections of
men, so as to conform them to His own image--these will be sincerely and
cheerfully obeyed. Again, it comprehends the resolution that there shall be
public and solemn union with the people whom He has redeemed; and whatever
external ordinances and public professions have been appointed by Divine
authority, as the pledge and the sign of that union, will be at once and
readily performed; so that it may be seen by those around that the decision
pronounced by Ruth has been taken in the highest and most spiritual sense with
regard to those who constitute the Church of the living God: ¡§Intreat me not to
leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I
will go; and where thou lodges, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people,
and thy God my God: where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried:
the Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and me.¡¨ And
then it involves a resolution that there shall be zealous and persevering
activity for the cause which God has established; and whatever objects God has
determined upon and announced for the purpose of extending His authority and
restoring His glory in this apostate and long-disordered world--these will be
studiously and diligently pursued. There will be the rendering of time, there
will be the rendering of talent, and the rendering (which is often the hardest
of all) of property, for the purpose of carrying on those designs of mercy,
which are not to terminate till the whole world shall be brought back to its
allegiance to the Almighty. These, my brethren, is man called upon to give, and
in the spirit in which the disciples remembered the saying and applied it to
the Redeemer: ¡§The zeal of the Lord¡¦s house hath eaten me up.¡¨
2. There is a second inquiry, which must be regarded as intimately
connected with this, namely, under what circumstances this dedication is
peculiarly appropriate. The spirit of dedication, as the result of the mercies
with which God has been pleased to surround us, must properly be considered as
furnishing and constituting what ought to be the habitual condition of man. There
is not a pulse that beats, nor is there a throb that palpitates in the hand or
in the heart, but what ought to remind every one amongst us that we should
write upon ourselves ¡§Corban¡¨--a gift upon the altar of God. There are
circumstances which sometimes peculiarly occur in the course of life, when it
seems especially appropriate that the dedication should be undertaken, or, if
already undertaken, that it should be renovated and renewed. We may, for
example, mention seasons when new and extraordinary mercies have been received
from God. We may mention, again, the seasons when new and extraordinary
manifestations have occurred in the course of human existence. Here, for
example, are the seasons when we constitute and enter into new domestic or
social connections; the seasons when we commemorate the days of our birth, or
the seasons when we mark the lapse of time by passing from one closing year to
the commencement of another.
III. In the action
of the patriarch there was ANTICIPATION. The whole of the passage which is
before us distinctly announces that, in connection with the retrospect of the
past, there was, in the memorial of the patriarch, the anticipation of the
future. Nor can we look upon the monumental pillar which he had erected,
without finding that it was not merely a commemoration, but a prophecy; and
that from the past he hurried his thoughts onward and still onward into the
dark and almost impalpable future, showing him the destinies of his temporal
prosperity in distant ages, especially exhibiting to him the day of Him whom
Abraham rejoiced to see and was glad; and raising his thoughts above the scenes
of this sublunary state to the enjoyment of that better country, that is, a
heavenly, into which he knew his spiritual seed would be exalted, through the
boundless mercy of God. And, my brethren, those of us who have performed the
act of dedication to our God, and are desirous of preserving the spirit of
dedication as long as life shall last, are called on to connect our
commemoration and our dedication with a spirit of anticipation, from which we
shall find our highest and purest emotions to be derived. Observe that our
expectation must involve future good in time. Having rendered yourselves to the
service of that Jehovah who has conjured us by His past mercies, we have
nothing before us, my brethren, in the prospect of the future, but calmness and
peace. It is so in Providence. Affliction, poverty, bereavement, disease, ¡§the
rich man¡¦s scorn, the proud man¡¦s contumely,¡¨ the worst storms and buffetings
of ¡§outrageous fortune¡¨--these, separately or accumulated, form no drawback or
hindrance to the enjoyment of the blessings we have announced. No, my brethren,
these very things themselves, in consequence of our covenant connection with
our God, are transformed, possess a new aspect; not rising before us like
demons and fiends of terror, but like ministering angels, only to bring us
nearer and nearer to our God, and to bring us nearer and nearer to His reward.
Nor is there one who, in reviewing past mercies, which his God has rendered
him, and who has been able to dedicate himself to the service of that God in
return, who cannot rest in the prospect of the future, on that one stupendous,
glorious announcement of the apostle, ¡§All things shall work together for good
to them that love God.¡¨ And then, in the sphere of grace, what can we
anticipate with regard to the future in the present life, but those enjoyments
which ¡§make rich,¡¨ and can ¡§add no sorrow¡¨? We anticipate that we shall be
kept; that we shall receive larger communications of knowledge, of
holiness, of love, and of zeal; that we shall receive additional and nearer
visions of Jehovah in spiritual intercourse and fellowship with Him; and that
we shall be made more and more like unto Him who was given ¡§that He might be
the First-born among many brethren¡¨; becoming etherealized in our own nature,
and made thus to partake of the beginning of heaven below. Nor can we
anticipate but that when the end of our pilgrimage is come, we shall go and
stand by the side of ¡§the rolling stream of Jordan; not terrified nor shrinking
back, as we behold it bear upon its flood the wrecks of departed beauty and
departed power; for we shall find the ark of the covenant there, and the glory
of the Shekinah there; and no sooner shall the foot touch the stream than the
waters, as by magic power, shall cleave asunder, and will permit us to pass
dry-shod through the deep, exclaiming, in triumphant language, ¡§O death, where
is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin, and the
strength of sin is the law; but thanks be to God, who giveth us the victory
through our Lord Jesus Christ.¡¨ And so, to use the language of Bunyan, we may
anticipate that ¡§all the trumpets shall sound for us from the other side.¡¨ And
my brethren, the future good which we may anticipate in time, must be also
connected with the fact that we must anticipate future good throughout
immortality. My brethren, there is not a blessing in Providence or in grace
received by one who, as the result of an enlightened retrospective, has
dedicated himself to the service of God, but what must be considered as a
pledge and foretaste, a decisive promise of higher and more holy and extactic
blessings which are reserved beyond the grave. And now, my brethren, in closing
this address, let me present two calls to those who, perhaps, constitute a
large proportion of this assembly. The first call is one to immediate
repentance. In connection with our call to immediate repentance, we must also
present a call to immediate dedication and devotedness to God, by which alone
repentance can be testified and can be confirmed. (J. Parsons, M. A.)
Verse 19
And he called the name of that place Bethel: but the name of that
city was called Luz at the first
A Divine transformation
Luz transformed into Bethel! A grove of almonds into the house of
God! The Bible is full of transformations.
There is a law of gravitation spiritual as well as physical. The downward
plunge, the leap earthward is natural because in accordance with this law. But
what natural law can turn the current upward, heavenward? A burning brand and
natural law can accomplish a transformation of ruin; but it needs Divine intervention,
a law of supernatural potency, to repair the ruin, erect the pillars of
redemption, and upon them to sweep the arch of perfected restoration. In other
words, between Luz and Bethel--the grove of almonds and the house of God--I
recognize the necessity of a Divine heart and a Divine hand.
I. Let us view
LUZ BEFORE THE TRANSFORMATION. In the midst of a wild and rugged region, broken
here and there by hills, from the top of one of which Lot surveyed the
well-watered valley of Jordan, and Abraham scanned his promised inheritance, a
few stunted almond trees, drawing precarious nourishment from the scanty soil,
afford grateful shade to the traveller. Gray, bare rocks everywhere shoot their
sharp peaks through the parched earth, and not a vestige of verdure relieves
the eye save the little clump of trees which gives Luz its name. Significant
symbol--the almond tree! Precious, princely, yet, if embittered, deadly poison.
Does the patriarch in famine-stricken Canaan design to send presents to Egypt
to propitiate ¡§the man, the lord of the country,¡¨ then he chooses the fruit of
the almond tree to make his offering acceptable. Precious fruit! There is
uniting in the wilderness among the princes of the host of Israel against the
supremacy of Aaron, and a rod of the almond tree is chosen to represent the
head of each tribe in the tabernacle of witness. Princely fruit! Precious,
princely man! The almond tree of this bleak and rugged world. Let us reverence
humanity. Not the rank or station, the varied and varying adventitious
enwrapments of his lot, but the man himself! But alas! the almond may become
embittered and tranformed into deadly poison. Strangely, the bitter fruit does
not differ in chemical composition from the other, yet by a mysterious change
of nature, it becomes a deadly thing. Sad, yet striking symbol of man! A
virulent poison has entered his life-blood and venomed the whole. Men are apt
to regard sin as the commission of a few evil acts, and they are disposed to
balance their so-called good acts, against the evil, with a secret complacency
that the account must balance in their favour. But sin is a permeating poison,
engendering the habitual disposition of rebellion against and distrust toward
God, circulating its venom through every artery of the soul and tainting all
the issues of life and thought.
II. But notice THE
TRANSFORMATION. Luz is changed to Bethel; the grove of almonds into the house
of God. One evening a solitary traveller, with weary step, approaches the
little clump of almond trees, and, noticing the grateful shade, casts his
way-worn form upon the scant but welcome grass. His countenance betokens youth,
but there are lines of deep sorrow and premature care upon his brow. The story
of the prodigal son is being rehearsed in the desert of Haran. It is Jacob, the
dishonest supplanter, leaving his father¡¦s house. The curtains of darkness fall
upon the scene and we see the pilgrim no longer with his awful burden of woe.
Does he pray? Does he weep? Jacob sleeps as soundly and sweetly that night with
the bare ground for a bed, and a rock for a pillow, as he ever did when a
child, upon his mother¡¦s breast. In other words, Luz is transformed into
Bethel, the grove of almonds into the house of God. But wherein does this
transformation consist?
1. Jehovah unbars the casement of heaven and reveals Himself to
Jacob. Now it is not Jacob who discovers God; it is God who reveals Himself to
the poor wanderer. Wondrous revelation! Luz is transformed into Bethel, the
place is sacred ground, for where the Supreme reveals Himself, there is the
house of God. This is the age of exploration and discovery. Hidden continents,
unscaled summits, untraversed deeps, secret forces have been tracked and
discovered. But why is it that the explorer, the man of science, the astute
discoverer has brought no tidings of God? The knowledge of the Divine Being is
not a discovery by man, but a revelation from God! It is He and He alone who
can unfilm the eye and unstop the ear and reveal Himself. And this He does to
the ¡§babes,¡¨ to those who, like Jacob, get to the end of their resources, and
in their extremity and self-destitution cry out to Him. And where He reveals
Himself there is Bethel, the house of God.
2. But there is more here than a dim and distant revelation; broad
as is the gulf between earth and heaven, that gulf is bridged by a ladder, the
foot of which rests upon earth while the top reaches heaven. The revelation of
God as He is, without such a connecting bridge, would be no boon
to the sinful soul. On the 10th of May, 1869, at a place called Promontory
Point, the junction was made completing the railway communication between the
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in the United States of America. A silver spike was
brought by the Governor of Arizona, another was contributed by the citizens of
Nevada. They were driven home into a sleeper of Californian laurel with a
silver mallet. As the last blow was struck the hammer was brought into contact
with a telegraph wire, and the news was flashed and simultaneously saluted on
the shores of two great oceans, and through the expanse of a vast continent, by
the roar of cannon and the chiming of bells. When the awful abyss between God
and man had to be bridged, the junction over the deepest chasm was made by the
outstretched arms of the Son of God; and as the spikes crashed through His open
palms He cried: ¡§It is finished¡¨; and swifter than electric current or
lightning¡¦s flash, the tidings were winged to the farthest bounds of three
worlds. The stairway connecting earth with heaven is completed; the awful chasm
is bridged; Luz is transformed into Bethel. Christ by dying has opened up the
way to God.
3. But Jacob not only saw the ladder erected; there was actual
communication between earth and heaven; he beheld the angels of God ascending
and descending upon it. Much interest concentres in the first or trial trip
upon a new road, or over a wide and difficult bridge. And many a fair structure
has succumbed to the actual strain of traffic. There are two angels at least
with whom each of us may and ought to be acquainted; their names are Faith and
Love. Let faith bear up your cry to the throne of God, and love will bring the
answer down. Swifter than the eagle¡¦s wing, the message of grace will be borne
to your needy heart, ¡§if faith but bear the plea.¡¨ And your weariness will be
transformed into joy, your night of sorrow into a mid-day of gladness: in other
words, Luz will be transformed into Bethel, the grove of almonds into the house
of God. (D. Osborne.)
Verses 20-22
And Jacob vowed a vow
Covenant vows
I.
Let
us, in the beginning, consider what is taught us in God¡¦s Word about vows in
general, and that will lead the way easily to the examination of those peculiar
in the Christian dispensation.
1. The Old Testament is the main source of all profitable
information. Indeed it hardly appears necessary to go beyond it. Classic
history, however, makes clear the fact that all religions and schemes of faith
have encouraged their devotees in the practice of making vows to their deities.
Temples of every sort, the world over, are filled with votive offerings,
presented by grateful recipients of Divine favour, when they have been
delivered from danger, or prospered in difficult enterprises. Even the rituals
of heathenism, the wildest and the wisest seem to agree in this. The custom,
therefore, has very ancient authority. It was not an original invention of
Jacob. Nor was it introduced by Moses, nor was it ever announced from heaven.
Its history is as old as the annals of the race. The great law-giver Moses,
acting under Divine direction, found this custom when he came to the leadership
of Israel, He simply set himself to regulate the practice, and put it under some
code of intelligent management.
2. The New Testament doctrine. No precept given; no regulation
prescribed. The spirit of the New Testament is one of freedom. Freedom,
however, is not lawlessness; liberty is not license. It is possible that there
may be found in our churches some persons, or even in our own moods, some
moments to which vows could be of service.
II. From these
general considerations, it gives us pleasure and relief to turn to the special
examination of what we term Christian vows.
1. We mean by this expression to cover a class of covenant
engagements which stand in close relationship to the New Testament church. They
are represented in the two ordinances of Baptism and the Lord¡¦s Supper.
2. The reach of these vows is universal. They cover our
possessions--our ways--our hearts--our lives.
3. A reach so extensive as this flings over the whole transaction a
spirit of profound solemnity. The parties to the covenant are not man and man,
but man and God. The witnesses who stand around are the world, the church,
angels--and devils. The sanctions of the covenant are expressibly sacred and
awful. All the good and evil of this life, all the blessings and the curses of
the life to come hang upon the question of our fidelity in keeping the faith we
have pledged.
4. Now no mere human being could abide the pressure of engagements
of such reach and solemnity, except for the alleviation annexed to them. There
is a promise underneath each one of them all. God not only keeps His own
covenant, but helps us keep ours.
5. The use which can be made practically of these covenant
engagements of ours is threefold. They give us a profitable caution; they
furnish ground for fresh hope; they remind us of former experiences of trust
and deliverance. The stated, steady repetition of them at periodic times, is of
prodigious service. They suddenly arrest us in the midst of daily life, and
demand a return of thoughtful surrender. The moment temptation confronts us, a
voice seems to speak in the air--Remember thine oath! And if we are
intelligent, we are quite glad to remember it; for God covenanted when we did.
There is a dowry in every duty, and a promise in every call. Our vows come to
be burdens less, and badges more; they are not fetters on our limbs, but rings
on our fingers. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
A long look ahead
I. WHAT JACOB
SOUGHT.
1. God¡¦s presence.
2. Divine protection.
3. Divine providence.
4. Divine peace.
II. WHAT JACOB
PROMISED.
1. To surrender himself, his entire being, to God.
2. To establish a perennial reminder of Divine goodness and mercy on
the spot where he had first found it.
3. To consecrate to God a fixed portion of his income for all
benevolent and religious use. (C. S. Robinson, D. D.)
The noble resolve
There were three steps in God¡¦s dealings with this mean and crafty
spirit; and in one form or another they have a universal application.
1. To begin with, God revealed Jacob to himself.
2. In the next place, God permitted Jacob to suffer the loss of all
earthly friends and goods.
3. Finally, God thrust into Jacob¡¦s life a revelation of His love.
That ladder symbolized the love of God. All through his life that love had
surrounded Jacob with its balmy atmosphere; but he had never realized, or
returned, or yielded to it. But now it was gathered up and crystallized into
one definite appeal, and thrust upon him; so that he could do no other than
behold it. And in that hour of conviction and need, it was as welcome as a
ladder put down into a dark and noisome pit, where a man is sinking fast into
despair; he quickly hails its seasonable aid, and begins to climb back to
daylight. The revelation of God¡¦s love will have five results on the receptive
spirit.
I. IT WILL MAKE
US QUICK TO DISCOVER GOD. Jacob had been inclined to localize God in his
father¡¦s tents: as many localize Him now in chapel, church, or minister;
supposing that prayer and worship are more acceptable there than anywhere
beside. Now he learned that God was equally in every place--on the moorland
waste as well as by Isaac¡¦s altar, though his eyes had been too blind to
perceive Him. In point of fact, the difference lay not in God, but in himself;
the human spirit carries with it everywhere its own atmosphere, through which
it may see, or not see, the presence of the Omnipresent. If your spirit is
reverent, it will discern God on a moorland waste. If your spirit is
thoughtless and careless, it will fail to find Him even in the face of Jesus
Christ.
II. IT WILL
INSPIRE US WITH GODLY FEAR. ¡§He was afraid, and said, How dreadful is this
place!¡¨ ¡§Perfect love casteth out fear¡¨--the fear that hath torment; but it
begets in us another fear, which is the beginning of wisdom and the foundation
of all noble lives; the fear that reveres God, and shudders to grieve Him; and
dreads to lose the tiniest chance of doing His holy will. True love is always
fearless and fearful. It is fearless with the freedom of undoubting trust; but
it is fearful lest it should miss a single grain of-tender affection, or should
bring a moment¡¦s shadow over the face of the beloved.
III. IT WILL
CONSTRAIN US TO GIVE OURSELVES TO GOD.
IV. IT WILL PROMPT
US TO DEVOTE OUR PROPERTY TO HIM. ¡§Of all that Thou shalt give me, I will
surely give the tenth unto Thee.¡¨ There is no reason to doubt that this became
the principle of Jacob¡¦s life: and if so, he shames the majority of Christian
people--most of whom do not give on principle; and give a very uncertain and
meagre percentage of their income.
V. IT WILL FILL
US WITH JOY. ¡§Then Jacob lifted up his feet¡¨ (Genesis 29:1, marg.). Does not that
denote the light-hearted alacrity with which he sped upon his way? His feet
were winged with joy, and seemed scarcely to tread the earth. All sorrow had
gone from his heart; for he had handed his burdens over to those ascending
angels. And this will be our happy lot, if only we will believe the love that
God hath to us. We, too, shall lose our burdens at the foot of the Cross; and
we shall learn the blessed secret of handing over, as soon as they arise, all
worries and fears to our pitiful High Priest. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Jacob¡¦s vow
I. WHAT JACOB
DESIRED OF GOD IN REFERENCE TO THIS WORLD.
1. The comfortable presence and favour of God. ¡§If God will be with
me.¡¨ When the ancients would express all that seemed beneficial in life, they
used this phrase (Genesis 39:2-3; Genesis 39:21). The wisdom, courage, and
success of David is resolved into this; ¡§ The Lord was with him¡¨ (1 Samuel 18:14; 1 Samuel 18:28; 2 Samuel 5:10). This administers
solid, satisfying comfort to the soul (Psalms 4:6-7; Psalms 36:7-9; Psalms 63:1; John 4:14).
2. The guidance of the Divine counsel and the protection of the
Divine providence. ¡§And will keep me in this way that I go.¡¨ This is a most
sure direction and safe defence. The righteous shall not err in anything of
importance, either as to this life or the next; either as to truth or duty.
They shall be safe (Proverbs 18:10; Psalms 27:1-6; Psalms 32:7).
II. WHAT JACOB
PROMISES TO GOD. ¡§Then shall the Lord be my God.¡¨ (J. Benson.)
The vow
I. Notice THE
IMPRESSION MADE UPON JACOB¡¦S MIND. This vision, which had been vouchsafed to
him, was not a mere idle dream, passing confusedly away with the shades of
night, and leaving no useful lesson impressed upon the heart. It was a
mysterious scene, permitted to pass before the mind of Jacob in his sleep; but
it left a real, powerful, and lasting impression behind. The impression
produced was rational, powerful, convincing, and influential; it was such an
impression as was most desirable under his circumstances, and such as issued in
the most becoming and consistent conduct.
1. He was impressed with a sense of the presence and nearness of the
invisible God. Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said, ¡§Surely the Lord is
in this place, and I knew it not.¡¨ He had a clear conviction that God had been
with him in a very peculiar manner. ¡§He inhabiteth eternity. He filleth all in
all. He is about our bed, and about our path, and spies out all our ways. If we
go up to heaven He is there, if we go down to hell He is there also. In Him we
live, and move, and have our being--and He is not far off from any one of us.¡¨
But the scripture shows us also, that God is particularly present with, and
near to His saints. A large portion of the revealed word of God is occupied in
showing that ¡§the Lord is nigh unto them that call upon Him¡¨; that if we will
¡§draw nigh to God, He will draw nigh to us.¡¨ ¡§The eternal God is thy refuge,
and underneath thee are the everlasting arms.¡¨ The 121st Psalm seems almost to
refer to this very event, when it says, ¡§Behold, He that keepeth Israel shall
neither slumber nor sleep.¡¨ There is then, for the first time, a consciousness
of God¡¦s existence--of his presence and nearness to the soul--a reality of
communion with Him--a living sensibly within the range of His holy influence
and dominion--and a bringing this fact to bear continually upon the conduct and
the heart. The impression produced on his mind through a vision, was the same
as that which is now given through the shining of the light of the glorious
Gospel of Christ into the heart. It was the knowledge of God.
2. He felt that the presence of God was awful. He said, ¡§Surely the
Lord is in this place; and he was afraid, and said, How dreadful is this
place!¡¨ No man can trifle with religious services who is admitted to the
reality of religious privileges. The more his religions impressions,
convictions, intentions, and enjoyments, assume the character of reality, the
more serious will he be in his spirit, and in all his religious feelings and
transactions. A becoming seriousness of deportment is always the result of
frequent communion with God--of much living in the Divine presence. It will not
be irrelevant to notice here that a truly sincere and serious spirit in
religion will show itself in an enlightened, but not superstitious, attention
to all the decencies and proprieties of the public service of God.
3. Jacob was impressed with the conviction that the place where God
communicates with men is ¡§the gate of heaven.¡¨ That communion with God by faith
is an opening to the mind of the eternal and invisible world, a realizing of
that interior and more elevated scene of God¡¦s dominions, where He reigns
unveiled. Faith is the gate of heaven.
4. This vision evidently impressed Jacob with a higher notion of the
benevolence and kindness of God. It was altogether a revelation of a peculiarly
merciful character.
II. We come to
notice THE CONDUCT WHICH JACOB IMMEDIATELY ADOPTED. His provision for the
external act of worship was but scanty; but whatever, under his straitened
circumstances, he could perform, he did.
There was here no idle and specious delay. It would have been easy
to have deferred this solemn scene of worship to a more seasonable opportunity,
when he would be better provided. But this is not the effect of the gifts of
Divine grace. The mercy of God, thus graciously revealed to him, had touched
his heart; and it made the religious service, and the religious vow, his
delight. He rose early, and while his feelings were yet fresh, and unblemished
by the mere natural course of vagrant thought, he addressed himself to this act
of piety, that he might perpetuate in his waking hours the enjoyments of his
extraordinary dream. What could be more simple and spiritual than this act of
worship? All the formalities of official sacrifice are, in the want of means
for them, dispensed with. No bleeding sacrifice was there; but in the simple
symbol that he was compelled to use, the true spirit of the appointed ceremony
was retained. The type of the true Israel, he appears to have out-reached the
bounds of knowledge in those earlier days, and to have approached God as a true
worshipper, in spirit and in truth.
III. But we shall
consider this more particularly as we notice THE VOW WHICH JACOB MADE. There
are several circumstances in the language of Jacob¡¦s vow which are worthy of
remark.
1. His piety, ¡§If God will be with me.¡¨ He does not ask for the
advantage of powerful friends, or connections in life. ¡§He sought first the
kingdom of God and His righteousness,¡¨--counting ¡§the lovingkindness of God
better than life¡¨; and the favour of God more valuable than worldly friends or
honours. The love of God is the essential feature of true piety.
2. Observe his moderation. It is the legitimate effect of true
religion, to moderato the desires of the heart for everything but spiritual
blessings. ¡§The land whereupon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy
seed:¡¨ but he simply limited his prayer to this, ¡§If God will give me bread to
eat, and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father¡¦s house in
peace.¡¨ In the face of so extensive a promise, he asked only for food and
clothing, and a return to his father¡¦s house. It is true, that generally in the
outset of life, men¡¦s views and wishes are more moderate than they afterwards
become; and even ambition is limited in its wishes, by the bounds of apparent
probability--so much so, that in looking back upon past life, the moderation of
man¡¦s early wishes is often a matter of surprise to themselves. But the spirit
of Jacob was shown in this, that with the promise of wealth and exaltation
before him, he still confined his wish to the needful supply of his daily
wants--to food and raiment, and safe return. How few are there who are content
with Jacob¡¦s portion! I speak of some, of whom there is reason to hope that
they have Jacob¡¦s God for their God, but with whom there still seems a
lingering attachment to the world which they are professing to renounce, and an
unjustifiable managing and contriving to obtain, either for themselves or their
children, a surer hold upon its dignities and its possessions.
3. Observe, again, Jacob¡¦s gratitude. He prayed even for less than
God had promised; but he felt that all that he could ever be possessed of was a
merciful gift, and he was willing to acknowledge that it was due to him from
whom it was received. ¡§This stone, which I have set up for a pillar, shall be
God¡¦s house; and of all that thou shalt give me, I will give the tenth unto
thee.¡¨ A zealous contribution of personal exertion, and pecuniary aid, to the
cause of God and of truth, had always marked the real servant of the Lord. The
worldly man may be benevolent to men, but he is never liberal for God. Again,
fix your attention on the event of Jacob¡¦s life, and consider how important was
the influence which it had upon him. All his life was coloured by this solemn
and interesting transaction. How important it is, then, to begin life with
God--to set out rightly. Lastly, let the whole tenour of Jacob¡¦s conduct on
this occasion show you, in illustration of the remark with which we set out,
the legitimate effect of Divine mercy. It leads directly to holiness of life. (E.
Craig.)
Lessons
1. God¡¦s promises and appearance to His may well require their vows
to Him.
2. Vows to God must follow His promises, not precede by conditioning
with Him.
3. God¡¦s presence, provision, protection, and safeguarding His own,
is just ground of vowing souls to Him.
4. It is just to vow man¡¦s self in inward worship to God, as the
Lord promiseth Himself to him.
5. It is righteous to vow outward worship to God in time and place,
as He desireth.
6. It is man¡¦s duty to vow and pay the tenth of all his estate to
God for the uses He hath appointed (Genesis 28:22). (G. Hughes, B. D.)
Jacob¡¦s contract with God
This vow has been sneered at--a bargain of Jacob¡¦s it is said. And
in truth it is not in the highest spirit. But at least there is no affection of
superfine piety in the Bible. That is something. What it is, it is. But
what is this? Perhaps not a shrewd bargain, but a solemn and creditable
contract with God, namely, that Jacob will be faithful to God if God will be
faithful to him. Not the highest, certainly--not Job¡¦s ¡§Though He slay me, yet
will I trust in Him.¡¨ Jacob would have stood on a far nobler height had he
said, ¡§I will worship this adorable God, who has shown me His glory as He
stooped to my low estate. I will trust and obey Him though He desert me and
strip me.¡¨ Yes; but when shall we have done thinking that our refinements and
perfections of view were theirs? An occasional spirit like Abraham¡¦s went
higher than Jacob¡¦s. A spirit like Job¡¦s shot far higher, yet, I think, and
anticipated the whole possibility of man. These were splendid anomalies; but
Jacob was the true representative of the good man of his time. Remembering
this, the contrast was not as bad as it seems, but was natural and even
beautiful. He does not ask God for riches, but simply, like a child (for these
primitive men were but children), he asks only for protection and support: ¡§If
the Lord,¡¨ &c. This, although it has a child¡¦s religious inferiority, yet
seems so artless and heartless that I think it was, even to the ear of God, a
very pleasing speech. And I wish that we would go as far. Suppose now, we
say--which of us is ready?--¡§If the Lord will keep me alive for this year, and
give me food and raiment, He shall be my God.¡¨ Let no man sneer at Jacob until
he is Jacob¡¦s equal. (A. G. Mercer, D. D.)
Of all that Thou shalt
give me, I will surely give the tenth unto Thee.
Tithes at the start
The two important matters of notice, in this text, are the early
purpose of this young patriarch to give a portion of his wealth to religious
ends, and the establishment of a fixed system in presenting it. It seems to be
in Scripture history the exact beginning of all that custom of tithing the
people which meets us everywhere in the Old Testament. It has arrested my
attention, because it is the act of a young man just starting in the new life.
It furnishes me with this for a topic--Systematic beneficence: its principle
and its measure.
I. THE PRINCIPLE
may be stated in one compact sentence: A Christian is to contribute, not on
impulse, but by plan. Jacob seems to have understood in the outset that this
was to be the practical side of his life.
1. This duty should be taken up early by every young Christian as a
matter of study.
2. It will not do to discharge this work all at once. A settled
habit of giving is promoted only by a settled exercise of giving.
3. It will not do to leave this duty to a mere impulse of excitement.
Christians ought never to wait for fervid appeals or ardent addresses to
sympathy,
4. It will not do to perform this duty as a mere mechanical form. We
are told, in one familiar verse of the New Testament, that ¡§he which soweth
sparingly, shall reap also sparingly.¡¨ This singular word ¡§sparingly¡¨ occurs
nowhere else in the Scriptures. It means grievingly, regretfully; holding back
after the gift, if such an expression may be allowed.
5. This duty is to be discharged only with a diligent comparison of
means with ends. System in giving is the secret of all success.
II. THE MEASURE OF
CHRISTIAN BENEFICENCE.
1. Give tithes to start with.
2. Tithes, just to start with, will in many cases force a Christian
on to increase as he grows in fortune. When life grows easier, and gains more
plentiful, the good Lord, whose stewards we are, raises His rates of loan, and
expects more liberal returns.
III. CONSIDERATIONS
WHICH ENTER INTO THE RECKONING.
1. Think of what has been done in our behalf by God, our Maker and
Redeemer. We should measure our gifts in money by our receipts in grace.
2. Remember whence the prosperity came, out of which we give money.
God seeks where He has given.
3. Consider the extent of the work which is to be accomplished.
4. Think of the promises which reward the free-giver. ¡§The liberal
soul shall be made fat.¡¨
5. Think of the exigencies arising under the favouring providences
of God.
6. Think of the listlessness of others.
Conclusion: He who gives tithes at the start will grow himself as his fortune
grows. He that delays will harden. And it should never be forgotten that money
is only the measure of manhood when consecrated to Christ. It is ourselves we
give to Him, ourselves He demands. (C. S.Robinson, D. D.)
The tenth is God¡¦s
The late Bishop Selwyn used often to quote that motto of John
Wesley¡¦s, ¡§Save all you can and give all you save,¡¨ and he did not think that
charity began until after a tithe had been paid to God. ¡§Whatever your income,¡¨
he wrote once to his son, ¡§remember that only nine-tenths of it are at your
disposal.¡¨ (Old Testament Anecdotes.)
Giving a tenth
Heathen nations used to give a tenth for religious objects.
Oberlin, a poor French minister, did this in giving his tenth of income, and
then God so blessed him in his circumstances, that he used to say he ¡§abounded
in wealth.¡¨ One day Oberlin was reading in the Old Testament where God told the
Jews that He expected them to give a tithe of all their property to Him, said
he to himself, ¡§Well, I am sure that I, as a Christian, have three times as
many blessings as the Jews had. If it was right for a Jew to give one tenth of
his property to God, surely I ought to give at least three times as much as
that.¡¨ So he made up his mind to do this. The Jews called giving ¡§the hedge
of riches.¡¨ ¡§Perhaps there was never a man more generous than Mr. Wesley.¡¨ For
years, when his yearly income was between £30 and £120, he lived upon £28 a
year, and gave away the remainder. It is supposed that during his life he gave
away £30,000, and when he died he left little more than was necessary to bury
him, and to pay his debts.
A tenth of all
"Take it quick, quick,¡¨ said a merchant who had promised,
like Jacob, to return to the Lord a tenth of all that he should give him, and
found that it amounted to so large a sum, that he said, ¡§I cannot give so
much,¡¨ and set aside a smaller amount. Then his conscience smote him, and,
coming to himself, he said, ¡§What I can I be so mean? Because God has thus
blessed me that I have this large profit, shall I now rob Him of His
portion?¡¨ And fearing his own selfish nature, he made haste to place it beyond
his reach in the treasury of the Lord, coming almost breathless to the pastor¡¦s
house, and holding the money in his outstretched hand.
Helping on the work of God
A widow found pardon and peace in her Saviour in her sixty-ninth
year. Her gratitude and love overflowed and often refreshed the hearts of
Christians of long experience. The house of God became very dear to her, and
she was often seen to drop a gift in the church door box though her income was
only 2s. 6d. per week. A fall in her seventy-second year prevented her ever
coming out again. A little boy being seen to drop something into the box, was
asked what it was. He said, ¡§It is Mrs. W--¡¥s penny..¡¨ He was told to take it
back to her, and to say that her good intention was prized, but that her
friends could not let her thus reduce her small means, especially as she could
not come out to worship. She replied, ¡§Boy, why did you let them see you give it?
Take it again and put it in when no one sees you.¡¨ Then weeping, she said,
¡§What, and am I not to be allowed to help in the work of God any more because I
can¡¦t get out?¡¨
Substance consecrated to God
John Crossley, the founder of the firm of the Crossleys of
Halifax, married a Yorkshire farmer¡¦s daughter, a woman of genuine piety and
strong common sense. Crossley was frugal and thrifty. He got on well, laid by
his earnings, and at length was able to rent a wool-mill and dwelling-house.
When the couple were about entering their new quarters a holy purpose of
consecration took possession of the young wife. On the day of entering the
house she rose at four o¡¦clock in the morning and went into the door-yard.
There in the early twilight, before entering the house, she kneeled on the
ground and gave her life anew to God. She vowed most solemnly in these words,
¡§If the Lord does bless me at this place the poor shall have a share of it.¡¨
That grand act of consecration was the germ of a life of marvellous nobility. (F.
G.Clarke, D. D.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n