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Isaiah Chapter
Two
Isaiah 2
Chapter Contents
The conversion of the Gentiles, Description of the
sinfulness of Israel. (1-9) The awful punishment of unbelievers. (10-22)
Commentary on Isaiah 2:1-9
(Read Isaiah 2:1-9)
The calling of the Gentiles, the spread of the gospel,
and that far more extensive preaching of it yet to come, are foretold. Let
Christians strengthen one another, and support one another. It is God who
teaches his people, by his word and Spirit. Christ promotes peace, as well as
holiness. If all men were real Christians, there could be no war; but nothing
answering to these expressions has yet taken place on the earth. Whatever
others do, let us walk in the light of this peace. Let us remember that when
true religion flourishes, men delight in going up to the house of the Lord, and
in urging others to accompany them. Those are in danger who please themselves
with strangers to God; for we soon learn to follow the ways of persons whose
company we keep. It is not having silver and gold, horses and chariots, that
displeases God, but depending upon them, as if we could not be safe, and easy,
and happy without them, and could not but be so with them. Sin is a disgrace to
the poorest and the lowest. And though lands called Christian are not full of
idols, in the literal sense, are they not full of idolized riches? and are not
men so busy about their gains and indulgences, that the Lord, his truths, and
precepts, are forgotten or despised?
Commentary on Isaiah 2:10-22
(Read Isaiah 2:10-22)
The taking of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans seems first
meant here, when idolatry among the Jews was done away; but our thoughts are
led forward to the destruction of all the enemies of Christ. It is folly for
those who are pursued by the wrath of God, to think to hide or shelter
themselves from it. The shaking of the earth will be terrible to those who set
their affections on things of the earth. Men's haughtiness will be brought
down, either by the grace of God convincing them of the evil of pride, or by
the providence of God depriving them of all the things they were proud of. The
day of the Lord shall be upon those things in which they put their confidence.
Those who will not be reasoned out of their sins, sooner or later shall be
frightened out of them. Covetous men make money their god; but the time will
come when they will feel it as much their burden. This whole passage may be
applied to the case of an awakened sinner, ready to leave all that his soul may
be saved. The Jews were prone to rely on their heathen neighbours; but they are
here called upon to cease from depending on mortal man. We are all prone to the
same sin. Then let not man be your fear, let not him be your hope; but let your
hope be in the Lord your God. Let us make this our great concern.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 2
Verse 1
[1] The
word that Isaiah the son of Amoz saw concerning Judah and Jerusalem.
The word ¡X
Or, the matter or thing, as this Hebrew word commonly signifies; the prophecy
or vision.
Verse 2
[2] And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the
LORD's house shall be established in the top of the mountains, and shall be
exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it.
In the last days ¡X In
the times of the Messiah. For Christ's institutions were to continue to the end
of the world.
The mountain ¡X
The temple of the Lord which is upon mount Moriah; which yet is not to be
understood literally of that material temple, but mystically of the church of
God; as appears from the flowing of all nations to it, which was not to that
temple, nor indeed was fulfilled 'till that temple was destroyed.
Exalted ¡X
Shall be placed and settled in a most conspicuous and glorious manner, being
advanced above all other churches and kingdoms.
Verse 3
[3] And
many people shall go and say, Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the
LORD, to the house of the God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and
we will walk in his paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word
of the LORD from Jerusalem.
The law ¡X
The new law, the doctrine of the gospel, which is frequently called a law,
because it hath the nature and power of a law, obliging us no less to the
belief and practice of it, than the old law did.
Verse 4
[4] And
he shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people: and they shall
beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruninghooks: nation
shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.
He ¡X Christ shall set up
his authority among all nations, not only giving laws to them, but doing what
no other can do, convincing their consciences, changing their hearts, and
ordering their lives.
Rebuke ¡X By
his word and Spirit, convincing the world of sin; and by his judgments upon his
implacable enemies, which obstruct the propagation of the gospel.
Verse 5
[5] O house of Jacob, come ye, and let us walk in the light of the LORD.
The light ¡X
Take heed that you do not reject that light which is so clear that even the
blind Gentiles will discern it.
Verse 6
[6]
Therefore thou hast forsaken thy people the house of Jacob, because they be
replenished from the east, and are soothsayers like the Philistines, and they
please themselves in the children of strangers.
Therefore ¡X
For the following reasons.
Thou ¡X
Wilt certainly forsake and reject.
Thy people ¡X
The body of that nation.
Because ¡X
Their land is full of the idolatrous manners of the eastern nations, the
Syrians and Chaldeans.
Philistines ¡X
Who were infamous for those practices.
They please ¡X
They delight in their company, and conversation, making leagues, and
friendships, and marriages with them.
Verse 7
[7]
Their land also is full of silver and gold, neither is there any end of their
treasures; their land is also full of horses, neither is there any end of their
chariots:
Treasures ¡X
They have heaped up riches, and still are greedily pursuing after more.
Verse 9
[9] And
the mean man boweth down, and the great man humbleth himself: therefore forgive
them not.
The great man ¡X
Men of all ranks fall down and worship idols.
Verse 10
[10]
Enter into the rock, and hide thee in the dust, for fear of the LORD, and for
the glory of his majesty.
Enter ¡X
Such calamities are coming upon you, that you will be ready to hide yourselves
in rocks and caves of the earth, for fear of the glorious and terrible
judgments of God.
Verse 12
[12] For
the day of the LORD of hosts shall be upon every one that is proud and lofty,
and upon every one that is lifted up; and he shall be brought low:
The day ¡X
The time of God's taking vengeance upon sinners.
Verse 13
[13] And
upon all the cedars of Lebanon, that are high and lifted up, and upon all the
oaks of Bashan,
The cedars ¡X
The cedars and oaks on the mountains shall be either thrown down by furious
winds or earthquakes, or torn in pieces by thunder and lightning; and the
stately houses built with cedars and oaks, shall be destroyed.
Verse 14
[14] And
upon all the high mountains, and upon all the hills that are lifted up,
Hills ¡X To
which men used to betake themselves in times of danger.
Verse 15
[15] And
upon every high tower, and upon every fenced wall,
Wall ¡X To
which you trusted for your defence.
Verse 16
[16] And
upon all the ships of Tarshish, and upon all pleasant pictures.
Tarshish ¡X
The ships of the sea, as that word is used, Psalms 48:7, whereby you fetched riches from the
remote parts of the world.
Verse 19
[19] And
they shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the earth, for
fear of the LORD, and for the glory of his majesty, when he ariseth to shake
terribly the earth.
They ¡X
The idolatrous Israelites.
Verse 20
[20] In
that day a man shall cast his idols of silver, and his idols of gold, which
they made each one for himself to worship, to the moles and to the bats;
Shall cast ¡X
Into the meanest and darkest places, in which moles and bats have their abode.
Verse 22
[22]
Cease ye from man, whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be
accounted of?
Cease ye ¡X
Never admire or place your trust in man.
Breath ¡X
Whose breath is quickly stopped and taken away.
Wherein ¡X
What excellency is in him, considered in himself, and without dependence on
God?
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
02 Chapter 2
Verses 1-22
Verse 1
The word that Isaiah the son of Amos saw concerning Judah and
Jerusalem
Heading to a small collection
(chaps.
2-4), the contents of which are--, Isaiah 2:1-4) All nations shall yet
acknowledge the God of Israel. Isaiah 2:5-22; Isaiah 3:1-26; Isaiah 4:1) Through great judgments shall
both Israel and thenations be brought to the knowledge of Jehovah Isaiah 4:2-6) When these judgments are
overpast, all Zion¡¦s citizens shall be holy. (A. B. Davidson, LL. D.)
A general view of the chapter
The Isaiah 2:2-4, it should be premised,
recur with slight variations in the fourth chapter of Micah, and are supposed
by many to have been borrowed by both writers from some older source. The
prophet appears before an assembly of the people, perhaps on a Sabbath, and
recites this passage, depicting in beautiful and effective imagery the
spiritual preeminence to be accorded in the future to the religion of Zion He
would dwell upon the subject further; but scarcely has he begun to speak when
the disheartening spectacle meets his eye of a crowd of soothsayers, of gold
and silver ornaments and finery, of horses and idols; his tone immediately
changes, and he bursts into a diatribe against the foreign and idolatrous
fashions, the devotion to wealth and glitter, which he sees about him, and
which extorts from him in the end the terrible wish, ¡§Therefore forgive them
not¡¨ (verses 5-9). And then, in one of his stateliest periods, Isaiah declares
the judgment about to fall upon all that is ¡§tall and lofty,¡¨ upon Uzziah¡¦s
towers and fortified walls, upon the great merchant ships at Elath, upon every
object of human satisfaction and pride, when wealth and rank will be impotent
to save, when idols will be cast despairingly aside, and when all classes alike
will be glad to find a hiding place, as in the old days of Midianite invasion
or Philistine oppression ( 6:2; 1 Samuel 13:6), in the clefts and
caves of the rocks. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Isaiah¡¦s citizenship in Jerusalem
Isaiah¡¦s citizenship in Jerusalem colours all his prophecy. More
than Athens to Demosthenes, Rome to Juvenal, Florence to Dante, is Jerusalem to
Isaiah. She is his immediate and ultimate regard, the centre and return of all
his thoughts, the hinge of the history of his time, the one thing worth
preserving amidst its disasters, the summit of those brilliant hopes with which
he fills the future. He has traced for us the main features of her position and
some of the lines of her construction, many of the great figures of her
streets, the fashions of her women, the arrival of embassies, the effect of
rumours. He has painted her aspect in triumph, in siege, in famine, and in
earthquake; war filling her valleys with chariots, and again nature rolling
tides of fruitfulness up to her gates; her moods of worship and panic and
profligacy--till we see them all as clearly as the shadow following the
sunshine and the breeze across the cornfields of our own summers. (Prof. G.
A. Smith, D. D.)
Judah and Jerusalem
There is little about Judah in these chapters: the country forms
but a fringe to the capital. (Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
The Word of the Lord ¡§seen¡¨
Though the spirit of man has neither eyes nor ears, yet when
enabled to perceive the supersensuous, it is altogether eye. (F. Delitzsch.)
Verses 2-4
And it shall come to pass in the last days
Isaiah¡¦s description of the last days
The description of ¡§the last days¡¨--which in the Hebrew begins,
¡§And it hath come to pass . . . the mountainof Jehovah¡¦s house shall be
established,¡¨ etc.
is an instance of the use of the perfect tense to express the
certain future. Its explanation seems to be that the structure of such a
passage as that before us is imaginative, not logical--a picture, not a
statement. The speaker completely projects himself into ¡§the last days¡¨; he is there,
he finds them come; he looks about him to see what is actually going on, and
sees that the mountain of Jehovah¡¦s house is about to be--still in process of
being--established at the head of the mountains; he looks again, and the
nations have already arrived at the place prepared for them, yet so freshly
that they are still calling one another on; and as they come up they find that
the King they seek is already there, and has effected some of His judgments and
decisions before they arrive for their, turn. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
An epitome of Isaiah¡¦s vision
(verses 2-4):--Isaiah, ¡§rapt into future times,¡¨ sees the throne
of the Lord of Israel established in sovereignty over all the nations of the
earth, and they becoming willing subjects to Him, and friendly citizens to each
other. The nations attain to true liberty, for they come to submit themselves
to the righteous laws and institutions, and to the wise and gracious word and
direction of that King whose service is perfect freedom; and to true brotherhood,
for they leave their old enmities and conflicts, and make the same Lord their
Judge and Umpire and Reconciler. And all this, not by some newly invented
device of the nations, some new result of their own civilisation, but by the
carrying out of the old original purpose and plan of God, that His chosen
people of the Jews should be the ministers of these good things, and that in
them should all nations of the earth be blessed,--that ¡§out of Zion should go
forth the law, and the Word of Jehovah from Jerusalem.¡¨ This is the vocation of
the Hebrew people. This, says the prophet, is the key to all our duties as a
nation, this is the master light to guide us to right action. (Sir E.
Strachey, Bart.)
The supremacy of Mount Zion
Transport yourselves for a moment to the foot of Mount Zion. As
you stand there, you observe that it is but a very little hill. Bashan is far
loftier, and Carmel and Sharon outvie it. As for Lebanon, Zion is but a little
hillock compared with it. If you think for a moment of the Alps, or of the
loftier Andes, or of the yet mightier Himalayas, this Mount Zion seems to be a
very little hill, a mere molehill, insignificant, despicable, and obscure.
Stand there for a moment, until the Spirit of God touches your eye, and you
shall see this hill begin to grow. Up it mounts, with the temple on its summit,
till it outreaches Tabor. Onward it grows, till Carmel, with its perpetual
green, is left behind, and Salmon, with its everlasting snow sinks before it.
Onward still it grows, till the snowy peaks of Lebanon are eclipsed. Still
onward mounts the hill, drawing with its mighty roots other mountains and hills
into its fabric; and onward it rises, till piercing the clouds it reaches above
the Alps; and onwards still, till the Himalayas seem to be sucked into its
bowels, and the greatest mountains of the earth appear to be but as the roots
that strike out from the side of the eternal hill; and there it rises till you
can scarcely see the top, as infinitely above all the higher mountains of the
world as they are above the valleys Have you caught the idea, and do you see
there afar off upon the lofty top, not everlasting snows, but a pure crystal
table land, crowned with a gorgeous city, the metropolis of God, the royal
palace of Jesus the King? The sun is eclipsed by the light which shines from
the top of this mountain; the moon ceases from her brightness, for there is now
no night: but this one hill, lifted up on high, illuminates the atmosphere, and
the nations of them that are saved are walking in the light thereof. The hill
of Zion hath now outsoared all others, and all the mountains and hills of the
earth are become as nothing before her. This is the magnificent picture of the
text. I do not know that in all the compass of poetry there is an idea so
massive and stupendous as this--a mountain heaving, expanding, swelling,
growing, till all the high hills become absorbed, and that which was but a
little rising ground before, becomes a hill the top whereof teacheth to the
seventh heavens. Now we have here a picture of what the Church is to be. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
A vision of the latter day glories
Of old, the Church was like Mount Zion, a very little hill. What
saw the nations of the earth when they looked upon it? A humble Man with twelve
disciples. But that little hill grew, and some thousands were baptized in the
name of Christ; it grew again and became mighty. But still, compared with the
colossal systems of idolatry, she is but small. The Hindoo and the Chinese turn
to our religion, and say, ¡§It is an infant of yesterday; ours is the religion
of ages.¡¨ The Easterns compare Christianity to some miasma that creeps along
the fenny lowlands, but their systems they imagine to be like me Alps,
outsoaring the heavens in height. Ah, but we reply to this, ¡§Your mountain
crumbles and your hill dissolves, but our hill of Zion has been growing, and
strange to say, it has life within its bowels, and grow on it shall, grow on it
must, till all the systems of idolatry shall become less than nothing before
it.¡¨ Such is the destiny of our Church, she is to be an all-conquering Church,
rising above every competitor. The Church will be like a high mountain, for she
will be--
1. Preeminently conspicuous.
2. Awful and venerable in her grandeur.
3. The day is coming when the Church of God shall have absolute
supremacy.
The Church of Christ now has to fight for her existence; but the
day shall come when she shall be so mighty that there shall be nought left to
compote with her. How is this to be done? There are three things which will
ensure the growth of the Church.
1. The individual exertion of every Christian.
2. We may expect more.
The fact is, that the Church, though a mountain, is a volcano--not
one that spouts fire, but that hath fire within her; and this inward fire of
living truth, and living grace, expands her side, and lifts her crest, and
upwards she must tower, for truth is mighty, and it must prevail--grace is
mighty, and must conquer--Christ is mighty, and He must be King of kings. Thus
there is something more than the individual exertions of the Church; there is a
something within her that must make her grow, till she overtops the highest
mountains.
3. But the great hope of the Church is the second advent of Christ.
When He shall come, then shall the mountain of the Lord¡¦s house be exalted
above the hills. We must fight on day by day and hour by hour; and when we
think the battle is almost decided against us, He shall come, the Prince of the
kings of the earth. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
¡§All nations shall flow unto it¡¨
Observe the figure. It does not say they shall come to it, but
they shall flow unto it.
1. It implies, first, their number. Now it is but the pouring out of
water from the bucket; then it shall be as the rolling of the cataract from the
hillside.
2. Their spontaneity. They are to come willingly to Christ; not to be
driven, not to be pumped up, not to be forced to it, but to be brought up by
the Word of the Lord, to pay Him willing homage. Just as the river naturally
flows downhill by no other force than that which is its nature, so shall the
grace of God be so mightily given to the sons of men, that no acts of
parliament, no state churches, no armies will be used to make a forced
conversion.
3. But yet again, this represents the power of the work of conversion.
They ¡§shall flow to it.¡¨ Imagine an idiot endeavouring to stop the river
Thames. The secularist may rise up and say, ¡§Oh, why be converted to this
fanatical religion? Look to the things of time.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The mountain of the Lord¡¦s house
The text calls our attention--
I. TO A PERIOD OF
TIME WHEN THE EVENTS OF WHICH IT SPEAKS ARE TO OCCUR. ¡§The last days.¡¨ The
phrase means, generally, the age of the Messiah; and is thus understood by both
Jewish and Christian commentators. The apostle has put this meaning beyond all
doubt. ¡§God, who spake in times past unto the fathers, hath in these last days
spoken unto us by His Son.¡¨
1. The expression intimates, that the dispensations which the
prophets of the Old Testament lived, were but preparatory to one of complete
perfection. To the future all these ancient holy men were ever looking. The
patriarchal was succeeded by the Mosaic age. Prophet came after prophet; but
all were looking forward. All things around them, and before them, were typical
shadowy.
2. The emphasis which the of last days, intimates, also, the views
they had of the complete efficiency of that religious system which the Messiah
was to introduce. On that age all their hopes of the recovery of a world they
saw sinking around them rested; and in the contemplation of this efficient plan
of redeeming love, they mitigated their sorrows. They felt that the world
needed a more efficient system, and they saw it descend with Messiah from
heaven.
3. The days of the Messiah were regarded by the ancient Church as
¡§the last days,¡¨ because in them all the great purposes of God were to be
developed and completed.
II. TO THE STATE OF
THE GENERAL CHURCH OF GOD IN THE LAST DAYS. ¡§The mountain of the Lord¡¦s house
shall be established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above
the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it.¡¨ Some have considered this as a
prediction of the actual rebuilding of the temple, and the restoration of the
political and church-state of the Jews, in the close of the latter days of the
times of the Messiah. Such an interpretation, if allowed, would not at all
interfere with that in which all agree, that, whatever else the prediction may
signify, it sets forth, under figures taken from the Levitical institutions,
the future state of the general Church of Christ. For the principle which leads
to such an interpretation, we have no less authority than that of the apostle
Paul, who uniformly considers the temple, its priests, and its ritual, as types
of heavenly things; and in one well-known passage, makes use of them to
characterise the true Church of Christ. ¡§But ye are come unto Mount Zion, and
unto the city¡¨ of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem. The mountain of the
Lord¡¦s house is no longer covered with ruins, but established in the top of the
hills. We learn from it--
1. That the Church shall be restored to evangelical order and beauty:
it shall be as Mount Zion.
2. In this state the Church shall be distinguished by its zeal. ¡§Out
of Zion shall go forth the law, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem.¡¨ So it
was in the best estate of the Jewish Church. The Gospel is to be preached in
all nations; and till you send forth the law they will not say, ¡§Come, and let
us go up to the mountain of the Lord.¡¨ We thus see the connection between the
best state of the Church and this holy zeal. All history proves it.
III. TO CERTAIN
SPECIAL OPERATIONS OF GOD BY WHICH THE EFFORTS OF HIS RESTORED CHURCH TO BLESS
AND SAVE THE WORLD SHALL BE RENDERED EFFECTUAL. Without God, not all the
efforts of the Church, even in her best state, can be effectual.
1. He shall judge among the nations. The word ¡§judge¡¨ is not always
used in its purely judicial sense, but in that of government,--the exercise of
regal power both in mercy and judgment; and in this sense we here take it. He
shall so order the affairs of the world, that opportunities shall be afforded
to His Church to exert herself for its benefit. And thus is He judging among
the nations in our own day.
2. It is a part of the regal office to show mercy; and thus, too,
shall He ¡§judge among the nations.¡¨ This He shall do by taking off those
judicial desertions which, as a punishment for unfaithfulness, He has
inflicted. ¡§He shall judge among the nations.¡¨ He shall do this judicially, yet
not for destruction, but correction. Then are two sorts of judgments; judgments
of wrath, and judgments of mercy. When grace is given with judgments, then do
they become corrective and salutary.
3. It is, therefore, added, ¡§and shall rebuke many people¡¨; or,
according to Lowth¡¦s translation, ¡§work conviction among them.¡¨ And may we not
hope that this is approaching? Even while waiting for the glorious period
described and promised in the preceding prophecy, the Church is called to ¡§walk
in the light of the Lord¡¨ (Isaiah 2:5).
1. Walk by this light of truth yourselves.
2. Set the glory of these splendid scenes before you, and let them
encourage you to increasing exertions for the spread of truth, holiness, and
love throughout the earth. (Richard Watson.)
The glorious exaltation and enlargement of Church
I. THE GLORY AND
EXALTATION. ¡§The mountain of the Lord¡¦s house shall be established,¡¨ etc.
II. THE
ENLARGEMENT. ¡§All nations shall flow unto it.¡¨
III. THE PROSPERITY
of the Church begins to be described in Isaiah 2:4. (J. Mede, B. D.)
The Church¡¦s visibility and glory
There are--
I. TIMES WHEN THE
CHURCH IS VISIBLE BUT NOT GLORIOUS.
II. TIMES WHEN IT
IS NEITHER VISIBLE NOR GLORIOUS.
III. TIMES WHEN IT
IS TO BE BOTH VISIBLE AND GLORIOUS. (J. Mede, B. D.)
The mountain of the Lord¡¦s house
I. THE PERIOD
REFERRED TO. The reference is not to the Gospel era as a whole, but to an
advanced period of it, even the time of the great millennial prosperity. The
golden age of the Greeks and Romans was the past, but our golden age is yet to
come.
II. THE CHEERING
TRUTH DECLARED. ¡§The mountain,¡¨ etc. Often has Zion languished, but she is to
become a praise in the whole earth. In this striking figure two things are
embraced--
1. Elevated position.
2. Permanent duration.
III. THE GENERAL
INTEREST AWAKENED. We have here--
1. The invitation given. ¡§And many people shall go and say, Come ye,
and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of
Jacob.¡¨
2. The considerations by which it is enforced. ¡§And He will teach us
of His ways, and we will walk in His paths: for out of Zion shall go forth the
law, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem.¡¨ It is the seat of Divine
instruction on the one hand, and the centre of holy influence on the other.
IV. THE HAPPY
RESULTS DECLARED (verse 4). This is--
1. A consummation most devoutly to be desired.
2. Absolutely certain in its realisation. ¡§They shall beat their
swords into ploughshares.¡¨
3. The means whereby it win be accomplished. By God judging or ruling
among the nations, and rebuking or working conviction among them. (Anon.)
The future glory and amplitude of the Church
1. The Gospel dispensation was designed to supersede that which was
given by the hand of Moses; it was to be exalted above this hill.
2. The Gospel also was destined to triumph over all those corrupt
systems of religion which have ever been received among men.
3. The assertion before us is also understood as a prophecy relative
to the fulness of the Church when the Jews shall be called in. This important
event is foretold by the sacred writers. (S. Ramsey, M. A.)
Isaiah¡¦s wideness of view
Consider what that prediction meant in Isaiah¡¦s time. He lived
within well-defined boundaries and limitations: the Jew was not a great man in
the sense of including within his personal aspirations all classes, conditions,
and estates of men; left to himself he could allow the Gentiles to die by
thousands daily without shedding a tear upon their fallen bodies; he lived
amongst his own people; it was enough for him that the Jews were happy, for the
Gentiles were but dogs. Here is a new view of human nature, great enlargement
of spiritual boundaries. (J. Parker, D. D.)
The Church of the future--Goethe and Isaiah
It is quite the fashion in these days for those who do not believe
in the Christian religion to bestow on it their patronage. The Bible is full of
delusion and falsehood, but they regard it, on the whole, as a book that
deserves notice; parts of it are almost as good as the Rig-Veda. The Church has
been the handmaid of bigotry and superstition, yet they find in the history of
the Church some passages that are inspiring. Jesus of Nazareth was a teacher in
whose doctrine they find many things to set right; yet, so rich were His
contributions to ethical science that they feel themselves justified in
bestowing on Him a qualified approval. This fashion of patronising Christianity
may have been set by Goethe. Into that temple of the future which he describes
in his Tale, the little hut of the fisherman, by which he symbolises
Christianity, was graciously admitted. ¡§This little hut had, indeed, been
wonderfully transfigured. By virtue of the Lamp locked up in it [the light of
reason] the hut had been converted from the inside to the outside into solid
silver. Ere long, too, its form changed; for the noble metal shook aside the
accidental shape of planks, posts and beams, and stretched itself out into a
noble case of beaten, ornamented workmanship. Thus a fair little temple stood
erected in the middle of the large one; or, if you will, an altar worthy of the
temple.¡¨ This is Goethe¡¦s view of the Church of the future. He has been magnanimous
enough to provide a niche for it in the perfected temple of the Great
Hereafter; it is to serve as a pretty decoration of that grand structure, as a
dainty bit of bric-a-brac. About twenty five centuries before Goethe¡¦s day
another poet, dwelling somewhere in the fastnesses of Syria, had visions of the
future in form and colour quite unlike this of the German philosopher. In
Isaiah¡¦s sight of the latter day, the Church of God is not merely a feature--it
furnishes the outline, it fills the whole field of vision. It is not merely a
trait of the picture--it is the picture. Instead of putting the Church into a
niche in the templeof the future, to be kept there as a kind of heirloom--a
well-preserved antique curiosity--Isaiah insists that the Church in the temple,
and that all stores and forces of good are to be gathered into it, to celebrate
its empire and to decorate its triumph. The mountain of the Lord¡¦s house, the
typical Zion on which the spiritual Church is builded, is to be exalted above
all other eminences. Toward that all eyes shall turn; toward that all paths
shall lead; toward that shall journey with joy all pilgrim feet. For the
heralds of its progress, for the missionaries of its glad tidings it shall have
many nations; it shall give to all the world the ruling law and the informing
word. This is Isaiah¡¦s view of the Church of the future. When twenty-five
centuries more shall have passed it will be easier to tell whether the Hebrew
or the German was the better seer. (Washington Gladden, D. D.)
The Church of the future
Isaiah shows us the Church of the future only in outline; the
great fact which he gives us is that in the last days the spiritual Jerusalem
shall gather into itself all the kingdoms of the world and all the glory of
them. It may be possible for us in some indistinct way to fill in this outline;
to imagine, if we cannot prophesy, what the scope and character of the future
Church shall be.
I. WILL IT HAVE A
CREED? A creed is only a statement, more or less elaborate, of the facts and
principles of religion accepted by those who adhere to it. Religion is not
wholly an affair of the emotions; it involves the apprehension of truth. In the
future, as in the past, this truth must be stated, in order to be apprehended.
A man¡¦s creed is what he believes; and there must be creeds as long as there
are believers. It is probable, however, that the creeds may be considerably
modified as the years pass. Certainly they have been undergoing modifications,
continually, through the centuries gone by. It must be remembered, however,
that the changes through which theological science has been passing have been
changes of spirit rather than of substance, of form more than of fact. The
essential truth remains. The great changes in theology are moral changes.
Theology is constantly becoming less materialistic and more ethical. This
progress will continue through the future. The creed of the future will
contain, I have no doubt, the same essential truth that is found in the creeds
of the present; but there may be considerable difference in the phrasing of it,
and in the point of view from which it is approached.
1. Men will believe in the future in an infinite personal God, the
Creator, the Ruler, the Father of men. The abstract, impersonal Force to which
Agnosticism leads us has no relation to that which is deepest in man, and can
have none. Christ bade us love the Lord our God with all our heart and mind and
soul. Can any man ever be perfectly happy until he has found some Being whom he
can love in this way? Must not the Being who is worthy to be loved in this way
be both perfect and infinite? And is it possible for a man to love with heart
and mind and soul, any being, however vast or powerful, that has neither heart
nor mind nor soul?
2. Concerning the mode of the Divine existence, men will learn in the
future to speak more modestly than they have spoken in the past. It will become
more and more evident that it is not possible to put the infinite into terms of
the finite. There is the doctrine of the Trinity; there is truth in it, or
under it; but can anyone put that truth into propositions that shall be
definite and not contradictory?
3. II one may judge the future by the past there is no reason to fear
that the person of Jesus Christ will be less commanding in the Church of the
future than it is in the Church of the present.
4. The fact of sin will not be denied by the Church of the future.
Doubtless organisation and circumstance will be taken into the account in
estimating human conduct; but the power of the human will to control the
natural tendencies, to release itself from entangling circumstances, and to lay
hold on the Divine grace by which it may overcome sin, will also be clearly
understood. The supremacy of the moral nature will be vindicated.
5. Punishment, as conceived and represented by the Church of the
future, will not be an arbitrary infliction of suffering, but the natural and
inevitable consequence of disobedience to law. It will be discovered that the
moral law is incorporated into the natural order, and that its sanctions are
found in that order; while, in the work of redemption, God interposes by His
personal and supernatural grace to save men from the consequences of their own
disobedience and folly. Law is natural; grace is supernatural Transgressors
will be made to see, what they now so dimly apprehend, that no effect can be
more closely joined to its cause than penalty to sin.
6. Whatever the creed of the future may be, however, it will not be
put to the kind of use which the creed of the present is made to serve. It will
not be laid down as the doctrinal plank over which everybody must walk who
comes into the communion of the Church. The Church, like every other organism,
has an organic idea, and that is simple loyalty to Jesus Christ, the Head of
the Church. There will be but one door into that Church--Christ will be the
door.
II. WHAT WILL BE
THE POLITY OF THE FUTURE CHURCH? It is likely that, of the various sorts of
ecclesiastical machinery, each of the several religious bodies will freely
choose that which it likes best. Doubtless the Church will have some form of
government: it will not be a holy mob; lawlessness will not be regarded as the
supreme good, in Church or in State. In whatever ecclesiastical mould the
Church of the future may be cast, there will be no mean sectarianism in
existence then. The various families of Christians will dwell as happily
together as well-bred families now do in society. Though there be diversities
of form in the future, there will be real and thorough intercommunion and
cooperation among Christians of all names, and nothing will be permitted to
hold apart those who follow the same Leader and travel the same road.
III. WHAT KIND OF
WORK WILL BE DONE BY THE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE? It will have many ways of
working that the Church of the present has not dreamed of. ¡§The field is the
world,¡¨ Christ has told us; and in that better day the Church will have learned
to occupy the field.
1. Paul said that as a preacher of the Gospel he magnified his
office. There is no office more honourable. But it must not be inferred that
there is no other Way of preaching the Gospel except the formal utterance of
religious truth, in the presence of a congregation. The truth will be
disseminated, in that time, in many other ways. For though the living voice is
the best instrument for the proclamation of the truth, so far as it will reach,
it cannot reach very far. The art of printing has been given to the world since
that day; and by that invention the whole business of instructing and
influencing men has been revolutionised. The Church has already appropriated
this agency; and it is doubtless true that it will be employed in the future
more effectively than in the past. Neither will the range of teaching be so
narrow as it has sometimes been in the past. To apply the ethical rule of the
New Testament to the conduct of individuals, and to the relations of men in
society, will be the constant obligation of the pulpit. Out of Zion must go
forth the law by which parents, children, neighbours, citizens, workmen,
masters, teachers, pupils, benefactors, beneficiaries, shall guide their
behaviour. Science, long the nightmare of the theologians, will no more trouble
their dreams; it will be understood that there can be no conflict between
truths; that physical science has its facts and laws, and spiritual science its
facts and laws; that these are diverse but not contradictory, and that the one
is just as positive and knowable as the other. The unfriendliness now existing
between the scientists and the theologians will exist no longer, because both
parties will have learned wisdom.
2. But the work of teaching will not be the only work to which the
Church of the future will address itself. Large and wise enterprises for the
welfare of men will be set on foot; many of the instrumentalities now in use
will continue to be employed, under modified forms, and many new ones will be
devised. It will be understood that the law of the Church is simply this, ¡§Let
us do good to all men as we have opportunity.¡¨ (Washington Gladden, D. D.)
The magnet which draws the nations
The Church is established on the top of the mountain, and all
nations are flowing unto it. Yes, flowing up hill! Yes, up the mountain side!
When I was a boy I said, ¡§That is false rhetoric, a mistake--flowing to the top
of the mountain; it cannot be.¡¨ I went to the workshop of a friend, and I saw
in the dust a parcel of steel filings. And he had a magnet, and, as he drew it
near to the steel filings, they were attracted to it and kissed the magnet.
Then I said, Give me a magnet large enough, place it on the mountain top, and
it will draw all the nations unto it. That magnet is the Lord Jesus Christ, for
He said, ¡§If I be lifted up from the earth, I will draw all men unto Me.¡¨ (Bp.
M. Simpson, D. D.)
Verse 3
Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord
¡§Many people¡¨
For ¡§people¡¨ read ¡§peoples.
¡¨ So ver.
4.
(A. B. Davidson, LL. D.)
Desire for spiritual instruction
What I intend is to make use of the words as they express a
sincere desire in many people of being better informed in the mind and will of
God, by some particular revelation from Himself than they could be by the mere
natural light of their own minds, reflecting only upon the general works of
creation and providence.
I. EVERY RATIONAL
MAN, WHO BELIEVES A GOD AND A PROVIDENCE GOVERNING THE WORLD, IS UNDER A
NATURAL OBLIGATION TO INQUIRE WHETHER GOD HAS MADE ANY PARTICULAR REVELATION OF
HIS WILL TO MEN, WHICH THEY ARE ANY WAY CONCERNED TO TAKE NOTICE OF.
II. WHOEVER
SERIOUSLY MAKES THIS INQUIRY, WILL FIND IT REASONABLE TO CONCLUDE THAT SOME
REVELATION MAY JUSTLY BE EXPECTED FROM GOD, CONSIDERING THE GENERAL STATE OF
MANKIND.
1. In the nature of things, there is no impossibility that God should
make a particular revelation of His will to men. That God should communicate
His will to men in a particular manner, implies nothing contradictory, either
to the nature of man or God. For if we believe that God is the Maker of
mankind, and that from Him they received their reason and understanding, then
it is unreasonable to suppose that the mind of man is incapable of receiving
any impression of revelation or instruction from the Supreme mind, only because
that Supreme mind is of an invisible nature. And it is yet much more
unreasonable to suppose any incapacity in the Divine Being, of making such
discovery of His will to the mind of man, as His wisdom sees fit; for this
would, in effect, be to deny the perfection of His nature, and to make him a
Being not acting freely but by necessity, without liberty or choice and this in
the end comes to the same thing as denying His Being altogether.
2. Considering our natural notions of the goodness of God, there is
no reason to think it incredible that He should at some time or other make such
discovery of His will.
3. Considering the general condition of mankind, such revelation is
by no means unnecessary.
III. IF THIS BE SO,
THEN IT IS EVERY MAN¡¦S DUTY TO USE ALL THE PROPER MEANS HE CAN TO FIND OUT WHAT
IS TRUE REVELATION AND WHAT IS ONLY PRETENDED. (R. Boyle.)
¡§Let us go up¡¨
Those that are entering into covenant and communion with God
themselves should bring as many as they can along with them. (M. Henry.)
He will teach us of His
ways
The ways of God
By the ways of God may be meant--
1. His purposes and counsels, so far as are proper and necessary for
His servants to be acquainted with, in order to promote their happiness and
salvation.
2. His providential dispensations, so far as is consistent with their
duty and interest to know them. That they may understand the loving kindness of
the Lord.
3. The ministration of His Spirit and the way of salvation, by which
the manifold wisdom of Jehovah is admirably displayed. These are, with great
propriety, called the ways of God, as He points them out to us in His Word, and
as they are intended to conduct to the enjoyment of Him in the land of
everlasting upright ness. (R. Macculloch.)
And we will walk in His
paths
Walking in God¡¦s paths
The resolution before us--
1. Plainly implies a free choice of the precepts of the Gospel, in
preference to all other ways, and in opposition to every kind of compulsion
whatever.
2. It includes a fixed purpose of heart, a firm determination, to
cleave unto the Lord, notwithstanding every difficulty and discouragement that
may lie in the way.
3. And as walking is an uniform, progressive motion, it comprehends a
constant, persevering progress in the good ways of the Lord, wherein they are
instructed. (R. Macculloch.)
Verse 4
And He shall Judge among the nations . . . neither shall they
learn war any more
Christ¡¦s kingdom upon earth
1.
When
it is said that He should ¡§judge among the nations,¡¨ we must observe that the
term is continually used in the Old Testament of the rule of a chief
magistrate. Under the theocracy those who ruled the nation, as we read in 2:1-23, and in many other places, were
termed ¡§judges.¡¨ Of one of these it is said--¡§The Spirit of the Lord came upon
Othniel, and he judged Israel, and went out to war,¡¨--acted as their supreme
ruler. And the same language is employed continually of those who ruled in
Israel, under God their King. The prediction is very nearly parallel to one in
the seventy-second Psalm respecting the Messiah: ¡§He shall judge¡¨--or
rule--¡§the people with righteousness, and the poor with judgment.¡¨Accordingly,
in our text it is declared that the Messiah should be a Ruler ¡§among the
nations.¡¨ This rule was to take place, according to the language of prophecy,
when the Redeemer came into this world. Hence when our Lord was upon earth, He
Himself proclaimed that ¡§the kingdom of heaven was at hand.¡¨ He directed His
disciples to preach the same truth. And we know that a time is to come, when
¡§the kingdoms of the world are to become the kingdoms of our Lord and of His
Christ.¡¨ When our Saviour was upon earth He allowed the expression used by
Nathaniel--¡§Rabbi, Thou art the Son of God, Thou art the King of Israel.¡¨ When
He came in triumph into Jerusalem, and the people shouted out--¡§Hosannah! I
blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord,¡¨ our Lord did not repress
the exultation. All believers, then, have already become subjects of His
Kingdom, and He is stated in Scripture to be their King. He has a dominion,
indeed, far more extensive than that of the Church; He has ¡§all power given Him
in heaven and earth.¡¨ But the passage before us does not refer to this
universal dominion, which He exercises in providence, but it speaks of the
dominion of grace, His dominion limited to His Church--because it is a dominion
that was to result from the promulgation of His Word out of Zion, and a
dominion to be co-extensive with the exaltation of His Church of Zion. ¡§Out of
Zion shall go forth the law, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem. And He
shall judge among the nations.¡¨
2. It was added, as a contemporaneous act of His sovereignty, ¡§He
shall rebuke many people.¡¨ By that word ¡§rebuke¡¨ is evidently meant, He shall
reprove them for their sinfulness.
3. The effect of the Saviour¡¦s reign is further described; it is to
be universal peace. ¡§They shall beat,¡¨ etc. (B. W. Noel, M. A.)
Anomalies in the history of Christendom
An obvious reflection which occurs to us, when reading this
prediction--or at least which is likely to occur to anyone not well acquainted
wire Scripture--is, that the effect of the Gospel, going forth from Zion and
from Jerusalem, seemed from the very first to be quite the opposite of this
prediction. How can it be said that the effect of the Gospel has been to
introduce a universal peace, when it seems man fest from history that it has
introduced universal disturbance and confusion? Our Lord Himself, when on
earth, by His ministry and life, only led to a universal conspiracy against
Him; and when He ascended to His glory, and His disciples began to preach in
His name, it was the signal for general confusion. As that Gospel advanced, it
was the signal for more savage opposition, till every part of the Roman empire
was stained with the blood of Christ¡¦s followers, till everywhere there was a
universal warfare among menu between those who were the advocates of the old
system, and those who proclaimed the new. At length, when the empire was
conquered, it was only to be the occasion of still wider and more sanguinary
disturbances. Many as had perished through popular fury, or by legal
interference, during the three first centuries, multitudes more perished, as
the indirect consequence of the Gospel in after ages. When the Roman empire was
shivered by the shock of barbarian invaders, and the feudal kingdoms of Europe
rose in its place, in each of those kingdoms the castle of the noble frowned
defiance upon the castle of every good and great man; the wars between
neighbouring nations became interminable; and when at last the monarchies were
consolidated, and the great modern monarchies rose out of that confusion, it
was only to see in every page of history an interminable war fare between
Christian nations. So that, for instance, in our own frontiers, the Border
warfare between Scotland and England was almost interminable; and yet these
were Christian nations; and the Christian nations of France and England were
termed hereditary foes, and there was not a monarch of Europe that did not join
in some sanguinary strife, to please a minister, or to gratify his own
ambition, or for some vain pretence, as corrupt as it was often false. But this
has not been the only way in which this prediction appears to have been
perpetually frustrated--for there have actually been sanguinary wars that have
arisen from no other cause than religion. The wars of Bohemia and the Low Countries,
and the civil wars of France and many other countries which long raged in the
hearts of nations, for no other cause than a difference in Christian doctrine,
seem to be a contradiction of the prophecy in our text, beyond all apology. And
even when the disturbances of nations have not risen to actual warfare, how
lamentable have been the cruelties exercised over a profession belief in
Christianity! See the dukes of Savoy soaking the valleys of Piedmont with the
blood of their best subjects; see the rage of the Roman Catholic persecutors
exhibiting itself in the massacre of St. Bartholomew; view the remorseless
Dragonades in the south of France; see the many enormities which were
perpetrated in our own country during the reigns of Henry the Seventh and
Eighth, and Charles the First and Second. Carry your views to the northern
parts of this island, and there see Claverhouse and his companions reeking with
the blood of the guiltless Covenanters; cross the Channel, and see the Roman
Catholics of Ireland massacring thousands of Protestants because they were
Protestants, and the equally bloody return secured to them by the iron-hearted
and relentless soldiers of Oliver Cromwell. So that everywhere massacre and
misery have followed the introduction of the Gospel. Is this the fulfilment of
the promise--¡§They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears
into pruning hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
shall they learn war any more¡¨?
1. Let us first notice, that the Gospel is not responsible for the
acts of its enemies,--and in all the cases I have named its friends might still
be like sheep in the midst of wolves. They might ¡§be wise as serpents, harmless
as doves,¡¨ and yet all this slaughter might take place under the name of
religion. They have been the enemies of the Gospel, and not its friends, who
have thus manifested such savage cruelty and unprincipled cupidity towards
their fellow men.
2. And let us notice, in the next place, that the prediction in our
text was manifestly not to be fulfilled immediately; it was to take place ¡§in
the last days¡¨--and those ¡§last days¡¨ have not yet transpired. (B. W. Noel,
M. A.)
War during the Christian centuries, though peace predicted
It may be said, that however guiltless the Gospel may have been of
these sanguinary results, yet they are facts of history. The prediction was,
universal peace to follow from the Gospel, and the experience has been
universal war. Does not this seem to contradict the prediction? Nothing is more
conclusive than the answer which may be given to this objection.
1. The Gospel was declared to be of a pacific tendency. It forbids
all the causes of war in the world--pride, passion, cupidity, etc. It bids all
who become the subjects of Christ¡¦s dominion to be mild and meek and patient as
their Master was.
2. There must be the same pacific tendency among nations that are in
any degree Christianised.
3. This tendency has not been and could not be wholly counteracted.
It is true there have been these shameful wars; but it is no less true that
under even the partial influence of the Gospel wars have in our day assumed a
humanity which they never before manifested.
4. The influence of each individual Christian and the tendency of
Christian institutions combine to secure the fulfilment of these prospects. And
if so, may we not reasonably exult in this blessed doctrine of Christ? And if
we look back with shame and pain on the history of the nations that call
themselves Christian, let us seek our selves to manifest a better spirit and be
men of peace. (B. W. Noel, M. A.)
God the Arbitrator
Here is a prediction of arbitration in case of war. ¡§He . . .
shall rebuke many people.¡¨ Read the word ¡§rebuke¡¨--He shall arbitrate amongst
many people; He shall hear their cause; He shall redress their grievances; He
shall determine their controversies, and men shall accept His award as final. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
Learning war no more
Not learning war is something more than not continuing to practise
it (Calvin), and signifies their ceasing to know how to practise it. (J. A.
Alexander.)
War
I. THE MISERIES
AND CRIMES OF WAR.
II. THE SOURCES OF
WAR. Many will imagine that the first place ought to be given to malignity and
hatred. But justice to human nature requires that we ascribe to national
animosities a more limited operation than is usually assigned to them in the
production of war.
1. One of the great springs of war is the strong and general
propensity of human nature towards the love of excitement, of emotion, of
strong interest.
2. Another powerful principle of our nature, which is a spring of
war, is the passion for superiority, for triumph, for power.
3. Another powerful spring of war is the admiration of the brilliant
qualities displayed in war.
4. Another cause of war is false patriotism.
5. Another spring of war, the impression (and false views of war)we
receive in early life. These principal causes of war are of a moral nature.
They may be resolved into wrong views of human glory, and into excesses of
passions and desires, which, by right direction, would promote the best
interests of humanity. From these causes we learn that this savage custom is to
be repressed by moral means, by salutary influences on the sentiments and
principles of mankind.
III. THE REMEDIES OF
WAR. Without taking an extreme position, we ought to assail war, by assailing
the principles and passions which gave it birth, and by improving and exalting
the moral sentiments of mankind.
1. Important service may be rendered to the cause of peace by communicating
and enforcing just and elevated sentiments in relation to the true honour of
rulers.
2. To these instructions should be added just sentiments as to the
glory of nations.
3. Another most important method of promoting the cause of peace is
to turn men¡¦s admiration from military courage to qualities of real nobleness
and dignity.
4. Let Christian ministers exhibit, with greater clearness, the
pacific and benevolent spirit of Christianity. (W. E. Channing, D. D.)
Private war abolished
There was a time, not very long ago, when private war was even
more universal than public or international war is today. City against city!
Baron against baron! Even private persons were entitled to settle their
differences by judicial combat if they preferred. Right of trial by combat
still survives in some European countries in the form of duelling. But with
that solitary exception, private war has now been entirely abolished throughout
the civilised world. How has this immense improvement been achieved? The fact
to be specially remembered is that the barons of the Middle Ages submitted very
reluctantly and slowly to the substitution of judicial arbitration for private
war. Kings had not the power to compel, and the barons continually defied the
kings. Gradually a more enlightened and moral public opinion grew up in favour
of the rational and Christian method of settling disputes. At last the
supremacy of law and of courts of justice became established. Private war is
now impossible, so absolute is the triumph of Christianity in the internal
affairs of the nation. Now, a precisely similar slow and intermittent change is
evolving better order in international life. Barbarous and heathen governments
still defy the dictates of reason and of conscience as the cities and barons of
the Middle Ages did. But slowly and intermittently their ferocity is being
overcome. Arbitration has already been substituted for war in a large number of
important cases which, in any previous period of human history, would
inevitably have deluged the world with blood. (H. P. Hughes, M. A.)
War
I. THE TERRIBLE
EVILS OF WAR. There are many evils we have to endure in this life that we
cannot avoid. They are unforeseen, indirect, irresistible. Disease, domestic
sorrows, adversity, and other evils befall men; but none can equal war.
II. IT IS
IMPOSSIBLE TO SETTLE NATIONAL DISPUTES BY WAR. No argument is necessary to
prove that physical force can never settle the right or wrong of any question.
The most powerful battalions are not always on the side of the just cause. And
when a war is over, who accepts it as a final settlement of the question in
dispute? Often a bloody war is followed by conferences and treaties, and after
a vast expenditure of treasure and life, after the entrance of sorrow into many
homes, the measures which should have been resorted to at first are the
measures which decide the question How often one side accepts peace simply
because, for the present, it can no longer prosecute war. The only true method
of settling quarrels is by reason, the furnishing of explanations, the granting
of concessions, the manifestation of a desire and purpose to agree. Two nations
may thus settle their misunderstandings without calling in a third party, or
they may call in others to arbitrate between them and agree to abide by their
decision. A high court of arbitration is in full agreement with enlightened
reason and Christian teaching; it seems in the highest degree practicable, and
it would prove, in its operations and results, one of the greatest blessings to
the nations of the earth.
III. ONE OF THE MOST
PRESSING DUTIES OF CHRISTIAN MEN IS TO EMPLOY ALL POSSIBLE MEANS FOR THE
EXTINCTION OF WAR. We should steadfastly set ourselves against the maintenance
of large standing armies. We should leaven public opinion with the principles
of peace by the press, in social intercourse, and by using our power as
citizens in seeking to purge our Legislature as much as possible from warlike
influences. There is no cause in which woman¡¦s influence may be more
appropriately exercised or can have greater weight. Preachers of the Gospel
should preach peace. (W. Walters.)
Universal peace
Let me attempt to do away a delusion which exists on the subject
of prophecy. Its fulfillments are all certain, say many, and we have therefore
nothing to do but to wait for them in passive and indolent expectation. Now, it
is very true, that the Divinity will do His work in His own way, but if He
choose to tell us that that way is not without the instrumentality of men,
might not this sitting down into the mere attitude of spectators turn out to be
a most perverse and disobedient conclusion! The prophecy of a peace as
universal as the spread of the human race, and as enduring as the moon in the
firmament, will meet its accomplishment; but it will be brought about by the
activity of men--by the philanthropy of intelligent Christians.
I. THE EVILS OF
WAR. The mere existence of this prophecy is a sentence of condemnation upon
war. So soon as Christianity shall gain a full ascendency in the world, war is
to disappear. We have heard that there is something noble in the art of war;
that there is something generous in the ardour of that fine chivalric spirit
which kindles in the hour of alarm, and rushes with delight among the thickest
scenes of danger and of enterprise; that expunge war, and you expunge some of
the brightest names in the catalogue of human virtue, and demolish that theatre
on which have been displayed some of the sublimest energies of the human
character. One might almost be reconciled to the whole train of its calamities
and its horrors, did he not believe his Bible, and learn that in the days of
perfect righteousness, there will be no war;--that so soon as the character of
man has had the last finish of Christian principle thrown over it, all the
instruments of war will be thrown aside, and all its lessons forgotten. But
apart altogether from this testimony to the evil of war, let us take a direct
look at it, and see whether we can find its character engraven on the aspect it
bears to the eye of an attentive observer. Were the man who stands before you
in the full energy of health, to be in another moment laid by some deadly aim a
lifeless corpse at your feet, there is not one of you who would not prove how
strong are the relentings of nature at a spectacle so hideous as death. But
generally the death of violence is not instantaneous, and there is often a sad
and dreary interval between its final consummation, and the infliction of the
blow which causes it. A soldier may be a Christian, and from the bloody field
on which his body is laid, his soul may wing its way to the shores of a
peaceful eternity. But when I think that the Christians form but a little
flock, and that an army is not a propitious soil for the growth of Christian
principle; when I follow them to the field of battle, and further think, that
on both sides of an exasperated contest the gentleness of Christianity can have
no place in almost any bosom, but that nearly every heart is lighted up with
fury, and breathes a vindictive purpose against a brother of the species, I
cannot but reckon it among the most fearful of the calamities of war, that
while the work of death is thickening along its ranks, so many disembodied
spirits should pass into the presence of Him who sitteth upon the throne, in
such a posture, and with such a preparation.
II. Let me direct
your attention to THOSE OBSTACLES WHICH STAND IN THE WAY OF THE EXTINCTION OF
WAR, and which threaten to retard, for a time, the accomplishment of this
prophecy.
1. The first great obstacle is the way in which the heart of man is
carried off from its barbarities and its horrors, by the splendour of its
deceitful accompaniments. There is a feeling of the sublime in contemplating
the shock of armies, just as there is in contemplating the devouring energy of
a tempest; and this so elevates and engrosses the whole man, that his eye is
blind to the tears of bereaved parents, and his ear is deaf to the piteous moan
of the dying, and the shriek of their desolated families. There is a
gracefulness in the picture of a youthful warrior burning for distinction on
the field, and lured by this generous aspiration to the deepest of the animated
throng, where, in the fell work of death, the opposing sons of valour struggle
for a remembrance and a name; and this side of the picture is so much the
exclusive object of our regard, as to disguise from our view the mangled
carcasses of the fallen, and the writhing agonies of the hundred and the
hundreds more who have been laid on the cold ground, where they are left to
languish and die. On every side of me I see causes at work which go to spread a
most delusive colouring over war, and to remove its shocking barbarities to the
background of our contemplations altogether. I see it in the history which tells
me of the superb appearance of the troops and the brilliancy of their
successive charges. I see it in the poetry which lends the magic of its numbers
to the narrative of blood, and transports its many admirers, as by its images
and figures and its nodding plumes of chivalry it throws its treacherous
embellishments over a scene of legalised slaughter.
2. But another obstacle to the extinction of war is the sentiment
that the rules and promises of the Gospel which apply to a single individual,
do not apply to a nation of individuals. If forbearance be the virtue of an
individual, forbearance is also the virtue of a nation. If it be the glory of a
man to defer his anger, and to pass over a transgression, that nation mistakes
its glory which is so feelingly alive to the slightest insult, and musters up
its threats and its armaments upon the faintest shadow of a provocation. If it
be the magnanimity of an injured man to abstain from vengeance, and if by so
doing, he heap coals of fire upon the head of his enemy, then that is the
magnanimous nation, which, recoiling from violence and from blood, will do no
more than send its Christian embassy, and prefer its mild and impressive
remonstrance; and that is the disgraced nation which will refuse the
impressiveness of the moral appeal that has been made to it.
III. IT IS ONLY BY
THE EXTENSION OF CHRISTIAN PRINCIPLE AMONG THE PEOPLE OF THE EARTH THAT THE
ATROCITIES OF WAR WILL AT LENGTH BE SWEPT AWAY FROM IT. (T. Chalmers,
D. D.)
The world¡¦s deliverance from war
Ever since the fall, our world has exhibited much of degradation
and misery; and it is lamentably true, that a vast amount of its wretchedness
has been produced by the active agency of its own inhabitants. Man has hated
and oppressed his fellow man But how delightful is it to think that we have
been assured by the word of Divine inspiration, that it is the design of the
great Creator of all things, to reclaim our earth from its state of degradation
and wickedness and misery, and to make it again the scene of holiness and
harmony and happiness!
I. THE NATURE OF
THE EVIL TO BE REMOVED. This evil is represented to consist in the lifting up
of the sword, and in the learning of the art of war.
II. THE CHARACTER
OF THE CHANGE TO BE PRODUCED. ¡§They shall beat,¡¨ etc. The period is to arrive,
in the history of our world, in which the operation of those unholy passions by
which so much destruction and misery has been produced, shall be subdued; and
in which the principle of love to God and to men shall be delightfully predominant
within the human bosom.
III. THE MEANS BY
WHICH THE HAPPY TRANSITION IS TO BE ACCOMPLISHED. Swords are to be beaten
¡§into¡¨ ploughshares, and spears to pruning hooks, and war is no more to be
learned, when many people shall go and say, ¡§Come ye and let us go up to the
mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob, for He will teach us of
His ways.¡¨ Hence, it appears that the change is to be produced by the agency of
the Gospel. There may be other instrumentalities era subordinate nature brought
into operation, such as the commercial intercourse of nations with each other,
and the knowledge which they may acquire of their mutual interests and
dependencies; but the religion of Jesus is to be the principal cause of the
termination of hostilities in our world, and the introduction of the reign of
universal peace and felicity. The Gospel of Christ informs us of the source
whence all our enmities and contentions proceed, even from the deceitfulness
and desperate wickedness of our hearts. The Gospel of Christ first of all
reconciles man to his God, and then works within him the dispositions which
lead him to be reconciled to his fellow man, and to ¡§love him with a pure heart
fervently.¡¨ The Gospel of Christ inculcates those principles of peace and
goodwill, the recognition of which composes differences, softens down
resentments, inspires with forgiving and kindly feelings, and prompts, to deeds
of beneficence. It is the testimony of experience, moreover, that nothing but
the Gospel of Christ has ever opposed the system of war, and diminished in any
degree the amount of the evil which it occasions. The ancient philosophy
dignified with the name of virtues the unholy passions from which it arose, and
the poets of the olden times made it the theme of their highest admiration, and
of their sweetest praise. The classical heathenism of Greece and of Rome had
its god and goddess of war, and represented its deities as mingling in the fray
and delighting in the carnage of the battlefield. But Jesus appeared in our
world as the Prince of Peace; and one of the most delightful precepts of His
meek and gentle faith is, ¡§Blessed are the peace makers, for they shall be
called the children of God.¡¨ What was it but the spirit of Christianity which
put an end to the cruel gladiator ships of the amphitheatre of Rome? What was
it but the spirit of Christianity which subdued the fierceness of the Huns, the
Goths, and the Vandals of former times, and made so many of them the soldiers
of the Cross and the followers of the Captain of our salvation? (W. M¡¦Kerrow.)
The cessation of war an effect of the prevalence of Christianity
Notwithstanding any accompanying references, we cannot hesitate to
take this for a prediction of times yet to come. Evidently, it has never yet
been fulfilled.
1. It is as conjoined with very nearly the beginning of our race,
that we have to look upon this direful phenomenon. But how strange, for a
creature, come fresh, living, and pure, from the beneficent Creator¡¦s hands!
The least that we can think of that original state of man is, that there must
have been in his soul the principle of all kind affections,--a state of feeling
that would have been struck with horror at the thought of inflicting suffering.
And, from the creature thus originally constituted, all the race was to
descend. Can such a nature ever rage with malignity and revenge, and riot in
suffering and destruction? Yet, in this original family, in the very first
degree of the descent, war and slaughter began. While we think of the deadly conflicts
of those early ages, the idea may occur to us of the peculiar atrocity of
destroying a life which might, in the course of nature, have lasted so long.
Living beings cloven down or mortally pierced or poisoned or burnt that might
have lived seven or eight centuries, for improvement, for serving God, for
usefulness, for whatever happiness there might have been in this world or
preparation for another!
2. The world began anew in the person and family of a selected
patriarch, whom alone ¡§the Lord had seen righteous in that Generation.¡¨ Now,
then, for a better race,--if the human nature were intrinsically good, or
corrigible by the most awful dispensations. But all in vain! The flood could
not cleanse the nature of man; nor the awful memory and memorials of it repress
the coming forth of selfishness, pride, ambition, anger, and revenge.
3. The sacred history, after Just recounting some successions of
names in the different branches of the new race, limits its narrative to the
origin and progress of what became the Jewish people--Abraham and his
posterity. Their history, however, in proceeding downward, involves much of
that of the surrounding nations. And some of the profane histories go far back
into the period subsequent to the deluge. And what is so conspicuous over all
the view, as wars and devastations? There is one portion of this tragical
exhibition which we are to take out of the account of ordinary war, namely, the
war of extirpation against the Canaanites. But, setting this portion of the
history aside, think of the long course of sanguinary conflicts within the
boundary of the selected nation itself, between Israel and Judah. Besides the
slaughters, of battle and massacre, within each separately, of these two
divisions of that people, add, all their wars with Syria and Egypt, with the
Babylonian, Grecian, and Roman powers, closed finally, in that most awful
catastrophe, the siege and destruction of Jerusalem.
4. Then glance a moment over the wider view of the whole ancient
world; as far abroad and as high up in time as history has made it visible. The
human race is exhibited, in some regions, in the form of numerous small states.
But their smallness of size and strength was not the measure of their passions.
What we are certain to read of them is, that they attacked and fought one
another with the ferocity of wild beasts. By some ambitious ¡§conquering hero¡¨ a
great number of these were subdued and moulded together into a great kingdom,
on one large space of the earth, and the same on another. And then with a
tremendous clash, these empires came into conflict.
5. But now if we could take one grand compass of view over the earth,
and down through time from that period to this! What a vision of destruction!
And to complete the account--as if the whole solid earth were not wide
enough--the sea has been coloured with blood, and received into its dark gulf
myriads of slain, as if it could not destroy enough by its tempests and wrecks!
Reflections--
War
I. SOME OF THE
LEADING FEATURES OF WAR, AS RECORDED IN GOD¡¦S WORD.
1. The cause of war (James 4:1-2). From this passage, we see
that just as in domestic broils, just as in strifes between sects and parties,
so in strifes between nation and nation--they all proceed from the lusts of
men, and from that carnal mind which is enmity against God.
2. We learn from God¡¦s Word that war is a tremendous evil. What
horror filled the soul of the prophet Jeremiah, when he heard the rumour of
war--¡§My bowels, my bowels! I am pained at my very heart; my heart maketha
noise in me; I cannot hold my peace, because thou hast heard, O my soul, the
sound of the trumpet, the alarm of war¡¨ (Jeremiah 4:19). See again Jeremiah 47:2-3, how the prophet
describes the distress and anguish of the Philistines at the approach of an
invading army--an anguish so great and so terrible, as to lead them even to
forget the common ties of humanity. See again Deuteronomy 28:50-51, how Moses speaks of
the devastating force of an invading army; and Joel 2:2, where the prophet describes the
day of the Lord as compared to an invading army.
3. God¡¦s Word shows us that war is one of God¡¦s scourges, by which He
punishes guilty nations for their wickedness. In Ezekiel 14:21, the sword |s distinctly
spoken of as one of God¡¦s four sore judgments.
4. God¡¦s Word shows us that it is He alone who can bring war to an
end. Psalms 46:9.) In every war God has
a special design of His own to fulfil--a purpose into which the eye of
mortality can never pierce--but untilthat purpose is executed the war can never
end. (Jeremiah 47:6-7.)
5. God¡¦s Word shows that war is to be the immediate precursor of the
terrors of the latter days. (Joel 3:9, etc.; Matthew 24:6.)
6. God¡¦s Word declares that there is a time approaching when wars
will forever cease.
II. PRACTICAL
LESSONS.
1. What is our present duty
2. The necessity of being prepared for the things that are coming
upon the earth.
3. The awfulness of being overtaken unprepared. You will be
speechless. (A. W.Snape, M. A.)
The means by which this prophecy is to be fulfilled
I. A PROPER
ESTIMATE OF THE MISERIES OF WAR must prepare the way for universal peace.
II. THE
DISSEMINATION OF THE WORD OF GOD. Nothing but the Word of God can effect the
cure of this moral distemper--nothing but the Spirit of God can subdue the
native principles of the heart--nothing but the salvation of the Gospel can
remove the evil we deplore. There is no other remedy can reach the core of the
malady.
III. THE PRAYERS OF
CHRISTIANS must accompany the other means used for the establishment of peace.
(J. Gray, M. A.)
War to cease
I. HUMAN INDUSTRY
IS A FEATURE IN THE BRIGHT PICTURE OF FUTURE HAPPINESS. The inhabitants of the
earth throughout the millennium, when the globe is to be covered with its first
beauty, are not to subsist without some measure of labour. They are to use the
ploughshare and the pruning hook; and this use is sufficient to show that the
ground will not then yield its fruits, except in return for the toil of the
husbandman. It seems to indicate how accurately the world will be put back into
its condition before defiled by sin--that a necessity for toiling should be
alleged or implied; though all that is painful or exhausting in labour must be
supposed to have ceased. We are greatly struck by the carefulness displayed
throughout the Bible, to put honour on industry, and to represent labour as in
the largest sense an appointment of God. The too common sup position is, that
labour was a curse which disobedience provoked, whereas labour was appointed
unto man while yet in the full enjoyment of the favour of his God. We are so
constituted, that labour is indispensable to our happiness, to the
strengthening of our faculties, and to the preservation of a wholesome tone in
our spirits. We know not whether the going to the armouries, and ransacking
them for the materials of the implements of agriculture, may not mark such
increase in the number of the inhabitants of the world, as would require
continued effort on the part of the husbandman to keep pace with the growing
demand, so that ploughshares and pruning hooks are not furnished fast enough,
and swords and spears must be made to do their office. But we now proceed to
consider what seems given as the reason for this conversion of the instruments
of war into the implements of husbandry.
II. THERE WILL
CERTAINLY BE NO FURTHER USE FOR THE ARMS OF WAR--¡§Nation shall not lift up
sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.¡¨ It is Isaiah¡¦s
assertion, that the cessation of war is to result from the general diffusion of
Christian principles. And there is no difficulty in tracing the necessary
connection between the sovereignty of Christ and the extinction of war; for the
tendency of the religion of Jesus is to bind the whole world in brotherhood.
III. WAR SHALL NOT
ONLY CEASE AS AN EMPLOYMENT, BUT ALSO AS A SCIENCE--¡§Neither shall they learn
war any more.¡¨ They shall not only enjoy the liberty of peace--for peace may
be, and too commonly is a season in which war is studied, and preparations are
made for future battles; they shall be so secure of peace being permanent, that
the arts of attack and defence will fall into oblivion, and the whole array of
military tactics pass from the world like the science of the necromancer, or
any other exploded and reprobated study. We find no hint in Scripture, but
altogether the reverse, that the profession of a soldier cannot harmonise with
godliness. The angel sent to the Roman centurion bore no message as to the
unlawfulness of his calling. But these admissions are quite in harmony with
what we have stated as to the condemnation of war, which is wound up in the
sentence that war is a science. That men should not merely have been roused by
sudden passion into the doing violence to one another, but that they should
actually have studied how best to effect the butchery of thousands, having
their schools and establishments in which numbers may be trained in the art of
destruction--this, of itself, presents such a picture of human depravity as
would serve for the painter who might desire to exhibit it in the darkest
possible colours. There is a great difference between a prophecy which should
assert the termination of war as an employment, and another which affirms its
termination as a science; since the former might only show the existence of a
restraining power, whereas the latter indicates such a forgetfulness or
renunciation of everything military as requires the supposing the human race
universally changed, and all the elements of discord eradicated from every
bosom. (H. Melvill, B. D.)
William Penn
The King of England strongly urged William Penn (the founder of
Pennsylvania), out of the king¡¦s great respect for his father, Admiral Penn, as
he was going out with many followers amongst known savages, to take out with
him sufficient troops which should be placed at his service. It was averred
that William Penn and his followers would speedily be placed in the war kettle
of the untutored Indians, if he did not go out well armed to protect himself
and his large colony. In the spirit of his Master, the Prince of Peace, he
declined to take any soldiers; he went open handed and unarmed to the red men!
When the Council of State was held, the red men believed in William Penn¡¦s
professions of amity, and they always thereafter lived in peace! When the
Indians disagreed amongst their several tribes they frequently took their
differences to be settled ¡§justly¡¨ by William Penn, or their ¡§Father Onas,¡¨ as
they became accustomed to call him. (James Withers.)
War sometimes justifiable
A war undertaken in self-defence is natural and right, and under
the rights of self-defence must be included the protection of our countrymen in
distant lands and of our interests in the future as well as in the present. It
must be carried on with a serious mind, with a consistent purpose, and not
without the hope of benefiting other nations as well as ourselves; it can only
be justified by the event whether it leaves the world better off than it found
it. There are many evils for which war provides the only remedy, and we cannot
say that centuries of oppression are better than a struggle for independence.
The religion of Christ gives no sanction or encouragement to war. The
conscience of mankind acknowledges that while wars continue there is something
not altogether right in the world; and yet under given circumstances it may be
the duty of a nation to strike the blow; the greatest safety may be the
willingness to meet the greatest danger. (Prof. B. Jowett, D. D.)
The evils of war--loss of life
What a fearful loss of human life it entails! It is computed that
Alexander and Caesar caused, each of them, the death of two millions of the
human race. Bonaparte¡¦s campaign in Russia carried death to five hundred
thousand human beings, and in the vast majority of that number death was
accompanied by the most awful sufferings. At Borodino in one day eighty
thousand were sacrificed amid the most horrid cruelties. The next day it was
found that a surface of about nine squares miles was covered with the killed
and wounded; the latter lying one upon another, destitute of assistance,
weltering in their blood, uttering fearful groans, and beseeching any who
passed by to put an end to their excruciating torments. During the burning of
Moscow, twelve thousand wounded were in the hospitals; and almost all perished
in the flames. No tongue or pen can describe the horrors of the retreat.
¡§Multitudes of these desolate fugitives,¡¨ says Sir R.K. Porter, in his Narrative
of the Campaign in Russia, ¡§lost their speech, others were seined with
frenzy, and many were so maddened by the extremes of pain and hunger that they
tore the dead bodies of their comrades into pieces, and feasted on the
remains.¡¨ The last Russian war cost this country a hundred thousand human
lives. Hundreds of thousands fell victims during the Franco-German war. In one
sortie from Metz four hundred wives were made widows, and upwards of a thousand
children fatherless, out of a single Prussian regiment in the course of an
hour. What barbarities are practised! What disastrous results follow! What
desolation to fertile and flourishing districts of country! What a blight shed
on commerce! What an increase of taxation! What corruption to public morals! It
is impossible to exaggerate, in conception or statement, the evils of war. (W.
Waiters.)
The enormous cost of war
When Napoleon¡¦s army marched up towards Moscow, they burned every
house for one hundred and fifty miles. Our Revolutionary war cost the English
Government six hundred and eighty millions of dollars. The wars growing out of
the French Revolution cost England three thousand millions of dollars.
Christendom--or, as I might mispronounce it in order to make the fact more
appalling, Christendom--has paid in twenty-two years fifteen thousand million
dollars for battle. Those were the twenty-two years, I think, ending in 1820 or
thereabout. Edmund Burke estimated that the nations of thin world had expended
thirty-five thousand million dollars in war; but he did his ciphering before
our great American and European wars were plunged. He never dreamed that in
this land, in the latter part of this century, in four years, we should expend
in battle three thousand million dollars. (T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D.)
Enormous sacrifice of human life through war
In one battle, under Julius Caesar, four hundred thousand fell.
Under Xerxes, in one campaign, five millions were Slain. Under Jengispham, at
Herat, one million six hundred thousand were slain. At Nishar, one million
seven hundred and forty-seven thousand were slain. At the siege of Ostend, one
hundred and twenty thousand. At Acre three hundred thousand. At the siege of
Troy, one million eight hundred and sixteen thousand fell. The Tartar and
African wars cost one hundred and eighty million lives. The wars against the
Turks and the Saracens cost one hundred and eighty million lives. Added to all
these, the million who fell in our own conflict. Then take the fact that
thirty-five times the present population of the earth have fallen in battle. (T.
DeWitt Talmage, D. D.)
The greatest peace
The greatest peace can only be secured by the entire extinction,
as speedily as possible, of the false Gospels of Materialism and Force. Empires
built on Force have never persisted. Military kingdoms must pass away. No
nation was ever more military than Rome; it was armed from head to foot; it was
a great fighting empire, and though it lasted long it had to go. The seven
Oriental empires that preceded Rome were military; they, too, have disappeared.
Permanence of empire depends on peace, social justice, liberty, and
brotherhood. (J. Clifford, D. D.)
Christian achier and war
There is no reason why a Christian soldier should not as
vehemently denounce war as a medical man attacks disease, as a minister does
sin. Success would mean in either ease an end of their work, but that in either
case were a consummation devoutly to be wished. The sooner the profession of
arms becomes unnecessary and impossible, the better for everybody. (H. P.
Hughes, M. A.)
Verse 5
O house of Jacob, come ye, and let us walk in the light of the
Lord
Mutual encouragement
I.
SYMPATHETIC
FELLOW FEELING. All who are anxious for their own welfare, desire the welfare
of others.
II. MUTUAL
PROGRESS. Two together are stronger than two apart. ¡§Let us¡¨ A weak brother at
our side will not only get help but will afford us assistance.
III. APPRECIATIVE
KNOWLEDGE. ¡§Let us walk in the light of the Lord.¡¨ The light is the place for
safety. Light is life, darkness is death.
IV. UNFAILING
PROVISION. ¡§The light of the Lord.¡¨ God is the only source of light, but He is
an all-efficient source. He never can fail. God is light. (Homilist.)
An invitation to repentance
I. THIS IS
ISAIAH¡¦S INVITATION TO HIS COUNTRYMEN TO REPENT. To feel the full force of his
appeal we must notice the connection of the text with its context.
1. The prophet commences by quoting (Isaiah 2:2-4) what is probably an ancient
prediction, quoted also by Micah (Micah 4:1-3). The people would doubt less
look eagerly for the fulfilment of this prophecy, so agreeable to their
national hopes. But no sign of its accomplishment was to be seen. They were
indeed enjoying in the reign of Uzziah a season of secular prosperity, but they
were far from being ¡§established in the top of the mountains¡¨; they were
surrounded by watchful foes, and certainly there were no signs of the long
foretold reign of peace.
2. The light of worldly prosperity had not brought them the
fulfilment of the prophecy of peace. Isaiah then bids them ¡§walk in the light
of the Lord¡¨; for, as he goes on to show, God had forsaken His people on
account of those sins which their prosperity had engendered. Therefore it was
that this prophecy was not fulfilled to them. Their very prosperity kept them
back from greater prosperity (verses 6-9).
3. But this state of things could not continue. If they refuse to
walk in the light of the Lord, He will not only withdraw the promised blessings,
but will humble them by taking away the prosperity they already enjoyed (verses
10-21).
II. THE SITUATION
OF THE CHURCH OF GOD THUS DESCRIBED BY ISAIAH REMAINS ALMOST UNCHANGED TO THE
PRESENT DAY.
1. We still look for the time when ¡§the mountain of the Lord¡¦s house
shall be established in the top of the mountains,¡¨ and the promised ¡§peace on
earth¡¨ shall be realised; but we see no sign of its immediate approach. The
Church still continues beset with foes, unable to stem the rising tide of rationalism
and unbelief; and certainly these are no signs of the long-foretold reign of
peace.
2. If we inquire why this is so, the answer is the same as it was in
the days of Isaiah. We do not, with a single eye, walk in the light of the
Lord. We enjoy a large measure of worldly prosperity. Science and secular
knowledge and useful arts make rapid progress, and in their light we walk, too
often forgetting that it is but a reflected radiance, borrowed from the one
source of all true light. If the Church makes some impression upon the world,
the world also makes great inroads upon the Church.
3. But this state of things cannot last forever. Isaiah of old spake
of the day of the Lord, which would surely overtake His people if they
continued to follow their own inventions and to neglect God. A yet greater and
more terrible day of the Lord is at hand. In that day all the pride of our
modern civilisation, its wisdom and knowledge, will aid us no more than the
idols of silver and gold, unless withal we are found walking in the light of
the Lord. (A. K. Cherril, M. A.)
Walking in the light of the Lord
To ¡§walk in the light of the Lord¡¨ implies--
I. THAT WE AVAIL
OURSELVES OF HIS REVELATION OF TRUTH.
II. THAT WE ORDER
THE COURSE OF OUR LIVES ACCORDING TO HIS EXAMPLE AND THE GUIDANCE OF HIS WORD
AND SPIRIT (Jeremiah 10:23).
III. PROGRESS. It
supposes that we leave behind our former darkness and sin, our slothfulness and
error, and march every day some distance on our road to eternal life.
IV. LIGHT INSPIRES
CHEERFULNESS AND JOY and if we ¡§walk in the light of the Lord,¡¨ we must have
the only true happiness and peace. The truth of the Gospel is enough to cause
constant exultation. (Homilist.)
Walking in the light of the Lord
I. THE IMPORT OF
THE WORDS, ¡§the light of the Lord.¡¨ There appears here to be an allusion to
that striking token of special guardianship which was vouchsafed to the
Israelites in the Shechinah as it appeared to the Church in the wilderness;
which, while it was the recognised token of special favour from God, indicated
also their course of movement. The expression ¡§to walk in the light of the
Lord,¡¨ we regard--
1. As indicative of a cordial reception of His truth. Light is the
general emblem of knowledge; and there are many striking points of analogy
between religious knowledge and light. The phrase is applicable to the whole
body of Divine revelation, which may be viewed as the light of God, that breaks
forth, as it were, from His countenance: His countenance, which is the emblem
of His immaculate purity, as well as His infinite intelligence. He is said ¡§to
dwell in the light which no man can approach unto.¡¨ And this is also
significant of the glory of revealed truth--it is the very light in which the
perfections of God stand manifested; the light that develops to us His secret
counsels, His plans of government, especially His plan of saving mercy; the
light, in allusion to which the prophet elsewhere speaks when he says, ¡§Arise,
shine, for thy light is come,¡¨ etc.
2. To ¡§walk in the light of the Lord,¡¨ seems to imply the full
reception of all the blessings which the light revealed. And there is this idea
suggested in this view of the phrase, ¡§the light of the Lord,¡¨ that there is an
inseparable connection between the truth of God and the favour of God. Whilst
the truth creates piety, the piety of the Church is to react on the Church and
preserve it from decline.
3. To ¡§walk in the light of the Lord¡¨ implies the zealous prosecution
of all those duties which the light unfolds.
4. To ¡§walk in the light of the Lord¡¨ is to walk in the calm
contemplation of the final fulfilment of prophecy.
II. THE MOTIVES OR
PRINCIPLES WHICH ENFORCE THIS EXHORTATION.
1. There is moral obligation, for what is moral obligation but
submission to the will of God--and to Him who is the Sovereign, we being the
subjects? Therefore it is incumbent on us to submit to, and to recognise His
will, to love His law, to mark His rule, and to feel all the force of the sanctions
appended to that rule. This may be very appropriately illustrated by the very
phrase itself: it is ¡§the light of the Lord¡¨--the light of Jehovah, sovereign
light; the light dispensed by Him for special purposes and the natural light
does not more clearly indicate its office than the moral light indicates the
special intentions of the God of heaven. This light is given for a special
purpose; it is directing light; and saving light; it regulates the degree of
personal as well as collective responsibility.
2. Then there is also obligation specially induced by conviction of
privilege. Privilege exists wherever light exists. There was nothing in the
Jewish Church which bore any comparison to the gift of religious truth to that
nation. Any nation that has the light of the Lord and the ability to use it, is
signally privileged, and attains the very altitude of human glory. All this is
not given us for vain glory; it is conferred that we might preach Christ and
bring the world under His government.
3. The blessings attendant on walking in the light of the Lord. There
is personal salvation, for instance, diffused to the very greatest possible
extent. Then, if you look at the subject simply in reference to Churches, there
is a very powerful motive; for, to ¡§walk in the light of the Lord¡¨ is the sole
condition for retaining the light. (G. Steward.)
Walk in the light
From looking into the future Isaiah comes back to his work of
trying to amend the present. He neither wastes time in singing funereal dirges
over Israel¡¦s decay, nor spends his life in useless reveries about the future.
He saw the sad present, and wept; he saw the bright future, and rejoiced; and
then set to work with heart and tongue to arouse the nation, crying, ¡§O house
of Jacob,¡¨ etc. So let us all act.
I. THE SECRET
CAUSE OF THIS PEOPLE¡¦S GUILT--moral and spiritual gloom. By implication, at
least, we learn from this text that moral darkness is the fruitful mother of
every species of iniquity. One master stroke of Paul¡¦s pen gives the secret of
the sins of Rome in his day--¡§their foolish heart was darkened. The way of the
wicked,¡¨ says Solomon, ¡§is as darkness.¡¨
I. Let us dwell
upon the natural darkness of men--
2. This darkness is wilfully and wickedly incurred. If the ¡§house of
Jacob¡¨ were ignorant of the character of God, this was their own fault, for God
had revealed Himself in manifold and marvellous ways. And if they had
sufficient light who dwelt in the dim dawn of revelation, what shall be said of
us who have the accumulated light of intervening centuries?
II. We have THE ONE
REMEDY DECLARED. ¡§Walk in the light of the Lord.¡¨ Like all Divine remedies it
is striking in its simplicity.
1. Get into the light. Con version is the passing of the soul ¡§out of
darkness into His marvellous light.¡¨ What is this light?
2. Make progress in the light. ¡§Walk in the light.¡¨ Both the Old
Testament and the New speak of the daily life of the godly man as a walk,
suggesting that it is to be a progressive life.
3. Associate with the children of light. ¡§Let us walk in the
light of the Lord,¡¨ says Isaiah. He will not walk in the light alone, but will
seek the company of those like minded with himself. He will use his influence
to induce others to walk in the light with him. (W. Williams.)
The gentle strength of light
I have seen the sun with a little ray of distant light challenge
all the powers of darkness, and without violence and noise, climbing up the
hill, hath made night so retire that its memory was lost in the joys and
sprightliness of the morning. If physical light hath such gentle strength, how
much more hath spiritual. (Bp. Taylor.)
Walking in the light ensures ever-increasing revelation
That is the only preparation for further revelation. Walking in
the light, we shall receive increase of illumination; thankful for the morning
dawn, we shall see the noontide splendour; faithful in a little, we shall be
entrusted with much; honest children of the twilight, we shall yet see things
in their largest and grandest reality. If we do the will, we shall know the
doctrine. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Nations prosper as they walk in the light of the Lord
There is inscribed upon the pedestal of the statue of Samuel
Morley, late M.P. for Bristol, this sentence, quoted from a speech of his, that
tallies with the experience of every country, ancient or modern: ¡§I believe
that the power of England is to be reckoned, not by her wealth or armies, but
the purity and virtue of the great mass of her population.¡¨ (F. Sessions.)
National religion
Religious Ideas alone have power to transform a nation¡¦s
tendencies and actions. The religious idea is the very breath of humanity,--its
life, soul, conscience, and manifestation. (Mazzini.)
The light cure
Lately we have discovered a new method by which a terrible disease
can be cured. It is called the light method, and the cure is wrought by
concentrating upon the scarred and diseased form a powerful and peculiar light.
The effect of the light is so great that in time the disease is arrested and
the skin becomes healthy and natural. (Sunday School Chronicle.)
Best things seen in God¡¦s light
Dr. Charles Berry said, in the last pastoral letter he wrote,
¡§There are some things--the best things--that can only be seen when the lights
of life are turned low, and the light of God is left to shine alone.¡¨
The limitations of earthly light
Clear and brilliant light often brings out exquisite colours, as
happens among the Alps and also in the north frigid zone, where the humble
little plants called lichens and mosses are in many cases dyed of the most
brilliant hues, purple and gold predominating. Warmth, in like manner, will
stimulate vegetable growth in the most astonishing manner, but it is growth not
necessarily accompanied by the secretion of valuable substances, such as give
quality and real importance to the plant. In English hot houses, for example,
we have plenty of spice trees, those generous plants that yield cinnamon and
cassia, the nutmeg and the clove; but although healthy and blossoming freely,
they never mature their aromatic secretions. Though they have artificial heat
equal to that of their native islands, which burn beneath the sun of the Indian
Ocean, we cannot supply them with similar and proportionate solar light. Our
cloudy skies shut us in from the full and direct radiance of the sunshine, and
wanting this, heat alone will not avail. (Scientific Illustrations and
Symbols.)
Verses 6-9
Therefore Thou hast forsaken Thy people
God never forsaken without good reason
¡§Therefore Thou hast forsaken Thy people.
¡¨ The term is logical God never forsakes His people in any whimsical way: He is
not a man, or a son of man, that He should treat His creatures arbitrarily,
moodily, renew full of sunshine in relation to them, and now covered with great
clouds, without giving any reason for the change. It is a most noticeable
feature in Biblical revelation that when God forsakes men He gives the reason
for abandoning them. The reason is always moral. God never leaves man because
he is little, or weak, or self-distrustful, or friendless, or homeless, or
broken hearted; when God forsakes man it is because man has first forsaken Him,
broken His laws, defied His sword, challenged His judgment, forsaken with
ungrateful abandonment the altar at which the life has received its richest
blessing. So, never let us neglect the word ¡§therefore¡¨ in reading concerning
Divine judgments. God will never forsake the life that trusts Him. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
A forsaken people
Read: ¡§for Thou hast cast off . . . they strike hands¡¨ (make
alliances) ¡§with the children of strangers.¡¨ (A. B. Davidson, LL. D.)
God claims the sole sovereignty of the life
When we are forsaken it is because we have forsaken God. Is God to
be the companion of idols? Is the Lord to be invited into darkened rooms, that
He may be one of the deities of the universe, and take His place in order of
seniority or of nominal superiority? Is He to be invited to compete with the
fancies of the human brain for the sovereignty of human mind and the
arbitrament of human destiny? Herein He is a jealous God. ¡§The Lord alone shaft
be exalted in that day.¡¨ If we make gods we must be content with the
manufactures which we produce; but we never can persuade the eternal God to sit
down with our wooden deities, and hold counsel with the inventions and fictions
of a diseased imagination. ¡§Choose you this day whom ye will serve.¡¨ ¡§If Baal
be God, serve him; if the Lord, serve Him.¡¨ (J. Parker, D. D.)
God had forsaken them as their Father and Friend
God had forsaken them as their Father and Friend, but He comes to
call them to account as their Judge. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
A sad sequence: money leading to idolatry
Observe how the sequence runs: money in abundance: money will buy
horses, and horses stand for power: horses will need chariots, and chariots
mean dash, speed, ostentation--money, horses, chariots, can men end there? They
cannot; and given money, horses, chariots, without a corresponding
sanctification, without the inworking of that spirit of self-control which
expresses the action of the Holy Ghost, and you compel men to go farther and to
Fall their land with idols. The sequence cannot be broken Men may have money,
horses, chariots, and the true God; but when men have money, horses, chariots,
and no god that is true, they will make gods for themselves, for they must eke
out their ostentation by some sort of nominal piety. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Spiritual idolatry
Men will build churches; men must have religious rites and
ceremonies; and what can suit the worldly man better than an idol that takes no
notice of him, a wooden deity that never troubles him with its disciplinary
obligations. (J. Parker, D. D.)
An honoured yet God-forsaken people
I. The house of
Jacob is here honoured with the character of THE PEOPLE OF GOD. They were His
in a special manner, in consequence of His choosing them for His peculiar
people; redeeming them with a strong hand and stretched out arm; and entering
into covenant with them, so that they became His property, were called by His
name, and professedly devoted to His service.
II. Notwithstanding
this intimate connection, GOD HAD FORSAKEN THEM. He took off the restraining
influence of His providence, whereby He prevented their enemies from executing
their destruction; He removed the hedge of His kind protection, by which they
enjoyed the most agreeable safety. He withheld from them His gracious
direction, which had attended them In all their fortunes. The Most High hid
counsel from them, so that they groped at noon day. He withdrew from them His
Divine favour, which had long compassed them as a shield; He denied them His
gracious presence and Holy Spirit, which was the beauty and glory of their
assemblies, having In reserve for them the most awful temporal calamities. (R.
Macculloch.)
Verse 7
Their land also is full of silver and gold
An up-to-date inventory
There is something startlingly modern about this chapter; if you
sit down to analyse it, you feel that there is something startlingly up-to-date
about the Inventory.
What did this proud people make their boast about?
1. The abundance of their treasure; their land also is full of silver
and gold, neither is there any end of their treasures.
2. Their shipping and their active commerce all the ships of
Tarshish.
3. Their military equipment; ¡§their land is also full of horses,
neither is there any end of their chariots.¡¨
4. Their natural defences; ¡§all the high mountains, all the hills that
are lifted up.¡¨
5. Their artificial defences; ¡§every high tower, every fenced wall.¡¨
6. The wealth of their timber; ¡§all the cedars of Lebanon, all the
oaks of Bashan.¡¨
7. They boasted even of the treasures of their art; ¡§all pleasant
pictures.¡¨ (J. H.Jowett, M. A.)
Gold may shut out the vision of God
An old proverb runs, ¡§The sixpence in the man¡¦s eye prevented him
from seeing the sovereign at the end of his nose.¡¨ And some men allow the
passion money to become so all-absorbing that the coin fills all their vision
and shuts out God and His heaven. (W. C. Bonner.)
Verse 8
Their land also is full of idols
Idols
The philosophic theory of polytheism is ¡§one centre, many
emanations.
¡¨ Iamblicus and Porphyry defend it on this line against the monotheism of early
Christianity. Hermes Trismegistus, according to St. Augustine, says the
Egyptians regarded images as being merely the bodies of the gods. In India
there may be seen any day of the week the ceremony of praying a spirit of
Vishnu or of Shiva Into a statue, or into a symbolic stone, by the Brahmin
priest. The priestly theory is one of ¡§consubstantiation,¡¨ like the Lutheran
theory of the Eucharist, the difference being between the spiritual indwelling
in material bread and material wine In the one case, and material wood and
stone in the other. The gods, thus made visible to the common people, are
endowed, by the popular consent, with human passions and human prejudices. Each
represents one or more of these human propensities. Some are emblems of the
reproductive powers of nature--fertilizers of the flocks and fields. Their
worship, pure at the first possibly, became beyond all telling, licentious and
abominable. (F. Sessions.)
Verse 9
The mean man
The mean man
¡§Mean¡¨ there does not mean selfish or stingy, but the man between
two extremes, the mean, average, ordinary man.
The mean man and the great man are both bowing--what are they bowing to?
Something beneath them; they have lost the sense of their dignity, and they
have forgotten that they are kings, and now they are bowing down to things that
they ought to control. (J. H. Jowett, M. A.)
Verse 10
Enter into the rock and hide thee in the dust
The sinner¡¦s ignominy before the manifestation of God¡¦s glory
No other course is now left open for them but to follow the
sarcastic command of the prophet: ¡§Creep into the rock, and bury thyself in the
dust, before the dread look of Jehovah, and before the glory of His majesty!¡¨
The nation that was supposed to be a glorious one shall and must creep away and
hide itself ignominiously, when the glory of God which it had rejected, but
which alone is true glory, is judicially manifested.
It must conceal itself in holes of the rocks as if from a host of foes ( 6:2; 1 Samuel 13:6; 1 Samuel 14:11), and bury themselves
with their faces in the sand, as from the deadly simoom of the desert, that
they may but avoid the necessity of enduring this intolerable sight. (F.
Delitzsch, D. D.)
Verse 11
The lofty looks of man shall be humbled . . . the Lord alone shall
be exalted in that day
Man humbled and Christ exalted
The day may be very properly applied to any of those days when the
Lord abases the pride of guilty man, or when He makes His presence felt by the
power of His Spirit upon the heart; for it is then the lofty looks of man are
humbled; it is then the haughtiness of man is bowed down, and the Lord is
exalted in the heart.
What other than this is God¡¦s object in the Gospel? It is definitely that self
may be humbled, and Christ exalted.
I. Let us look at
some points on which MEN ARE APT TO BE LIFTED UP and to bolster themselves up
in their pride and self-sufficiency.
1. They hold that they have natural ability to understand the Word of
God. What saith the Scripture upon this point? (1 Corinthians 2:11, etc.) How many
take up the Word of God to read it just as they would any other book,
forgetting its character--forgetting its object! They read it merely to know,
not in order to be. Whereas the value of the Book is, that it is to tell upon
man¡¦s character. It is to make him altogether a new creature in Christ Jesus.
2. Another point of deep importance is the opinion which men have
with respect to their power to save themselves. It is not that they think that
they can actually blot out their sins, or that they can perfectly keep God¡¦s
law; but they, in imagination, strike a kind of balance between their good and
bad deeds. They think that there is something good in what they do, and that
what they fail in Christ will make up; and the consequence is, there is no real
humiliation before God while this idea lasts.
3. The foolish thoughts men have of the character of God, as if He
were such an one as themselves. You will often hear men speak of what they
conceive the justice of God to be, without attending in the smallest degree to
the declarations which He makes of Himself in His Holy Word. They speak as
though they thought the difference between themselves and God, who is holy, is
one of degree merely, and not of nature. They put on one side altogether the
fact that God is a Spirit, and that they themselves are carnal, and they speak
as if morality would fit a man for heaven, utterly ignoring the words of the
Lord, ¡§Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.¡¨ Men,
indeed, form their own opinions; but remember the way in which God speaks of
it: ¡§Thou thoughtest that I was such an one as thyself; but I will reprove
thee.¡¨
II. Now, all these
mistaken views are so many sources of pride in men; but when the Holy Spirit
comes into the heart in power, they ARE BOWED DOWN AND HUMBLED BEFORE GOD. One
of the effects produced by the Holy Spirit, when He comes upon a man¡¦s heart,
is to make him consider his ways. He looks to himself and sees nothing but sin;
that there is not one single ground of hope; and when the Holy Spirit has
graciously brought him to this point, then He shows him the salvation of
Christ. And then in this exaltation of the Lord Jesus comes the true abasement
of the man himself. Lessons--
1. The object of all God¡¦s dispensations is to humble us, and to
bring us down to the feet of Christ.
2. The nature of true faith. It is humility; it is dependence; it is
coming down from all self-confidence; it is resting upon another, and that
Christ alone. (J. W. Reeve, M. A.)
God exalted
1. By entertaining elevating apprehensions of His infinite majesty,
and exercising suitable affections towards Him--fearing Him who pours contempt
upon princes, trusting in Him in whom is everlasting strength, and loving Him
in whose favour there is life.
2. By celebrating the praises of His Divine excellencies with
gratitude and joy.
3. By such conduct as may give the most sensible and lively
representation of God--beginning, carrying on, and ending all their businesses
in Him; making His love the principle, His law the rule, and His glory the end
of all their actions. (R. Macculloch.)
Humility
Life is a long lesson in humility. (J. M. Barrie.)
Verses 12-17
The day of the Lord of hosts shall be upon everyone that is proud
and lofty
Scepticism discomfited by Christ¡¦s advent
I.
Among
THE CAUSES OF THE SPIRIT OF RELIGIOUS SCEPTICISM there are--
1. An early habit of spiritual negligence.
2. A state of exaggerated and credulous belief.
II. Consider THE
INSEPARABLE CONSEQUENCES OF SUCH A STATE, whatever be the peculiar causes out
of which it springs.
1. He who is in suspense about the truth of the Gospel cannot pray.
¡§He that cometh to God must believe that He is.¡¨ He who feels that he has
sinned, and that God is holy, knows that he needs a mediator; and he that would
trust in a mediator must believe that He is.
2. He cannot resist sin. He who is in suspense about the truth of
Christ¡¦s Gospel is as weak as he who denies it, yea, weaker. For the other
knows that he is thrown upon the resources of his own unaided strength, and he
summons them all together for his support. But the man who doubts is a divided
man. He has cast off his other armour; and this, the armour of God, he cannot
take, for he has not proved it.
III. THINK WHAT THE
ADVENT WILL BE TO SUCH A MIND. The day of the Lord of hosts will be ¡§upon¡¨ it,
and will bring it low. We inquired whether there was a day coming; and behold,
it is come. While we inquired and reasoned and speculated, He of whom we
doubted was carrying on His judgment upon us. (C. J. Vaughan, D. D.)
The day of the Lord
The flood, the destruction of Sodom, the invasion of Judaea in the
reigns of Ahaz and Hezekiah, the taking of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar or by
Titus, were held by the Jewish prophets and preachers--as the like national
crises in ancient and in modern history have ever been held by Christian philosophers
and historians--to be ¡§days of the Lord,¡¨ in which He has come to judge the
earth; and partial anticipations of the last judgment of the world. (Sir E.
Strachey, Bart.)
The day of the Lord and the majestic beauty of nature
(Isaiah 2:13-14):--Has this language a
merely figurative meaning?. . .In order to understand the prophet we must bear
in mind what sacred Scripture assumes throughout, that all nature is joined
with man to form one common history; that man and the whole world of nature are
inseparably connected as centre and circumference; that this circumference
likewise is under the influence of the sin which proceeds from man, as well as
under the wrath and the grace which proceed from God to man; that the judgments
of God, as proved by the history of nations, bring a share of suffering to the
subject creation, and that this participation of the lower creation in the
corruption and the glory of man will come into special prominence at the close
of this world¡¦s history, as it did at the beginning; and lastly, the world in
its present form, in order to become an object of the unmixed good pleasure of
God, stands as much in need of a regeneration ( £k£\£f£f£d£^£^£`£h£`£m£d́£\) as the
corporeal part of man himself. In accordance with this fundamental view of the
Scriptures, therefore, we cannot wonder that, when the judgment of God goes
forth upon Israel, it extends to the land of Israel, and, along with the false
glory of the nation, overthrows everything glorious in surrounding nature which
has been forced to minister to the national pride and love of display, and to
which the national sin adhered in many ways. What the prophet predicts was
already actually beginning to be fulfilled in the military inroads of the
Assyrians. The cedar forest of Lebanon was being unsparingly shorn; the hills
and vales of the country were trodden down and laid waste, and, during the
period of the world¡¦s history, beginning with Tiglath-Pileser, the holy land
was being reduced to a shadow of its former predicted beauty. (F. Delitzsch.)
The Lord of hosts
All the creatures in the universe are the hosts or armies of
Jehovah; angels, who excel in strength; the sun, the moon, and the stars; the
thunder and the lightning; the wind, the hail, and the rain; the storm and the
tempest; the most insignificant insects, such as the flies and the
caterpillars; yea, the sand of the sea and the dust of the earth. (R.
Macculloch.)
The day of the Lord upon the proud and lofty
Is it personal strength, vigour, and firmness of constitution with
which he is elated? Though he be among the sons of the mighty, strong as the
children of Anak, the weakness of God is stronger than men; before the
Almighty, he is only as a grasshopper, and is easily crushed as the moth. Is it
courage and fortitude which hath rendered him valiant, and made his heart as
the heart of a lion? He who saith to them that are of a fearful heart, Be
strong, can quickly deprive him of his courage, and render him timorous and
faint-hearted, so as to tremble at the shaking of a leaf. Is it riches which
are reckoned a strong tower, a defence, and the sinews of strength! The day of
the Lord shall blow upon them, and they shall pass away as the flower of the
field, or an eagle flying toward heaven. Is it honour and renown that hath lift
him up to the pinnacle of earthly glory? God, who overthroweth the mighty,
shall bring down all that dignity, on account of which he highly valued
himself, and reduce him to the most humiliating condition. History, sacred and
profane, confirms the truth of this prediction. (R. Macculloch.)
Man humiliated
Zedekiah, King of Judah, deprived of his royal dignity, of his
sons, who were slain before his eyes, and then of his eyesight, was bound in
fetters of brass, and carried to Babylon.. Bajazet, the Emperor of Turkey, was
bound with fetters of gold, by the victorious Tamerlane, and carried along with
him in his march through Asia, in an iron cage, as an object of ridicule. Henry
V, Emperor of Germany, was reduced to such poverty, that he went to the great
church which he himself had built at Spires, begging the place of a chorister,
to keep him from starving. (R. Macculloch.)
Ships of Tarshish
Ships of Tarshish are deep sea ships. Possibly Tartessus, west of
the straits of Gibraltar. (A. B. Davidson, LL. D.)
Verse 16
Pleasant pictures
The proper use of art
Sir Joshua Reynolds wisely, stated the canon for artists when,
referring to the choice of subjects, he said.
¡§No subject can be proper that is not generally interesting. It ought to be
either some eminent instance of heroic action or heroic suffering. There must
be something, either in the action or in the object, in which men are
universally concerned, and which publicly strikes upon the public sympathy.¡¨
They who are not content to copy what is ignoble, or reproduce what is
insignificant--who use art to expound and apply the teaching of God in nature
and revelation--who design to address the heart, and so elevate the
imaginations and judgments of men, are benefactors of their race--ministers at
the altar of truth and righteousness. The work of such artists can be regarded
as eminently sacred. (J. H. Hitchens, D. D.)
The far-reaching influence of art
The preacher¡¦s voice must be occasionally silenced by weariness,
and ultimately hushed by death; but the artist¡¦s pictures continue to tell
their own tale, and enforce their own lessons to all spectators, night and day,
so long as they may be preserved. The author¡¦s book, upon the loftiest possible
theme, can be read only by those who are familiar with the language in which it
is written, and among the would-be readers will be some who, being unaccustomed
to the laws of thought, will lay the book aside as uninteresting; but pictures
are biographies, histories, homilies, poems which, without words, can be
studied at a glance. (J. H. Hitchens, D. D.)
Pictures
Pictures are by some relegated to the realm of the trivial,
accidental, sentimental, or worldly, but the text shows that God scrutinises
pictures, and whether they are good or bad, whether used for right or wrong
purposes, is a matter of Divine observation and judgment. (T. DeWitt
Talmage, D. D.)
The prostitution of art
That the artist¡¦s pencil and the engraver¡¦s knife have sometimes
been made subservient to the kingdom of evil is frankly admitted. After the
ashes and sconce were removed from Herculaneum and Pompeii the walls of those
cities discovered to the explorers a degradation in art which cannot be
exaggerated. Satan and all his imps have always wanted the fingering of the
easel; they would rather have possession of that than the art of printing, for
types are not so potent and quick for evil as pictures. (T. De Witt Talmage,
D. D.)
Bad pictures should be avoided
Pliny the elder lost his life by going near enough to see the
eruption of Vesuvius, and the further you can stand off from the burning crater
of sin, the better. Never till the books of the Last Day are opened shall we
know what has been the dire harvest of evil pictorials and unbecoming art
galleries. Despoil a man¡¦s imagination and he becomes a moral carcase. The show
windows of English and American cities in which have sometimes hung long lines
of brazen actors and actresses in style insulting to all propriety, have made a
broad path to death for multitudes of people. (T. De Witt Talmage, D. D.)
The value of Bible pictures
I refer to your memory and mine when I ask if your knowledge of
the Holy Scriptures has not been mightily augmented by the woodcuts or
engravings in the old family Bible, which father and mother read out of, and
laid on the table in the old homestead when you were boys and girls. The Bible
scenes which we all carry in our minds were not gotten from the Bible typology,
but from the Bible pictures. To prove the truth of it in my own case, the other
day I took up the old family Bible which I inherited. Sure enough, what I have
carried in my mind of Jacob¡¦s ladder was exactly the Bible engraving of Jacob¡¦s
ladder; and so with Samson carrying off the gates of Gaza; Elisha restoring the
Shunamite son; the massacre of the innocents; Christ blessing little children;
the Crucifixion, and the Last Judgment. My idea of all these is that of the old
Bible engravings which I scanned before I could read a word. (T. De Witt
Talmage, D. D.)
Gustave Dore¡¦s pictures
In 1833 forth from Strasburg, Germany, there came a child that was
to eclipse in speed and boldness and grandeur anything and everything that the
world had seen since the first colour appeared on the sky at the creation, Paul
Gustave Dore. At eleven years of age he published marvellous lithographs of his
own. Saying nothing of what he did for Milton¡¦s Paradise Lost, emblazoning it
on the attention of the world, he takes up the Book of books, the monarch of
literature, the Bible, and in his pictures ¡§The Creation of Light,¡¨ ¡§The Trial
of Abraham¡¦s Faith,¡¨ ¡§The Burial of Sarah,¡¨ ¡§Joseph Sold by his Brethren,¡¨ ¡§The
Brazen Serpent,¡¨ ¡§Boaz and Ruth,¡¨ ¡§David and Goliath,¡¨ ¡§The Transfiguration,¡¨
¡§The Marriage in Cana,¡¨ ¡§Babylon Fallen,¡¨--two hundred and five Scriptural
scenes in all,--and that with a boldness and grasp and almost supernatural
afflatus that make the heart throb, and the brain reel, and the tears start,
and the cheeks blanch, and the entire nature quake with the tremendous things
of God and eternity and the dead. I actually staggered down the steps of the
London Art Gallery under the power of Dore¡¦s ¡§Christ Leaving the Praetorium.¡¨
Profess you to be a Christian man or woman, and see no Divine mission in art,
and acknowledge you no obligation either in thanks to God or man? (T. De
Witt Talmage, D. D.)
Verse 18
And the idols He shall utterly abolish
The cessation of idolatry
In heathen systems of religion, God and nature are not kept
distinct.
His personality, also, is confounded. The fears and hopes of idolaters are
projected into deities. Two things are necessary to destroy idolatry in this
its grossest form.
I. THE PREVALENCE
OF THE WORD OF GOD.
1. Within its pages God and nature are carefully distinguished and
separated.
2. Here His personality is clearly presented.
3. Here commands against idolatry are fully and solemnly promulgated.
4. Here the true God is set forth in all the glorious attributes that
constitute His character, allegiance is commanded, service demanded, and every
soul held to a strict accountability.
II. THE PREVALENCE
OF THE CHRISTIAN CIVILISATION.
1. The Bible is indispensable. Heathen science is insufficient to
deliver men from idolatry, as witness Rome and Greece.
2. Mere science is in danger of becoming materialistic or agnostic.
3. Science needs to be vitalised by the Bible, the moral law, and
conscience.
Reflections--
1. Science is the handmaid of the Bible.
2. There can be no contradiction between the work of God and the Word
of God.
3. It is the duty of every Christian to assist in the circulation of
the Bible, to the end that every idol on the face of the earth may be speedily
destroyed. (Homiletic Review.)
The evils of idolatry and the means of its abolition
The progress of Christianity in the world has already been so
great and wonderful as to carry evidence of its Divine original, and of its
promised final triumph over every false religion.
I. THE EVIL TO BE
ABOLISHED. Idolatry. It has been commonly and very properly distinguished as of
two kinds, literal and spiritual. Spiritual idolatry is an evil which, by the
apostasy of our nature, attaches to all mankind, whether inhabiting Christian
or pagan regions, except those individuals whose hearts have experienced a
renovation by the Spirit of God. It is to literal idolatry that the prophet
refers in the text--this the connection shows, where mention is made of those
idols of silver and gold which the converted idolaters would cast away. The
progress of Christianity was, from the first, marked by the cessation of idol
worship. There are two principal points of view in which we may regard the evil
nature and effects of idolatry--its aspect toward God and its aspect toward
man. In the former aspect, it appears as a crime; in the latter as a calamity:
thus contemplated, it appears as an evil destructive equally to the Divine
glory and to human happiness. Man naturally tends to this evil; and one
generation after another gradually accumulated the follies of superstition,
till it reached the monstrous extreme of gross idolatry.
1. The Word of God everywhere reprobates idolatry as an abominable
thing which the soul of God abhors. To provide against it was the principal
object in the political and municipal department of the Mosaic law. It is
expressly prohibited by the first and second commandments of the moral law. The
golden calf was intended as a representative of the God of Israel; and the
calves set up by Jeroboam were the same: yet the worship of the golden calf
occasioned the slaughter, by the Divine command, of three thousand persons; and
the executioners of Divine vengeance were extolled for having forgotten the
feelings of nature toward their nearest kindred: every man was commanded to
slay his brother or his son, and so to consecrate himself to the Lord. Where
the honour of God was so deeply concerned, men were to lose sight of common
humanity. When the Israelites were tempted by the artifices of Balaam to commit
idolatry at Baal Peer, twenty-four thousand were slain at once; the memory of
Phinehas was immortalised on account of the holy zeal he displayed in the
destruction of certain conspicuous offenders; and the Moabites were devoted to
extermination, because, in this respect, they had proved a snare to Israel.
Idolatry is, with respect to the government of God, what treason or rebellion
is with respect to civil government. It is the setting up of an idol in the
place of the supreme Power; an affront offered to that Majesty, in which all
order and authority is combined and concentred, and which is the fountain of
all social blessings. Idolatry is an evil which taints every apparent virtue;
because it destroys the soul of duty, which is conformity to the Divine
command.
2. But we turn to contemplate idolatry on another side; in its aspect
toward man, its influence on society. The apostle Paul informs us (Romans 1:19-25) that God hath shown to
men what may be known concerning Himself; that His invisible Being, His eternal
power and Godhead, may be clearly seen and understood by the works of creation;
so that those are without excuse who have changed the glory of the
incorruptible God into an image in the likeness of corruptible man, of birds
and beasts and reptiles. They are without excuse; their conduct admits of no
apology. The origin of all the atrocities they committed is to be found in
aversion to God; dislike of the spirituality and purity of His character; a
desire, like Cain, to retire from the presence of their Maker; a wish to forget
a Being whose character they knew to be utterly uncongenial with their own.
This disposition originally led men to substitute idols for God. Those idols
would, of course, be conceived of a character unlike that of God.
II. We must now
advert to a brighter scene, presented by the prophet, when he assures us that
JESUS CHRIST (of whom he is speaking) WILL UTTERLY ABOLISH IDOLATRY, and sweep
it from the face of the earth with the ¡§besom of destruction¡¨ In sending the
Gospel to the heathen, you offer, as it were, the holy incense, like Moses, when
he interposed between God and the perishing Israelites: you stand, like him,
between the dead and the living,--the dead and the living for eternity!--and
you stay the plague! No sooner did Christianity appear, than its formidable
power, as the opponent of idolatry, was felt and manifested. Preaching, an
instrument so unpromising in the view of carnal reason, has been the chief
instrument employed in producing these moral revolutions. (Robt. Hall.)
The downfall of idolatry
I wish to invite your attention to some of the reasons which
induce me to believe that the heathen kingdoms of this world are to become the
kingdoms of our God and of His Christ.
I. Consider, in
the first place, THE LIGHT IN WHICH IDOLATRY IS REGARDED BY GOD. I am sometimes
asked, ¡§Why do you unsettle the religious convictions of a highly civilised
people like the Chinese? Is not the Supreme Governor of the universe pleased
with the homage of His rational creatures when proceeding from sincere
devotion, whether according to the one mode or the other, of the various
religions which He has permitted to be published?¡¨ Lord Macartney, the first
ambassador to China, in writing to the Chinese emperor, gave this as a reason
why the English never attempted to dispute or disturb the worship of others.
But in whatever light idolatry is regarded by man, we know that it is a thing
on which God cannot look with indifference. When we see idolatry associated
with immorality and inhumanity, our instincts are naturally shocked, but where
such is not the case, even the missionary finds it difficult to think and feel
rightly in regard to it. The spiritual idolatry within us has so distorted our
intellectual vision and perverted our spiritual taste that it requires an
effort to see the literal idolatry in all its hideous deformity and feel
towards it as we ought. The whole of heathendom is under the dominion of the
prince of this world, and he and his angels are the powers worshipped by the
heathen, however little they themselves may be aware of the fact. The whole
fabric of heathenism has been reared under the inspiration of the spirit of
darkness, and it is he that sits as God in that vast temple, calling himself
God, and receiving oblations, sacrifice, and adoration from his deluded
votaries. God sees in idolatry not weakness only, but also sin, positive sin,
in its nature God-opposing and soul-destroying. It is an attempt to rob Him of
that glory, which is peculiarly His own, and to confer it on the creature. But
if this is the light in which God regards idolatry, we may rationally infer
that the abomination will not be permitted to pollute the world forever.
II. My faith in THE
FINAL TRIUMPH OF TRUTH in the progress of the race tends to produce this
conviction in my mind. At the commencement of the Christian era the Sun of
Righteousness began to scatter the thick darkness with His beams. For some time
it rose higher and higher, and thousands were rejoicing in the Divine light
which promised speedily to fill the whole earth with life and gladness. But
these hopes were no sooner raised than dashed to the ground. Two dark clouds
rose between the nations and the sun, which, lowering and spreading, enveloped
them in more than Egyptian darkness. These were the Papacy and Mohammedanism.
It is estimated that more than eight hundred millions, or about two-thirds of
the human family, are idolaters today. But matters shall not remain in this
state forever. The light is greater than the darkness; the truth of heaven is
mightier than the falsehood of hell, and God is infinitely stronger than the
devil. There may be occasionally something like a retrograde movement; the
retrogression is only in appearance. The onward course of the race has been
compared to that of a ship making way against the breeze; it consists of a
series of movements, each of which seems to bear her away from the true
direction, yet, in fact, brings her nearer and nearer to the destined haven.
But if the race is progressing, and is ultimately to realise the object of its
existence, idolatry must pass away. You cannot conceive of such a thing as the
progress of the race along with the existence of idolatry. (Griffith John.)
The gods and goddesses of mythology
Homer, the first who appears to have composed a regular picture of
idolatry, paints his Jupiter, or supreme deity, as deficient in every Divine
attribute; in omnipotence, in justice, and even in domestic peace. He paints
Juno as the victim of eternal jealousy; and with good reason for her jealousy,
when the earth was peopled, according to Homey, with the illegitimate progeny
of Jupiter, to whom almost every hero traced his pedigree. Mars was the
personification of rage and violence; Mercury, the patron of artifice and them.
How far such a mythology influenced the character of its votaries, it is
perhaps impossible for us to know: nothing could be more curious than to look
into the mind of a heathen. But it is certain that the mind must have been
exceedingly corrupted by the influence of such a creed: and probably each
individual idolater would be influenced by the deity whose character happened
to be most accommodated to his own peculiar passions. Achilles would emulate
Mars in ferocity and deeds of blood; Ulysses would be like Mercury in craft and
stratagem; While the ambitious mind of Alexander or Julius Caesar would aspire
to act a Jupiter on earth. What a state of society must that be, in which no
vice, no crime could be perpetrated that was not sanctioned by the very objects
of religious worship! What a religion that which exerted an antagonist force against
conscience itself!--a religion which silenced or perverted the dictates of the
moral sense, the thoughts that should either accuse or excuse us within! The
temples of Venus, we are informed, wore crowded by a thousand prostitutes, as
servants and representatives of that licentious goddess; the very places of
their worship were the scenes of their vices, and seemed as if they were
designed to consecrate the worst part of their conduct! (Robt. Hall.)
Destroying an idol
Two young men owned and supported a Hindu temple in a village
named Rammakal Cooke. Both, becoming Christians, determined after much prayer
to destroy the idol which had previously been worshipped in the temple. When
they went to carry out their intention, a vast concourse assembled to hinder
them. One of them brought out the idol, and lifting it up, asked if anyone
would maintain its cause. The bold words awed the crowd, and then was heard the
voice of a woman, saying, ¡§Victory, victory to Jesus Christ.¡¨ Others took up
the cry. The idol was broken, the temple destroyed. (J. Vaughan.)
J.G. Paton¡¦s success among idol worshippers
After the sinking of the well by Paten on Aniwa, and the discovery
of water in answer to prayer, the chief, Namakei, in a striking address,
declared for Jehovah. That very afternoon he and several others brought their
idols to the mission house. Intense excitement followed. For weeks, company
after company came, and, with tears, sobs, or shouts, laid down their cherished
idols in heaps, again and again repeating, ¡§Jehovah!¡¨ (Sunday School
Chronicle.)
Verse 19
And they shall go into the holes of the rocks
No escape from the judgments of God
They shall vainly seek to escape, as unarmed peasants or women fly
into the nearest cave or hole when they hear the hoofs of some plundering tribe
of Edom or Ishmael from the desert; but the judgment of Jehovah shall reach
them, as the earthquake (then, as now, not uncommon in Judaea) would bring down
the reck on him who sought refuge in it.
(Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
For fear of the Lord
The fear of the Lord
1. It is some alleviation of a man¡¦s misfortune, if he knows the
worst of it. For the apprehension of evil is sometimes worse than the evil
itself. But this rule holds good only in temporal evils.
2. In the present state of things, men can harden their hearts
against all the threatenings and terrors of the Lord: and have so accustomed
themselves to dispute and disbelieve everything which is supernatural, that the
concerns of another world make but faint impressions upon them.
3. The great foundation, therefore, on which the substance of our
religion is built, is the belief of that day when God shall call men to an
account for all the works which they have done in this life, and shall deal
with them according to the promises and threatenings of His own word.
4. The way not to be afraid of the wrath of God then, is to stand in
awe of it now.
5. He hath declared that He hath an extraordinary indignation at
proud men, i.e., such as have no regard for His laws, and that He will
one day effectually humble them.
6. When we fear God as a merciful and gracious Father, we live easy
in His family, and rejoice in His presence; but a guilty fear causes us to fly
from
Him like our first parent, dreading Him as justly provoked to be
angry with us, and ready to execute His threatened judgments upon us.
7. ¡§The fear of the Lord,¡¨ says Solomon, ¡§is the beginning of
wisdom¡¨; and I will venture to add, that it is the end of it too: for a man can
never be denominated wise without this fear; whenever he lays it aside, he
certainly plays the fool.
8. There is no man who, by daily reading and hearing of God¡¦s Word,
keeps the rule of his life in his eye, but must see that he has manifold
reasons to be humbled for not acting up to it.
9. And as horrible fear, so shall shame and confusion of face be the
portion of all those who will not now be restrained by a virtuous modesty from
offending against God.
10. Let us, then, wisely make choice of these restraints in due
season, and keep up their influence so strong in our minds, that no sinful
temptation, even in the closest retirement and most secret corner, may ever be
able to prevail against them. (W. Reading, M. A.)
Verse 20
In that day a man shall cut his idols of silver
The return to God: idols cast away
The most beautiful sight on God¡¦s earth is a man turning home
again to God.
What will happen when he comes back? ¡§They shall fling their idols to the bats
and to the moles.¡¨ Blind as a mole, blind as a bat, and the idols have to go to
them. The man discovers that the thing by which he has been led is itself a
blind thing, and he flings it to blind things, to the moles and the bats. He
sees that the thing is blind: which means that he has recovered his own sight,
and therefore Malachi says, ¡§They shall return and discern.¡¨ When they come
back they shall see--see what things are, and what things are not, and no
longer shall they be seduced. Their lands shall still be full of silver and
gold. I have no wish for my country to be poor. But, when we have said that, we
shall be able to alter the other phrase. No longer shall we say, ¡§The land is full
of silver and gold, the land is full of idols¡¨; but this shall be the refrain,
¡§The land is full of silver and gold, the glory of the Lord filleth the land as
the waters cover the sea¡¨ (J. H. Jowett, M. A.)
Verse 22
Cease ye from man.
The Septuagint omits this verse. (R. V. margin.)
Man¡¦s insignificance and God¡¦s supremacy
Two things are indispensable to undisturbed tranquillity of mind,
namely, humble and distrustful views of ourselves, and supreme and unfaltering
reliance on God. So long as a man depends on his own wisdom, power, and
goodness, he must be disquieted and unhappy. We can attain to substantial quiet
only when we feel that our dependence is on a Being omnipotent, independent,
and supreme, as well as abundant in truth and love (Isaiah 26:3). To produce in us this
two-fold feeling is the constant aim of Holy Scripture. The grand scheme of
redemption is founded on the principle here laid down. Man is sinful, ignorant,
impotent to good, and of himself inclined only to evil, and that continually.
God, in His infinite mercy, wisdom, and power, hath provided the only means by
which he can be restored to holiness, to the favour of his God, and to life
everlasting. But while there is in all religiously instructed people a
readiness to concede to Christ the merit of salvation, there is too much
disposition to rely upon ourselves and our own arrangements for success in
temporal and physical things, and to claim the merit of it if we do succeed.
There are various things that have a tendency to produce within us a feeling of
self-dependence, and lead to the ignoring of the Divine power and efficiency.
There is in us too often an idolatry of human agency and natural or artificial
instrumentalities, and too often these occupy in our souls the place of God. In
the order of nature causes produce their legitimate effects, so that if we can
secure certain antecedents we feel confident of corresponding results. To use
all wisdom and discretion in the use of means is a plain duty. But the
difficulty with us is, that in our reliance on secondary agencies we too often
leave God out of the account. We forget that He is above all means, that He can
work without them, or He can frustrate all our means and all our best-concerted
plans. There is nothing that men are more disposed to confide in than
superiority of intellect. Yet God has given us reasons sufficient to abate our
idolatry of human talent. For--
1. The largest capacity of man is really very small. Knowledge with
all men is very limited, even in those that know the most.
2. Men of great capacity and uncommon attainments seldom, perhaps
never, bear to be examined very closely. If one excel in one thing he is
deficient in another. Sir Isaac Newton, great as he was in science and
philosophy, failed in the common affairs of life. Laplace, whose extensive
range of thought took in the whole mechanism of the planetary universe, did not
at all justify the high opinion formed of him by Napoleon, when he, at
the emperor¡¦s invitation, undertook the business of the statesman.
3. Men of the largest pretensions to mind have been and are still
guilty of the puerile, the absurd, the degrading crime of idolatry. E.g.,
Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, modern Hindoos.
4. The comparatively few specimens of unsullied, religious character.
5. We see in the record which God has given of His dealings with our
race, a series of illustrations of man¡¦s inefficiency and God¡¦s supremacy. He
has seldom used the means to accomplish an end that man would have selected or
supposed. Egypt saved from perishing by a seven years¡¦ famine by a young,
falsely accused slave, wrongfully cast into prison. Naaman. Deliverance of
Israel from the Midianites ( 7:1-25). Destruction of Spanish Armada,
Waterloo, etc., Lessons--
Ceasing from man
I. CEASE YE FROM
EXPECTING TOO GREAT PERFECTION IN MAN. Many are sadly mistaken on this point.
They have higher ideas of the excellency of human nature than the Word of God
warrants. It is sad that our experience of life should chill its generous
sympathies, and that the heart should become cold and selfish as our knowledge
of mankind increases. We ought so to live that the more we become acquainted
with human wickedness, the more our compassionate feelings should be enlarged;
and that person has a Christian spirit whose experience of man¡¦s depravity and
love for man have increased in the same ratio.
II. THE RULE OF OUR
TEXT WILL APPLY ALSO TO CHRISTIANS. Cease from expecting perfection in them.
1. The Bible teaches us to regard a Christian as different from
others only as the man recovering from disease differs from one who is still
under its full power, not as one in perfect health and strength.
2. As Christians we may learn to cease from expecting too much from
our fellow Christians.
3. We should cease, too, from making any fellow Christian our model,
or measuring our faith by his faithfulness.
4. And let us cease from expecting too much from Christian
friendship. Christ was forsaken by the twelve, and at St. Paul¡¦s first answer
before the Roman emperor, no man stood with him, but all forsook him.
III. CEASE YE FROM
THE FEAR OF MAN is another appropriate application of the text.
1. The Word of God warns us against this. Who can say that he pursues
just that path which conscience approves without being drawn aside by the fear
of man? And how strong is the antidote to such a fear which the text presents!
His breath is in his nostrils!
2. We should be careful, however, that our ceasing from man be not
attended with evil feelings towards him. If a poor man is fearless in the
presence of the rich because he scorns them, that is wrong. If we go forward in
the path of duty, undeterred by the opinion of the world, because we are
self-opinionated, and care nothing for any conclusions except our own, that is
wrong.
IV. CEASE YE FROM
MAN AS A SOURCE OF HAPPINESS. We build our enjoyments on relatives and friends.
We gather around us those who are worthy of our love; our hearts begin to knit
with theirs, and we say, This is comfort, here is happiness. But one touch of
death crumbles all to the dust, and leaves us to mourn over our disappointed
expectations. (W. H. Lewis, D. D.)
God man¡¦s only dependence
Our text speaks in a two-fold manner: there is in it warning
pointedly expressed; also instruction indirectly conveyed--
I. REGARDING THE
CONDITION OF MAN.
II. REGARDING MAN¡¦S
DELIVERANCE AND SALVATION.
III. REGARDING THE
CONVERSION OF EVERY SAVED SINNER. Man cannot save you, whatever he may pretend
to do.
IV. REGARDING THE
CHARACTER OF THE GOSPEL. Such is man that he will hold the truth with the head,
and think he can be saved whilst his heart is in the world.
V. REGARDING THE
MAINTENANCE AND PROMULGATION OF DIVINE TRUTH
IN THE EARTH. How frequently the necessity of this warning is seen
in missionary enterprises! ¡§Oh,¡¨ say some, ¡§you have got the right missionaries
now; their heads are full of learning; they have very strong bodies, able to
stand any climate; there is plenty of money in the missionary exchequer¡¨; and
away they go. Ah, ¡§let not the rich man glory in his riches; let not the strong
man glory in his strength; let not the wise man glory in his wisdom; but let
him that glorieth, glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth Me, saith
the Lord God Almighty.¡¨ And then, there is not only work to do abroad, but at
home too. If you speak to some men about the infidelity and superstition at
home, they will say, the government should do so and so, and make such and such
an act of parliament. Do you think that men can be converted by acts of
parliament? Oh! ¡§cease ye from man.¡¨ The text does not mean--
1. That any unconverted person is to say, I will wait till God thinks
proper to convert me.
2. That there is no necessity for men to preach the Gospel. Preaching
is necessary, because God has ordained it.
3. That it is wrong for rulers or governments to give their
legitimate aid to
God¡¦s truth. Finally, we are taught the great duty of prayer to
God. (Hugh Allen, M. A.)
Ceasing from man
I. WHAT THE
EXHORTATION DOES NOT IMPLY.
1. That God wills our seclusion from the society of man.
2. That we are not to give any confidence to man.
3. That we are to withdraw from the appointed means of grace as being
superior to them, or standing in no need of them.
II. WHAT THE
EXHORTATION DOES IMPLY.
1. That we should cease from all that vain admiration of the external
appearance in the character and condition of men in which we are so prone to
indulge.
2. That we should not indulge the desire of applause from man.
3. That we should not envy man--his popularity, prosperity, etc.
4. That we should cease from all such confidence in man as would
supersede confidence in God.
5. That we should cease from the fear of man.
6. That we should cease from all expectations of perfection in the
character of men, even of those who profess religion.
7. That we should cease from all inordinate attachment to creatures.
III. THE ARGUMENT BY
WHICH THIS EXHORTATION IS ENFORCED. Cease from man--
1. Because he is a depraved creature, subject to violent and
dangerous passions.
2. Because he is a deceitful creature, often deceiving himself as
well as others.
3. Because he is a fickle and changeable creature.
4. Because he is a weak and helpless creature.
5. Because he is a dying creature. (E. Parsons.)
Man, ¡§soul and soil¡¨
Man is made up, as the old writers used to say, of soul and soil.
Alas, the soil terribly soils his soul! ¡§My soul cleaveth to the dust¡¨ might be
the confession of every man in one sense or another. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Man, whose breath is in his nostrils
One consequence of the prevailing materialism of our corrupt
nature is our craving for something tangible, audible, visible, as the object
of our confidence. Man is, by nature, an idolater. The people of Isaiah¡¦s day
were like the rest of their race: they showed their unspiritualness and their
inability to walk in the light of the Lord by making their own wealth their
chief confidence (verse 7). Nations also, like the Israelitish people, are apt
to idolise power; even power in the form of brute force. We read: ¡§Their land
also is full of horses, neither is there any end of their chariots.¡¨ These
people, in the heat of their idolatry, set up many idols. Idolatry is common
even here. May we not easily make idols of ourselves? There is nothing more
absurd in the history of human nature than the fact that man is apt to trust in
man. The sin is none the less accursed because of its commonness.
I. Our first
inquiry is, WHAT IS MAN? This question is asked many times in Scripture, end it
has been frequently answered with a copiousness of instruction.
1. What is man? He is assuredly a very feeble creature. He must be
weak, for ¡§his breath is in his nostrils.¡¨ We measure the strength of a chain
by its weakest link. See, then, how weak man is, for he is weakness itself in a
vital point.
2. Man, moreover, is a frail creature. It seems as though his life in
his breath stood at the gates, ready to be gone, since it is in his nostrils.
3. Man is also a dying creature. Contemplate the dead! What think you
now of your idol?
4. The text also reminds us that man is a very fickle creature. His breath
is in his ¡§nostrils.¡¨ As his breath is affected by his health, so is he
changed. Today he loves, and tomorrow he hates; he promises fair, but he
forgets his words.
5. If you read the chapter through, you will also find that man is a
trembling creature, cowardly creature, a creature, indeed, who, if he were not
cowardly, yet has abundant reason to fear. (Read from verse 19.) ¡§They
shall go into the holes of the rocks,¡¨ etc. Think of the days of Divine wrath,
and especially of the last dread day of Judgment, and of the dismay which will
then seize upon many of the proud and great. Are you going to make these your
confidants?
II. WHAT IS TO BE
OUR RELATION TO MAN, or what does the text mean when it says, ¡§Cease ye from
man¡¨? It implies, that we very probably have too much to do with this poor
creature man already. We may even require to reverse our present conduct, break
up unions, cancel alliances, and alter the whole tenor of our conduct.
1. ¡§Cease ye from man¡¨ means, first, cease to idolise him in your
love. It is very common to idolise children. A mother who had lost her babe
fretted and rebelled about it. She happened to be in a meeting of the Society
of
Friends,
and there was nothing spoken that morning except this word by one female Friend
who was moved, I doubt not, by the Spirit of God to say, ¡§Verily, I perceive
that children are idols.¡¨ She did not know the condition of that mourner¡¦s
mind, but it was the right word, and she to whom God applied it knew how true
it was. She submitted her rebellious will, and at once was comforted. Cease ye
from these little men and women; for their breath is in their nostrils, and
indeed it is but feebly there in childhood. A proper and right love of children
should be cultivated; but to carry this beyond its due measure is to grieve the
Spirit of God. You can idolise a minister, you can idolise a poet, you can
idolise a patron; but in so doing you break the first and greatest of the
commandments, and you anger the Most High.
2. ¡§Cease ye from man ¡§: cease to idolise him in your trust.
3. Cease to idolise any man by giving him undue honour. ¡§Honour all
men.¡¨ A measure of courtesy and respect is to be paid to every person, and
peculiarly to those whose offices demand it; therefore is it written, ¡§Honour
the king.¡¨ Some also, by their character, deserve much respect from their
fellow men; but there is a limit to this, or we shall become sycophants and
slaves, and, what is worse, idolaters. It grieves one to see how certain
persons dare not even think, much less speak, till they have asked how other
people think. The bulk of people are like a flock of sheep; there is a gap, and
if one sheep goes through, all will follow. God¡¦s people should scorn such
grovelling. If the Son shall make you free, you will be free indeed.
4. Equally does the text bid us cease from the fear of man.
5. Once more, cease from being worried about men. We ought to do all
we can for our fellow men to set them right and keep them right, both by
teaching and by example; but certain folks think that everything must go
according to their wishes, and if we cannot see eye to eye with them, they
worry themselves and us. Let us not be unduly cast down if we cannot set
everybody right. The body politic, common society, and especially the Church,
may cause us great anxiety; but still the Lord reigneth, and we are not to let
ourselves die of grief. He only requires of us what He enables us to do.
6. ¡§But they say.¡¨ What do they say? Let them say. It will not hurt
you if you can only gird up the loins of your mind, and cease from man. ¡§Oh,
but they have accused me of this and that.¡¨ Is it true? ¡§No, sir, it is not
true, and that is why it grieves me.¡¨ If it were true it ought to trouble you;
but if it is not true let it alone. Nine times out of ten if a boy makes a blot
in his copy book and borrows a knife to take it out, he makes the mess ten
times worse; and as in your case there is no blot after all, you need not make
one by attempting to remove what is not there. All the dirt that falls upon a
good man will brush off when it is dry: but let him wait till it is dry, and
not dirty his hands with wet mud. Let us think more of God and less of man.
Come, let the Lord our God fill the whole horizon of our thoughts. Let our love
go forth to Him; let us delight ourselves in Him. Let us trust in Him that
liveth forever, in Him whose promise never faileth. Cease ye from man because
you have come to know the best of men, who is more than man, even the Lord
Jesus Christ, and He has so fully become the beloved of your souls, that none
can compare with Him. Rest also in the great Father as to your providential
cares: why rest in men when He careth for you? Rest in the Holy Spirit as to
your spiritual needs; why need to depend on man? Yea, throw yourself entirely
upon the God all-sufficient, El Shaddai, as Scripture calls Him.
III. WHY ARE WE TO
CEASE FROM MAN? The answer is, because he is nothing to be accounted of. Every
man must cease from himself first, and then from all men, as his hope and his
trust, because neither ourselves nor others are worthy of such confidence.
¡§Wherein is he to be accounted of?¡¨ Compared with God man is less than nothing
and vanity. Reckon him so, and act upon the reckoning. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
God, the Verity of verities
Care nothing for the vanity of vanities, but trust in the Verity
of verities. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Man¡¦s morality
¡§His breath is in his nostrils,¡¨ puffed out every moment, soon
gone for good and all. Man is a dying creature, and may die quickly; our
nostrils, in which our breath is, are of the outward parts of the body; what is
there is like one standing at the door ready to depart. Nay, the doors of the
nostrils are always open; the breath in them may slip away, ere we are aware,
in a moment; wherein then is man to be accounted of? Alas, no reckoning is to
be made of him; for he is not what he seems to be,--what he pretends to be,
what we fancy him to be.(M. Henry.)
Insignificance of men
A Sultan, amusing himself with walking, observed a dervish sitting
with human skull in his lap, and appearing to be in a profound reverie. His
attitude and manner surprised the Sultan, who demanded the cause of his being
so deeply engaged in reflection ¡§Sire,¡¨ said the dervish, ¡§this skull was
presented to me this morning, and I have from that moment been endeavouring, in
vain, to discover whether it is the skull of a powerful monarch like your
Majesty, or of a poor dervish like myself.¡¨ (Baxendale¡¦s Anecdotes.)
Folly of man
It was once remarked to Lord Chesterfield that man is the only
creature endowed with the power of laughter. ¡§True,¡¨ said the peer; ¡§and you
may add, perhaps, that he is the only creature that deserves to be laughed at.¡¨
(Timba.)
.
Outline
of chapter
The first part opens with a general prediction of the loss of what
they trusted in, beginning with the necessary means of subsistence (Isaiah 3:1). We have then an enumeration
of the public men who were about to be removed, including civil, military, and
religious functionaries, with the practitioners of certain arts (Isaiah 3:2-3). As the effect of this
removal, the government falls into incompetent hands (Isaiah 3:4). This is followed by
insubordination and confusion (Isaiah 3:5). At length, no one is willing
to accept public office, the people are wretched, and the commonwealth a ruin (Isaiah 3:6-7). This ruin is declared to
be the consequence of sin, and the people represented as their own destroyers (Isaiah 3:8-9). God¡¦s judgments, it is
true, are not indiscriminate. The innocent shall not perish with the guilty,
but the guilty must suffer (Isaiah 3:10-11). Incompetent and
faithless rulers must especially be punished, who instead of being the
guardians are the spoilers of the vineyard, instead of protectors the
oppressors of the poor (Isaiah 3:12-15). As a principal cause of
these prevailing evils, the prophet now denounces female luxury, and threatens
it with condign punishment, privation, and disgrace (Isaiah 3:16-17). This general
denunciation is then amplified at great length, in a detailed enumeration of
the ornaments which were about to be taken from them and succeeded by the
badges of captivity and mourning (Isaiah 3:18-24). The agency to be
employed in this retribution is a disastrous war, by which the men are to be
swept off, and the country left desolate (Isaiah 3:25-26). The extent of this
calamity is represented by a lively exhibition of the disproportion between the
male survivors and the other sex, suggesting at the time the forlorn condition
of the widows of the slain (Isaiah 4:1). (J. A. Alexander.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n