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Isaiah Chapter
Twenty-one
Isaiah 21
Chapter Contents
The taking of Babylon. (1-10) Of the Edomites. (11,12) Of
the Arabs. (13-17)
Commentary on Isaiah 21:1-10
(Read Isaiah 21:1-10)
Babylon was a flat country, abundantly watered. The
destruction of Babylon, so often prophesied of by Isaiah, was typical of the
destruction of the great foe of the New Testament church, foretold in the
Revelation. To the poor oppressed captives it would be welcome news; to the
proud oppressors it would be grievous. Let this check vain mirth and sensual
pleasures, that we know not in what heaviness the mirth may end. Here is the
alarm given to Babylon, when forced by Cyrus. An ass and a camel seem to be the
symbols of the Medes and Persians. Babylon's idols shall be so far from
protecting her, that they shall be broken down. True believers are the corn of
God's floor; hypocrites are but as chaff and straw, with which the wheat is now
mixed, but from which it shall be separated. The corn of God's floor must
expect to be threshed by afflictions and persecutions. God's Israel of old was
afflicted. Even then God owns it is his still. In all events concerning the
church, past, present, and to come, we must look to God, who has power to do
any thing for his church, and grace to do every thing that is for her good.
Commentary on Isaiah 21:11,12
(Read Isaiah 21:11,12)
God's prophets and ministers are as watchmen in the city
in a time of peace, to see that all is safe. As watchmen in the camp in time of
war, to warn of the motions of the enemy. After a long sleep in sin and
security, it is time to rise, to awake out of sleep. We have a great deal of
work to do, a long journey to go; it is time to be stirring. After a long dark
night is there any hope of the day dawning? What tidings of the night? What
happens to-night? We must never be secure. But many make curious inquiries of
the watchmen. They would willingly have nice questions solved, or difficult
prophecies interpreted; but they do not seek into the state of their own souls,
about the way of salvation, and the path of duty. The watchman answers by way
of prophecy. There comes first a morning of light, and peace, and opportunity;
but afterward comes a night of trouble and calamity. If there be a morning of youth
and health, there will come a night of sickness and old age; if a morning of
prosperity in the family, in the public, yet we must look for changes. It is
our wisdom to improve the present morning, in preparation for the night that is
coming after it. Inquire, return, come. We are urged to do it quickly, for
there is no time to trifle. Those that return and come to God, will find they
have a great deal of work to do, and but little time to do it in.
Commentary on Isaiah 21:13-17
(Read Isaiah 21:13-17)
The Arabians lived in tents, and kept cattle. A
destroying army shall be brought upon them, and make them an easy prey. We know
not what straits we may be brought into before we die. Those may know the want
of necessary food who now eat bread to the full. Neither the skill of archers,
nor the courage of mighty men, can protect from the judgments of God. That is
poor glory, which will thus quickly come to nothing. Thus hath the Lord said to
me; and no word of his shall fall to the ground. We may be sure the Strength of
Israel will not lie. Happy are those only whose riches and glory are out of the
reach of invaders; all other prosperity will speedily pass away.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Isaiah》
Isaiah 21
Verse 1
[1] The
burden of the desert of the sea. As whirlwinds in the south pass through; so it
cometh from the desert, from a terrible land.
The plain — Of
Babylon, which lay in a very plain country. And the title of the sea might well
be given to the waters of Babylon, because of the great plenty and multitude of
them.
South — In
those parts which lay southward from Judea, where there were many and great
deserts.
Pass through — As
meeting with no opposition.
It — The burden or
judgment.
Desert —
From Media and Persia; a great desert lay between them and Chaldea.
A terrible land —
From the Medes, a warlike and formidable people.
Verse 2
[2] A grievous vision is declared unto me; the treacherous dealer dealeth
treacherously, and the spoiler spoileth. Go up, O Elam: besiege, O Media; all
the sighing thereof have I made to cease.
A vision — A
vision or prophecy, containing dreadful calamities which were to fall upon
Babylon.
The spoiler —
The Medes and Persians used treachery as well as force against Babylon.
Elam —
Persia, so called, because Elam was an eminent province of Persia, bordering
upon the Medes.
Besiege —
Namely, Babylon, verse 9.
The sighing —
The sighing and groaning of God's people, and other nations under the
oppressions of that cruel empire.
Verse 3
[3]
Therefore are my loins filled with pain: pangs have taken hold upon me, as the
pangs of a woman that travaileth: I was bowed down at the hearing of it; I was
dismayed at the seeing of it.
My loins —
Which he mentions with respect to the following similitude of child-bearing.
Pangs —
Sharp and grievous pains.
Verse 4
[4] My
heart panted, fearfulness affrighted me: the night of my pleasure hath he turned
into fear unto me.
The night — In
which I used to have sweet repose. He seems to have had this vision in a night.
But withal this signified that horror and destruction, which should befal the
Babylonians in a night of feasting and jollity.
He — God, who shewed him
that vision.
Verse 5
[5] Prepare the table, watch in the watchtower, eat, drink: arise, ye princes,
and anoint the shield.
Prepare —
Furnish it with meats and drinks. The prophet foretells what the Babylonians
would be doing when their enemies were at their doors.
Watch — To
give us notice of any approaching danger, that in the meantime we may more
securely indulge ourselves.
Princes — Of
Babylon: arise from the table and run to your arms.
Shield —
Prepare yourselves and your arms for the approaching battle. The shield is put
for all their weapons of offence and defence. They used to anoint their shields
with oil, to preserve and polish them, and to make them slippery.
Verse 6
[6] For
thus hath the Lord said unto me, Go, set a watchman, let him declare what he
seeth.
Go set —
This was now done only in a vision, but it signified what should be done really
afterwards.
Verse 7
[7] And
he saw a chariot with a couple of horsemen, a chariot of asses, and a chariot
of camels; and he hearkened diligently with much heed:
A chariot —
Hereby he signifies the variety and abundance of warlike provisions which the
Medes and Persians should have for their expedition, and particularly of
chariots, whereof some were for the carriage of necessary things, and others
for the battle.
Verse 8
[8] And
he cried, A lion: My lord, I stand continually upon the watchtower in the
daytime, and I am set in my ward whole nights:
A lion —
The watchmen cried out, I see also a lion marching before the horsemen and
chariots: which they suppose to represent Cyrus or Darius marching in the head
of their armies.
My lord —
The watchman speaks to the prophet, who had set him in this station.
Whole nights —
According to thy command I have stood, and do yet stand continually, both day
and night, upon my watch-tower.
Verse 9
[9] And,
behold, here cometh a chariot of men, with a couple of horsemen. And he
answered and said, Babylon is fallen, is fallen; and all the graven images of
her gods he hath broken unto the ground.
Men —
Not fitted with goods, but provided with men to fight.
He — The prophet, who here
gives an explication of the vision.
He — God, by the hands of
Cyrus.
Verse 10
[10] O my
threshing, and the corn of my floor: that which I have heard of the LORD of
hosts, the God of Israel, have I declared unto you.
Threshing —
Threshing is put for the corn threshed; and the corn threshed for people sorely
afflicted. This is probably spoken of Babylon. The corn - Which I will cause to
be threshed upon the floor.
You —
Unto you my people; for all the prophecies, even concerning other nations, were
published to them, and for their use and comfort.
Verse 11
[11] The
burden of Dumah. He calleth to me out of Seir, Watchman, what of the night?
Watchman, what of the night?
Dumah — Of
Edom or Idumea.
He — The people of Dumah,
one of them in the name and by the appointment of the rest.
Me — To the watchman: the
prophet delivers his prophecy in the form of a dialogue between the people and
the watchman.
Seir —
Out of Edom, which is frequently called Seir.
Watchman —
The watchman of Edom, whom they had set as people use to do in times of great
danger.
Night —
The people are supposed to come to him very early in the morning, to enquire
what had happened in the night; which shews a state of great perplexity and
fear.
Night —
The repetition of the words, shew the greatness of their solicitude.
Verse 12
[12] The
watchman said, The morning cometh, and also the night: if ye will enquire,
enquire ye: return, come.
The night —
The night is past without any mischief, and the light of the morning is
approaching; but tho' the morning is coming, it will be gone, and the night
will return, and your fears with it.
Come — If
you will enquire, enquire: I perceive your danger is not past, and there will
be occasion for farther enquiries. Therefore return, come - Come to me the next
morning, and so from morning to morning.
Verse 13
[13] The
burden upon Arabia. In the forest in Arabia shall ye lodge, O ye travelling
companies of Dedanim.
Forest —
Not as you used to do, in the houses or tents of the Arabians: whereby he
implies, that that populous country should be a wilderness.
Companies — In
those parts travellers then did, and still do, go together in companies.
Dedanim —
These were merchants, who used to trade with Tyre, and their way lay thro'
Arabia.
Verse 14
[14] The
inhabitants of the land of Tema brought water to him that was thirsty, they
prevented with their bread him that fled.
Tema — A
part of Arabia.
Fled —
Whereby he implies, that those other Arabians, against whom this prophecy is
principally directed, should be reduced to great scarcity, and forced to flee
for their lives, from a bloody enemy.
Verse 16
[16] For
thus hath the Lord said unto me, Within a year, according to the years of an
hireling, and all the glory of Kedar shall fail:
A year —
From the time of this prophecy: an exact year.
Glory —
Their power, and riches, and all things wherein they used to glory. This was
executed by the Assyrians.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Isaiah》
21 Chapter 21
Verses 1-10
The burden of the desert of the sea
The desert of the sea
This enigmatical name for Babylon was no doubt suggested by the
actual character of the country in which the city stood.
It was an endless breadth or succession of undulations “like the sea,” without
any cultivation or even any tree: low, level, and full of great marshes; and
which used to be overflowed by the Euphrates, till the whole plain became a sea,
before the river was banked in by Semiramis, as Herodotus says. But the prophet
may allude also to the social and spiritual desert which Babylon was to the
nations over which its authority extended, and especially to the captive
Israelite; and perhaps, at the same time, to the multitude of the armies which
it poured forth like the waters of the sea. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
The prophecy against Babylon
It is a magnificent specimen of Hebrew poetry in its abrupt energy
and passionate intensity. The prophet is, or imagines himself to be, in
Babylon. Suddenly he sees a storm of invasion sweeping down through the desert,
which fills him with alarm. Out of the rolling whirlwind troops of armed
warriors flash into distinctness. A splendid banquet is being held in the great
Chaldean city; the tables are set, the carpets are spread; they eat, they
drink, the revel is at its height. Suddenly a wild cry is heard, “Arise, ye
princes, anoint the shield!”--in other words, the foe is at hand. “Spring up
from the banquet, smear with” oil the leathern coverings of your shields that
the blows of the enemy may slide off from them in battle. The clang of arms
disturbs the Babylonian feast. The prophet sitting, as it were an illuminated
spirit, as a watchman upon the tower calls aloud to ask me cause of the terror.
What is it that the watchman sees? The watchman, with deep, impatient groan, as
of a lion, complains that he sees nothing; that he has been set there,
apparently for no purpose, all day and all night long. But even as he speaks
there suddenly arises an awful need for his look-out. From the land of storm
and desolation, the desert between the Persian Gulf and Babylon, he sees a huge
and motley host, some mounted on horses, some on asses, some on camels,
plunging forward through the night. It is the host of Cyrus on his march
against Babylon. In the advent of that Persian host he sees the downfall of the
dynasty of Nebuchadnezzar and the liberation of Judah from her exile. On the
instant, as though secure of victory, he cries out, “Babylon is fallen.” And
he, that is, Cyrus the Persian king, a monotheist though he be, a worshipper of
fire and the sun, has dashed in pieces all the graven images of the city of
Nimrod. Then he cries to his fellow exiles in Babylonian captivity, “O my
people, crushed and trodden down”--literally, “O my grain, and the son of my
threshing floor”--“this is my prophecy for you; it is a prophecy of victory for
your champions; it is a prophecy of deliverance for yourselves.” (Dean
Farrar, D. D.)
The Persian advance on Babylon
(Isaiah 21:7; Isaiah 21:9):--It is a slight but obvious
coincidence of prophecy and history that Xenophon represents the Persians
advancing by two and two. (J. A. Alexander.)
The Persian aversion to images
The allusion to idols (Isaiah 21:9) is not intended merely to
remind us that the conquest was a triumph of the true God over false ones, but
to bring into view the well-known aversion of the Persians to all images.
Herodotus says they not only thought it unlawful to use images, but imputed
folly to those who did it. Here is another incidental but remarkable
coincidence of prophecy even with profane history. (J. A. Alexander.)
“The burden of the desert of the sea”
There is a burden in all vast things; they oppress the soul. The
firmament gives it; the mountain gives it; the prairie gives it. But I think
nothing gives it like looking on the sea. The sea suggests something which the
others do not--a sense of desertness. In the other cases the vastness is broken
to the eye. The firmament has its stars; the mountain has its peaks; the
prairie has its flowers; but the sea, where it is open sea, has nothing. It
seems a strange thing that the prophet, in making the sea a symbol of life’s
burden, should have selected its aspect of loneliness. Why not take its storms?
Because the heaviest burden of life is not its storms but its solitude. There
are no moments so painful as our island moments. One half of our search for
pleasure is to avoid self-reflection. The pain of solitary responsibility is
too much for us. It drives the middle-aged man into fast living, and the
middle-aged woman into gay living. I cannot bear to hear the discord of my own
past. It appalls me; it overwhelms me; I fly to the crowd to escape my
unaccompanied shadow. (G. Matheson, D. D.)
Verses 1-17
Verses 1-10
The burden of the desert of the sea
The desert of the sea
This enigmatical name for Babylon was no doubt suggested by the
actual character of the country in which the city stood.
It was an endless breadth or succession of undulations “like the sea,” without
any cultivation or even any tree: low, level, and full of great marshes; and
which used to be overflowed by the Euphrates, till the whole plain became a sea,
before the river was banked in by Semiramis, as Herodotus says. But the prophet
may allude also to the social and spiritual desert which Babylon was to the
nations over which its authority extended, and especially to the captive
Israelite; and perhaps, at the same time, to the multitude of the armies which
it poured forth like the waters of the sea. (Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
The prophecy against Babylon
It is a magnificent specimen of Hebrew poetry in its abrupt energy
and passionate intensity. The prophet is, or imagines himself to be, in
Babylon. Suddenly he sees a storm of invasion sweeping down through the desert,
which fills him with alarm. Out of the rolling whirlwind troops of armed
warriors flash into distinctness. A splendid banquet is being held in the great
Chaldean city; the tables are set, the carpets are spread; they eat, they
drink, the revel is at its height. Suddenly a wild cry is heard, “Arise, ye
princes, anoint the shield!”--in other words, the foe is at hand. “Spring up
from the banquet, smear with” oil the leathern coverings of your shields that
the blows of the enemy may slide off from them in battle. The clang of arms
disturbs the Babylonian feast. The prophet sitting, as it were an illuminated
spirit, as a watchman upon the tower calls aloud to ask me cause of the terror.
What is it that the watchman sees? The watchman, with deep, impatient groan, as
of a lion, complains that he sees nothing; that he has been set there,
apparently for no purpose, all day and all night long. But even as he speaks
there suddenly arises an awful need for his look-out. From the land of storm
and desolation, the desert between the Persian Gulf and Babylon, he sees a huge
and motley host, some mounted on horses, some on asses, some on camels,
plunging forward through the night. It is the host of Cyrus on his march
against Babylon. In the advent of that Persian host he sees the downfall of the
dynasty of Nebuchadnezzar and the liberation of Judah from her exile. On the
instant, as though secure of victory, he cries out, “Babylon is fallen.” And
he, that is, Cyrus the Persian king, a monotheist though he be, a worshipper of
fire and the sun, has dashed in pieces all the graven images of the city of
Nimrod. Then he cries to his fellow exiles in Babylonian captivity, “O my
people, crushed and trodden down”--literally, “O my grain, and the son of my
threshing floor”--“this is my prophecy for you; it is a prophecy of victory for
your champions; it is a prophecy of deliverance for yourselves.” (Dean
Farrar, D. D.)
The Persian advance on Babylon
(Isaiah 21:7; Isaiah 21:9):--It is a slight but obvious
coincidence of prophecy and history that Xenophon represents the Persians
advancing by two and two. (J. A. Alexander.)
The Persian aversion to images
The allusion to idols (Isaiah 21:9) is not intended merely to
remind us that the conquest was a triumph of the true God over false ones, but
to bring into view the well-known aversion of the Persians to all images.
Herodotus says they not only thought it unlawful to use images, but imputed
folly to those who did it. Here is another incidental but remarkable
coincidence of prophecy even with profane history. (J. A. Alexander.)
“The burden of the desert of the sea”
There is a burden in all vast things; they oppress the soul. The
firmament gives it; the mountain gives it; the prairie gives it. But I think
nothing gives it like looking on the sea. The sea suggests something which the
others do not--a sense of desertness. In the other cases the vastness is broken
to the eye. The firmament has its stars; the mountain has its peaks; the
prairie has its flowers; but the sea, where it is open sea, has nothing. It
seems a strange thing that the prophet, in making the sea a symbol of life’s
burden, should have selected its aspect of loneliness. Why not take its storms?
Because the heaviest burden of life is not its storms but its solitude. There
are no moments so painful as our island moments. One half of our search for
pleasure is to avoid self-reflection. The pain of solitary responsibility is
too much for us. It drives the middle-aged man into fast living, and the
middle-aged woman into gay living. I cannot bear to hear the discord of my own
past. It appalls me; it overwhelms me; I fly to the crowd to escape my
unaccompanied shadow. (G. Matheson, D. D.)
Verse 5
Anoint the shield
“Anoint the shield”
The ancient shields being mostly of stout leather stretched over a
frame or rim of metal or wood, it was necessary to rub them with oil, lest they
should become hard and crack, or lest they should become so rigid that an arrow
or spear might easily penetrate them.
Shields of this kind are still much in use, and still require the same
treatment, in Western Asia; and we have ourselves frequently seen them on sale
in the bazaars, and in use among the Arabs, the Kurds, and the Caucasians. (J.
Kitto, D. D.)
Things that did not happen
What is a shield? It is a very peculiar part of God’s armour. It
is not a strength in calamity; it is something which prevents calamity from
coming. My strength is my power to bear; but my shield is my escape from
bearing. My strength lifts me when the blow falls; my shield catches the blow
before it falls. My strength supports what is; my shield wards off what might
have been. I have often praised God for the strength; but I have seldom
anointed the shield. I have recognised a thousand times His songs in the night;
but I have not sufficiently thanked Him that the night itch has not been
deeper. (G. Matheson, D. D.)
Verse 10
O My threshing, and the corn of My floor
God’s threshing
Babylon is the instrument employed by the Divine wrath to thresh
with.
But love takes part also in the work of threshing, and restrains the action of
wrath. A picture likely to give comfort to the grain lying for threshing on the
floor, i.e., to the people of Israel which, mowed down as it were and
removed from its native son, had been banished to Babylon, and there subjected
to a tyrannical rule. (F. Delitzsch.)
Comfort for God’s afflicted people
I. THE CHURCH IS
GOD’S FLOOR, in which the most valuable fruits and products of this earth are,
as it were, gathered together and laid up.
II. TRUE BELIEVERS
ARE THE CORN OF GOD’S FLOOR. Hypocrites are but as the chaff and straw, which
take up a deal of room, but are of small value, with which the wheat is now
mixed, but from which it shall be shortly and forever separated.
III. THE CORN OF
GOD’S FLOOR MUST EXPECT TO BE THRESHED by afflictions and persecutions.
IV. EVEN THEN, GOD
OWNS IT FOR HIS THRESHING--it is His still; nay, the threshing of it is by His
appointment and under His restraint and direction The threshers could have no
power against it but what is given them from above. (M. Henry.)
Verse 11-12
The burden of Dumah
The burden of Dumah
Like Moab, Edom had once formed part of David’s dominions, but in
the days of disruption and weakness both had rebelled.
What about Edom now? When Moab was so soon to fall--when the Assyrian was
spreading devastation all around--what was to be Edom’s fate? The prophet hears
the appeal addressed to him as God’s watchman and with anxious repetition. The
words, “Watchman, what of the night? How much of the night has passed?” contain
the cry of perplexity and a demand for light and guidance. But the answer is an
oracle of silence. Not yet is Edom to be told what is God’s will concerning her
future. She is assured that there will be alternations of light and darkness
for her as for all in the time of their probation. Meanwhile, patience is to
have its perfect work; and after a little while she may inquire again. A later
prophecy shows the work of Divine judgment on this land. (Buchanan Blake, B.
D.)
Dumah
It lay to the south of Palestine, thus bordering on the
inheritance of Judah. It was a wild mountainous district, inhabited by a race
whose character reflected the rugged nature of their surroundings. They were
constantly at war with their neighbours, especially the Jews, and spent a large
portion of their time making inroads into southern Palestine for the sake of
plunder and conquest. On account of these invasions, and also because they
joined the Chaldeans against the Jews, the most sweeping denunciations were
pronounced against them. In course of time these denunciations were followed by
disasters, in consequence of which the Edomites became a vanquished people, and
were finally incorporated with the Jewish nation. Then, when at a later period
the whole of that region passed into the hands of the Greeks and Romans, it
became known by the Greek name of Idumea--Dumah being the old Hebrew name.
Hence the “burden of Dumah” means the prophecy concerning the fate of Idumea or
Edom. (D. Merson, M. A. , B. D.)
The oracle of Dumah
The land of Edom pleads for some vision to her also. Judah is to
be rescued. The prophet has seen the Persian host in its varied array--troops
of chariots and horsemen crashing through the brazen gates of idolatrous
Babylon, extinguishing its feasts in blood, issuing from it with the cry of
victory. It is good news for Judah, but what shall it be for Edom? It is as if
the voice of Esau cried out once more, “Hast Thou but one blessing, O my
Father. Bless me, even me also, O my Father.” And as the prophet stands in
imagination on the peak of the hill, he hears a voice calling to him out of
Seir, the stronghold of the Edomites, a sharp, agitated cry, “Watchman, how far
in the night? Watchman, what hour of the night? Does the darkness still linger,
is the morning near?” Well might Edom be in terror; the sons of Esau had
behaved to Judah in her hour of affliction with malignant hatred which had
wounded her to the heart. In Obadiah, in Amos, in Ezekiel, in Jeremiah, you may
read traces of their crime. When the Jews fled before the advances of
Nebuchadnezzar, the Edomites, true to their miserable destiny, their hand
against every man and every man’s hand against them, had cruelly massacred and
intercepted the helpless fugitives, and had urged Nebuchadnezzar to destroy the
Holy City. It is to this that the sad Psalmist of the Exile alludes when he
says: “Remember, O Lord, against the children of Edom, in the day of Jerusalem,
how they cried, ‘Down with it, down with it, even to the ground.’” Naturally,
therefore, in the approaching hour of Judah’s emancipation, the prophet has not
much comfort to bestow on these cruel and treacherous” sons of the desert. All
he can say to the Edomites at first is a riddling message of which not much can
be made. But then, after this stern and dubious answer, as though somewhat
relenting, the watchman cries, “If ye wish to inquire again, inquire ye,” and
then, very briefly, “Return, come.” In other words. “The oracle for you, sons
of Edom, is no vaticination about a mere earthly future.” It may be summed up
in two words--in the warning, “Repent,” and in the invitation, “Come.” (Dean
Farrar, D. D.)
Edomites and Jews: a hostile world attacking the Church
It may help us to the true meaning of this question, if we keep in
mind the relation in which the Edomites stood the Jews. That relation was one
of the closest, if we have respect to origin or birth; but if we have respect
to friendship, then the feelings existing between them were of the most hostile
kind. Descended from a common stock, they kept alive the family animosities.
The Edomites, who were the descendants of Esau, hated the Israelites on account
of the deceitful conduct of Jacob their father. The sight of the prosperity of
the sons of Jacob perpetuated the old grudge in the breast of the less favoured
sons of Esau; and their seasons of adversity were made the occasions of bitter
sneers. These two nations have become associated in our minds, the one with the
people of God, the other with their enemies. The sons of Jacob were chosen, in
preference to the sons of Esau, to be the medium of carrying the Divine
blessings to all nations. The Edomites were in consequence filled with envy and
hatred towards their brethren, lost no opportunity of attacking them in the
most envenomed spirit, and thus they may justly be regarded as a type of the
hostile world attacking the Church of God. Here, then, we seem to have a clue
to the interpretation of the passage before us. If we regard the Jewish nation
as a type of the Church or people of God, and the Edomites as a type of the
hostile world, we have here a question addressed to the Church by the world,
and we have the Church’s reply. (D. Merson, M. A. , B. D.)
Eastern watchmen
It was the custom in the regions of the East in ancient times, to
erect lofty watchtowers, so high as to be above all surrounding buildings, and
to place watchmen on them, who should observe all that came within their view
and report accordingly. The design of this custom was to prevent the approach
of an enemy unforeseen. The watchman in his lofty tower observed in the
distance the gathering of armies and the mustering of hosts; he could see in
the far-off horizon the glistening of weapons and the waving of the banners of
war; and then he gave warning and the people prepared for the event. There is
very frequent allusion to this custom in the Scriptures; and it is in reference
to it, that the ministers of the Church of God are described as the Lord’s “watchmen.”
It is their duty to stand upon the walls and upon the watchtowers of the Church
that they may see the approaching danger, and to give warning, that the people
perish not (Isaiah 62:6; Ezekiel 33:2, etc.). (M. H. Seymour,
M. A.)
Watchman
A different word from that in Isaiah 21:6, and signifying not one who
spies or looks out, but one who guards or keeps (Psalms 130:6). (Prof. Driver, D. D.)
The burden
The burden is in two respects--
1. Of the prophets that bear it. The Word of the Lord is a heavy
burden till they are delivered of it; there is no rest to the surcharged
conscience. The ministry is a matter of both honour and burden. Are there none
that catch at honour, but will not meddle with the burden.
2. Of the people that were to suffer it. The judgments of God are
heavy on whomsoever they light. It is true of them what the philosopher said of
himself, Perieram nisi periissem,--they are undone that are not undone.
Security is the very suburbs of hell. An insensible heart is the devil’s anvil,
he fashioneth all sins on it, and the blows are not felt. (T. Adams.)
The burden of Dumah
I. THE CHARACTER
HERE GIVEN OF THE PROPHET.
II. THE IMPORTUNITY
OF THE PEOPLE APPLYING TO HIM.
III. HIS ANSWER.
1. We may tender the prophet’s answer to any who would perplex
themselves or others with inquiries respecting the existing state of this
world’s affairs.
2. The wicked, walking after their own lusts and counsels, sometimes,
in a scoffing manner, inquire of ministers, “What of the night? What think ye
of my state and prospects? What of the truth of religion? What of the uses and
importance of godliness? My wickedness thrives, and you said that it would be
my ruin; my vices are pleasant, and you said that they would be bitter; my mind
is at ease, and you said that I should be harassed in conscience. Where is the
truth of your words? where the severity of judgment?--what evidence of a day of
retribution?” The awful answer again is, “the morning cometh, and also the
night.”
3. The prophet’s answer was given to persons in trouble; and thus
applied, its import is various. To some who demand of us, in seasons of their
distress, “Watchman, what of the night?” the answer is, Time is fast passing,
and your sorrows are fast passing with it. To others, “The morning cometh,” but
as yet it is profound night to you, many and heavy sorrows still await you.
Your spiritual condition is such, that our Heavenly Father will seek to bring
you to Himself by many grievous visitations; hateful indeed, to the natural
will, but most salutary for the soul’s health. Or else, perhaps, as you have
approved yourselves to God in the season of prosperity, it is the Divine
pleasure to make experiment of you in the fiery furnace of adversity, to see
whether “tribulation can separate you from the love of Christ.” To others
again, the answer is, It is the seventh hour, the midnight of your affliction
is already past, and if passed by a little only, you have already suffered the
extreme of your earthly portion of endurance; all that follows shall be
comparatively light, and work for you a far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory, if in patience ye possess your souls. (A. Williams, M. A.)
The watchman’s report and advice
I. WHO IS THE
WATCHMAN REFERRED TO?
II. THE INQUIRY
INSTITUTED.
1. The whole state of the world demands of the servants of God that
they should prayerfully and diligently regard the signs and movements of the
times.
2. There are personal inquiries which ought to press upon all who are
rightly impressed with a sense of their responsibility to God. “How is the
period of my probation passing? What is the progress of the night, which is to
be succeeded by a morrow which knows no change or ending? How speeds the night
in which my soul’s salvation is to be determined?”
III. THE WATCHMAN’S
REPORT IN ANSWER TO THE QUESTION. “The morning cometh, and also the night.”
This report is most comprehensive, and may convey the following ideas--
1. That there will be nothing settled or permanent: changes may be expected.
2. But the report without doubt is designed to indicate a period of
coming joy to believers, of misery and woe to the wicked--to the one the
morning cometh, to the other night.
3. There is one other observation in the watchman’s report worthy of
attention, namely, that the morning and the night are said to come together;
“the morning cometh, and also the night.” It may seem strange to many that
these periods should be said to come simultaneously. But if you look at the
characters to whom they thus come, the difficulty is removed. That which will
be a time of light and comfort to the righteous, will be one of darkness and
dismay to the ungodly. Indeed, it is partly so in the present imperfect state
of things. The very blessings of the impenitent are turned into curses; their
day of mercy and grace becomes a night of darkness and calamity; whilst, on the
other hand, all that appear night and trouble to the people of God, are means
of increased light and joy to them. Their sorrow is turned into joy; their
tribulation worketh patience and experience and hope.
IV. THE ADVICE
WHICH THE WATCHMAN GIVES IN CONSEQUENCE OF THE REPORT.
1. Inquiry is the first duty recommended. We look for nothing, and
expect nothing so long as there is indifference. It was the great sin of God’s
professing people of old, that “they would not consider.” It is only when we
can excite a spirit of serious inquiry that we can hope for lasting good from
our efforts.
2. But to diligent inquiry, return to God is recommended. All inquiry
in fact is for this purpose, and it would be useless if it did not issue in an
actual return to your Father.
3. The prophet closes with one more observation, and it is used by
way of encouragement--“Come.” (T. Dealtry, D. D.)
The watchman’s report and advice
I. THE WATCHMAN’S
REPORT.
1. As it may be supposed to respect the public affairs of our
country.
2. The state of virtue and piety among us.
II. THE WATCHMAN’S
ADVICE. The doom of Dumah was not inevitably fixed; she would yet be indulged
with a morning of opportunities; and the only sure ground of hope was in a
returning to God. We have as a nation something of Dumah’s morning--some
farther space for reflection and repentance. It must be of the greatest moment
to know what an offended God expects. “Inquire; return; come.” The inquiring,
returning, coming, so kindly and seasonably urged on Dumah, in her night, are
recommended to us on every ground, whether human or Divine.
1. Nothing can be more fit and proper in itself.
2. It is the subject of a Divine command.
3. In the patience and forbearance of God, and in the wonderful
method He has devised for the pardon and salvation of a guilty people, we have
a loud call and a most powerful motive to “inquire, return, and come.”
4. And there are important and happy consequences resulting from a
sinful people’s inquiring, returning’, and coming to God. (N. Hill.)
“Watchman, what of the night?”
I. CONSIDER THE
QUESTION.
1. Some ask the report of the night with utter carelessness as to the
reply.
2. Some ask in contempt.
3. Some ask in horror and anguish of heart.
II. WHAT IS STILL
THE DUTY OF HIM WHO HOLDS THE MOMENTOUS POSITION OF WATCHMAN IN THE CITY OF
GOD?
1. He did not turn away from the question, in whatever spirit it was
asked.
2. He uttered with equal assurance a threat and a promise.
3. He pressed the necessity of care in the study and earnest inquiry
after the nature of the truth.
4. He summed up all by an anxious, a cordial, and a reiterated
invitation to repentance and reconciliation with an offended but pardoning God.
Thus, the single verse might be regarded as an abstract of the duties of the
ministerial office. (W. Archer Butler, D. D.)
The world’s challenge and the Church’s response
I. This is THE
WORLD’S CHALLENGE TO THE CHURCH. From the midst of that darkness which, by
reason of the limitation of our knowledge, encompasses us all; and from thy
midst of that double darkness which enwraps those who are untouched and
unchanged by the love of Christ Jesus, this challenge is continually coming to
the Church. This is--
1. The cry of scepticism. The scepticism of our day is, in some
instances, evidently the error of noble but misguided spirits, who, having
discovered that in some matters of belief concerning which they had thought
themselves very sure, they were wholly in the wrong, and having in other cases
been baffled in the search for certainty, have too hastily given up all hope of
obtaining saris faction and rest with respect to many of the most momentous
questions of human life. There is, however, a shallower scepticism. It
addresses the Church in tones of equal incredulity, but breathing the spirit of
vanity, hostility, and contempt.
2. The cry of the world’s worldliness. Men who are living for this
life only, ask the question. There is a terribly close connection between
worldliness and scepticism of the scoffing and contemptuous sort. The tendency
of a life in which there is no regard for God and eternity, is to produce an
unbelief far more blighting than that disbelief which is the result of
misguided thinking. And with all the wild recklessness or supercilious scorn or
stolid indifference of old times, they ask, “What of the night? You prophets of
darkness, who take so gloomy a view of the condition of the world, who warn us
of a perpetual darkness for those who live so heedlessly, what of the night?
You who profess to believe that your religion can do such great things, where
are the signs of its power, and of the accomplishment of its work? What signs
of the dissipation of the darkness of which you speak, and of the coming of the
day?”
3. The cry of the world’s agony. From the darkness of the sin which
is shutting out of the life all joy and purity and hope, from the woe which is
crushing them, men make their appeal to the Church of God. They ask for the
causes of this darkness and for the means by which it may be removed. But there
are many who are conscious that the agony they feel is attributable to their
sin; and in the sense of their alienation from God they ask of the Church, pleadingly,
What of the night? It is not simply the apprehension of darkness, but the
consciousness of it, the darkness of being sinful. “Oh tell us if there be
forgiveness, peace, purity, and rest, for guilty, storm-tossed, polluted, and
wearied hearts!”
4. The cry of the world’s hope. Many have felt the dawn of a new day
in their own hearts, and now they continually pray, “Thy kingdom come.”
Although they have light within, they see the darkness around them. But because
of what they have themselves experienced, they cannot despair of the case of
humanity.
II. THE RESPONSE
WITH WHICH THE CHURCH IS ENTRUSTED, and which she is bound urgently and
confidently to deliver. “The morning cometh, and also the night.”
1. The Church’s message to the world is a message of mingled mercy
and severity, of joyous and of sad import. We look at what Christianity has
done and is doing in the world; and the result of the examination is a deep and
growing conviction that the evidences of Christianity never were so strong or convincing
as today.
2. But alas! if it be true that the morning cometh, it is not less
necessary that we should add, “and also the night.” The dawning of the day of
Christ will leave some in profounder darkness.
3. Therefore, we close with the urgent personal appeal of the
prophet: “If ye will inquire, inquire ye: return, come.” Let this be the
commencement of an earnest inquiry as to the claims Christianity, and we do not
fear for the result. Let the value of the world be estimated, and compared with
the value of the favour and the life of God; and there can be but one issue.
Let this be the day of earnest seeking for the light, the peace and the pardon
of God; and the agony of a troubled heart and the burden of a guilty conscience
shall be taken away, and the spirit shall know the life and liberty of Christ
Jesus. “Inquire ye,” and in this truth as it is in Jesus ye shall find all you
need. (T. Stephenson.)
The burden of Dumah
I. ENDEAVOUR TO
EXPLAIN IT.
II. EXHIBIT THE
LESSONS WHICH IT TEACHES or, apply it to the friends and the foes of God.
1. We have an illustration of the conduct of a taunting world; a
world often disposed not to reason, but to make derision of religion; a world
always finding occasions, in some peculiar state of the Church, or in some
aspect of religion, for the exhibition of irony or scorn.
2. We have in the response of the watchman, “The morning cometh,” an
illustration of the times of light and prosperity in the Church destined to
succeed those of calamity. We may apply it to the individual Christian in the
midst of calamity. Thus, too, it is of the Church universal. In her darkest
hours, it was true that brighter days were to dawn. So it is now. The night of
sin is to be succeeded by a long bright day. There is one thing only that is
certain in the future history of this world--its conversion to God and to the
true religion.
3. In like manner we have an illustration of a third important
fact--the night of calamity that is coming on a sinful and scoffing world.
4. There remains one other idea. That is, if you--the despiser--will
inquire in a humble manner; if you will come with proper reverence, and will
turn from your sins, light will stream along your path; and the sun of
prosperity will ride up your sky, and pour down his noontide radiance upon you
also. (A. Barnes, D. D.)
“Watchman, what of the night?”
I. THE WATCHMAN AS
TYPICAL OF EVERY TRUE AMBASSADOR OF THE CROSS.
1. He occupied vantage ground. He was selected for the office; placed
in an appropriate position--where, unhindered, he could carry on his
observations.
2. He possessed knowledge of the ground he surveyed a mere enthusiast
would not do, nor a novice, nor an enemy; a patriot would be the best, with a
clear head and a warm heart.
3. He would expect implicit obedience to his cries. If he said “All
well!” people might rest; if, “To arms!” people must be up. Apply these points
to the office of the Christian ministry.
II. THE INQUIRER OF
THE WATCHMAN AS TYPICAL OF THE ANXIOUS SEEKER AFTER SALVATION.
1. He was painfully conscious of the darkness. Every awakened sinner
feels the darkness of ignorance, and danger, and guilt, and wonders what of the
night--how, and when will it end?
2. He was anxiously desirous of the light. The anxious seeker after
salvation longs for the Light of the world--the light of the glorious Gospel to
shine into his heart.
III. THE ANSWER OF
THE WATCHMAN AS TYPICAL OF THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF THE SOUL IN RELIGION.
1. The morning cometh--the morning of day, of newness of life, of
glorious opportunity.
2. “Also the night.” The day will not last forever, let us work while
it is called day. (F. W. Brown.)
The world’s interrogation and the Church’s response
I. WHEN NIGHT
HANGS HEAVILY ON THE CHURCH, IT HANGS STILL MORE HEAVILY ON THE WORLD. The Assyrian
oppression lay like a cloud on Judah, but in lying on Judah it projected a
still heavier cloud upon Edom. The world is so bound up with the Church that,
consciously or unconsciously, it rises with the Church’s rising, falls with the
Church’s falling, rejoices in the Church’s freedom, pines in the Church’s
bondage, is lightened by the Church’s sunshine, is shadowed by the Church’s
clouds. And this, take the world in what aspect you may, as the world of
society, the world of business, the world of pleasure. What is the practical
lesson? Do not leave the Church because the Church may be wrapped in adversity;
if you do, a deeper adversity is awaiting you in the quarter to which you
repair. And the same law holds good in a wider sense. We are compassed with mystery.
Some persons, impatient with the obscurities of faith, take refuge in the
greater obscurities of unbelief. Restless under the clouds of Judah, they seek
relief amidst the heavier clouds of Edom. There never was a greater mistake
than to suppose that because Christianity is bound up with problems, the
abandonment of belief is the abandonment of mystery.
II. And the fact
is, the world realises this; for note as the next thought we deduce from the
passage, THAT IN THE MIDST OF THIS COMMON NIGHT, ENVELOPING BOTH CHURCH AND
WORLD, THE WORLD TURNS TO THE CHURCH FOR LIGHT. It is very suggestive that in
the general pressure of the general gloom the Edomite is represented as
appealing to the Jew, a representative of the Jewish God., Was there none to
consult nearer home?
Where were the seers of Idumea? Through all ages the principle is
the same. Ever, in the midst of the cloud that surrounds us all, the world puts
its questions to the Church. Sometimes, indeed, the question is ironical.
Sometimes it is curious. Often, however, the question is earnest.
III. And thus we
come up to the next plain lesson, THAT WHEN THE WORLD QUESTIONS THE CHURCH, THE
CHURCH MUST BE READY TO ANSWER. That implies--
1. That the Church has an answer to give. It is conceivable that, in
some cases, professing Christian men may have no answer. When the question
comes, they are nonplussed; it embarrasses, puzzles them. What is the reason?
With one class, want of perception of the difficulty. And for another class,
the reason may be that, while feeling the pressure of the difficulty, they have
not obtained a solution for themselves. Wherefore, when face to face with the
world’s questions, let us see to it that we have material for an answer.
2. And let us give the answer we have. Let the possession of truth be
followed by the communication of it, as often as opportunity arises.
IV. And yet, let it
always be remembered that WHILE THE CHURCH SHOULD BE READY TO ANSWER THE
WORLD’S QUESTIONINGS, THE NATURE OF THE ANSWER MUST BE CONDITIONED BY THE MORAL
STATE OF THE QUESTIONER. Look once more at the prophet. So long as the attitude
of Edom is an attitude of general inquiry, the prophet has only a general
statement. “The morning cometh,” he says, “and also the night.” It is when this
attitude of general inquiry passes into the attitude of personal repentance,
that he promises a personal and particular revelation corresponding. “Cleanse
your hearts,” he says, “reform your ways, turn to the Lord, and then come back
again, and I will tell you more.” And here we turn from the duty and
responsibility of those that are questioned to the spirit and character of
those that question them. You ask if sorrow will pass, doubt dissolve,
providence unfold itself, Scripture become plain, heaven be won. Our answer is,
“Yes--in the experience of some”; whether in your experience we cannot say,
until we know more. If yours is the sensitive conscience, the tender heart, the
submissive will, if you sorrow for sin, if you turn to righteousness, if you
cleave to God, then we can tell. For you the night is departing, but if the
night is not vanishing in your own heart, it is useless, it is trifling, to ask
how the night goes elsewhere. How apt are some men to divert attention from the
state of matters within by directing it to the state of matters without--the
prospects of neighbours, the words of Scripture, the controversies of the
Church, the mysteries of Providence! He who will know of the doctrine must do
the will. (W. A. Gray.)
The coming dawn
(A Christmas homily) (with Romans 13:12):--“The night is far spent;
the day is at hand.” But for the fact which Christmas commemorates, we should
have no reply to that question save one: “Though the morning cometh, the night
cometh also.” It is only the advent of Christ, and the prophecy latent in that
advent, which enable us to add in the full assurance of faith: “The night is
far spent, and the day which has no night is at hand.”
1. That you may see that both these answers to the question which the
world and the Church have so long been asking are true, and in what sense they
are true, let us consider how far St. Paul’s answer to it has been fulfilled;
whether the day which he foresaw did not really come, but also whether this day
was not followed by a night and the promise of its dawn overcast. When he stood
on his watchtower and surveyed the horizon, he had much reason to believe that
the night of heathenism was far spent; that the day of the Lord, the day on
which Christ would take to Himself His great power and rule in all the earth,
was close at hand. But as we look back on the period to which he looked forward
with such confident hope, we can see that the end was not yet, although it
seemed so near; that, though a morning came, a night came also. The apostolic
day, or age, was hardly over before the night came rushing back; and in a few
centuries the dogmas and superstitions, the vices and crimes, of heathenism
were to be found in the very Church itself, where, alas, too many of them still
linger. Yet even in “the dark ages there was a remnant who had light in their
dwellings, and did not altogether lose hope. And when the day of the
Reformation dawned on Europe, Luther and his compeers had little doubt that the
true day of the Lord had come at last, that a light had arisen which would
speedily renew the face of the earth. And a day had come, but not the great day
of Christ. The end was not even yet. Over its larger spaces, even Europe still
lies in darkness, the darkness of superstition, or sensuality, or indifference;
while in Africa, Asia with its teeming millions, and South America, we can
discern only distant and twinkling points of light which are all but lost in
the surrounding darkness. So that when we in our turn ask, “Watchman, what of
the night? Is it almost gone? Will it soon pass?” we, too, can often hear none
but the old reply, “If a morning is coming, so also is a night.” We try to
hope, but the verdict of history is against us. Analogy is against us. How long
it took to make the world! how slowly it was built up, inch by inch, before it
was ready for the foot of man! And how intolerably slow is man’s growth and
development! Reason and experience are against us. Think what the world is
like,--how nation makes war on nation, and class on class, how common and
unblushing vice is even among those who should be best fortified against it by
education and position, how much of our virtue is but a prudent and calculating
selfishness! Think how hard we ourselves know it to be to wean even one heart
from selfishness and self-indulgence, and to fix it in the love and pursuit of
whatsoever is true and fair, good and kind; how slowly we advance in godliness
even when we have the grace of God to help us and are working together with
Him! And then tell me whether you must not say, “The dawn may be coming, but as
surely as the day comes, the night will come also; many days and many nights
must still pass, many alternations of light and darkness must sweep across the
face of the earth, before the great day of the Lord can arise and shine upon
us.”
2. If that be your conclusion I have good tidings for you. The very
meaning and message of advent is, that all these mornings and evenings are
gradually leading in the day of the Lord; that He is preparing for the coming
of His kingdom in the darkness as well as in the light, by every night through
which we pass as well as every day, by every disappointment and every
postponement of hope as well as by every fulfilment. Many forms of wrong,
cruelty, and vice are impossible now which were possible, and even common,
before the Son of God and Son of man dwelt among us; nay, even before the
Reformation carried through Europe a light by which such deeds of darkness were
reproved. The individual man may stand little higher, whether in wisdom or in
goodness, than of old; but the number of men capable of high thoughts, noble
alms, and lives devoted to the service of truth and righteousness, incomparably
larger. The world took long to make, and may take still longer to remake; but
its re-creation in the image of God is just as certain as its creation. The
darkness of ignorance and superstition may still lie heavily over the larger
spaces of the world; but the points of light are rapidly increasing. As we
count time, the end is not yet; but as God counts time, the end is not far off.
(S. Cox, D. D.)
National responsibility
The prophet has here nothing to predict; his function is only to
repeat the oft unheeded warning that all things in this universe of God go on
by unchanging law and in regular succession; “the morning,” as in the apparent
revolution of the sun round the earth, so also in the revolutions of states and
kingdoms and empires, “the morning cometh, and also the night.” Like causes
produce like events; the course of providence may be foretold from the action
of those with whom it deals.
And what is history, but the exhibition of this great but much
neglected truth? e.g., Egypt, Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Rome. In
each case we may distinctly trace their more or less speedy downfall to the
operation of the same eternal law of justice; requiting on each the iniquities
of each, and making those iniquities the very causes of their overthrow. What
likelihood, then, is there of the same principle not being carried out again;
of its not being carried out in the case of nations and kingdoms in which we
feel more than an antiquarian interest? To them, too, will come, as the
morning, so also the night. It is, of course, most difficult to appraise the
fortunes, to calculate the probable destiny of any nation of which we ourselves
form component parts. The human mind, like the human eye, must see things
somewhat at a distance in order to get them into due perspective and appreciate
their exact proportions. But this difficulty does not affect our power of
evaluating the principles of conduct on which we see men or nations act. Those
principles are broad and clearly marked, and it is easy to perceive how far
justice and right dealing, truth and soberness, self-devotion for the common
good and real, not mock, philanthropy are practised: or, on the other side, how
far oppression and cowardice, luxury and vice, falsehood and selfishness, are
the real rulers of the nation. It was the true function of the Hebrew prophets
to rouse the conscience of the nation to what they spake. If, then, we wish to
acquire some idea of the probable future of the great empire to which we
belong, it will be well carefully to review the aspects of life prevailing in
it, and to see in what way the eternal obligations of the Divine law are
observed, or how far they are despised and violated. (Archbishop Reichel, D.
D.)
“Watchman, what of the night?”
I. GOOD MEN
SUFFERING. The pious Jews were now in deepest sorrow. It was their night. The
good have often a night. Physical suffering, secular difficulties, social
bereavements, spiritual temptations, conscious imperfections, often turn the
sky of a good man into night.
II. WICKED MEN
TAUNTING. The voice from Mount Seir was, “What of the night?” The language is
sarcastic and contemptuous. The wicked, instead of sympathising with the good
in their sufferings, often treat them with heartless ridicule. The spirit is
seen now in various questions that are addressed to the Church.
III. THE GREAT GOD
SPEAKING TO BOTH. “The morning cometh and also the night.”
1. His voice to the good. “The morning cometh.” There is a morning
for the Church on this earth. There is a morning to the good in eternity.
2. The voice to the wicked. “The night cometh.” “Where is Edom now?
The night cometh, sinner: the shadows are gathering already,” etc. (Homilist.)
“What of the night?”
I. “Watchman, what
of the night” of SENSE AND SIN? “The morning cometh”--the morning of
sinlessness. “Also the night.” Sin now, sin then; sin on sin, sin forever and
ever!
II. “Watchman, what
of the night” of SUFFERING AND SORROW? “The morning cometh.” “God shall wipe
away all tears from their eyes.” “Also the night”--the night of eternal
suffering and sorrow.
III. “Watchman, what
of the night” of MOCKING AND MYSTERY? “The morning cometh,” when the mocking
mystery will vanish. “They shall see His face.” “Also the night”--“the outer
darkness,” the black profound, where the soul wanders forever Christless,
restless, lost.
IV. “Watchman, what
of the night” of SOLITUDE AND SEPARATION? In this world we have never met. Men
of science tell us that there are in this universe no two atoms in real
contact. “The morning cometh,” the morning of meeting for the first time in the
never parting of the revelation of God. “Now we see in a mirror darkly,” etc.
“Also the night,” the night of a separation eternal. Let another natural law be
traced in this spiritual world. If you took away all contrary and opposing
forces from a propelled cannonball, and if you secured a perfect vacuum in
boundless space, by vis inertiae, the ball would go on forever. If this
is the first law of motion in mechanics, it is as really the first law of
motion in the wrath of God on an eternally separated lost soul. (J. Bailey,
M. A.)
Visions of the day and night
The great beauty and power of the Word of God lies in this, that
it is never obsolete and never out of date.
I. THE QUESTION in
our text. Night is the emblem of ignorance, sorrow, sin, crime, danger, and disaster;
as in the natural night there are different degrees of light and shade, of
gloom and darkness, so it is with the spiritual night.
II. THE ANSWER.
“The morning cometh.”
1. To nations.
2. To individuals. It comes to the awakened and accepted sinner in
the form of pardon and deliverance from the power and burden of sin and guilt.
It comes to others in the form of deliverance from some secret, instinctive,
but crushing sorrow, which has pressed the poor heart down for years; which has
made them, some from physical and some from spiritual weakness, walk for a long
period in gloom and darkness, crying, “Oh! when will it end?”
3. The morning cometh to others in declining years; to the aged, the
afflicted, the dying.
4. “And the night cometh,” when the long-abused love and compassion,
and patience of God shall be at length exhausted; when the plea of mercy shall
be exchanged for the penalty of justice, and the shield of the Advocate give
way to the sword of the Avenger. It cometh to nations; it cometh to individuals.
(G. Davenport.)
Alternations of morning and night
The morning cometh in the appearing of Messiah, the Prince; and
also the night of the exclusion of the Jews. The morning cometh, in the spread
of the Gospel among the Gentile nations; and also the night, in the tenfold
persecutions which wasted the Church. The morning cometh, in the reign of
Constantine the Great over the Roman empire; and also the night of Arian
blasphemy and persecution. The morning cometh, in the reformation of religion
from popery; and also the night of a fearful falling sway. The morning cometh,
more bright and glorious than all which have preceded, in the glory of the
latter days; and also the night of another falling sway before the general
judgment. And then shall a morning burst upon the universe, which shall never
be overcast. (W. Taylor.)
The burden of Dumah
I. THE WORLD’S
QUESTION. In the first instance it is a question put by the Edomites of Mount
Seir to Israel’s watchman. It is worth noting that a people animated with such
hostile feelings should thus open up communication with the objects of their
hostility. Two expiations might be given. It may be they asked the question
tauntingly in a spirit of mockery, or they may have asked it earnestly in a
spirit of anxious inquiry. Either of these views will fit the historical
conditions.
I. If we adopt the
first, we must suppose the Jews to be in captivity and the Edomites prospering,
and we know from history that they did prosper during the Babylonish captivity,
At that time they got possession of a portion of Jewish territory in southern
Palestine, having been permitted to settle there as a reward for their services
to the Babylonians during the struggle that preceded the captivity. While
occupying this new settlement, their fortunes rose, and in the exuberance of
success they retaliated on their now oppressed brethren, as much as to say, You
who boasted of being the special favourites of Heaven, where is now your God?
Your night of oppression has continued long enough, is there any sign of
deliverance? Surely it is time for your God to show His hand! The picture is
something like this: On Mount Seir, the highest eminence in the land, the
Edomites are convened, elated by their fleeting prosperity; while in a foreign
land are the captive Jews, groaning under the yoke of the oppressor, and their
watchman or prophet standing on his watchtower, eager to catch the first ray of
deliverance. From the one to the other passes the taunting, call, “Watchman,
what of the night?” And the watchman returns the reply, “The morning is coming,
and also the night. Do not deceive yourselves, ye taunting Edomites, your
momentary prosperity will become a night of gloom and our present calamities
will be followed by a glorious day. The morning of deliverance will come to the
captive Jews, but the night of desolation to the mocking Edomites.” The
question is still thrown out by the unbeliever with a fling of scorn,
“Watchman, what of the night?” “Tell us what progress you are making, etc.
There are not wanting in these days men who affect to throw discredit on
Christian and missionary effort. Look, say they, how little has been
accomplished by these means in the past, and how much remains to be done.
Instead of the Gospel, let us try civilisation, the spread of commerce, and the
wider diffusion of knowledge, and the morning will soon dawn. Now, if this were
so, it would indeed be a serious charge. But what are the facts! Let it he
conceded that the visible marks of Christian progress are not overwhelming; at
the same time no one who will cast his eyes over the earth can fail to see that
the nations most advanced in civilisation and what is called modern culture are
also the most Christian.
2. Let us think of the question as being asked in a spirit of anxious
inquiry. In this case, the once captive Jews must be regarded as a prosperous
people, living in their own land, and the once prosperous Edomites as an
oppressed People. In their distress they cry to those whom they previously
mocked. But their cry has a different meaning now that the tables have been
turned. “What of the night” now means an earnest desire to know how long their
calamities are likely to last. As if they had said, It has been a night of dire
adversity with us, tell us, you who are a watchman in Zion, is that night
nearly past? We have suffered much, and are longing for relief. Are our
sufferings nearly at an end? If this view is adopted, it is still a question
addressed by the world to the Church; no longer, however, in mockery, but in a
spirit of anxious inquiry. There do come times in the history of godless
nations and individuals, when, in the midst of trouble, they are constrained to
pay homage to the Church, and call upon her for advice. There are in the Bible
several instances of the wicked consulting God’s ministers in times of
calamity. And have we not seen examples of men calling on God in the hour of
calamity, who never bowed a knee to Him in the hour of their prosperity! When
such a question is asked with a true motive, that of itself is an indication to
the watchman that the morning is coming. It is the duty of the spiritual
watchman to declare to the people the whole counsel of the King, to discern
wisely the signs of the times, so as to be able to impart the needed instruction.
II. THE CHURCH’S
REPLY, whether the question is asked by way of taunt or in an earnest spirit.
In either case, the inquirer is assured that the morning of a glorious
deliverance will come to the oppressed Church, while a night of awful
desolation will fall upon her foes.
1. This prophecy was unmistakably fulfilled in the after history of
the Edomites. The morning did come, as the watchman said, and for a short
period the Edomites were a flourishing people in the land of Seir; but they
refused to inquire, they did not return, they wandered further from the path of
righteousness, and the long night of desolation overtook them. The prophecy
regarding it, in Isaiah 34:12-13, has been literally
fulfilled. And this is the inevitable doom of those who will not improve the
day of their merciful visitation--“the night cometh.”
2. But while the watchman’s message to the enemies of the Gospel is
one of woe and warning, he has a message of encouragement to the people of God.
“The morning cometh.” Night and morning! Unlike air, and yet they go hand in
hand. What will be morning to some will be night to others.
3. Yet again, the watchman says, “If ye will inquire, inquire ye.”
Addressed originally to the inquiring Edomites, the words still apply to their
modern successors whether they put their questions in jest or in earnest. The
inquiring spirit here meets with no rebuff, for it is a healthy sign. History
records instances of men who studied the Christian evidences in order to refute
them, and ended by becoming devoted Christians. Religion, so far from shunning
investigation, rather invites it. And if there is a sure solution of his
-perplexities awaiting the critical investigator, there is also an answer that
will satisfy the inquirer after salvation.
4. There is another class of persons to whom the watchman’s
commission extends. To them he says, “return”--a word which may he taken to
refer to backsliders.
5. The text contains one other word--a word of encouragement to all.
This word is, “come”; a word that Jesus, when on earth, was never weary of
uttering, and which He has left behind Him as the Church’s invitation call to
Gospel privileges. (D. Merson, M. A. , B. D.)
The night watchmen Mount Seir
The double question and the doubting reply are well suited to the
changing aspects of nature in a mountain land. To the inhabitants of such
countries, inquiries for the winds and the clouds, the morning and the night,
are as familiar as the words of daily salutation. And the variable condition of
human society, the advance and decline of nations, the concealments and
revelations of Providence, are well illustrated by the darkness and the day,
the shadows and the sunshine among mountains. Such was the history of the
Hebrew nation under the especial guidance of Divine providence in ancient
times. Such has been and still in the history of peoples and opinions in the
European world. The good and the glorious days of Samuel, and David, and
Solomon, and Hezekiah, were followed by the dark and evil days of Saul, and
Jeroboam, and Ahab, and Manasseh- Athanasius and Augustine, Luther and Calvin,
Cranmer and Knox, Whitefield and Wesley, the great champions of truth and
reformation, found their dark shadow and counterpart in Arius and Pelagius,
Loyola and the Inquisition, Voltaire and the French Revolution. The bright dawn
of a better day has always been overcast with dark and angry clouds. And yet
the providence of God is wiser and mightier than the policies of man. The night
which comes with the morning is partial and temporary, although it seems for a
time to devour the day and cut off the hopes of mankind. In the darkest periods
of human history, we need only the clear vision of faith to see the day
approaching. It is ever God’s way to bring light out of darkness, joy out of
sorrow, rest out of weariness, for the waiting and longing soul. (D. March,
D. D.)
Sin the great silencer
The word Dumah means “silence,” “the land of silent desolation.”
It is a very suggestive thought. Sin is the great silencer. The end of sin is
silence. Assuredly that was true in the case of Edom. It was true of it at the
time when the prophet spoke, it was to be true of it still more completely in
the ages to follow. Travellers tell us that if we want to know how Providence
can turn a fruitful land into barrenness, and make a defenced city a heap, for
the iniquity of the inhabitants thereof, we have only to look at Edom, with its
hills and plains picked clean of every vestige of vegetation, and its ruined
palaces, once the home of busy men, now the haunt of vultures and the lair of
scorpions, all human sound gone--the voice of mirth, the voice of gladness, the
voice of the bridegroom, the voice of the bride! But why go to Edom for an illustration?
Look nearer home. Go to any city churchyard. Pass through the iron gates that
divide those strangely contrasted crowds, the throng of the living and the
congregation of the dead. How still! Everything may be orderly, everything
trim--winding walks, flowery borders, spreading shrubs, grassy mounds, careen
monuments white and clean, but all so still, no sound nor motion anywhere, save
the wind that shudders through the yew trees, and the measured chime of the
steeple clock as it tolls its hourly reminder that we too shall be still, still
as the throngs beneath. What makes that stillness? Sin. Sin is the great
silencer, and death is the climax of the silence that it makes. (W. A. Gray.)
The silence of God
It is really a terrible answer, for there can be nothing so
terrible for us on earth as to know that God has nothing to say to us. “O, my
God!” cried Martin Luther, “smite me with famine, with want, with pestilence,
with all the sore diseases on earth, rather than Thou be silent to me.” Yet God
is sometimes thus silent to wicked men and to wicked nations; He is so for
their punishment. “Ephraim is turned unto idols. Let him alone.” (Dean
Patter, D. D.)
Mount Seir; false confidences
Be not too confident in thy Mount Seir! Every wicked soul has her
Mount Seir to trust in; they that have no assurance of rest in heaven, have
their refuges and mountains of help on earth. David so returns it upon the
wicked (Psalms 11:1). “In the Lord put I my
trust: how then say ye to my soul, Flee as a bird to your mountain?” Why should
I seek to foreign helps, that have settled myself in the bosom of rest itself?
Riches are a Mount Seir to the covetous; they rest on them. Honour is a Mount
Seir to the ambitious, against all the besiegings of rivals. Sensuality to the
voluptuous, against all the disturbances of a clamorous conscience. Pride,
fraud, drunkenness, are a Mount Seir to the lovers of them; but alas, how
unsafe! If stronger against, and further removed from the hand of man, yet
nearer to God’s hand in heaven; though we acknowledge no place procul a
Jove, or procul a fulmine,--far from God, or from His thunder. But
we say, it is not the safest sailing on the top of the mast; to live on the
mountainous height of a temporal estate is neither wise nor happy. Men standing
in the shade of humble valleys, look up and wonder at the height of hills, and
think it goodly living there, as Peter thought Tabor; but when with weary limbs
they have ascended, and find the beams of the sun melting their spirits, or the
cold blasts of wind making their sinews stark, flashes of lightning or cracks
of thunder soonest endangering their advanced heads, then they confess,
checking their proud conceit, the low valley is safest; for the fruitful dews
that fall first on the hills stay least while there, but run down to the
valleys. And though on such a promontory a man further sees, and is further
seen, yet in the valley, where he sees less, he enjoys more. Take heed, then, lest
to raise thy Mount Seir high, thou dejectest thy soul. If we build our houses
by unrighteousness, and our chambers without equity, though as strong as Mount
Seir, they shall not be able to stand in the earthquake of judgment. God so
threatens Jehoiakim (Jeremiah 22:15).Think not your houses to
be fortresses, when your souls are unarmed of Christian weapons--faith and
obedience. (T. Adams.)
Edomite scorners
I will single you out four sorts of these Edomites, scorners,--for
I justly parallel them--
1. Atheists: such as have voluntarily, violently, extinguished to
them selves the sunlight of the Scripture, moonlight of the creature, nay, the
sparks and cinders of nature, that the more securely, as unseen and unhidden of
their own hearts, they might prodigally act the works of darkness
2. Epicures: that deny not a God and a day of judgment, but put it
far off Amos 6:3), with, Give me the present,
take thou the hope of future joys.
3. Libertines: that neither affirm no night, nor put it far off, but
only the strength of sin prevails over all; and, come sorrow, death, grave,
hell, they must have their pleasures.
4. Common profane persons: that will suffer themselves to wear God’s
livery, though they serve the devil. (T. Adams.)
Watchman, what of the
night?--
The duty of examining the signs of the times
I. The first thing
which, in reference to this inquiry, the words before us suggest, is, that IT
IS OF THE LORD HIMSELF THE INQUIRY MUST BE MADE. His eye alone seeth under the
whole heaven; and He only knoweth the end from the beginning. Nothing can be
more utterly fallacious than any mere calculation of human probabilities in
regard to the future progress of Divine truth--in regard to the course it may
be destined to run. When Jesus of Nazareth had been put to an ignominious
death, His few and obscure disciples dispersed in terror, and when the handful
of peasants and fishermen who had been the companions of His ministry were shut
up, unnoticed and unknown, in an upper chamber at Jerusalem, who could have
foreseen that the blast of the trumpet, blown by this small and feeble band,
was to shake down the mighty Jericho of that universal heathenism which then
overspread and enslaved the benighted earth? When, fifteen hundred years
thereafter, a poor, emaciated Augustinian monk was wearing himself out in his
gloomy cell in the terrible conflict of an awakened conscience, which all his
self-righteous austerities could not satisfy or soothe, who could have foreseen
that in that single man the Lord was training a soldier, who should confront,
single-handed, the gigantic power of the man of sin, and liberate the half of
Europe from his galling and destructive yoke? But if human sagacity would thus
have been baffled on the one hand by unlooked-for triumphs to the cause of
truth, would it not have been equally confounded on the other by unexpected
defeats? When the day of Gospel light was breaking forth in such glorious
splendour upon the world in apostolic times, who would have ventured to
anticipate that so bright a day was to be succeeded by the dark ages, the long,
dismal, dreary centuries during which the few remaining witnesses prophesied in
sackcloth, amid bonds and stripes, and imprisonments, and death? Again, when
the Lutheran Reformation, like a strong wind out of the clear north, was
sweeping off from the nations the dense cloud of papal superstition, and
revealing once more to their wondering eyes the long-hidden Sun of
righteousness, who would have thought that the horrid cloud would again return
to spread its murky folds over so many of its ancient fields, and that men,
choosing darkness rather than the light, would love to have it so? It is to the
Lord we must turn if we desire to know what is in the womb of time.
II. However
discouraging the aspect of things may, in many points, appear, “THE MORNING
COMETH”--a day of unprecedented brilliancy and joy, when the kingdom and dominion
under the whole heaven shall be given to the Son of man, and when, emancipated
from the strife and turmoil of incessant wars, and enjoying and exhibiting a
foretaste and emblem of the heavenly state, the rest of Zion shall be glorious.
III. WE MUST REJOICE
WITH TREMBLING, FOR WHILE THE MORNING COMETH, THERE COMETH ALSO THE NIGHT. When
the year of recompense for the controversy of Zion shall have come, it will be
a night to her adversaries and oppressors; but to Zion herself it will be a
bright and glorious day. (R. Buchanan, D. D.)
The watchman’s office
I. A watchman must
be DULY AUTHORISED AND APPOINTED TO THE STATION. It is not left to any man to
mount the watchtower at pleasure--to take his round through the streets--or to
challenge the citizens, except he can show a regular commission for the
service. Ezekiel, with all his zeal for his country, and love to his own
people, could not occupy the post of a watchman among them till the God of
Israel made him one (Ezekiel 3:17). Thus a call, a commission,
is indispensably necessary to the exercise of any office in the Church of
Christ, especially of the office of the ministry. But when the call is given
and the appointment conferred, the watchman ought, without gainsaying, to
repair to his box.
II. A watchman
ought to be SAGACIOUS AND QUICK-SIGHTED. A simpleton, or a blind man (Luke 6:39), would be altogether unfit for
a watchman. He could neither descry the enemy as he approached the city, nor
penetrate his mischievous designs, nor alarm the citizens of the impending
danger. The ministers of Christ are accordingly represented in the Revelation
as “full of eyes”; and they have need of all the eyes ascribed to them, that
they may take heed to themselves, and watch over others.
III. VIGILANT. An
indolent and sleepy watchman is a most dangerous officer in a city, especially
in a period of warfare. For, while men sleep, the enemy may occupy the gates,
or mount the walls. The ministers of Christ ought to be very vigilant in
watching over the people; and other officers are to exert themselves in
watching along with them. For, “while men sleep,” the enemy sows his tares of
error, of heresy, and division.
IV. SPIRITED. A
spirited watchman, ever upon the alert, to detect the disorderly, and to
suppress them in their first appearances, is an eminent blessing in his
station. By the spirited exertions of an active watchman, much disorder and
tumult in the streets of a city may be prevented, especially during the night.
So ought the minister of Christ to display a firm and spirited determination to
suppress disorder and vice of every kind, although it should cost him much trouble,
and the strife of tongues against him, in accomplishing his object. It is also
part of the constitutional duty of every good citizen, to assist the watchman,
by all the means in his power, to suppress riot, and check the unruly. Let
private Church members attend to this.
V. Watchmen ought
to be STEADY. They are to occupy their station, to maintain their post, and in
no instance to neglect their duty. The ministers of Christ, in like manner, are
to “be steadfast, unmovable,” etc. (1 Corinthians 15:58). They are “to
watch, to stand fast in the faith, to quit themselves like men and to be
strong.”
VI. Watchmen are to
be COURAGEOUS. A coward would, of all others, be a most unfit person for a
watchman, especially in the night, and when the enemy was at the gates. Such
ought unquestionably to be a prominent qualification of the minister of Christ,
and of all who bear rule in the Church along with him. A trimming, truckling,
temporising humour, to please men, and a dread of giving offence in the
discharge of positive duty, is altogether unsuitable to the condition of those
whose chief attention is to please and honour God.
VII. Watchmen are to
be FAITHFUL. They are neither to betray their trust, by conniving with the
disorderly, nor to expose the city, by keeping silence, while they perceive
danger approaching. This part of the watchman’s character may be often
perverted, as, indeed, what part of it may not? Men may make a great noise and
parade about being faithful and honest, who, in truth, have nothing so much at
heart, as to gratify their own vanity, interest, pride, humour, or favourite
plans of action. But the faithfulness intended by this particular chiefly
respect? plain and honest dealing with the consciences of men. The faithful
servant of the Lord is to warn the transgressor of the error of his ways, and
of the danger of persisting in error.
VIII. Watchmen are to
be FRANK IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE, either to inform the citizen of the hour of the
night, or to guide him on his way. The watchmen of the Old Testament gave the
time of night under that dispensation, and laid themselves out to collect every
information (1 Peter 1:11). The watchmen of the
New Testament are to continue the inquiry into the mind of the Spirit; that
they may tell what of the night--what is the part of prophecy which applies to
the present times--and what the signs of the breaking light of the coming
glory. Such is a very tender and useful department of the spiritual watchman.
He is to guide the bewildered--to encourage and protect such as apprehend
themselves in danger--and to tell them, to the best of his information,
concerning the Friend of sinners. (W. Taylor.)
Aspects of the times
I. The Christian
man has still before him THE UNBELIEF AND IRRELIGION OF THE NIGHT, and yet
there are streaks of sunny dawn.
II. The Christian
man has MUCH IN HIS OWN HISTORY THAT SPEAKS OF THE NIGHT, and yet there is
morning there too.
III. The Christian
man sees that IN NATIONS WHERE THE PURE GOSPEL OF CHRIST PERVADES THE PEOPLE,
WE HAVE THE HOPE OF THE WORLD.
IV. THE CHRISTLESS
MAN MAY ASK, “WHAT OF THE NIGHT?” as well as the Christian. (W. M. Statham.)
A momentous inquiry
I. Let us see how
this inquiry will apply to THE WORLD IN GENERAL The world commenced with a
bright and sinless morning. But early in the history of our race, the power of
the tempter was so successfully wielded, that the bright morning was succeeded
by a day of dark clouds and desolating storms. With the growth of the world’s
population the overspreading darkness grew until God could bear with the
wickedness of the world no more. After the deluge the world started anew from
another head. Old crimes, old corruptions, quickly regained their sway. Long
centuries came and passed away. The moral heavens grew darker as time rolled
by, and as the world’s inhabitants increased in numbers. Here and there only
was there a ray of light shining amid the abounding darkness. Outside of Judea
there was not much to dispel the darkness. Greece, somewhat enlightened,
furnished a Socrates and a Plato. But Greece, because of her crimes and vices,
soon went down to ruin. The once magnificent empires, Egypt, Assyria, Greece,
and Rome, were alike involved in the moral night of error and sin, and their
greatness, once so commanding, and their glory, once so brilliant, have passed
away. Indeed, in all succeeding ages, and among all the peoples of the earth,
the darkness has prevailed. What prospect is there for this sin-darkened world?
We may respond in the words of the prophet: “The morning cometh.” The long
night of captivity, of error, of wrong, of violence shall give place to the
glorious day, wherein the ransomed of the Lord everywhere shall rejoice in that
liberty with which God makes His people free.
II. How will the
inquiry of our text apply to ISAIAH’S TIME? It was indeed for the chosen people
a time of darkness. The Jews were captives in Babylon. Isaiah had a grander
vision and saw another morning. He saw the breaking day, and told of the advent
of the promised Messiah, who was to be the light and the glory of the world.
The vision which Isaiah saw we also are permitted to see. We see the complete
fulfilment of many of the predictions of the prophet. And there are the signs,
which will not fail, that his grandest visions will be realised.
III. How will this
inquiry, “Watchman, what of the night?” apply to our OWN TIMES?
1. Glance for a moment at the progress that has been made in our
times in science and in art.
2. Ours has been a time of moral progress.
3. The religious progress of the world is remarkable.
4. All around us are signs of improvement.
IV. How will this
inquiry, “Watchman, what of the night?” apply to OURSELVES PERSONALLY?
1. There is the night of scepticism, or partial scepticism, in which
some are involved. To the earnest and sincere inquirer the response must be,
“The morning cometh,”
2. There is a night of worldliness. For the worldly the morning
waiteth. Christ stands at the door and knocks. He is the light and the life of
men.
3. There is a night of penitential sorrow. For every awakened,
penitent, and believing one the morning cometh.
4. There is the night of suffering. The morning cometh, when the
wounds of the sorrowing shall be healed, and when their sorrow shall be turned
into joy.
5. The Christian worker may sometimes inquire, “Watchman, what of the
night?” Learn to labour faithfully and to wait.
6. While the morning cometh for all who willingly hear and obey the
Gospel, the night also cometh for the disobedient and unbelieving. (D.
D.Currie.)
Heathen darkness and Gospel light
1. There is something to encourage us in the interest now taken in
missions as compared with a century ago. We can fairly point to what is done
for missions as a proof of the vitality and the power of Christian principles,
evidence at once of the influence which Christianity exerts on its disciples,
and earnest of its ultimate triumph.
2. But looking at the dark night of heathendom in answer to the
question, What of the night? it is scarcely possible to present its condition
in colours that are too dark. We speak of the wickedness of our home
population, and bad enough it is; but if you remember how much is done to
discourage it; how a healthy public opinion rebukes it; how Christianity
grapples with it, and creates an atmosphere which is inimical to its existence,
so that those who practise it are made to feel ashamed; and when you consider,
on the other hand, how in many parts of heathendom wickedness is actually
deified, how the very gods they worship are incarnations of vice, and
personifications of every evil passion; how in many instances licentiousness
and cruelty are enjoined as part of their religious rites,--when you think of
all that, you can understand that the wickedness at home is nothing compared
with that which exists in heathen lands. To some minds the most affecting
consideration of all is the dishonour done to the Almighty by their religious
beliefs and ceremonies.
3. But is the Gospel an appropriate remedy for the evils of which we
speak? You want the world to be brought back to God, and nothing but the Gospel
of Christ will suffice for that. Let men say what they will, the world is not
today what it was when Christianity dawned upon it. Then it was wrapt in total
darkness--a darkness that might be felt. Now the light of the Gospel is
penetrating the darkest parts of the earth, and many nations of the world are
being permeated with and moulded by the influence which it exerts. Moreover, it
is advancing.
4. When the Church enters on her work with the zeal and enthusiasm
which it ought to excite; when she drains her resources, and strains every
nerve to secure success; when she prays, and labours, and toils for it; when
she gives the bulk of her property to it; when she sends out her noblest sons,
and puts forth her best energies, then, perhaps, she may begin to talk about
expecting the conversion of the world! Think of what Christ has done for you,
and then bestir yourselves to take an active interest in this stupendous work,
and to make some sacrifices for its extension. (W. Landels, D. D.)
Inquire ye: return, come
Inquire; return; come
I. INQUIRE.
1. Where? Where should a people inquire, but at their God? (Isaiah 8:19-20).
2. How? With humility, reverence, and desire of knowledge.
3. When? In the morning of thy years. The devil is a false sexton,
and sets the clock too slow, that the night comes ere we be aware. Tarry not,
then, till your piles of usuries, heaps of deceits, mountains of blasphemies,
have caused God to hide Himself, and will not be found. There is a sera
nimis hora, time too late, which Esau fell unluckily into, when “he sought
the blessing with tears, and could not find it.”
II. RETURN from
your sins by repentance.
III. COME home to
God by obedience. (T. Adams.)
Destiny determined by conduct
For ourselves, what need we of oracles? Our future win be in all
essential things exactly as we make it. The sunshine or the shadow of our lives
is less in our surroundings than ourselves. The oracle of God to man is not
silence; St. Paul gave it long ago, God win render to every man according to
his works, etc. Romans 2:6-11). (Dean Farrar, D. D.)
Verses 13-17
The burden upon Arabia
Arabia
The term “Arabia,” in the Old Testament, is not used in such a
wide sense as in modern English, and denotes merely a particular, tribe, having
its home in the northern part of what is now known as the Arabian peninsula,
and mentioned in Ezekiel 27:20-21, by the side of Dedan
and Kedar as engaged in commerce with Tyre.
Isaiah lines a tide of invasion about to overflow the region inhabited by these
tribes, and addresses the Dedanite caravans, warning them that they will have
to turn aside from their customary routes and seek concealment in the forest.
In verse 14, he sees in imagination the natives of Tema bringing food and
water, to the fugitive traders. Tema was the name of a tribe settled in the
same neighbourhood, about 250 miles S.E. of Edom, on the route between Damascus
and Mecca, in a locality in which some interesting inscriptions have recently
been discovered. Within a year, the prophet concludes, the glory of the wealthy
pastoral (Isaiah 9:7) tribe of Kedar--here used so
as to include by implication its less influential neighbours--will be past, and
of its warriors only an insignificant remnant will survive. (Prof. S. R.
Driver, D. D.)
The Bedawin
These were the carriers of the world’s commerce in the days before
railways were introduced. As country after, country was feeling the
consequences of the advance of Nineveh, these merchantmen would be the first to
hear the news wire rearm, and in many cases to give timely assistance. But
these weakly defended caravans would not stand long before the armies of
Sargon. (B. Blake, B. D.)
Verse 16-17
Within a year, according to the years of an hireling, sad all the
glory of Kedar shall fail
End of the year: a warning and a lesson
I.
A
TERRIBLE THREATENING. We have here a prophecy of the fall of a nation, which
had held a proud position by reason of prowess and skill in war. But glory
founded on physical strength, upon wealth, or upon power, may speedily fade
away. With all the study of economics we seem to know but little even now, and
we have found, many times of late, how trifling a matter may lead to the
overthrow of existing engagements and conditions. Much less stable is the glory
of a nation built upon the strength of its arms. A nation’s glory is safe only
when it is founded upon righteousness and obedience to God.
II. A TIME FIXED.
“Within a year.” How different the feeling in looking back over a year and
looking forward! The retrospect--bow short a time, how quickly passed, how
little done, and yet what changes have taken place! How the number of the
mighty have diminished! The prospect--what a long time, what hopes we have,
what possibilities are in it! To us as a nation, to us in our families, to us
as persons. Are we prepared for them! The fall of the glory of Kedar was
announced to come within the year. Forbearance must have its limits. A boundary
to life, to sin, to indulgence; but within a given period the time of reckoning
must he fixed.
III. THE ATTITUDE WE
SHOULD ADOPT. Standing on the threshold of a new year, let us consider our
position. Certain it is that some will fall “within the year.” Men shall be
diminished. Let our influence, by example and precept, be exerted to found our
national glory, not upon our skill in arms, on our insular position, on our
wealth, but upon true obedience to God. The number of those who form the glory
of the Church will be diminished this year. Are the younger people preparing
themselves to fill the vacant places? There is a warning here, that those who
trust in aught but in Jehovah will find their glory naught but folly. There is
also encouragement. “The God of Israel hath spoken it.” To him that walketh
uprightly and serveth God humbly, shall glory be revealed from day to day,
until the full glory of God is revealed to us in the life beyond. (Frank
Mabin.)
“According the years of an hireling”
In a year’s time, calculated as exactly as is the custom between
employers and employed, Kedar’s freedom, military strength, numbers, and wealth
shall have vanished. (F. Delitzsch.)
“The number of archers”
They [the sons of Kedar] are numbered hero, not by heads, but by
bows, so specifying the fighting men--a mode of numbering common, e.g.,
among the Indians of America. (F. Delitzsch.)
“Within a year”
A sensible person said he could never covet the office of chief
magistrate of London, because that honour continued only one year. Might not
the idea be justly extended to all the honours and enjoyments of this life?
None of them are permanent. (Anon.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》