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Isaiah Chapter
Twenty-six
Isaiah 26
Chapter Contents
The Divine mercies encourage to confidence in God. (1-4)
His judgments. (5-11) His people exhorted to wait upon Him. (12-19) Deliverance
promised. (20,21)
Commentary on Isaiah 26:1-4
(Read Isaiah 26:1-4)
"That day," seems to mean when the New Testament
Babylon shall be levelled with the ground. The unchangeable promise and
covenant of the Lord are the walls of the church of God. The gates of this city
shall be open. Let sinners then be encouraged to join to the Lord. Thou wilt
keep him in peace; in perfect peace, inward peace, outward peace, peace with
God, peace of conscience, peace at all times, in all events. Trust in the Lord
for that peace, that portion, which will be for ever. Whatever we trust to the
world for, it will last only for a moment; but those who trust in God shall not
only find in him, but shall receive from him, strength that will carry them to
that blessedness which is for ever. Let us then acknowledge him in all our
ways, and rely on him in all trials.
Commentary on Isaiah 26:5-11
(Read Isaiah 26:5-11)
The way of the just is evenness, a steady course of
obedience and holy conversation. And it is their happiness that God makes their
way plain and easy. It is our duty, and will be our comfort, to wait for God,
to keep up holy desires toward him in the darkest and most discouraging times.
Our troubles must never turn us from God; and in the darkest, longest night of
affliction, with our souls must we desire him; and this we must wait and pray
to him for. We make nothing of our religion, whatever our profession may be, if
we do not make heart-work of it. Though we come ever so early, we shall find
God ready to receive us. The intention of afflictions is to teach righteousness:
blessed is the man whom the Lord thus teaches. But sinners walk contrary to
him. They will go on in their evil ways, because they will not consider what a
God he is whose laws they persist in despising. Scorners and the secure will
shortly feel, what now they will not believe, that it is a fearful thing to
fall into the hands of the living God. They will not see the evil of sin; but
they shall see. Oh that they would abandon their sins, and turn to the Lord,
that he may have mercy upon them.
Commentary on Isaiah 26:12-19
(Read Isaiah 26:12-19)
Every creature, every business, any way serviceable to
our comfort, God makes to be so; he makes that work for us which seemed to make
against us. They had been slaves of sin and Satan; but by the Divine grace they
were taught to look to be set free from all former masters. The cause opposed
to God and his kingdom will sink at last. See our need of afflictions. Before,
prayer came drop by drop; now they pour it out, it comes now like water from a
fountain. Afflictions bring us to secret prayer. Consider Christ as the Speaker
addressing his church. His resurrection from the dead was an earnest of all the
deliverance foretold. The power of his grace, like the dew or rain, which
causes the herbs that seem dead to revive, would raise his church from the
lowest state. But we may refer to the resurrection of the dead, especially of
those united to Christ.
Commentary on Isaiah 26:20,21
(Read Isaiah 26:20,21)
When dangers threaten, it is good to retire and lie hid;
when we commend ourselves to God to hide us, he will hide us either under
heaven or in heaven. Thus we shall be safe and happy in the midst of
tribulations. It is but for a short time, as it were for a little moment; when
over, it will seem as nothing. God's place is the mercy-seat; there he delights
to be: when he punishes, he comes out of his place, for he has no pleasure in
the death of sinners. But there is hardly any truth more frequently repeated in
Scripture, than God's determined purpose to punish the workers of iniquity. Let
us keep close to the Lord, and separate from the world; and let us seek comfort
in secret prayer. A day of vengeance is coming on the world, and before it
comes we are to expect tribulation and suffering. But because the Christian
looks for these things, shall he be restless and dismayed? No, let him repose
himself in his God. Abiding in him, the believer is safe. And let us wait
patiently the fulfilling of God's promises.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 26
Verse 1
[1] In
that day shall this song be sung in the land of Judah; We have a strong city;
salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks.
In that day ¡X
When God shall do such glorious works, as are described in the foregoing
chapter.
Sung ¡X In
the church of God.
A city ¡X
Jerusalem, or the church, which is often compared to a city.
For walls ¡X
God's immediate and saving protection shall be to his church instead of walls.
Verse 2
[2] Open ye the gates, that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth may
enter in.
The gates ¡X Of
the city, mentioned verse 1.
The nation ¡X
The whole body of righteous men, whether Jews or Gentiles. For he seems to
speak here, as he apparently did in the foregoing chapter, of the times of the
gospel.
Keepeth truth ¡X
Which is sincere in the true religion.
Verse 4
[4]
Trust ye in the LORD for ever: for in the LORD JEHOVAH is everlasting strength:
For ever ¡X In
all times and conditions.
Verse 5
[5] For
he bringeth down them that dwell on high; the lofty city, he layeth it low; he
layeth it low, even to the ground; he bringeth it even to the dust.
On high ¡X He
speaks not so much of height of place, as of dignity and power, in which sense
also he mentions the lofty city in the next clause.
Lofty city ¡X
Which may be understood either of proud Babylon, or of all the strong and
stately cities of God's enemies.
Verse 6
[6] The foot shall tread it down, even the feet of the poor, and the steps of
the needy.
The needy ¡X
God will bring it under the feet of his poor, and weak, and despised people.
Verse 7
[7] The
way of the just is uprightness: thou, most upright, dost weigh the path of the
just.
Thou ¡X O
God, who art upright in all thy ways, and therefore a lover of uprightness, and
of all upright men, dost weigh (examine) the path of the just, the course of
his actions, and, which is implied, dost approve of them, and therefore direct
them to an happy issue.
Verse 9
[9] With
my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea, with my spirit within me will I
seek thee early: for when thy judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of
the world will learn righteousness.
In the night ¡X
When others are sleeping, my thoughts and desires are working towards God.
Early ¡X
Betimes in the morning.
For ¡X
And good reason it is that we should thus desire and seek thee in the way of
thy judgments, because this is the very design of thy judgments, that men
should thereby be awakened to learn and return to their duty; and this is a
common effect, that those who have been careless in prosperity, are made wiser
and better by afflictions.
Verse 10
[10] Let
favour be shewed to the wicked, yet will he not learn righteousness: in the
land of uprightness will he deal unjustly, and will not behold the majesty of
the LORD.
Will not learn ¡X
This is the carriage of thy people; but the course of wicked men is directly
contrary in all conditions: for if thou dost spare them, they will not accept
of that gracious invitation to repentance.
In the land ¡X
Even in God's church, and among his people, where righteousness is taught and
practised.
Will not behold ¡X Tho'
God gives such plain discoveries of his majesty and glory, not only in his
word, but also in works, and especially in this glorious work of his patience
and mercy to wicked men, yet they will not acknowledge it.
Verse 11
[11]
LORD, when thy hand is lifted up, they will not see: but they shall see, and be
ashamed for their envy at the people; yea, the fire of thine enemies shall
devour them.
Will not see ¡X
And they are guilty of the same obstinate blindness when thou dost smite and
punish them, which is commonly signified by lifting up the hand.
They shall see ¡X
They shall know that by sad experience, which they would not learn by easier
ways.
These ¡X
Such fire or wrath as thou usest to pour forth upon thine implacable enemies.
Verse 12
[12]
LORD, thou wilt ordain peace for us: for thou also hast wrought all our works
in us.
Our works ¡X
All the good works done by us, are the effects of thy grace.
Verse 13
[13] O
LORD our God, other lords beside thee have had dominion over us: but by thee
only will we make mention of thy name.
Other lords ¡X
Others besides thee, and besides those governors who have been set up by thee,
even foreign and heathen lords.
By thee ¡X By
thy favour and help.
Will we ¡X
Celebrate thy praise.
Verse 14
[14] They
are dead, they shall not live; they are deceased, they shall not rise:
therefore hast thou visited and destroyed them, and made all their memory to
perish.
Rise ¡X
Those tyrants are destroyed; they shall never live or rise again to molest us.
Verse 15
[15] Thou
hast increased the nation, O LORD, thou hast increased the nation: thou art
glorified: thou hadst removed it far unto all the ends of the earth.
The nation ¡X
This nation seems to be the people of Israel.
Removed ¡X
Thou hast removed thy people out of their own land, and suffered them to be
carried captive to the ends of the earth.
Verse 16
[16]
LORD, in trouble have they visited thee, they poured out a prayer when thy
chastening was upon them.
They ¡X
Thy people.
Visited ¡X
Come into thy presence, with their prayers and supplications.
Verse 17
[17] Like
as a woman with child, that draweth near the time of her delivery, is in pain,
and crieth out in her pangs; so have we been in thy sight, O LORD.
Like ¡X
Such was our anguish and danger.
Verse 18
[18] We
have been with child, we have been in pain, we have as it were brought forth
wind; we have not wrought any deliverance in the earth; neither have the
inhabitants of the world fallen.
We ¡X We have had the
torment of a woman in child-bearing, but not the comfort of a living child, for
we have brought forth nothing but wind; all our labours and hopes were
unsuccessful.
The world ¡X
The Assyrians, or our other enemies.
Verse 19
[19] Thy
dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise. Awake and
sing, ye that dwell in dust: for thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth
shall cast out the dead.
Thy ¡X
The prophet here turns his speech to God's people, and gives them a cordial in
their distress. Thy dead men are not like those, verse 14, for they shall not live; but thine shall
live. You shall be delivered from all your fears and dangers.
My dead body ¡X As
I myself, who am one of these dead men, shall live again; you shall be
delivered together with me.
Awake ¡X
Out of your sleep, even the sleep of death, you that are dead and buried in the
dust.
Thy dew ¡X
The favour and blessing of God upon thee.
The dew ¡X
Which makes them grow and flourish.
Verse 20
[20]
Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee:
hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the indignation be overpast.
Shut thy doors ¡X
Withdraw thyself from the world, and pour out thy prayers to God in thy closet.
Indignation ¡X
The dreadful effects of God's anger, mentioned in the following verse.
Verse 21
[21] For,
behold, the LORD cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the earth
for their iniquity: the earth also shall disclose her blood, and shall no more
cover her slain.
Cometh ¡X
Cometh down from heaven.
To punish ¡X
All the enemies of God, and of his people.
Her slain ¡X
The innocent blood which hath been spilled upon the earth shall be brought to
light, and severely revenged upon the murderers.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
26 Chapter 26
Verse 1
Verses
1-10
In that day shall this song be sung
Periods of restoration
If it be demanded, what period of time is this which the prophet
speaks of?
we must answer, that it is the time when the people, who for their provocations
were thrown into the furnace of affliction, and had continued in it till they
were purged from their sins, were delivered from it, and restored to the favour
of God, and the enjoyment of His former mercies. Of which restoration there are
three kinds or degrees plainly spoken of by the prophet Isaiah.
1. The Jews¡¦ return from the
land of their captivity, especially that of Babylon.
2. The restoration of the
family and kingdom of David in the person of the Messiah.
3. The perfect felicity of
that kingdom in astute of future glory. (W. Reading, M. A.)
Three elements in prophecy
All true prophecy, seems to have in it three elements: conviction,
imagination, inspiration. The seer speaks first of all from his knowledge of,
and experience with, the inherent vitality of right and righteousness. He is
sure that the good in the world is destined to conquer the evil. Then when he
attempts to tell how this victory is to be brought about he uses his
imagination. He employs metaphors and figures which from the necessities of the
case may not be literally fulfilled. And then, in addition to this, his
prophecies have in them a certain comprehensiveness of plan and structure, and
a certain organic relation to history, such as can be revealed only by the
Divine Maker of history Himself. It took a man of large parts to see above the
wreck and ruin, and through the darkness of his age, such visions of hope and
promise as Isaiah saw. Everywhere around him were sensuality and oppression.
The Church of the true God had been almost swallowed up by the foul dragon of
paganism. And yet the prophet, with his eye upon the future, beheld a day when
this song was to be sung in the land of Judah: the song of salvation.
Sure he was that God must triumph, and with the poet¡¦s instinct he
clothed his assurance in the language of metaphor, and set it to the rhythm of
song. (C. A. Dickinson.)
The triumph of goodness
1. Those who study this song
in the light of succeeding history find in it the picture of the ultimate
triumph of the Church. The central figure is the strong city, the walls and
bulwarks of which are salvation, and through whose open gates the righteous
nation which keepeth the truth is allowed to enter. This picture reminds us at
once of that vision of the new Jerusalem which fell upon the eyes of the seer
of Patmos many years after, and which was evidently the type and symbol of the
perfected kingdom of Christ. To attempt to give to this strong city and this
new Jerusalem a literal and material significance is to involve ourselves in
inextricable difficulties.
2. There are two views
concerning the progress and ultimate triumph of Christianity in the world. In
some respects these views are the same; in others they differ radically.
3. I am well aware that those
who claim that the world is fast ripening in evil for its final catastrophe can
point to many facts which seem to substantiate their theory. But just here, it
seems to me, comes in one of their greatest mistakes. There is, of course,
danger of generalising too much, but there is certainly great danger of
allowing some near fact to blind the eyes to the great general truth which lies
beyond it; to hold the sixpence so near the eye that we cannot see the sun.
There is danger of confining our thoughts so exclusively to certain specific
texts as to get a wrong conception of the real truth of which these special
texts may be only a small part. Now, what are some of the signs that we are
living today in an age of conquest?
4. I believe that we are in
the midst of mighty spiritual forces which are working successfully for the
redemption of this world from sin; and I have two great incentives to spur me
on to earnest effort.
We have a strong city
A city the emblem of security
To understand this figure of a city we must remember what a city
was in the earlier ages; i.e., a portion of land separate from the
general surface, in which the people of a locality gathered, and put their
homes into a condition of safety by building walls of immense strength, which
should both resist the attacks of enemies and, to a great extent, defy the
ravages of time. Such a city, then, was the emblem of security. (R. H.
Davies.)
The song of salvation
I. THE GROUND OF REJOICING.
Salvation; and consequently eternal security. ¡§We have a strong city.¡¨ All
God¡¦s people are represented as citizens; the whole sainthood is represented as
a corporate assemblage of people possessed of peculiar privileges, connected
with an eternal condition, and as such are to dwell in some region of safety
and bliss. Here they find not such an abode. Here they have ¡§no continuing
city, but seek one to come.¡¨ And, when they shall be gathered together in the
presence of their Lord, they will constitute the body to form a city.
II. THE CHARACTER OF THOSE WHO
ARE TO PARTAKE OF THESE BLESSINGS. ¡§The righteous nation which keepeth the
truth.¡¨ (R. H. Davies.)
Salvation
Salvation, i.e., freedom and safety. The original sense of
the word rendered ¡§salvation¡¨ (as Arabic shows) is breadth, largeness, absence
of constraint. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Saving health
(1) Political theorists have
been fond of picturing an ideal State, the government of which would be
perfect.
1. The first thought
suggested in this connection is that the city should be a clean place to live
in, healthy from end to end and in every corner, each house in it a fitting
abode for sons of God and daughters of the King. When we pass from the
sanitation of the city to the saving health of the citizen, we think first of
his body, and recognise the necessity of having all the conditions as conducive
as possible to its health.
2. But clearly we cannot stop
there. We must have the ¡§mens sana in corpore sane¡¨; hence the need of
universal education, to secure intellectual sanity.
3. Nor may we end here, for
moral sanity, a sound conscience, is even still more important. The nation must
be a righteous nation.
4. Clearly, there must be
sanitation for the will before we have reached saving health; and inasmuch as
the will is swayed by desire, the sanitation must reach the heart. What
sanitary measures could we here summon to our aid? The purest water will not
cleanse the heart; the most bracing air will have no effect upon the soul.
There must be a fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness, and some breath of
God for inspiration to the soul.
5. And here we reach the
prophet¡¦s highest, dominating thought. ¡§In that day,¡¨ the passage begins. What
day? Look back (Isaiah 25:9). ¡§It shall be said in
that day, Lo, this is our God, we have waited for Him, and He will save us.¡¨
And look forward (Isaiah 26:4), ¡§Trust ye in the Lord
forever, for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength.¡¨ ¡§Lord, Thou wilt
ordain peace for us; for Thou also hast wrought all our works in us¡¨ (Isaiah 26:12). This introduces us to
one of the most important questions of the day. There are many, sound and
strong on the subject of righteousness, who yet fail to realise that
righteousness is so bound up with saving truth--that truth of God and His
salvation through Jesus Christ His Son, and by His Holy Spirit breathed in
human hearts, which they sometimes offensively set aside as mere dogma--that
the one cannot be had where it does not exist already, and cannot be retained
long where it does without the other. ¡§Open ye the gates that the righteous
nation which keepeth the truth may enter in.¡¨
6. How can we open or help to
open these gates of national strength and saving health? For individual action
the answer would be such as this: First, by loving truth and keeping
righteousness ourselves; next, by doing all we can to help others to a life of
godliness and righteousness; further, by earnest and frequent prayer to Him who
gave of old the promise, ¡§I will open to you the two-leaved gates¡¨; and lastly,
by the faithful exercise of the privileges of citizens, seeing to it that in
the forming of our opinions, in the giving of our votes, in the use of all our
influence, not selfish interest, or class interest, or even party interest, but
the interests of righteousness and truth be the determining factor. But
individual action is not enough. We must combine; we must bring our united
force to bear. And here the main reliance must be on the Church of Christ, on
which is laid the responsibility of carrying on His great work of salvation. (J.
M.Gibson, D. D.)
Our strong city
There are three things here--
I. THE CITY. No doubt the
prophet was thinking of the literal Jerusalem, but the city is ideal, as is
shown by the bulwarks which defend, and by the qualifications which permit entrance.
And so we must pass beyond the literalities of Palestine, and must not apply
the symbol to any visible institution or organisation if we are to come to the
depth and greatness of the meaning of these words. No Church which is organised
amongst men can be the New Testament representation of this strong city. And if
the explanation is to be looked for in that direction at all, it can only be
the invisible aggregate of ransomed souls which is regarded as being the Zion
of the prophecy. But, perhaps, even that is too definite and hard. And we are
rather to think of the unseen but existent order of things or polity to which
men here on earth may belong, and which will one day, after shocks and
convulsions that shatter all which is merely institutional and human, be
manifested still more gloriously. The central thought that was moving in the
prophet¡¦s mind is of the indestructible vitality of the true Israel, and the
order which it represented, of which Jerusalem on its rock was but to him a
symbol. And thus for us the lesson is that, apart altogether from the existing
and visible order of things in which we dwell, there is a polity to which we
may belong, for ¡§ye are come unto Mount Zion, the city of the living God,¡¨ and
that order is indestructible. There is a lesson for us, in times of
fluctuation, of change of opinion, of shaking of institutions, and of new
social, economical, and political questions, threatening day by day to
reorganise society. ¡§We have a strong city¡¨; and whatever may come--and much destructive
will come, and much that is venerable and antique, rooted in men¡¦s prejudices,
and having survived through and oppressed the centuries, will have to go, but
God¡¦s polity, His form of human society, of which the perfect ideal and
antitype, so to speak, lies concealed in the heavens, is everlasting. And for
Christian men in revolutionary epochs the only worthy temper is the calm,
triumphant expectation that through all the dust, contradiction, and
distraction the fair city of God will be brought nearer and made more manifest
to man. To this city--existent, immortal, and waiting to be revealed--you and I
may belong today.
II. THE DEFENCES. ¡§Salvation
will God appoint for walls and bulwarks.¡¨ This ¡§evangelical prophet¡¨ is
distinguished by the fulness and depth which he attaches to that word
¡§salvation.¡¨ He all but anticipates the New Testament completeness and fulness
of meaning, and lifts it from all merely material associations of earthly or
transitory deliverance into the sphere in which we are accustomed to regard it
as especially moving. By ¡§salvation¡¨ he means, and we mean, not only negative
but positive blessings. Negatively, it includes the removal of every
conceivable or endurable evil, whether they be evils of sin or evils of sorrow;
and positively, the investiture with every possible good that humanity is
capable of, whether it be good of goodness or good of happiness. This is what
the prophet tells us is the wall and bulwark of his ideal real city. Mark the
eloquent omission of the name of the builder of the wall. ¡§God¡¨ is a
supplement. Salvation ¡§will He appoint for walls and bulwarks.¡¨ No need to say
who it is that flings such a fortification around the city. There is only one
hand that can trace the lines of such walls; only one hand that can pile their
stones; only one that can lay them, as the walls of Jericho were laid, in the
blood of His first-born Son. ¡§Salvation will He appoint for walls and
bulwarks,¡¨ i.e., in a highly imaginative and picturesque form, that the
defence of the city is God Himself. The fact of salvation is the wall and the
bulwark. And the consciousness of the fact is for our poor hearts one of our
best defences against both the evil of sin and the evil of sorrow. So, let us
walk by the faith that is always confident, though it depends on an unseen
hand. ¡§Salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks,¡¨ and if we realise,
as we ought to do, His purpose and His power to keep us safe, and the actual
operation of His hand keeping us safe at every moment, we shall not ask that
these defences shall be supplemented by the poor feeble earthworks that sense
can throw up.
III. THE CITIZENS. Our text is
part of a ¡§song,¡¨ and is not to be interpreted in the cold-blooded fashion that
might suit prose. A voice, coming from whom we know not, breaks in upon the
first strain with a command, addressed to whom we know not. ¡§Open ye the
gates¡¨--the city thus far being supposed to be empty,--¡§that the righteous
nation which keepeth the truth may enter in.¡¨ The central idea there is just this,
¡§Thy people shall be all righteous.¡¨ The one qualification for entrance into
the city is absolute purity. Now, that is true in regard of our present
imperfect denizenship within the city; and it is true in regard to men¡¦s
passing into it, in its perfect and final form. They used to say that Venice
glass was so made that any poison poured into it shivered the vessel. Any drop
of sin poured into your cup of communion with God shatters the cup and spills
the wine. Whosoever thinks himself a citizen of that great city, if he falls
into transgression, and soils the cleanness of his hands, and ruffles the calm
of his pure heart by self-willed sinfulness, will wake to find himself not
within the battlements, but lying wounded, robbed, solitary, in the pitiless
desert. ¡§The nation which keepeth the truth,¡¨--that does not mean adherence to
any revelation, or true creed, or the like. The word which is employed means,
not truth of thought, but truth of character; and might, perhaps, be better
represented by the more familiar word in such a connection, ¡§faithfulness¡¨ A
man who is true to God, that keeps up a faithful relation to Him who is
faithful to us, he, and only he, will tread and abide in the city. (A.
Maclaren, D. D.)
The walls and bulwarks of a city
Accepting the vague but universal idea that there is an abundance
of sin of every sort massed together in any great city, our inquiry concerns
the main lines of work by which the welfare of the city may be promoted. To the
eye of the prophet there comes a vision of a strong city; and the walls and
bulwarks of that strength is said to be salvation--that is, the strength and
safety of a city is in the men and women in it who are saved through the
atoning sacrifice of Christ. I know there are many to turn a deaf ear to any
such claim as this. They reject it as being too sweeping. They say that there
are many sources from which the life-giving waters come. Let us take a look at
some of these things which are supposed to give safety.
I. And perhaps the first
thing to be mentioned is Law. It need not be any highly moral or religious
enactment, but simply plain, everyday, matter-of-fact law. The city needs it.
People in the simplicity of country life, where there is an abundance of room,
can get on without much law. But the city needs law. And no one will decry the
beneficent effect of righteous laws. It must be said, however, that the good
effect of law is very much diminished by the many bad laws which are enacted.
Are we claiming too much when we say that largely the efficiency of law is due
to the Christian men and women who are in the city? Righteous laws follow in
the train of progress made by Christianity. The bulwark which at first seemed
to stand out alone and distinct becomes identified with that bulwark in the vision
of the prophet whose foundation stone, as well as its lofty capstone, is
salvation.
II. We are led on to speak of
another bulwark for the city. It is A BENEFICENT AND POWERFUL PUBLIC OPINION.
But again, I assert that very largely all this safety is due to the presence in
the city of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. There is the public conscience itself,
and where did it come from but through Christianity?
III. But again, look at another
so-called secular bulwark. Call it THRIFT, the genius of success, the ability
to get on in the world. Thrift is consistent with pure selfishness. Find a
society in which everybody is only thrifty, where no man cares for his
neighbour, where the human heart feels nothing of the flow of generosity and
love, and, while you may be able to point to fine and well-kept houses, neat
little cottages, well-dressed, clean children, you are really looking upon a
hollow, lifeless sham. I do not want to live there, A sea of poverty with a
little stream from Calvary flowing into it would be far better. Just a touch of
human sympathy and love would transform the whole. (J. C. Cronin.)
A song of salvation
I. What is the PERIOD
referred to? A day which was to he remarkable for the destruction of the
Church¡¦s enemies, for the salvation of her friends, and for the glorious
extension of the Gospel through all the nations of the earth.
II. What is the SUBJECT of
this song? ¡§We have a strong city: salvation will God appoint for walls and
bulwarks.¡¨ The inviolable security of the Church was to be the subject.
III. WHERE is this song to be
sung? ¡§In the land of Judah.¡¨ It was sung when the great salvation was
accomplished by the one offering of Christ upon the Cross; and the risen
Saviour said to His disciples, ¡§Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel
to every creature¡¨; and the tidings were sent abroad; and the Gospel, which was
first preached at Jerusalem, was sounded forth into all lands. And we cannot
but indulge the confident persuasion, that among the Jews, though they are for
the present cast out, this song shall be sung in due time, which shall be ¡§as
life from the dead.¡¨ But as that people have long since been cut off because of
their unbelief, we remark, that the words will apply to others also; ¡§for he is
not a Jew which is one outwardly,¡¨ etc. So that this song comes down to us. (G.
Clayton.)
The Church not in danger
I. THE FIGURATIVE DESCRIPTION
WHICH IS HERE GIVEN OF THE CHURCH.
1. It is a city; from which
metaphor we obtain three ideas respecting it--
2. But this city has an important
appellative;--it is ¡§a strong city.¡¨ And this will appear, if you consider--
II. ITS IMPREGNABLE SAFETY.
How do I know that this city shall continue, and its interests be advanced,
until its glory is consummated? Why, for this reason: ¡§Salvation will God
appoint for walls and bulwarks.¡¨
1. Hostility is implied.
2. The means of preservation
and defence are amply provided.
3. It implies a glorious
issue. All these means shall prove effectual
III. HOW MAY WE HAVE A
SATISFACTORY ASSURANCE THAT WE HAVE PERSONALLY AN INTEREST IN THIS CITY OF THE
GREAT KING? You may have this--
1. If you have chosen Jesus
Christ as the ground of your dependence for salvation.
2. If you are visibly
incorporated with the inhabitants of this city.
3. If you are enabled to exemplify
the distinguishing character of those who are citizens of Zion.
4. If you find that you have
truly merged all your interests in the interests of the Church, and have
identified your happiness with her successes.
5. If you find your thoughts
and affections much engaged on that future State of which the Church on earth
is but a type.
Conclusion--
1. Let me call upon you to be
thankful to God, who has afforded you such an asylum.
2. Let me invite you to enter
this city.
3. Let us dismiss our fears,
when we have once got within the walls of this city.
4. Endeavour to bring as many
as you can to be inhabitants of that Zion, the privileges of which you enjoy. (J.
C. Cronin.)
The saving arm of God a sure defences to the Church of Christ
against all her enemies
I. Mention some of those
ENEMIES against whom the Church is fortified.
1. She is fortified against
all the attempts of Satan.
2. A wicked world is always
disposed to take part with Sam against her.
3. The Church has enemies
within her own walls; and is often in the greatest perils by false brethren.
4. The Church has enemies
even in the hearts of her best friends and sincerest members. That principle of
corruption that is not totally subdued in the best Christians, as it is
inimical to God, must also be inimical to the Church; and, as far as it
prevails, its effects must be always hurtful to her.
II. Speak of that SALVATION
which God has promised to appoint for walls and bulwarks to the Church.
1. Salvation bears an evident
relation to misery and danger.
2. It is but a partial
salvation that she can hope to enjoy in this world:--
3. But her salvation shall
one day be complete. From every salvation that God has already wrought, faith
draws encouragement: considering it as a pledge of what He will work in time to
come.
III. CONSIDER WHAT ABOUT THE
CHURCH IS SECURED AGAINST THE ATTEMPTS OF ENEMIES BY THE SALVATION OF GOD. She
may lose much of what may appear to a carnal eye as most valuable to her. But
in the eye of the Church herself, and of all her genuine children, all this
perfectly consistent with the all-sufficiency of that salvation by which she is
defended. An is still safe that is necessary either to her being or her
well-being, and all that is essential to the happiness of any of her citizens.
1. Her foundation is always
safe. She is ¡§built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus
Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone.¡¨
2. Her existence is always
safe. The Church may be driven into the wilderness; but she shall never be
driven out of the world.
3. Her particular citizens
are all safe, under the protection of God¡¦s saving arm.
4. Her privileges and
immunities are all safe. These having been purchased for her by the blood of
Christ, and bestowed upon nor by His God and Father, are also preserved by
Divine power and grace; and none shall ever be suffered to deprive her of them.
5. Her treasures are all
safe. She has a two-fold treasure: a treasure of grace, and a treasure of
truth. Both these are lodged in the hand of Christ.
6. Her real interests are all
safe and secure: and that to such a degree, that neither shall she suffer any
harm, in the issue,--nor shall her enemies gain any advantage, by all their
apparent success.
7. In a word, her eternal
inheritance is perfectly safe and secure.
IV. Conclude with some
IMPROVEMENT of what has been said.
1. The Church of Christ has
but little occasion for the favour and protection of earthly princes, and
little cause to regret the want of it.
2. It is neither upon ordinances
nor instruments, upon her own endeavours nor those of her members, nor upon any
created assistance that the Church of Christ ought to depend for safety or
prosperity.
3. Neither the Church of God,
nor any particular Christian, has anything to fear from the number, the power,
the policy, or even the success of their enemies,
4. This subject informs us
what it is that really brings the Church of Christ into danger. Nothing but her
own sin can bring her into real danger; because this, and nothing else, tends
to deprive her of her protection, or to cause her defence to depart from her.
5. We may here see plentiful
encouragement to every member of the Church, as well as to those who bear
office in her, to continue strenuous and undaunted, in opposing every enemy, in
defending every privilege, that God has bestowed upon the Church, every
ordinance that He has instituted in her, and every truth that He has revealed
to her.
6. We have here an ample fund
of consolation to all those who are affected with the low condition of the
Church of God in our day. (J. Young.)
The city of salvation
In the Scriptures we read of some very strong cities, that are now
levelled with the dust. But the ¡§city¡¨ mentioned in the text is stronger than
all the rest. The state of nature may be called the city-of-destruction; and
the state of grace, the strong city, or the city of salvation.
I. The NAME of this city.
¡§Salvation.¡¨ It is a very old name, it has had this name a great many thousands
of years; it has never changed its name; it is a durable name; it is an
unchangeable name.
II. What KIND of a city it is.
1. It is a large city. It
would hold all the inhabitants of the earth for thousands of generations.
2. It is a free city. The
Lord Jesus Christ welcomes you to come and live in it.
3. It is a wealthy city. The
treasures of free grace are in the city of salvation.
4. It is a healthy city. They
breathe good air who live in it. The Physician is the Lord Jesus Christ, who
heals every disease.
5. It is a happy city.
6. This city will last foe
ever. Where is Babylon? Where is Tyre? Where is Nineveh? Where are the cities
of Egypt? Those mighty cities are levelled with the dust, but this city will
last through all eternity.
III. The BUILDER of this city.
The Lord Jesus Christ. In London there is a constant succession of streets for
many miles in length, and the whole was built by man.
IV. Who are the INHABITANTS of
this city? They are good men, women, and children.
1. They are called ¡§saints.¡¨
The word ¡§saint¡¨ means a holy person.
2. Another name given to the
inhabitants of this city is righteous.
3. Another name is believers.
4. Another name is sons and
daughters.
V. The WATCHMEN of the city.
There are watchmen placed upon the walls of Zion--parental watchmen, teaching
watchmen, and ministerial watchmen.
VI. The GUARDS of the city.
Angels guard you while you sleep and while you are awake. They are wise guards;
powerful guards; affectionate guards.
VII. The WAY which leads to
this city. The road of repentance.
VIII. The WALL of this city. It
is so high that no enemy can scale it; it is so strong that no enemy can break
or injure it.
IX. The FOUNDATION of this
city. The righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ.
X. The STREETS of this city.
There are some very remarkable streets.
1. The high street of Faith.
This street runs from one end of the city to the other. In almost every town
and city, we find a street of this name--¡§High Street.¡¨ But there is no such
street, as this high street of faith; it is a very long and beautiful street.
It connects the gate of conversion and the gate of Heaven. This high street is
frequented by all who live by faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
2. The street of Humility. It
lies alongside the high street of faith.
3. The street of Obedience.
The inhabitants are very partial to this street. This street is divided into
ten parts. The ten parts are the ten commandments. This is a very broad street.
¡§Thy commandments are exceeding broad.¡¨ It is a remarkably clean street.
4. A fourth street is Worship
street.
XI. We may now take a view of
the SCHOOLS of the city.
1. Providence.
2. Revelation.
3. Affliction.
4. Experience.
XII. Come and see the PALACES
of the city. When anyone gets to London, they want to see the palace of the
king. I will show nobler palaces than palaces or earthly Kings. These palaces
are ordinances; such as prayer, praise, reading and hearing the Holy Gospel,
baptism and the Lord¡¦s Supper, meditation and self-examination. Consider the
reason why they are called palaces. A palace is a place where the king is to be
seen. It is a place where petitions are presented; where the king bestows
wealth and great gifts. Here petitions are presented and received; here King
Jesus bestows wealth and honour. It is a place for conversing with the king;
and here we may converse with Jesus. In a palace grand feasts are held; so in
the ordinances noble feasts are provided for souls immortal, where they may eat
abundantly of heavenly provisions.
XIII. The ARMOURY of the city. A
beautiful piece is hanging up called the helmet--the helmet of salvation. Not
far from the helmet is a breastplate--the breastplate of righteousness. Near
the breastplate is a girdle or sash,with this inscription--truth. The next
piece of armour is a pair of shoes with this name--¡§preparation of the Gospel
of peace.¡¨ Next is ¡§the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God.¡¨ The
shield of faith.
XIV. The GARDEN of the city.
1. The walks in the garden.
The walks of meditation and holy fellowship.
2. The fountains. The Lord
Jesus Christ is the principal fountain. There is another fountain, called the
consolation of the Holy Ghost; the water is delicious. All the inhabitants
drink of it.
3. The flowers. There are the
flowers of the promises and doctrines; they are odoriferous flowers, and never
failing.
4. The trees. The tree of
knowledge; not the tree of knowledge which was in Eden, but of knowledge and
wisdom. There is not a poisonous tree in the garden. The tree of life, the Lord
Jesus Christ, is there--¡§whose leaves are for the healing of the nations.¡¨
XV. The BANK of this city. The
name of this bank is written on the door; it is--the covenant of grace. It is
so free, all may come and apply; and all who apply, receive. The bank, too, is
very rich; and it is free for the poorest sinner. The Lord Jesus Christ is the
Proprietor, and He is willing to give to poor sinners as much as they need.
This bank cannot fail; it cannot break. Whatever is drawn out during the day,
it is as full again at night. It is full of ¡§the unsearchable riches of
Christ.¡¨
XVI. There is a GATE through
which the inhabitants of the city pass, when they enter Heaven. It is the gate
of death. There is a valley leading to the gate called the valley of the shadow
of death. It is illuminated with the light of the Sun of Righteousness. Pious
children pass through that valley, leaning on the arm of Jesus. (A.
Fletcher, D. D.)
Verse 2
Open ye the
gates
A bunch of keys
(to children):--
1.
The gate of healing. What would you say is the key of that gate?
Is it not our need? What, e.g., would give you admission into any
hospital? Would it not be your need of the help that could be obtained there?
Just so is it with Jesus, the good Physician. We have no claim except His own
exceeding love and our exceeding need. There are no incurables so far as the
Lord Jesus is concerned.
2. The door of hope. The key for that is promise. You may read about
it in the ¡§Pilgrim¡¦s Progress¡¨ (Christian and Hopeful in Doubting Castle).
3. The door of help. The key is sympathy. Sympathy, as the meaning of
the word implies, understands the situation. ¡§Thou shalt not oppress a
stranger,¡¨ was one of God¡¦s commands to the Israelites, ¡§for ye know the heart
of a stranger, seeing ye were strangers in the land of Egypt.¡¨ That was
sympathy as the key to the door of help. They knew what it was to be strangers
in a strange land, and therefore they could understand how a stranger among
themselves would feel, how he would appreciate a friendly spirit, and how
sensitive he would be to any coldness of treatment. Is it not His sympathy that
makes Jesus the perfect Saviour?
4. The door of communion. For that we need two keys, just as in your
house doors two keys are required to open them--the key that turns the lock and
the key that lifts the latch. Prayer and obedience are the two keys.
5. The door of change, that door that stands at the end of ¡§the
well-trodden path to the grave.¡¨ What is the key for this door? We have none.
God keeps it in His own hands. (J. B. Mayer, M. A.)
The righteous nation which keepeth the truth
Truth, and its influence
upon society
Truth was not
intended to be brought before the world by the God of truth for the mere
purpose of influencing individual character. Hence we find the passage before
us inviting not separate men in their respective capacities, but the righteous
nation to enter in that keepeth the truth.
I. WHEN THE TRUTH SPREADS THROUGH SOCIETY IT WILL GIVE NEW VIEWS OF
MORAL OBLIGATION. Looking at society as it stands at present where the truth
has made but little way, we find those views of moral obligation that are
adopted and acted upon, accommodated to the selfishness of individuals, and
society has but little place in their consideration. But let the truth as it is
in Christ influence society, and they will then begin to feel that the great
source of moral obligation is not what they owe to themselves but what they owe
to God.
II. If we find, therefore, that our sense of moral obligation is
influenced by these higher considerations when we come to the truth, we have,
in the next place, to look at THE WORKING OF TRUTH UNDER THIS HIGH SENSE OF
MORAL RESPONSIBILITY TO GOD. There is an enlargement of feeling from the man to
his own family--from his own family to his own relatives--from his own
relatives to his own social circle--from his own social circle to his
nation--from his nation to the body of nations round him--there is an
enlargement of feeling in the still widening circle to regions beyond these--an
enlargement of feeling that carries the mind onward in a morally spiritual
expansion to the whole human race, and after the feelings of the man under the
power of truth have been thus far extended, his feelings experience still a
desire for further enlargement. He looks unto another and an eternal world and
feels that there is a fellowship due to the spirits of just men made perfect,
and to angels that seek to learn from his condition the manifold wisdom of God.
And while his mind is thus enlarged under the working of truth, there is the
reflection back again of truth in all the peace that it propagates, in all the
glories that it conveys, in all the safety that it confers, in all the
spirituality that it kindles, in all the communion which it permits between the
creature and God, which will be found to tell upon the man, so that instead of
living in a sphere of selfishness where his light burns but dimly, and where
the discoveries of the power of truth are very limited, he feels that he lives
in a blaze of spiritual illumination, and when he finds so many kindred souls
sympathise with him, and striking up an anthem to God, whence all has come, he
feels that he is a greater man, a happier man, a holier man, than if he were to
stand aloof even in solitary perfection in his insulated condition, to worship
God alone. Instead of a community of nations, we find a community of parties,
and each frowning upon the other, and each watching the other with an unworthy
yet a constant and an anxious jealousy. But when the truth does begin to
operate upon the condition of the nations generally, how will their temporal
circumstances be changed! What a rising of a new spirit in the human community!
If we find truth thus raising our sense of moral obligation, if we find truth
thus calculated to open so many sources of happiness, let us look to the source
whence this mighty element derives all its power. It is not the truth itself
regarded merely as conveyed by so many propositions that can accomplish this
mighty wonder. But it is the truth applying these propositions by the Spirit of
glory and of God. Looking, therefore, to all these mews of truth upon society,
we have another great reason to induce us to endeavour to ¡§buy the truth, and
sell it not.¡¨ (J. Burnet.)
National responsibility
(with Proverbs 14:34):--From these and suchlike passages it is evident that nations
may be and ought to be righteous and truth keeping, and that nations which are
of this character occupy the highest position in relation to other nations, and
in the estimation of Him by whom kings reign, and to whom national as well as
individual homage is due. That nations can possess such a moral character, and
render such homage is denied by those who do not admit that nations, in their
corporate capacity, are subjects of God¡¦s moral government. They hold that
nations or states are impersonal, that they have no will and no conscience, and
that therefore no responsibility attaches to national action, if indeed there
can be such action at all. This is a serious mistake, and one which cannot but
prove most pernicious in its influence and consequences. For nothing can be
clearer, alike from the teaching of God¡¦s Word and the facts of universal
history, than that nations are responsible subjects of Divine government; that
they are dealt with by God according to their character and conduct, punished
when they do evil, and blessed and prospered when they do well (Jeremiah 18:7-10). (Original Secession Magazine.)
National righteousness
I. Let us inquire WHAT THAT RIGHTEOUSNESS IS which should
characterise a nation, and by which a nation is exalted. How does it manifest
itself?
1. This righteousness has as its root--its essence--the foundation
principle of all true religion--¡§the fear of God,¡¨ in the hearts of the people,
of rulers and ruled. This must be the prevailing character of the persons of
whom it is composed.
2. It includes, as one of its leading elements, the due observance of
the worship of God, according to the rules lain clown in the Divine Word.
3. It includes a national keeping of the truth.
4. It includes the regulation of all national affairs, in the
departments of legislation and administration, by the principles of God¡¦s Word,
which should be the rule of faith and practice to the nation as well as to the
Church, the family, and the individual.
5. It includes the prevalence of Christian morality, or righteous
dealings between man and man in the business of life, and the practice of all
those moral virtues by which society is sweetened and adorned.
II. HOW RIGHTEOUSNESS EXALTS A NATION. A two-fold exaltation results
from national righteousness--exaltation in the estimation of men, of other
nations, and exaltation in the estimation of God.
III. HOW THIS NATION-EXALTING RIGHTEOUSNESS MAY BE AND OUGHT TO BE
PROMOTED.
1. By attending to the cultivation of personal godliness.
2. By attending to the duties of family religion.
3. By diffusing the Word of God and stirring up the people to read
and study it for themselves in secret and private, and by securing that it be
taught in all our schools.
4. By the faithful preaching of the Gospel by ministers of religion.
5. By the forth-putting of all legitimate moral efforts to counteract
and suppress whatever is contrary thereto.
6. With all such means must he mingled fervent prayer for the
blessing of God, which can alone make them efficacious for the advancement of
the cause of righteousness. (Original Secession Magazine.)
Verse 3-4
Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee
Perfect peace
The Scriptures are full of priceless secrets, and here is one of
them--the secret of trust in God as revealed to us in Jesus Christ, as the sole
method and means of that peace which we all desire.
¡§Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace¡¨; or, as the original expresses it still
more forcibly in its Semitic simplicity, ¡§Thou shalt keep him in peace, peace,
whose mind is stayed on Thee.¡¨ It is not the promise of freedom from sorrow; it
is not, by any means, a promise of success or prosperity on earth: but it is a
promise of that inward peace--of that heart¡¦s ease in the breast--with which
sorrow itself is a tolerable burden, and without which prosperity itself is a
questionable boon. The existence or the absence of peace in our hearts is no
slight indication of our true condition, for, as peace must exist with the
righteous even in the midst of adversity, it cannot exist in the hearts of the
wicked, however smiling, however prosperous their lot. ¡§There is no peace,
saith my God, to the wicked.¡¨ There is, I know, a false, as well as a true
peace. There is the simulated contentment of a hard indifference. There is the
cynical self-complacency of a moral blindness. There is the deep infatuation of
a false security. There is the dull stupefaction of an obstinate despair. But
who will call this peace? The carelessness of a traveller by night, who knows
not that he is walking all the time along the edge of a frightful precipice--is
that peace? For, just as we must not be deceived by the false semblance, or by voices
which cry Peace, peace, when there is no peace, so let us neither be robbed of
the deep reality by external appearances, or by passing troubles.
1. Take, for
instance, the case of personal anxieties. Most--perhaps everyone--of us suffer
from these anxieties for ourselves; anxieties about our families; anxieties for
the present; anxieties of a still deeper kind about the future. Though we are
children of God, yet the cares of life come to us which come to all. They are
the necessary incentive to our efforts. They are the necessary impulse to make
us treasure otherwhere than on earth our hopes. But, oh, how differently do
they happen to the Christian and to the sinner! But to be absorbed in merely
private agitations is the characteristic of a mean soul, and the lives of many
men who rise far above these personal and domestic egotisms are yet deeply
troubled by the world¡¦s agitation and unfit, by the perils of institutions to
which they are devoted, by the perplexities of nations which they love. We have
heard how Augustus, the ruler of the world, constantly moaned in his sleep for
the loss of his three legions. We remember how the sad English queen, who lies
with her great sister in this Abbey, said that when she died the word ¡§Calais¡¨
would be found written on her heart. We have known how, in his later days, the
good and great Lord Falkland fell into deep melancholy, ever murmuring the
words ¡§Peace, peace,¡¨ because his heart bled with the bleeding wounds of his
country. We recall how the wasted form and shattered hopes of William Pitt were
laid, in a season dark and perilous, at the feet of his great father, Chatham,
with the same pomp, in the same consecrated mould, and how, grieved to the soul
with the news of Austerlitz, he died, with broken exclamations about the perils
of his country. Well, we should not be human if we did not suffer thus with
those whom we see suffer. We may say to the fools, ¡§Deal not so madly,--and to
the ungodly. ¡§Lift not up your horn on high; but the issues of all these things
we must leave humbly,¡¨ calmly, trustfully, with God. The earth is not ours, nor
the inhabiters of it; neither do we hold up the pillars of it. Let us not think
much of our own importance. Ah, yes, for the anxieties of the statesmen, and
the churchmen, and the patriot, here again is the remedy. We know that the
angels of the Churches and the angels of the nations gaze on the face of God.
Troubled was the life of David, yet he could say, calmly and humbly, ¡§God
sitteth above the water floods, and God remaineth a King forever.¡¨
2. Again, the
lives of how many of us are troubled by the strife of tongues! And yet even
amid these flights of barbed arrows; amid these clouds of poisonous insects;
amid these insolences of anonymous slander, what peace--what perfect peace--may
we find if our minds be stayed on God. Letthem say what they will,¡¨ said a good
man, now gone into his rest, ¡§they cannot hurt me; I am too near the great
white throne for that.¡¨ Yes, ¡§Thou shalt hide them privily by Thine own
presence from the provoking of all men. Thou shalt keep them secretly in Thy
tabernacle from the strife of tongues.¡¨ ¡§Thou shalt keep him in peace, peace,
whose mind is stayed on Thee.¡¨
3. There is yet
another, the heaviest of all life¡¦s troubles in which this promise of peace
comes to us like music heard over the stormy waters. It is when we are most
overwhelmed with shame and sorrow for the past,--when our sins have taken such
hold upon us that we are not able to look up. Who shall count the number of the
men whose lives are ruined by the consequences of the past, but who, even in
the midst of that ruin, are far more embittered by shame than by calamity, and
who feel the sickness or the downfall far less than they feel the remorseful
accusing of the evil conscience. It is the lost Heaven which torments no less
surely than the present hell. In Michael Angelo¡¦s great picture of the last
judgment, one of the evil spirits has seized upon a doomed transgressor, and is
dragging him downwards; and as he drags him in down rushing flight the demon is
driving his furious teeth into the sinner¡¦s flesh; but, with a touch of
marvellous spiritual insight, the great painter has represented the poor wretch
as wholly unconscious of that agony--as so unaware of it that his clasped hands
and his eyes gazing upwards in agony on his offended Lord, show that, in the
absorbing sense of having forfeited the blessing of the forgiven, he has no
anguish left to thrill at the torture of the condemned. Yes, it is the worst
sting of misery to have once been happy,--the worst pang of shame to have once
been innocent,--the most fearful aggravation of punishment that men do not
forget the Heavens from which they fall. Lock at the white water lily, in its
delicate fragrance, as it lifts from its circle of green floating leaves the
immaculate purity of its soft sweet flower. Its roots are in the black mud; its
resting place is on the stagnant wave. Not from its mean or even foul
surroundings--not assuredly from the blackness of the mud, or the stagnation of
the wave--did it draw that pure beauty and that breathing beneficence, but from
some principle of life within. And cannot He who gave to the fair blossom its
idea of sweetness draw forth from us, the souls whom He made when He breathed
into our nostrils the breath of life--oh, though we have debased those souls
with the stagnancy of idleness, and blackened them with the mud of sin--cannot
our God still bring forth frown those souls that He has made His own sweetness
and purity again? He can, if we trust in Him. The alchemy of His love can
transmute dross to gold, and, though our sins be as scarlet, the blood of His
dear Son can wash them white as snow. Let the very depth of your remorse, if
God grants you to feel remorse and a shameful and sinful past--let the very
depth of this remorse be your protection from despair. Seek God, and that
remorse may be but the darkness which is deepest before the dawn. (Dean
Farrar, D. D.)
Peace
Peace is the balance of a thousand forces in that centre of all
things--the human heart; and, if we regard the question apart from revelation,
such a balance seems quite unattainable. History discovers the successive
generations plagued by inquietudes--mental, moral, and political. And the most
popular philosophy in the world, taking for its basis the common experience of
mankind, teaches that peace is logically impossible; that all nature is full of
blind and endless striving; that existence means desire, and desire means
misery; that thus the world and life are fundamentally and essentially evil,
and there is no escape from discontent, except in insensibility and extinction.
In opposition to all this, revelation teaches that the world is a cosmos, not a
chaos; that human nature is intrinsically noble and only accidentally base; and
that the Lord Jesus Christ waits to restore the lost balance in the hearts of
all who trust in Him, bringing their life into accord with the infinite music
of God¡¦s perfect universe. (W. L.Watkinson.)
Perfect peace
Let us trace the method of God¡¦s operation in securing to us the
peace which passeth all understanding.
I. THERE IS THE
ANTAGONISM BETWEEN OUR CONSCIENCE AND HISTORY. We recall all we have been and
done, and of how little in past years can an instructed conscience approve!
From a certain historical character came the sad outburst: ¡§My whole life has
been one great mistake¡¨; and this confession is wrung from all when the law
comes home and we know ourselves as we are known of God. Not simply an
intellectual mistake to be condoned on grounds of infirmity, but a profound
moral mistake also, for which we are and ought to be accountable. Now there can
be no rational peace until we are freed from this dead, accusing past. Here
Christ becomes most precious to all who believe. This peace in Christ is of the
noblest. The law of Heaven is not relaxed one jot or tittle. Neither is the
tone of conscience lowered to ensure us peace, but, on the contrary, He who
gives us a new heart gives us a new conscience; conscience in evangelical
penitence becomes more acute and authoritative than ever, and yet in its utmost
majesty and tenderness is satisfied with God¡¦s reconciling work and word in
Jesus Christ. And yet how few pardoned ones have entered rote the enjoyment of
¡§perfect¡¨ peace! ¡§Being justified by faith, let us have peace with God.¡¨
II. THE SECOND
SERIOUS ANTAGONISM OF LIFE IS THAT BETWEEN OUR FLESH AND SPIRIT. The apostle
describes this feud in language which brings the sad fact home irresistibly.
¡§For I delight in the law of God after the inward man: but I see another law in
my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity
to the law of sin which is in my members.¡¨ This is the fundamental, fatal
discord. There can be no true peace until this internecine war ends in the
utter breaking down and final extinction of the law in our members. The
supremacy of the flesh would not ensure rest; such triumphant usurpation would
bring all hell with it. Any alliance between the rival powers is also
impossible. They greatly err who argue that the law in the members and the law
of the mind are simply disturbed polarities of our nature between which harmony
may be established; that they correspond to the antithetical laws we find in
creation, and whose just mutual action is altogether beneficent. That conflict
of the soul in which all other fightings--elemental, national, or social--have
their origin, and out of which spring the manifold miseries of human life, is
not the result of powers, properties, and laws altogether good and pure having
fallen through ignorance and accident into displacement and misrelation, and
needing only the correction of culture; but our nature has lost its purity,
that is, its homogeneity; an exotic element, an alien power, an abnormal law
has found place within us, working our destruction, and this the grace of God
only can master and extirpate. Christ pours into us the light, energy, joy of
His own glorious nature, breaking the tyranny of the law in the members, giving
ascendency to the law of the mind, and thus brings back the paradisiacal calm.
Perfect peace goes with perfect purity.
III. A FURTHER
ANTAGONISM OF LIFE IS THAT BETWEEN FEELING AND REASON. One of the most painful
and perplexing phases of life is the conflict between instinct and logic; our
reflective reason contradicting our spontaneous reason on many of the greatest
questions of existence. A primitive intuition apprehends the goodness of the
Supreme, but the intellect pondering this sad world cannot confirm the
intuition. A constitutional principle prompts us to prayer, implies the
intervention of God in all our affairs and the validity of supplication, yet
our dialectics often disown our devotions, and it seems as unphilosophical to
pray as it is natural. Our consciousness assures us of our freedom and
responsibility, giving grandeur to thought and life; but science contradicts
consciousness, degrading us into mere mechanism. The fact of immortality is a
truth found in the depth of our mind, a glorious instinctive hope lending the
colour of gold to all the sphere; but science is at variance with sentiment;
and we look into the black grave with dismay. If we dare trust that feeling in
us which is at once deep, noble, and positive, we could welcome all the
glorious articles of the creed and rest in them with unmixed delight, but
reason enters another verdict, and we are overwhelmed in the dilemma. Here,
once more, Christ is our peace, giving us rest by giving us light. We are far
from asserting that the New Testament formally harmonises syllogism and
sentiment, that it demonstrates agreement between intuitionalism and
rationalism; but it suspends the bitter polemic by mightily reinforcing the
brightest convictions and aspirations of our nature. It shows us the greatest,
wisest, holiest Teacher the world has ever seen--He who spake as never man
spake--giving direct and ample authentication to the grand creed of the heart;
and this is surely an adequate reason for waiting in hope the final solution of
the apparent antagonism between feeling and philosophy. Here also many who
believe in Christ have not the ¡§perfect¡¨ peace. We argue these questions away
from Christ, and our soul is troubled. ¡§Let not your heart be troubled: ye
believe in God, believe also in Me.¡¨ It is perfectly quiet at the centre of the
whirlwind. Jesus Christ is the centre of the whirlwind of modern controversy,
and whilst our lame interpretations of the universe, our little systems of
philosophy put forth with so much pride and hope, are being driven about and
driven away like the chaff of the summer threshing floor, with Christ at the
centre reason finds lasting quiet.
IV. THE FINAL
ANTAGONISM OF LIFE IS THAT OF CHARACTER AND CIRCUMSTANCE. No sooner are we what
we ought to be than we painfully feel the world is not what it ought to be, and
the more nearly we are right the more we realise how deeply the world is wrong,
and how hard a thing it is to carry into effect high principles and
convictions. Life is one long severe trial. We are tried in every possible
way--in principle, temper, affection, and faith. Here again, however, Christ
becomes our peace by giving us power. He makes us to share in His own
triumphant spirit and might, thus enabling us to over come the trial and
temptation, the allurement and sorrow of life. We are filled with wisdom, love,
power and joy as He was. How few in the friction and strain of this worldly
life attain this ¡§perfect peace¡¨! We have solicitude, fretfulness, misgiving,
and sorrow. And we explain this to ourselves by regarding our circumstances as
specially harsh and afflictive, which is an explanation very wide of the truth.
The blame of our lack of peace is not to be laid on our severe environment, but
on the inner defect of power which, in its turn, is caused by our qualified
faith. If we fully identified ourselves with the world-conquering Christ we
should know no more irascibility or fear, but in fiery trials prove abiding
equanimity and imperturbation. (W. L. Watkinson.)
The blessing attendant upon having the mind stayed on God
I. THE STATE OF
MIND HERE SPOKEN OF. The soul may be said to trust, or stay, upon anything,
when it relies upon it for its present comfort and future salvation. The soul
that possesses the blessing here spoken of, has for the object of its trust and
stay the Lord Jehovah. It confides in His name and character as revealed in the
Scriptures of truth: it relies upon His promises of mercy and grace declared
unto mankind in Christ Jesus our Lord and derives its support and consolation
from viewing God as ¡§in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself, not imputing
their trespasses unto them.¡¨ This confidence in the Almighty stands opposed to
various false refuges and deceitful grounds of confidence.
1. It is opposed
to that confidence which men are often apt to place in an arm of flesh, in
human wisdom, experience, power, interest, etc.
2. This affiance
in the Lord Jehovah is likewise directly opposite to all reliance on our own
services and performances.
3. This trust in
Jehovah is very different from confidence placed in any feelings, or what are
usually termed frames of mind. These are, at best, very uncertain, often very
deceitful.
II. THE PROMISE OR
BLESSING HERE SPOKEN OF. ¡§Perfect peace.¡¨
1. There is an
energetic simplicity in the original expression: it is ¡§peace, peace¡¨;
intimating that the soul which steadfastly reposes itself on God, may expect
every kind of peace as its portion. Whether you understand by the word,
reconciliation with God, amity with men, composure in the conscience,
resignation to the appointments of providence, rest from the turbulency of
sinful passions and appetites, or finally, that everlasting state of rest and
felicity which remains for the people of God; rain all these senses peace is
the happy lot of those whose minds are stayed on God.
2. But the thing
especially intended here seems to be composure of mind, as opposed to
distraction or disquietude.
3. This may be
properly termed, ¡§perfect peace,¡¨ not because it actually excludes every degree
of disquietude from the soul; nor, as if in the measure in which it is enjoyed,
it never met with any interruption; but it is perfect peace, when compared with
any satisfaction or composure of mind which this world, or anything in it, can
administer, and as proceeding from Him from whom cometh every good and every
perfect gift; as being the best preparative for, and support under, the
troubles of life, and, probably, the choicest foretaste that can be
communicated to us of the peace of God¡¦s eternal kingdom.
4. This blessing
will be enjoyed, this peace will be experienced in the soul, in proportion to
the degree of its confidence in God.
III. ENFORCE THE
EXHORTATION here given. ¡§Trust ye in the Lord forever¡¨: to which is subjoined
the encouraging declaration, ¡§for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength.¡¨
Such an exhortation as this supposes their state to be distressing and
dangerous, and that either through ignorance they are likely to betake
themselves to false refuges, or through fear may be deterred from venturing
upon what they believe to be the true one.
1. God calls upon
you to do this.
2. Whatever your
wants and necessities may be, you will thus obtain a rich and full supply of
them.
3. Take the
precious promises which He has caused to be recorded for this purpose.
4. Examples might
also be produced from Scripture, in abundance, of those who looked unto Him and
were lightened. (S. Knight, M. A.)
Peace out of trust
I. AN EXPRESSION
OF CONFIDENCE IN GOD. It is characteristic of Jehovah--
1. That He seeks
the trust of His people. Heathen gods, all gods that are the men creations of
men¡¦s minds or hands, seek the service of things; they want our gifts; they
claim, not the man, but that which the man only has. Jehovah seeks the service
of love and trust.
2. That He rewards
the trust of His people. And this He does--
II. AN APPEAL TO
THE PEOPLE FOR CONTINUITY IN THEIR TRUST IN GOD. ¡§Trust ye in the Lord
forever,¡¨ etc. We cannot keep on trusting if our trust is in things; for the
¡§fashion of this world passeth away.¡¨ We cannot keep on trusting if our trust
is in man; ¡§for the pain of living is our disappointment in our best loved
friends.¡¨ We can keep on trusting in God. His very name implies a basis of
confidence. (Weekly Pulpit.)
The inhabitant of the Rock
If we may suppose the invocation of the preceding verses to be
addressed to the watchers at the gate of the strong city, it is perhaps not too
fanciful to suppose that the invitation in my text is the watchers¡¦ answer,
pointing the way by which men may pass into the city. At all events, I take it
as by no means accidental that immediately upon the statement of the Old
Testament law that righteousness alone admits to the presence of God, there
follows so clear and emphatic an anticipation of the great New Testament Gospel
that faith is the condition of righteousness, and that immediately after
hearing that only ¡§the righteous nation which keepeth the truth¡¨ can enter
there, we hear the merciful call, ¡§Trust ye in the Lord forever.¡¨
I. THE INSIGHT
INTO THE TRUE NATURE OF TRUST OR FAITH GIVEN BY THE WORD EMPLOYED HERE. The literal
meaning of the expression here rendered ¡§to trust¡¨ is to lean upon anything.
And that is the trust of the Old Testament; the faith of the New.
II. THE STEADFAST
PEACEFULNESS OF TRUST. (See R.V. margin.) It is the steadfast mind,
steadfast because it trusts, which God keeps in the deepest peace that is
expressed by the reduplication of the word. And if we break up that complex
thought into its elements it just comes to this--
1. Trust makes
steadfastness. No man can steady his life except by clinging to a holdfast
without himself.
2. The steadfast
mind is rewarded in that it is kept of God. The real fixity and solidity of a
human character comes more surely and fully through trust in God than by any
other means; on the other hand, it is true that, in order to receive the full
blessed effects of trust into our characters and lives, we must persistently
and doggedly keep on in the attitude of confidence.
3. Then, still
further, this faithful, steadfast heart and mind, kept by God, is a mind filled
with deepest peace. There is something very beautiful in the prophet¡¦s
abandoning the attempt to find any adjective or quality which adequately
characterises the peace of which he has been speaking. He falls back upon the
expedient which is the confession of the impotence of human speech worthily to
portray its subject when he simply says, ¡§Thou shalt keep in peace because he
trusteth in Thee.¡¨ The reduplication expresses the depth, the completeness of
the tranquillity which flows into the heart. Such continuity, wave after wave,
or rather ripple after ripple, is possible even for us. For the possession of
this deep, unbroken peace does not depend on the absence of conflict, of
distraction, trouble, or sorrow, but on the presence of God.
III. THE WORTHINESS
OF THE DIVINE NAME TO EVOKE AND THE POWER OF THE DIVINE CHARACTER TO REWARD THE
TRUST. ¡§In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength.¡¨
I. The words
feebly rendered in the A.V., ¡§everlasting strength,¡¨ are literally ¡§the Rock of
Ages¡¨; and this verse is the source of that hallowed figure which, by one of
the greatest of our English hymns, is made familiar and immortal to all
English-speaking people.
2. But there is
another peculiarity about the words, and that is that here we have, for one of
the only two times in which the expression occurs in Scripture, the great name
of Jehovah reduplicated. ¡§In Jah Jehovah is the Rock of Ages.¡¨ In the former
verse the prophet had given up in despair the attempt to characterise the peace
which God gave, and fallen back upon the expedient of naming it twice over. In
this verse, with similar eloquence of reticence, he abandons the attempt to
describe or characterise that great name, and once more, in adoration, contents
himself with twice taking it upon his lips, in order to impress what he cannot
express, the majesty and the sufficiency of that name. What, then, is the force
of that name?
3. The metaphor
needs no expansion. We understand that it conveys the idea of unchangeable
defence.
IV. THE SUMMONS TO
TRUST. We know not whose voice it is that is heard in the last words of my
text, but we know to whose ears it is addressed. It is to all. ¡§Trust ye in the
Lord forever.¡¨ (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Peace
Peace has ever been praised and desired by the majority of
mankind. It is generally supposed to be near, to be possible; but it moves
before or follows men like the shadow of themselves, which cannot overtake
them, which they cannot overtake. The schoolboy sees it in release from his
lessons and his school. The man of mid-life sees it in his childhood, and by
the fireside of an honoured successful age. But when old he looks back with
regret to the appetite for repose which accompanied an active life. There is no
more peace in twilight than at noon. In the morning we say, ¡§Would God it were
evening¡¨; and in the evening, ¡§Would God it were morning.¡¨
I. THERE IS MUCH
PEACE WHICH IS IMPERFECT.
1. There is the
peace of ignorance. The child plays by the coffin of its mother. The peasant
fool stands quietly beneath the tree which draws the lightning stroke. But this
peace, we need not stop long to see, passes away. We learn, our eyes are
opened, and we regret or shudder at our insensibility.
2. There is the
peace of corruption. Dead bodies make no stir, ask no questions, have no
doubts. Dead minds are quiet and peaceable enough. Their peace is that of
quiet, painless stagnation; but we cannot call it perfect.
3. There is the
dependent peace: when we leave other people to think and act for us. This is
pleasing enough till they make some fatal irremediable mistake. It is bad
enough to lose a few bank notes; but it is a far more serious thing to find
that your conscience keeper has embezzled your soul.
4. There is the
peace of success. When the action is over then comes reaction. The peace it gives
is not perfect. It needs patching and polishing as soon as it is obtained. It
entails labour and involves additional anxiety.
5. All these kinds
of mock peace die out, or break down, or run dry. If not that, they hinder our
being what we might be; they keep us down.
II. WHAT WE
ASSOCIATE MOST WITH THE WORD PEACE. It is the opposite to war. It is freedom
from disorder, disturbance. But it is by no means idleness. The time of peace
is the time of work. The surest advance and most abundant plenty may be made in
the time of the profoundest peace. There is most life where there is least
disorder. It is thus in nature. What can be more quiet than a field of wheat on
a still summer day? and yet an important work is going on then; there God is
making bread for man. Again, what suggests more repose than a silent, cloudless
night? And yet the globe on which we stand, and the brightest of the stars we
see, and which seem so still, are really whirling through space at a prodigious
speed. Their perfect peace is perfect fulfilment of the win of God.
III. IS THERE SUCH A
THING FOR US--PEACE WHICH CAN NEVER BE DESTROYED, NEVER DIE OUT? ¡§Thou shalt
keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee.¡¨ On Thee--there is the
point. On God Himself. We are not the masters of this world, or time. We can
neither make nor destroy it. By quietly doing our own work we do our share, and
the Great Master will look after us and the rest. Peace is found only along
with Him, by straying upon Him. Those who do the work He plainly sets them need
not be distressed about the main chance and the great end and course of life.
The sailor who has confidence in his captain and pilot is at peace; he knows
the ship is in good hands. So if we would believe that we were in good hands
ourselves, how full of comfort we should be. An explorer is searching for a new
country. He sails over the seas, here and there, in vain; he is deceived by low
lying clouds which look like land, but are dispersed as he approaches them. At
last, after many disappointments, he spies the shore, sails to it, finds he is
not mistaken this time; he sets his foot upon the beach, he sees new trees,
animals, plants. He returns to his ship, night comes and he can perceive
nothing. Nevertheless the discovery is made; the sought for land is found.
There is an end to his surmises, expectations, guesses, watchings. The land is
found, though he leave or lose sight of it. He has fulfilled his object; it is
a fact; it is there. So the man who has been beating about in vain in the waves
of this troublesome world, looking for peace, steering this way and that, but
has at last laid hold of the great immovable fact that peace is in God, and not
to be got from himself or his fellow creatures, may often seem solitary and
disturbed; but he has made the discovery, and all is well. (H. Jones, M. A.)
The sustaining power of faith
I. THE SOURCE OF
FAITH IS DIVINE. ¡§Trust ye in the Lord forever: for in the Lord Jehovah is
everlasting strength¡¨
1. Faith is Divine
in its inception. God is author and object thereof.
2. Faith is Divine
in its inspiration. Trust in God is not a single act, but a condition of
restfulness. There are occasions when special acts are called forth, but these
are the trials of faith. When Abraham was called to offer up Isaac on Moriah,
God proved him there.
II. THE SEAT OF
FAITH IS MENTAL. ¡§Whose mind (or thought) is stayed on Thee.¡¨ Mr. Ruskin says,
¡§The power, whether of painter or poet, to describe rightly what he calls an
ideal thing depends upon its being to him not an ideal but a real thing. No man
ever did, or ever will, work well but either from actual sight or sight of
faith.¡¨ The sight of faith is no less keen, or complete, or perfect, than
actual sight. There are many thoughts which agitate the human heart--faith is
the solution of these.
1. One thought is
our acceptance before God. We are perplexed by many aspects of this
all-important subject. Take one of them--how can the death of Jesus Christ
atone for our sins? Faith alone can make the matter plain. How is it done? By
taking the mind to God to be saved by the acceptance of this great truth. Faith
never says, How is it? but, Let it be. God Himself is the solution of the
difficulty.
2. Thoughts
concerning our guidance in life. We are the creatures of circumstances, and
often fail to see their bearing. Faith brings forth tranquillising influences,
and speaks with firmness. ¡§Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him.¡¨ All
wrongs will be avenged. All stolen possessions will be restored. Therefore,
take no thought for the morrow: He who measures the minutes fills them with
mercies.
III. THE INFLUENCE
OF FAITH IS SUSTAINING. ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose thought is
stayed on Thee.¡¨
1. Faith is our
strength in duty. To do the right is not always easy. We are often tempted to
do as other people do, and sometimes we are chided because we do not follow the
way of the world. Whatever may be the temptation to do wrong, or whatever may
be the adverse criticism for doing right, trust in God will sustain us in the
effort.
2. Faith is our
stay in trouble.
3. Faith is our
prospect in death. Charles Wesley said, ¡§Satisfied! Satisfied!¡¨ Benjamin Abbot
said, ¡§I see Heaven opening out before me.¡¨ Baron Humboldt was full of peace,
and said, ¡§How sweet these rays; they beckon me up to Heaven.¡¨ Robert Wilkinson
exclaimed, ¡§The lovely beauty! the happiness of paradise.¡¨ Mrs. Hemans bade
this world adieu by saying, ¡§The visions cannot be told; the mountaintops are
gleaming from peak to peak.¡¨ We believe in the same Saviour. God will be with
us in the person of the Good Shepherd to lead us safely home. Why do the
gracious impressions received by many, while listening to the Gospel, die out?
Because they are not sustained by faith. (T. Davies, M. A.)
The source of true peace
I. A STATE OF MIND
to be described. ¡§Whose mind is stayed on Thee.¡¨ This is an act that includes
in it--
1. A renunciation
of dependence on the creature.
2. The exercise of
filial dependence on God.
3. This is a frame
of mind exercised on evangelical principles. It is the shadow of that throne
where the Saviour appears as the Lamb in the midst of it beneath which true
faith causes us to repose.
II. A GRACIOUS
ASSURANCE to be considered. ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace.¡¨ This does
not refer to external peace, but to mental peace and serenity in trying
circumstances; and this is very great.
1. Reflect on the
Author of it. ¡§Thou wilt,¡¨--the very Being on whom the soul reposes, who is the
Lord God all-sufficient.
2. Consider the
extent of this peace. As the Redeemer once said to all the elements of nature
that were convulsed, ¡§Peace, be still; and there was a great calm¡¨; thus He
speaks to all the agitated and perturbed powers of the human mind.
III. AN INTIMATE
CONNECTION to be established. ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind
is stayed on Thee; because he trusteth in Thee.¡¨ This connection is
established--
1. By the dictates
of reason. It is reasonable to expect that he who reposes on a rock should feel
himself immovable.
2. In the promise
of Scripture.
3. In the
experience that trust in man has often been deceived; but the benefits of
having the mind reposed on the infinite and eternal God can be attested by
thousands. (C. Gilbert.)
Confidence in God composing the mind
I. WHAT WE ARE TO
UNDERSTAND BY STAYING THE MIND ON GOD. It simply means relying upon Him or
trusting in Him.
II. THIS STAYING OF
THE MIND ON GOD KEEPS IT IN PEACE.
1. This alone can
calm the mind when convinced of sin, and searching in dreadful distress for
pardon.
2. This confidence
also calms the mind under delays.
3. This confidence
composes the mind in the events of life, and this is the thing principally
intended.
III. THE PEACE THAT
FLOWS FROM THIS TRUST IN GOD IS SAID TO BE PERFECT. It is not indeed absolutely
so, as if it were incapable of addition; but it is so--
1. Comparatively.
What is every other peace to this? What is the delusion of the Pharisee, the
stupidity and carelessness of the sinner, the corn and wine of the
worldling--what is everything else, compared with this peace?
2. In relation to
this confidence. It is true this peace rises and falls; but it is only because
this confidence varies. (W. Jay.)
Peace the result of confidence in God
I. THE BLESSING
HERE DESCRIBED. ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace.¡¨ We take it for granted
that the prophet is referring to the blessings of the Gospel. Christ is called,
by this same prophet, the Prince of Peace; and apart from Him, true peace of
mind can never be attained.
1. The word peace
at once suggests the cessation of hostilities. It is true there never was any
hostility in the mind of God towards man. But when we look at the aspect of man
towards God, we see him in an attitude of rebellion. It became necessary that
some means should be adopted by which his enmity might be destroyed, and
reconciliation affected. The wondrous plan, devised in the mind of God for the
accomplishment of this purpose, was the sacrifice of His own dear Son, who thus
became our Mediator between God and man.
2. The peace which
God bestows arises not merely from a consciousness of pardon and restoration to
the Divine favour, it springs further from the calming influence which He
exerts on the mind by the transforming of the affections from things earthly to
things heavenly.
3. But the peace
which God bestows is a ¡§perfect peace¡¨; by which we understand peace,
ever-flowing like a river, broad, deep, and calm,--peace, including all
spiritual blessings, and available under every circumstance of Christian trial
4. Mark the
expression, ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace.¡¨ It is not a mere transitory
feeling, a sun flash on the storm presently to be lost behind the cloud, but an
abiding principle, which God keeps for His people and in His people, that they
may be preserved from dismay whatever may befall them.
II. THE MEANS OF
ATTAINING IT. Who is the happy possessor of this inestimable blessing of peace?
He whose mind is stayed upon God, because he trusteth in Him. We cannot take a
single step in religion without trust, or faith. As this trust is essential to
the first acquirement of peace, so is it equally necessary to its continued
possession. It is enjoyed only so long as the mind is ¡§stayed¡¨ upon God. But
all men have not peace; and some never will have peace. ¡§There is no peace, saith
my God, to the wicked.¡¨ There is no peace to them who stay their minds on the
world, on worldly objects and worldly pleasures. There is no peace to them who
keep away from Christ. (W. J. Brock, B. A.)
Trust in God brings peace
That almost every man is disappointed in his search after
happiness is apparent from the clamorous complaints which are always to be
heard; from the restless discontent which is hourly to be observed, and from
the incessant pursuit of new objects, which employ almost every moment of every
man¡¦s life. As men differ in age or disposition, they are exposed to different
delusions in this important inquiry.
I. WHAT IS MEANT
BY THIS TRUST IN GOD, TO WHICH PERFECT PEACE IS PRESSED? Trust, when it is used
on common occasions, implies a kind of resignation to the honesty or abilities
of another. Our trust in God ought to differ from every other trust, as
infinity differs from an atom. It ought to transcend every other degree of
confidence, as its object is exalted above every degree of created excellence.
We know that He is infinite in wisdom, in power, and in goodness; that
therefore He designs the happiness of all His creatures; that He cannot but
know the proper means by which this end may be obtained; and that, in the use
of these means, as He cannot be mistaken, because He is omniscient, so He
cannot be defeated, because He is almighty. He therefore that trusts in God
will no longer be distracted in his search after happiness; for he will find it
in a firm belief, that whatever evils are suffered to befall him, will finally
contribute to his felicity.
II. HOW THIS TRUST
IS TO BE ATTAINED. There is a fallacious and precipitate trust in God--a trust
which, as it is not founded upon God¡¦s promises, will, in the end, be
disappointed. Trust in God, that trust to which perfect peace is promised, is
to be obtained only by repentance, obedience, and supplication. (John
Taylor, LL. D.)
The source of peace
In considering the great event of the Saviour¡¦s first advent,
there is one circumstance of which we should never lose sight--the peculiar
character in which He then came to earth. He was pleasedto veil His more awful
attributes behind His humanity; and, instead of showing Himself as our future
Judge, to reveal Himself as our ¡§Prince of Peace.¡¨ Hence this is the peculiar
characteristic of the Gospel, that in looking to it the sinner finds it to be a
message of peace. And not only this, but he finds, as he proceeds in the
knowledge of the truth as it is in Jesus, that whilst glory is the prospect which
it holds out for eternity, in time it corresponds with what might well be
called the Redeemer¡¦s dying legacy to His Church: ¡§Peace I leave with you, My
peace I give unto you: no as the world giveth, give I unto you.¡¨
I. WHAT IS MEANT
BY HAVING OUR MIND STAYED ON GOD? Nothing is more evident than the fact that
man always needs someone on whom to lean. But there are cases in which it must
appear peculiarly necessary to stay our minds on the Lord, because there are
cases in which man can absolutely do nothing to help us. Look at the various
sorrows, the various doubts, the various fears by which we are liable to be
assailed, and say whether any but a Divine power can assist us there. Our
natural state being enmity with God, we are, whilst still unconverted, more
inclined to forget Him or flee from Him, than to draw near to Him and depend on
Him for assistance or protection. But the believer has been led by the Holy
Spirit to see how ruinous is his alienation from God. He has therefore turned
to the God against whom he had sinned; he has entrusted himself to the mercy
and faithfulness of God; and, having done so, he feels that it is a little
matter to trust to Him for support and comfort in that conflict here, which a
few years or hours may change into the triumphs of eternity. The more advanced
he is, the more humble will he be; and in the hour of trial, instead of
depending on his former attainments, or looking to be upheld by his past
experience, he will continue, at each fresh assault of his enemy, to look for
strength according to his day.
II. THE BLESSING
PROMISED TO HIM WHOSE MIND IS THUS STAYED ON THE LORD. ¡§Perfect peace.¡¨
1. Peace with God
(Romans 5:1).
2. Peace of
conscience.
3. Peace with the
world.
I do not say that the world has peace with him. But the Christian
has received the spirit of gentleness and love. (R. M. Kyle, B. A.)
Peace the perfect and assured portion of the believer
There is a sweetness in the very word ¡§peace¡¨; it fills the mind
with a number of pleasing thoughts, and oven by its very sound seems to convey
something which attracts and charms us. But if the mere sound of peace be thus
pleasing, how much more so must be the substance. Peace is what everyone may be
said to prize, and to be in search of. Why is it so seldom found? Because we
are always seeking peace, and saying peace, where them is no peace; we seek it
anywhere, and in anything, rather than in Him, and from Him, who alone can give
it.
I. THE CHARACTER
brought before us in the text is that of the man whose mind is stayed on God.
The word ¡§stayed¡¨ denotes--
1. Firmness. It is
that kind of leaning or resting which shows full confidence in the strength of
the foundation which has been chosen.
2. Calmness and
quietness.
3. An unchanging
trust; a resolution of the soul to abide by its choice under all circumstances;
a fixed adherence to its God.
II. THE BLESSING
PROMISED AND SECURED TO THOSE TO WHOM THE CHARACTER REALLY BELONGS. ¡§Thou shalt
keep him in perfect peace.¡¨
1. The blessing
itself: ¡§perfect peace.¡¨ Perfect, because--
2. The way in
which this blessing is said to be secured to every believer. The Lord, on whom
his mind is stayed, will keep him in it.
III. THE GRACIOUS
FULFILMENT OF HIS WORD in the case of him whose remains have so lately gone
down into silence. (F. Lear, B. D.)
Peace for the careworn
In the description given of the state of the ungodly in Romans 3:1-31, the apostle
Paul says: ¡§The way of peace have they not known.¡¨ There are many ways in this
world--ways of sin, of disappointment, of pleasure, of death, of misery, but
beside all these there is ¡§the way of peace.¡¨
I. THE PERSON WHO
IS KEPT IN PEACE. He is a person whose mind is stayed on God, and who trusts in
God. A man¡¦s self, and sin, and pleasure, and false religion, and vain hopes
are every one of them troubled waves in one common ocean of disquietude, and no
soul can stay itself upon these, though many souls have sought to be stayed
upon them. Mark the mighty Rock on which such an one lieth down and findeth
repose. That rock is God. Yet it is a most certain fact that our God is a
consuming fire, out of Christ. Ah, you say, some of you, ¡§I trust in God,¡¨ but
you know not the God you trust in. What is the sole object of faith? It is the
God-man.
II. THE POWER WHICH
KEEPS THE BELIEVER IN PEACE. Not the power of his own faith, as some would
think at first sight; not the power of his own effort, struggling to obtain
confidence, as some would suppose; but the power of God.
III. THE PEACE IN
WHICH SUCH A PERSON IS KEPT.
It is called here ¡§perfect peace.¡¨ It is like the Redeemer with
his head on the pillow, with His eyes closed, with His mind in conscious repose
and sleep, in the midst of the wild storm at night upon the lake of Galilee,
when the waves beat upon the trembling vessel, and the clouds rolled over head,
threatening to beat the waves still higher, and engulf them all. He slept
secure and Peaceful amidst the storm. So does the soul of the believer,
afterwards, that stayeth itself upon God. Upon what lay that peaceful head of
Jesus but on the unseen arm and bosom of God? Men said of Christ mockingly, ¡§He
trusted in God.¡¨ He did trust in God, as the most exalted believer, and far
more than the most exalted believer; and in that simplicity of faith, amidst
contending elements He was kept in peace, sleeping amidst the storm. So with
the believer. And he that thus trusteth in God findeth not only that peace in
life; for death to him, what is it? It is as a peaceful sunset. (H. G.
Guinness.)
Hindrances to a mind stayed on God
There are two hindrances to a steady mind.
1. The loving of
unlawful things.
2. The loving of
lawful things with inordinate affection. (J. Summerfield, M. A.)
Perfect peace
I. THE PROMISED
GIFT. ¡§Peace.¡¨ Not freedom from sorrow, not assured prosperity, not a certainty
of success, but inward tranquillity, ease of heart, without which even
prosperity would be a burden. Not the simulated contentment of indifference.
Not the cynical self-complacency of moral blindness. Not the dull stupefaction
of despair. There is peace--
1. Amid personal
anxieties. These come to God¡¦s people as well as to the world. But the effects
they produce in each are very different.
2. Amid the
contests of the world. The nations are at strife. Good is at war with evil. The
noblest institutions are threatened. Lawlessness stalks forth threatening all
that is true. But the Christian has peace in his dwellings.
3. Amid the
struggles of sin and the assaults of the evil one. The remorse of sin, the
anxieties of sin, all disturb the soul, but here is peace.
4. In the
conflicting emotions of sickness, the pain of death, and the realities of a
future world.
II. THE CONDITION
EXACTED. Faith. ¡§Whose mind is stayed on Thee.¡¨ This act assures us of the
promise--
1. Because it is
the carrying out of the Divine requirement. It is God¡¦s own condition, God¡¦s
own plan, and unless that is complied with no man can hope to obtain the fulfilment
of the promise.
2. Because it is
in itself a calming, sanctifying act. The man who casts all his cares upon God,
feels no responsibility resting on himself. He who leaves his sins on Christ
ceases to trouble about the consequences of those sins, so far as he himself is
concerned. The man who leaves all events in the hands of One who knows all,
feels that whatever happens all is for the best. How can such feel anything but
peace? The great thing wanting is the power to place such unreserved confidence
on an unseen Being.
III. THE SAFE
ASSURANCE. Thou wilt keep. Here is a sure ground of confidence--the promise and
power of the Author and Ruler of the universe. ¡§Thou.¡¨
1. Here is the
source of all strength; He is therefore able.
2. Here is the source
of all love; He is therefore willing.
3. He is the
supplier of all comfort, the refuge of all the oppressed. If peace exists at
all, surely It can be obtained from Him. (Homilist.)
The song of a city and the pearl of peace
I. WHAT IS THIS
PERFECT PEACE?
1. This ¡§peace,
peace¡¨ means, an absence of all war, and of all alarm of war.
2. This perfect
peace reigns over all things within its circle.
3. No perfect
peace can be enjoyed unless every secret cause of fear is met and removed.
4. Peace in a city
would not be consistent with the stoppage of commerce. Where there is perfect
peace with God, commerce prospers between the soul and Heaven. Good men commune
with the good, and thereby their sense of peace increases. If you have perfect
peace, you have fellowship with all the saints; personal jealousies, sectarian
bitternesses, and unholy emulations are all laid aside.
5. It consists in
rest of the soul ; a perfect resignation to the Divine will; sweet confidence
in God; a blessed contentment.
6. It means
freedom from everything like despondency.
7. There we are
kept from everything like rashness.
II. WHO ALONE CAN
GIVE US THIS PEACE AND PRESERVE IT IN US? How does the Lord keep His people in
peace?
1. By a special
operation upon the mind in the time of trial (Isaiah 26:12).
2. By the
operation of certain considerations intended by His infinite wisdom to work in
that manner.
3. By the distinct
operations of His providence.
III. WHO SHALL
OBTAIN THIS PEACE? The whole of our being is stayed upon God in order to this
peace.
IV. WHY IS IT THAT
THE LORD WILL KEEP THAT MAN IN PERFECT PEACE WHO STAYS HIMSELF ON HIM? ¡§Because
he trusteth in Thee.¡¨ That means surely--
1. That in faith there
is a tendency to create and nourish peace.
2. His faith is
rewarded by peace.
3. This peace
comes out of faith because it is faith¡¦s way of proclaiming itself. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Peace not from nature, but from God
Man alone of all created beings of whom we know anything seems
strangely out of harmony with the circumstances with which he is surrounded,
and the conditions of his existence. Everything around us, and much within us,
seems specially designed to militate against the possibility of peace.
1. If man is to be
at peace, why does he hold his very life, and everything else that he values
best, on the most precarious tenure? The lower animals are exposed to nothing
like the same number of uncertainties; they, for the most part, live out their
own appointed span of existence, while, on the other hand, their incapacity for
reflection saves them those gloomy apprehensions of possible disaster, and that
still sadder certain anticipation of ultimate dissolution, which cast so dark a
shadow over the experience of man just because he can and must think, Man¡¦s
affections are immeasurably more intense than theirs, and yet he knows what
they do not, that at any moment he may be robbed of all he loves most; thus the
very strength of his affections militates against his peace. They seem
incapable of care, and what they need usually comes to them without any
laborious provision. He has to exercise forethought and skill, and to expend
much patient labour before he can hope to obtain so much as the bare necessaries
of life; and even then he cannot make sure of these, owing to the apparent
caprices of nature.
2. And the worst
of it is that these are not the only causes of our disquiet and unrest. There
are disturbing influences within as well as without. Peace is broken by inward
war, the conflict of one element of our nature with another.
3. All this shows
us that either we are to be denied even such a peace as the animals apparently
enjoy, and that their condition in this respect is to be vastly preferable to
ours, or else that some higher provision must have been made for inducing this
feature in our experience--some provision that they know nothing about, and
that does not lie upon the surface of outward nature; some provision that has
to be otherwise made known than by the ordinary phenomena of the outer world.
And this is one of the most cogent amongst many proofs, that a supernatural
revelation is absolutely necessary to supplement the phenomena of the world
known to sense, unless nature is to be found guilty of strange and anomalous
inconsistencies. The ¡§God of peace¡¨ knows that we need peace, and He has
provided it for us. He who has blessed His lower creatures with a restful
uncarefulness, that renders existence not only tolerable, but pleasant to them,
has not left His highest creature to be the victim of his own greatness, and to
be tossed about aimlessly upon a sea of troubles, until at last the inevitable
shipwreck comes upon the pitiless shoals of death. Our great Father, God,
dwells Himself in an atmosphere of eternal calm, and His love makes Him desire
to share His peace with us ¡§the peace of God which passeth all understanding.¡¨
(W. Hay Aitken, M. A.)
Peace
Let us ask, What is it that hinders peace? in order that we may
better understand the things that belong to our peace. Here, I think, we shall
discover three distinct sources of mental disturbance by which man is
affected--three distinct and terrible discords that mar the harmony of human
life until they are resolved by redemption. Man is, to begin with, out of peace
with God; he is, in consequence, out of peace with nature, or the order of
things with which he is surrounded; and, in the third place, he is out of peace
with himself. These other discords which break in upon and destroy his peace
are dependent upon and spring from the first. It is because man is not at peace
with God that he finds himself at war with nature, and the victim of internal
feuds. The conditions of his existence in this material world seem of a kind to
militate against his peace; but this is only so when they are viewed apart from
any higher and ultimate object to which they may be designed by infinite
benevolence to contribute. Once let me see that the trials and uncertainties of
life are intended to enforce upon my attention the true character of my present
position and its relations to the future, and I no longer quarrel with them. I
confess that I am a stranger and a sojourner, and I see wisdom and love in the
very circumstances which impress this upon my mind. And even so is it with
those moral discords that disturb my peace within. They spring from the
controversy that exists between man and God. Here we see how the Gospel is
adapted to the deepest needs of the human heart, and how skilfully it is
designed to deal with cause and effect in their own proper order in the moral
sphere. The Gospel is primarily a proclamation of peace between God and man, a
revelation of a wondrous method of reconciliation. (W. Hay Aitken, M. A.)
The way of peace
The text contains the open secret of a spiritual life, which is
peace, and discloses the sure way of attaining it. The person spoken of is one
whose mind is stayed on God. The man has become fixed upon this centre, and he
cannot be moved therefrom. To this man God is omnipotent, omniscient, and
all-loving. God commands his entire nature. There is a prevalent disposition
amongst men to be stayed upon themselves, but the Scriptures declare that ¡§he
that trusteth in his own heart is a fool.¡¨ A self-centered man is always a weak
man. There is another class of men who desire to be stayed upon riches But God
says, ¡§Labour not to be rich, for riches certainly make themselves wings; they
fly away as an eagle towards Heaven¡¨ (1 Timothy
6:9-10). The man
referred to in the text, if he have money, does not stay himself upon it. This
man does not stay himself on his fellow men. There is a prevalent disposition
amongst men to pin their confidence to some human sleeve, and when that proves
unfaithful, as it often does, such people are thrown into confusion. Peace
flows alone from trust in God. But faith never stands alone. Peace never stands
alone in the heart of man. Trust brings peace, but it brings other graces
besides. Trust does not put a man to sleep. It does not alienate a man from the
source of power. It does not scatter a man. It unites him and unites him to
God. It animates him. It sets him in motion. The ear of the trusting disciple
lies close to the mouth of his beloved Master, whose words are the sweetest
messages that can possibly break upon his consciousness. The feet of faith
tremble with desire to run upon the errands of its Lord. Obedience is the
corollary of faith. Without obedience, peace would become discord in the soul.
Trust stirs us to industry and success in prayer; it makes us cheerful and
faithful in obedience; it makes us patient in affliction; it makes us resolute
in trials; it consoles us in desertions; it makes us fruitful in life, and
triumphantly victorious in death. (L. R. Foote, D. D.)
Trust gives steadfastness
How can a willow be stiffened into an iron pillar? Only--if I
might use such a violent metaphor--when it receives into its substance the iron
particles that it draws from the soil in which it is rooted. How can a bit of
thistledown be kept motionless amidst the tempest. Only by being glued to
something that is fixed. What do men do with light things on deck when the ship
is pitching? Lash them to a fixed point. Lash yourselves to God by simple trust,
and then you will partake of His serene immutability in such fashion as it is
possible for the creature to participate in the attributes of the Creator. (A.
Maclaren, D. D.)
Perfect peace a medium of revelation
When you have a really calm sea, what rare things the placid
waters reveal! Sculptured coral, whorled shells, iridescent fish,
pearls--snowflakes of the deep not one moment white but white forever, gems
whose strange e the floods cannot quench, with glorious plants and blossoms, as
if the silver water mirrored the flowers of Heaven as well as its stars. And
what rare things the unstirred sea reflects! The ambient blue, with all its
treasures of light and colour; the devious coast, with all its fantasy of rock
forestry and mountain. But let one ripple pass over the glassy tide, and the
matchless spectacle is sadly marred. So in ¡§perfect¡¨ peace we realise the glory
of our own being, the glory of higher worlds, as no language can tell; but the
first ripple of passion, or care, or doubt, spoils the magic of the picture and
the joy. (W. L.Watkinson.)
The human soul needs support
When the mind leans for strength upon itself it cannot be at
peace. Conflicting thoughts are ever passing through the brain, and we need
something solid on which to stay ourselves. The mind may be compared to ivy,
which, if it is to grow vigorous, needs to cling to an upright support. The
mind may be also likened to a lever, which without a fulcrum is almost useless;
and to a ladder, which when placed upright will fall, but when stayed against a
building is steady and strong enough to bear your weight. (W. Birch.)
Perfect peace in peril
A respected brother in the ministry once told me that he was at
Villa Franca in Italy, when a shock of an earthquake was felt. The various
members of a family with which he then was all showed alarm or uneasiness in
different ways, with the exception of one, who merely smiled at perceiving the
effect produced on them. That one was a dying man--in about a week after he
died in the Lord--and he knew that the time of his departure was at hand. It
mattered little to him whether he were summoned by the slow wasting hectic, or
by the crush of an earthquake. His mind was stayed on the Lord, and was
therefore kept in perfect peace under circumstances which would have made most
of us tremble. (R. M. Kyle, B. A.)
Membership in the ideal city
Verse 3 (see R.V. margin) states the conditions of membership in
the ideal Zion; a ¡§steadfast mind¡¨ may share the ¡§peace¡¨ which the ideal city
is to enjoy. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Freedom from care
A ship is made to go in the water, and no matter how deep the sea
nor how wild the tempest, all goes well so long as the water does not get into
the ship. The problem of managing a ship is, not to keep the ship out of the
water, but to keep the water out of the ship. The problem of true Christian
living is, not to keep ourselves out of cares and trials and temptations, but
to keep the cares and temptations from getting into our souls. (J. R.
Miller, D. D.)
God between the soul and circumstances
A great difference comes into the life when, instead of putting
circumstances between ourselves and God, we put God between ourselves and
circumstances. Then when annoyance and fret, unkind speeches and unjust
treatment, worries about money and helpers and procedure accumulate, they seem
like the passage of crowds up and down a London thoroughfare, whilst we sit
quietly within and pursue our work behind the double windows, that render the
room almost impervious to sound. Happy the soul which has learned to live
inside the film of God¡¦s invisible protection, poured around it by the Spirit
of peace! (F. B.Meyer, B. A.)
Mr. Gladstone¡¦s text
It is said that Mr. Gladstone, for forty years, had on the wall of
his bedroom this text: ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is
stayed on Thee.¡¨ These were the first words on which the great statesman¡¦s eyes
opened every morning, and they were one of the sources of his calm strength. (Sunday
School Chronicle.)
Trust in God reasonable
George M¡¦Donald says somewhere that it is more absurd to trust God
by halves than it is not to believe in Him at all.
Stonewall Jackson¡¦s faith
At a battle in the American Civil War, a general asked Stonewall
Jackson how it was he kept so cool while the bullets literally rained about
him. Jackson instantly became grave, and earnestly answered, ¡§My religions
belief teaches me to feel as safe in battle as in bed. God has fixed the time
of my death. I do not concern myself about that, but to be always ready.¡¨ After
a pause, he added, looking his questioner in the face, ¡§That is the way all men
should live, and then all would be equally brave.¡¨
Worry
Every time a man worries, physiologists say, he changes a portion
of his nervous system. Sometimes the change is serious; sometimes it is
permanent; sometimes it is fatal. What worry does for the body, it does also
for the spirit. It is the destruction of energy, the ruin of that serenity
which is half of power, and the fruitful cause of a large of life¡¦s failures.
The bicycle is useful because, on a level or a down grade, it
relieves a man not only of the weight of his burdens, but even of his own
weight, and he can put all his strength into the matter of getting along. Now
that is precisely what the Christian¡¦s trust will do for him. God never
intended that we should carry the burdens He lays upon us. He never intended
even that we should carry the burden of our own evil nature and sinful
tendencies, no is willing, nay, eager, to carry them all for us, emancipating
all our strength for pure progress (A. R. Wells.)
Verse 4
Trust
ye in the Lord forever
Trusting in the
Lord
I.
THE DUTY ITSELF.
1. It implies an acquiescence or submission to the will of God,
whatever it may be--trusting in Him, assured that He is doing, and will do,
what is right. This was the spirit of Eli of old, who, though under great
family trial, still said, ¡§It is the Lord; let Him do what seemeth Him good.¡¨
This was the spirit of the patriarch Job, who under all his trials could say,
¡§Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him.¡¨
2. It implies also an application to the Lord, with confidence that
the application will not be in vain. Perhaps the best passage I can give you upon
this subject will be that which contains the character given of Hezekiah. In 2 Kings 18:5, we are told, ¡§He trusted in the Lord God of Israel; so that
after him was none like him among all the kings of Judah, nor any that were
before him. For he clave to the Lord, and departed not from following Him, but
kept His commandments, which the Lord commanded Moses.¡¨ There was habitual
confidence in the Lord, which led Hezekiah to apply to the Lord in his hours of
trial; and therefore, when he was in danger of being besieged, he instantly
felt that his whole confidence must be in the Lord! So he took the letter, and
in close communion with God read aloud that letter, trusting that the Lord would
deliver him from all the threatenings which the letter contained.
3. Closely connected with these two explanations is that which I may
call dependence and expectation; so that we may say, in our hours of anxiety,
¡§Jehovah-jireh, the Lord will provide.¡¨ All this is perfectly compatible with
the energetic use of means for deliverance out of our trials. Indeed, wherever
there is the neglect of means, there is simple presumption.
4. Notice, again, in the description of the duty set before us in the
text, that it is to endure forever. We read here, ¡§Trust in the Lord forever.¡¨
This revolves both time and circumstances.
II. THE ENCOURAGEMENT. The text tells us, ¡§For in the Lord Jehovah
there is everlasting strength¡¨; or, ¡§The Lord Jehovah is the Rock of Ages.¡¨ The
encouragement, therefore, is based on the everlasting strength of God. (H.
M.Villiers, M. A.)
Trust in God
I. AS A RELIGIOUS DUTY. God, in our view, either in His wisdom,
power, grace, love, or fidelity, must always be the object of religions trust
and confidence; and I think it will be found that all these great qualities and
perfections in God are peculiarly exercised for the benefit and happiness of
believers. It is not merely in these abstract qualities that the Christian is
to trust, but in their exercise and development, for his own benefit and
advantage.
II. WHAT IS ESSENTIAL TO THE EXERCISE OF TRUST IN GOD.
1. It will be essential for you to cultivate scriptural knowledge.
The more the mind is brought under the illumination of the Spirit and the Word
of God--the more we are in the habit of connecting time with eternity, taking a
large and extended view of both--the more we consult the nature of Divine
providence, as developed in the history of His ancient people, in every age of
the world, and the manner of His dealings with them--the better we become
acquainted with the nature and spirit of His own work, the work of religion in
the human heart, and, certainly, the more confidence we shall be enabled to
exercise in God. We are very often brought into a state of darkness, doubt,
perplexity, bondage, and suffering, for the want merely of enlightened and
scriptural views of God, and the method of His dealings with His church.
2. Another state is also necessary-that is, living in a reconciled state
with God.
III. THE EXTENT TO WHICH WE OUGHT TO CARRY THIS CONFIDENCE IN GOD. And
first of all we may say, we ought to trust Him with everything. But then, there
is this remark to be made--that we ought to engage in nothing that is unlawful
and sinful; for we cannot trust God with that which is evil. Let us not
classify events, and consider some little and some great, some to be reposed on
God and others not. The fact is, we ought to take everything to Him in the
spirit of humble prayer and confidence, imploring His blessing upon it. Let me
remark, too, that we ought to trust God for everything, as well as with
everything. (J. Dixon, D. D.)
Unchanging
trust in an unchanging God
The
grandest and profoundest truths of the Old and New Testament with regard to the
Divine nature are always presented as the bases of exhortations to conduct and
to emotion. There is no such thing in Scripture as an aimless revelation of the
Divine character. That great ¡§for¡¨ of my text links together the two clauses.
I. Observe THE NAME OF JEHOVAH here given as the ground of invitation
to our trust. ¡§In the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength,¡¨ or ¡§the Rock of
Ages.¡¨ The expression that is here employed, the singular reduplication of the
name, which only occurs in one other place in Scripture, is no doubt intended
to emphasise the idea that underlies the name. We find here the same singular
appellation which occurs in one of the Psalms, where we read of God as ¡§riding
in the Heavens by His name Jah.¡¨ So here the name appears as ¡§Jah,
Jehovah¡¨--the former name being, as I suppose, the abbreviated form of the
latter, and the purpose of employing both being to call attention emphatically
to the name and what it means. What does it mean It speaks--
II. THE TRUST which corresponds to, and lays hold of the Rock. ¡§Trust
ye in the Lord forever: for in the Lord Jehovah is the Rock of Ages.¡¨ The word
which is here rendered ¡§trust¡¨ is an extremely graphic and significant one, and
teaches us a great deal more of the meaning and essence of the act of faith
than many more elaborate treatises would do. It simply means ¡§to depend.¡¨
Charles Wesley, in his great hymn, has, with the Christian poet¡¦s unerring
instinct, laid his finger on the precise meaning of the word when he says--
Hangs my helpless soul on
Thee.
Incongruous
as the metaphor hanging on the rock may seem, It conveys to us the true idea of
the trust which is peace and life. But did you ever notice that in our use of
the word ¡§depend¡¨ we have two different expressions, which convey two different
though kindred meanings? To be dependent on gives a different shade of
signification from to depend on. The former acknowledges inferiority, takes a
position of receptivity, and recognises that from another, who is conceived as
being above us, there flow down upon us all good things, strengths, and graces
that we may require. So, in this hanging upon God, there is the consciousness
of utter emptiness in myself and of my need of receiving all that I can have or
want from His full hand. But in faith or trust we hang on God in that other
sense too. We are not only consciously dependent upon Him, as conscious of our
emptiness and of His fulness, but we depend upon Him, as being calmly and
completely certain of Him and of His being and doing all that we need. In other
words, trust is reliance. Dependence and reliance are both metaphors. Both
picture resting one¡¦s whole weight on some person or thing beyond one¡¦s self,
but dependence pictures the weight as hanging from and upheld by a fixed point
above, and reliance pictures it as reposing on and upheld by a fixed point
beneath; and each sets forth in graphic fashion the act of the soul which Old
and New Testament alike regard as the condition of vital union with God. That
trust is reasonable. People pit faith against reason, as if the two things were
antagonists. Faith is the outcome of reason. The only difference between it and
reason, in the narrow sense of the word, is that faith has got longer sight
than reason, and can see into what is dark to it. There is nothing so
reasonable as to trust utterly in Him whose name is Jehovah, and in whom is the
Rock of Ages.
III. THE PERPETUITY OF THE CONFIDENCE which corresponds with the
eternity of the Rock. ¡§Trust ye in the Lord forever.¡¨ It is a commandment and a
promise. An unchanging God ought to secure an unchanging trust. ¡§Forever!¡¨ Amid
all the fluctuations of our minds and dispositions, there ought to be this one
steadfast attitude of our spirits kept up continuously through a whole life.
¡§Forever!¡¨ Whatever may happen in the way of changing conditions and altered
circumstances, for the same unchanging purpose brings all changes. The same
diurnal motion brings day and night. The same annual revolution brings summer
and winter. It is the same unchanging purpose of the steadfast God that creates
the wintry darkness through which the orb of our lives has to pass, and the
long summer hours of sunshine. But my text, like an God¡¦s commandments, carries
a promise hidden in its bosom. All that build on the Rock of Ages build
imperishable homes, which last as long as the Rock on which they are founded. (A.
Maclaren, D. D.)
Strong by
trusting the strong
Readers
of Darwin will recall the description he gives of a marine plant which rises
from a depth of one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet, and floats on the
surface of the water in the midst of the great breakers of the Western Ocean.
The stem of this plant is less than an inch through; yet it grows and thrives
and holds its own against the fierce smitings and pressures of breakers which
no masses of rock, however hard, could long withstand. What is the secret of
this marvellous resistance and endurance? How can this little, slender plant
face the fury of the elements so successfully, and, in spite of storms and tempests,
keep its hold, and perpetuate itself from century to century? It reaches down
into the still depths, where it fixes its grasp, after the fashion of the
instinct that has been put into it, to the naked rocks; and no commotion of the
upper waters can shake it loose. (Weekly Pulpit.)
Verse 8
Yea, in the way of Thy
Judgments, O Lord, have we waited for Thee
God¡¦s people waiting for
Him in the way of His judgments
I.
THE WORDS
CONTAIN A SOLEMN PROTESTATION--a protestation, on the part of these faithful
people of the Lord, to Himself, in reference to His ¡§judgments.¡¨ ¡§Yea,¡¨ say
they, ¡§Verily Thou, O Divine Searcher of hearts, knowest that we lie not, when
we declare that in the way of Thy judgments we have waited for Thee.¡¨ What a
happy state of mind and heart is this! There may be a multiplication of
observances, lastings, solemn assemblies, where, on the part of multitudes,
there is nothing but form.
II. THESE
GODLY JEWS SPEAK TO THE LORD OF HIS ¡§JUDGMENTS.¡¨ If a sparrow cannot fall to
the ground without. Thy knowledge and permission, how much more is Thy agency
to be traced in those mighty desolations that have moved the earth, and come
down with such appalling fury on the land of Thine own people!
III. THESE
GODLY PEOPLE, IN THEIR SINNING AND CHASTENED LAND, SPEAK TO GOD OF ¡§THE WAY¡¨ OF
HIS JUDGMENTS. We read of Jehovah¡¦s
¡§way¡¨ in a gracious
sense--His way of mercy to lost sinners--the wondrous and glorious path along
which He has passed, and is still passing, in saving sinners of our fallen race
through the atonement of His own beloved incarnate Son (Psalms
67:1-2).
Blessed, most blessed, are they who are Divinely taught this ¡§way¡¨ of the Lord!
A far other ¡§way¡¨ of Judah¡¦s God is that to which her mourning children refer
in the verse before us. It is His judicial way--the wrathful way in which He is
provoked to ¡§come out of His place,¡¨ and move towards highly favoured but
deeply sinning and guilty lands.
IV. Let
us contemplate and imitate the exercise of this ¡§small remnant¡¨ of the fearers
of the Lord in the land of Judah. THEY WAITED FOR HIM IN THE WAY OF HIS
JUDGMENTS. What are the elements which should enter into the exercise to which
we are this day called?
1. Solemn
recognition of God.
2. Solemn
adoration of this high and holy Lord God.
3. Justification
of God.
4. Humiliation
of soul before God.
5. Pouring
out the heart in earnest supplication before the Lord. (W. Mackray, M. A.)
The right improvement of
public or private calamities
I. IN
EVERY AFFLICTIVE DISPENSATION OF DIVINE PROVIDENCE IT BECOMES US TO RECOGNISE
THE HAND OF THE LORD. They are ¡§Thy¡¨ judgments. In doing this we imitate the example
of the wise and good in every age.
II. EVERY
CALAMITY, WHETHER PRIVATE OR PUBLIC, SHOULD BE CONSIDERED AS A MANIFESTATION OF
THE DIVINE DISPLEASURE AGAINST SIN. They are Thy ¡§judgments.¡¨
III. IN
EVERY CALAMITY THE MIND OF THE BELIEVER SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO GOD. ¡§The desire
of our soul is to Thy name, and to the remembrance of Thee.¡¨
1. This
part of the passage expresses the most anxious solicitude that the Divine glory
might be promoted by all the dispensations of His providence towards the children
of men.
2. This
part of our text seems to intimate also to whom the afflicted believer should
apply for support. ¡§The desire of our soul is to Thy name, and to the
remembrance of Thee.¡¨
3. This
part of our text exhibits the believer finding a source of encouragement under
present trouble, or in the anticipation of future difficulties, in a reference
to his former experience of the power, the faithfulness and grace of his
covenant God. ¡§The desire of our soul is to the remembrance of Thee.¡¨
IV. IN
CIRCUMSTANCES OF AFFLICTION, WHETHER PRIVATE OR PUBLIC, IT IS THE DUTY AND
PRIVILEGE OF THE BELIEVER TO BE FOUND WAITING UPON GOD. ¡§In the way of Thy
judgments have we waited for Thee, O God.¡¨ The verb ¡§to wait,¡¨ as used in the
text, denotes desire, expectation, patience, and perseverance. Learn--
1. That
it is an evil thing and bitter to sin against God.
2. The
infinite value of that system, which opens the way for the sinful creature to
return to God, with the certain hope of being pardoned, adopted, and eternally
blessed.
3. Let
the sinner he exhorted to seek that Divine blessing which turns the curse into
a blessing.
4. Let
the believer labour to live in the exercise of the high and glorious
privilege--waiting on God. (Essex Congregational Remembrancer.)
Christians, and their
communion with God
(with Isaiah
26:9):--
I. THERE
IS, IN THE PEOPLE OF GOD, A PRINCIPLE OF COMMUNION WITH GOD.
1. This
is where their spiritual life begins.
2. This
is where the life of the real Christian grows.
3. It
becomes to the believer the tenor of his life to please God.
4. This
principle of communion with God becomes the very flower of our lives.
5. This
is the hunger and thirst of the Christian.
6. This
proves that there has been a Divine renewal wrought in us.
7. This
proves your sonship.
8. This
proves your holiness, too, in a measure, for like will to like.
9. This
proves your heavenliness, too, for that same desire which draws you to God is drawing
you to Heaven.
II. THIS
PRINCIPLE DISPLAYS ITSELF AND WORKS IN VARIOUS WAYS. ¡§Yea, in the way of Thy
judgments,¡¨ etc. We are longing for God, and it is dark and cloudy. What shall
we do then?
1. Why,
wait for Him. Sometimes, the way of God¡¦s judgments may mean the appointed way,
the regular way. Whenever thou hast a great trouble, expect a great mercy.
2. This
communion leads to desiring. The desire of our soul, etc.
3. Your
desire is to remember the Lord. ¡§And to the remembrance of Thee.¡¨ I wish that I
had a memory that was so narrow that it could only hold the things of God.
4. This
principle of communion shows itself in a personal yearning. The eighth verse is
in the plural, the ninth in the singular.
5. This
principle of communion takes one other form, that of personal seeking. ¡§Yea,
with my spirit within me,¡¨ etc.
III. THE
LORD TAKES PLEASURE IN THIS COMMUNION WITH HIS PEOPLE (Isaiah
26:20). (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
The desire of
our soul is to Thy name
The desire of the renewed
soul
What is personal religion,
and what is personal evidence of it? One single word, in my text is a key to
all--¡§desire.¡¨ The sum and substance of a believer¡¦s longings towards God is to
know more of God, to enjoy more of God, to live more upon the fulness of the
Son of God, and to become abstracted from all but God Himself. A sound creed is
contained in these three things: I am a guilty wretch, deserving hell; Jesus is
everything I want, for time and for eternity; I am His, and He is mine. Now,
keeping this in view, let us descant upon--
I. THE
OBJECT OF THE REGENERATED SOUL¡¦S DESIRE. Look at this as it relates to the Holy
Three in One. The soul may be longing for another sight of his Bible. But why?
Because he longs to meet with God there. He may be longing to hear another
Gospel sermon. Why? Because it sets forth the perfections of the God he loves,
and therefore he expects to meet Him there. He may be longing for another
ordinance day. Why? Because Jesus is often made known to him in ¡§breaking of
bread.¡¨ And so whatever means and ordinances are used, whatever externals are
laid before the child of God and employed by him, it is not these that will
satisfy him. It is God in them. I pass on to show--
II. WHAT
WEANING WORK IS ESSENTIAL TO THIS. Until there is a great deal of weaning in
the Christian¡¦s experience there will not be a very great deal of spirituality.
III. THE
NEGOTIATIONS THAT ARISE OUT OF THIS. If the earnest desire of my soul is after the
enjoyment of God, I cannot grow careless about using means (J. Irons.)
Verse
9
With my soul have I desired Thee in the night
The religious craving and seeking of the soul at night
There is no work so momentous, me influential, as the work of the
soul in the sleepless hours of night.
Busy in calling up departed friends and interchanging thoughts again, busy in
recalling the past and foreboding the future, busy in reflections concerning
itself and its God. In these words we have--
I. The soul¡¦s religious
LONGING in the night. The soul has many instinctive cravings, cravings for
knowledge, for beauty, for order, for society.; but its deepest hunger is for
God. ¡§My heart and my flesh crieth out for the living God.¡¨ For what in God
does it hunger?
1. For the assurance of His
love. We are so formed that we crave the possession of the object of our love.
Were all the works of God ours, we should be hungry without Him. He who gives
His strongest love to us gives Himself.
2. For revelations of His
mind. It yearns for ideas from the great Fountain of intelligence and love.
II. The soul¡¦s religious
SEARCHING in the night. ¡§With my spirit within me will I seek Thee early.¡¨ The
soul seeking for God implies--
1. A consciousness that it
has not got Him. All have God¡¦s works everywhere, God¡¦s influence everywhere,
God¡¦s presence everywhere; but only a few have Himself, the assurance of His
love. Hence the searching.
2. A belief that He may be
obtained. We may all have God as our portion by seeking Him in Christ. Men
hunger for some things they can never get--wealth, power, social influence, the
distinctions of genius, etc. But allwho hunger for God obtain Him.
Conclusion--God is the great want of the soul. Without Him what are we? Planets
detached from the sun, wandering stars for whom are reserved blackness and
anarchy. ¡§Whom have I in Heaven but Thee?¡¨ etc. (Homilist.)
Death and judgment
The judgments recorded in the Old Testament by the special
inspiration of God, showing them to be, as common centres, retribution on the
sons of men, are intended to lead us to the belief in that final judgment after
death of which we read in the New Testament. These early judgments of nations
and states were the shadows, ¡§the going before,¡¨ of that awful time when all
mankind shall appear to receive the sentence with its eternal consequences for
good or evil. Now, here we see the power of religion in sustaining the soul of
man under the awfulness of Divine retribution and the expectations of God¡¦s
anger on the sons of the world; we see the expression, by those who have passed
through such time, set before us as indications of the mind we are to cherish
and the hopes we may entertain in view of that final judgment, and it shows the
power of religious faith to maintain the soul in peace against the two greatest
fears which darken the soul of man.
1. The fear of death. How
nature shrinks from what teems to be an annihilation of this life!
2. Yet there is a greater
fear than this--the thought of meeting God in the solitary going forth into
what seems the dark night. It was not always so with man¡¦s soul He did not fear
God in his original creation. But as soon as sin was committed observe the
change; he shrank from the thought and the presence--from the approaching sound
of the Divine appearance. That was the effect of one sin, and since that sin
has spread through the whole of nature and has caused sinfulness to taint the
whole being of men. Men shrink from their follow creatures when they are better
than themselves. Those children who have committed faults shrink from their
parents¡¦ eyes, however fond they may be of them. Men shrink from themselves
when conscious of their own sin, and often it leads them to commit self-murder.
Now, religious faith raises a man above these two dark fears haunting the soul,
produces peace, and kindles brightest hopes. (T. T. Carter, M. A.)
The desire of the soul in spiritual darkness
Night appears to be a time peculiarly favourable to devotion. Its
solemn stillness helps to free the mind from that perpetual din which the cares
of the world will bring around it; and the stars looking own from Heaven upon
us shine as if they would attract us up to God. I shall not speak of night natural
at all, although there may be a great deal of room for poetic thought and
expression.
I. I shall speak to CONFIRMED
CHRISTIANS and I shall bring one or two remarks to bear upon their case, if
they are in darkness
1. The Christian man has not
always a bright, shining sun; he has seasons of darkness and night. It is a
great truth, that the true religion of the living God is calculated to give a
man happiness below as well as bliss above. But, notwithstanding, experience
tells us that if the course of the just be ¡§as the shining light, that shineth
more and more unto the perfect day,¡¨ yet sometimes that light is eclipsed.
2. A Christian man¡¦s religion
will keep its colour in the night. ¡§With my soul have I desired Thee in the
night.¡¨ What a mighty deal of silver slipper religion we have in this world.
Men will follow Christ when everyone cries ¡§Hosanna!¡¨ But they will not go with
Him in the night. There is many a Christian whose piety did not burn much when
he was in prosperity, but it will be known in adversity.
3. All that the Christian
wants in the night is his God. ¡§With desire have I desired Thee in the night.¡¨
By day there are many things that a Christian will desire besides his Lord; but
in the night he wants nothing but his God.
4. There are times when all
the saint can are is to desire. We have a vast number of evidences of piety:
some are practical, some experimental, some doctrinal; and the more evidences a
man has of his piety the better. We like a number of signatures, to make a deed
more valid, if possible. We like to invest property in a great number of
trustees, in order that it may be all the safer; and so we love to have many
evidences. But there are seasons when a Christian cannot get any. He can
scarcely get one witness to come and attest his godliness. But there is one
witness that very seldom is gagged, and that is, ¡§I have desired Thee--I have
desired Thee in the night.¡¨
II. Speak to NEWLY AWAKENED
SOULS.
1. The first question they
would ask is this--How am I to know that my desires are proofs of a work of
grace in my soul?
2. But you say, ¡§If I have
desired God, why have not I obtained my desire before now?¡¨
3. But there is one more
serious inquiry: and it is, Will God grant my desire at last? Yes, poor soul,
verily He will. It is quite impossible that you should have desired God and
should be lost. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
With my spirit within me
will I seek Thee early
Seeking God early
1. Early, in the morning of
life, which is the most proper season for this employment, your faculties being
then most active and vigorous.
2. Early, in preference to
all other objects which solicit your attention, seeking first, and above all
things, the kingdom of God and His righteousness.
3. Early, in every day of
life, after you are refreshed with rest; before you engage in company, in
business, or amusement; determined, with the man according to God¡¦s own heart,
that your voice the Lord shall hear in the morning. (R. Macculloch.)
When Thy Judgments are in
the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousness
The judgments of God
I. THE AUTHOR OF THOSE
JUDGMENTS WITH WHICH WE ARE VISITED THE ENDS FOR WHICH THEY ARE SENT AND THEIR
FITNESS TO INSTRUCT US IN RIGHTEOUSNESS.
1. Judgments come from God.
Judgments that would crush us when proceeding from any other source, can be
borne when viewed as coming from the hand of God.
2. But why does God visit us
with judgments? Not that He delights in the miseries of His creatures. ¡§He
afflicteth not willingly, nor grieveth the children of men.¡¨ He would rather
¡§draw them by the cords of love¡¨; and ¡§by His goodness lead them to
repentance.¡¨
3. A few plain considerations
are sufficient to show that the judgments of God have a natural tendency to
awaken men from their security and to teach them righteousness. Man is a
depraved and corrupted creature. The very multitude of Divine favours hides the
hand which confers them, and makes us forget our Benefactor; intoxicated and
blinded by enjoyment, in the bosom of peace and abundance, piety languishes, our
passions are inflamed, and we cease to ¡§hunger and thirst after righteousness.¡¨
In this situation, what does the mercy, the compassion of our Father, require
from Him? To visit us with His judgments. Then we see the impotence of the
idols which have seduced us; conscience wakes from its lethargy, and retraces
to us in accents awfully impressive all our wanderings from God and
righteousness.
II. INQUIRE WHY THE JUDGMENTS
OF GOD DO NOT ALWAYS HAVE THIS HAPPY EFFECT, which they are designed and
calculated to produce. Judgments are frequently rendered useless because of our
insensibility. (H. Kollock, D. D.)
The judgments of God
I. THE JUDGMENTS OF GOD ARE
DESIGNED BY HIM, AND IN THEIR OWN NATURE DO TEND TO TEACH THE INHABITANTS OF
THE WORLD TRUE REPENTANCE AND RIGHTEOUSNESS.
1. They are apt to work on
our minds a stronger conviction of the providence of God.
2. They most powerfully
awaken in us the thoughts of the great day of judgment.
II. INQUIRE WHETHER THEY DO
ALWAYS PRODUCE THIS EFFECT. And here experience acquaints us that there is
something in the corruption and acquired wickedness of some men¡¦s hearts that
baffles this as well as other methods of God¡¦s dealing with them; they are so
far from repenting and learning righteousness by the corrections of God that
they many times add impiety to their immoralities, and deny that He concerns
Himself in the government of the world.
III. EXHORT YOU TO LEARN
RIGHTEOUSNESS FROM THE PRESENT JUDGMENTS OF GOD. (T. Manningham, D. D.)
The judgments of God
By the term, ¡§judgments of God,¡¨ the Scriptures sometimes denote
the decisions, whether favourable or adverse, which God passes upon the conduct
of men. But more frequently this phrase is employed to denote the effect of
such decisions when they are unfavourable--to denote those remarkable
punishments by which the Almighty chastises the wickedness of guilty
individuals and the crimes of guilty nations. In the course of God¡¦s
providential procedure, we often see His judgments; we see misfortune and
distress following so closely and visibly the conduct of men, that we can have
no doubt whatever concerning the connection that, by His appointment, subsists
between them. But there are many eases where the precise object of the Divine
visitation is unknown. In such eases it would therefore be rash and
uncharitable to interpret particularly, and with reference to individuals, the
views of Divine judgment when affecting a multitude. It is enough for us to
know that these judgments, whatever be their kind, their nature, or their
degree, are instruments of God¡¦s government of His moral and rational
offspring, and that the inhabitants of the earth may learn from them lessons of
righteousness.
I. The judgments of God,
whatever their form and degree, are found powerfully to excite SENTIMENTS OF
WARM PIETY AND DEEP DEVOTION toward that God from whom these judgments proceed.
There are various principles of our constitution, by which the judgments of
Heaven contribute to a salutary effect upon the minds of a thoughtless world.
Unexpected revolutions, either in the natural or moral world, naturally arrest
our attention. They demonstrate, in the most sensible manner, to our
consciences, our own weakness, and the incompetency of our powers, either to
produce or control the changing events around us; and to every mind that is not
totally enfeebled and darkened, through corruption, such revolutions suggest
with irresistible force the notion of a powerful Supreme Ruler; they alarm our
fears at His displays, and awaken all those sentiments (this is at least their
natural tendency, or ought to be their constant effect) of humility and
penitence, which form the beginning of a pious and devout temper. And we learn
from Scripture that this is not only the tendency of the Divine judgments when
rightly improved, but often the very purpose for which they were sent by the
providence of God.
II. If, then, the judgments of
God be both fitted and designed to awaken us to the ways of His providence, HOW
SHOULD WE LABOUR TO REGARD AND IMPROVE THEM! (G. H. Baird, D. D.)
National judgments
I. THAT THIS COUNTRY HAS BEEN
VISITED BY THE JUDGMENTS OF GOD.
1. Our nation has, indeed,
been a scene of many and extraordinary mercies. The rise and establishment of
free institutions, and that wonderful balance of constitution which has
prevented both the extremes of government,--royal despotism on the one hand,
and popular anarchy on the other,--deserve our grateful recognition. Our own
soil has long been e, stranger to the desolating ravages of war, and the shouts
and confused noise of battle have been heard only at a distance. The
discoveries of science and the attainments of art have been unparalleled; and
useful knowledge has been diffused to an unexampled extent over the various
classes of society. We have had the benefits of a Divine religion, reformed
from the corruptions which had accumulated with the course of ages; we have had
an almost universal diffusion of the pure Word of God, the inspired oracles of
truth. ¡§The lines are fallen to us in pleasant places; yea, we have a goodly
heritage!¡¨
2. Yet it is also true that
the judgments of God have been abroad in the land. That mighty hand is the hand
of God; that mysterious and invisible power is the power of God. There is
indeed a sinful and fatal disposition abroad, to account for things only by
speaking of fortune and chance, or by referring, at most, to the passions and
principles of those human agents by whom the management of national interests
is conducted. This forgetfulness of the Most High, amounting to a practical
atheism, and spread widely over the habits of men, is one of the worst signs of
the times in which we live.
II. WHETHER, BY THE
INHABITANTS OF THIS COUNTRY, A RIGHT IMPROVEMENT OF ITS VISITATIONS HAS BEEN
MADE. ¡§When Thy judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will
learn righteousness.¡¨ We do not imagine this to be a positive assertion, that
the learning of righteousness is the invariable consequence of the Divine
judgments, but a statement that such ought to be their result. If it be true
that the Divine judgments are poured forth in consequence of transgression, it
must be clear that the right conduct to be pursued by those who feel them is to
repent and to reform.
III. THE REFLECTIONS BY WHICH
AN IMMEDIATE IMPROVEMENT OF PAST VISITATIONS IS FORCIBLY URGED.
1. Consider what must be
expected as the public consequences of continued impenitence and transgression.
2. Consider what will
doubtless be the results of the desired amendment and repentance. ¡§Iniquity
shall not be our ruin.¡¨ New glories will then arise upon our land. (James
Parsons.)
Instruction from the judgment of God
It is an act of righteousness to give everyone their own; to God,
the things that are God¡¦s; to do right to all men, and a man¡¦s self also.
I. PIETY TOWARDS GOD consists
in these six particulars--
1. Reverence and awful regard
of the Divine majesty.
2. The admiring and adoring
Him, in His height, excellency, and perfection.
3. Love and delight in Him,
because of His grace and goodness and free communication; with thankfulness for
His benefits.
4. Trust in God, because of
His faithfulness and to give Him credit, because of His approved truth and
goodness.
5. Submission to Him, because
of His superiority and sovereignty.
6. Duty and service, because
of His dominion and property.
II. RIGHTEOUSNESS TOWARDS MEN.
That doth comprehend in it good behaviour and equal dealings.
1. In general, it doth take
in the obedience and subjection that all inferiors owe to their superiors and
governors.
2. That fairness and complacency
which ought to be between all those that converse upon terms of equality.
3. That tenderness that ought
to be used towards inferiors, or in a worse condition than ourselves.
4. Thank, fulness, where we
are beholden.
5. Uprightness with all with
whom we have to do.
(4) Candour in all our
judgments and censures.
(10) Clemency and compassion
towards those that have done us evil.
(12) Love and goodwill towards
all men.
III. RIGHTEOUSNESS TO
OURSELVES.
1. It doth comprehend in it
modesty and humility: that is the soul¡¦s temper.
2. Sobriety: that is the
mind¡¦s balance.
3. Temperance and chastity:
that is the body¡¦s security. More particularly--
4. The whole man at heart¡¦s
ease, through Christian courage and resolution; reposing in God¡¦s protection
and providence; charging ourselves only with the use of lawful means; and when
we have done our-duty, leaving the success to God, acknowledging our dependence
upon Him, and the need of His blessing. These are instances of righteousness,
wherein the inhabitants of the world are to be instructed, when God¡¦s judgments
are upon the earth. (B. Whichcote, D. D.)
The judgments of God
1. The judgments of God ought
to drive the open transgressor of God¡¦s law from his sins and criminal
indulgences.
2. The judgments of God ought
to stimulate every individual, who is destitute of personal religion, to attend
to his spiritual interests without a moment¡¦s delay. Religion is a personal
concern, and essential to extensive usefulness and real happiness.
3. The judgments of God ought
to excite in every Christian more of the spirit and exercise of prayer both for
himself and others. (Alex. Harvey.)
Fast-day sermon
The faculties of man are too limited to comprehend the nature of
the Divine judgments. The direction of events in the moral government of the
world baffles his investigation. With respect to individuals, those afflictions
are improperly called ¡§judgments¡¨ which may be merely instances of trial or
discipline, or even of highly beneficial example. Yet we can seldom err in
calling those evils which visit a nation by the name of ¡§judgments.¡¨ We may
justly consider them as the penalty and correctives of a people¡¦s sin. For, as
such collective bodies may have national iniquities of a flagrant kind, and as
they can exist in that collective capacity of sinning as nations only in this
world, we may conclude that such wide visitations of evil are nothing less than
national chastisements, or a general penal discipline of the people so
afflicted: Still their object is always some ultimate good.
1. The perversion of great
wealth in a life of dissipation and voluptuousness, idleness and uselessness,
as it is a spectacle by no means uncommon, so is it a most offensive and
insulting sight in the eyes of Him ¡§who maketh poor and who maketh rich.¡¨
2. This leads me to another
crying sin, that seems to pervade all the ranks of modern society--¡§the love of
money¡¨: that which the apostle calls ¡§the root of all evil,¡¨ and, by another
name, the most offensive to a jealous God, who claims for Himself and His
service the powers of the mind, the strength of the body, and the yearnings of
the heart, namely, ¡§idolatry.¡¨ It is habitual covetousness, which early blights
and mildews the tender shoots of religion in the breast, hardens every finer
feeling, and concentrates every thought and care and wish upon self.
3. Another alarming sin of
our country is pride.
4. This leads me next to our
ingratitude.
5. The virtual unbelief, the
practical infidelity of the present day. National sins are, after all, the
collective vices of individuals; and every man has his own peculiar sins, which
must weigh also upon his country¡¦s welfare. For the removal, therefore, of
present, and the prevention of future judgments, we must look to the correction
of individual character. (A. B.Evans, D. D.)
Affliction a school of instruction
I. Let us consider WHAT THAT
IS WHICH MUST INSTRUCT US. Our sufferings and afflictions. And they are here
described in a threefold notion.
1. In their nature and
propriety; what, and whose they are. They are no other than God¡¦s ¡§judgments.¡¨
2. By their time and season;
that is implied in this particle of time, ¡§when.¡¨
3. By the circumstance of
place, where they are inflicted. That which God makes the school of correction;
¡§the earth.¡¨ Are our afflictions God¡¦s ¡§judgments¡¨?
Then--
1. They are deserved by us;
God doth justly inflict them upon us.
2. They are wisely ordained.
3. They are proportioned in a
just and holy manner, with a due measure and moderation.
II. THE LESSON WE MUST LEARN
BY THEM. ¡§Righteousness.¡¨
1. Who are the scholars? They
are the inhabitants of the world.
2. What is their duty? They
must be learners.
3. What is their lesson? They
must learn righteousness. (Bishop Brownrig.)
The teaching of ordinary life
Persons are apt too much to separate spirituality of mind from the
teaching of ordinary life, and the lessons which the facts of this world
convey. Undoubtedly the mind may be spiritualised without this teaching, and
even before it can be had; at the same time, in the case of the great majority
of men, the spiritual temper is not attained without this teaching. (J. B.
Mozley, D. D.)
The world a great monitor
The world is the great tempter, but at the same time it is the
great monitor. It is the great saddener, the great warner, the great prophet. (J.
B. Mozley, D. D.)
God¡¦s judgments best awaken sinners
I. I shall endeavour to
confirm the truth of THE GENERAL OBSERVATION IN THE TEXT, of the good effects
of God¡¦s judgments upon mankind.
1. The end and design of God,
in His judgments, is to do good to men; to make the bad good, and the good
better. God has told us, in His Holy Word, that He is love, and that fury is
not in Him. Now, it is demonstration that from love nothing but love can flow.
2. The judgments of God have
a natural tendency and efficacy to convert and reform sinners, and to perfect
the righteous. The two predominant and ruling passions in human nature are the
fear of evil and the desire of happiness; and nothing is more proper to work
upon these, and direct them to and fix them upon their right object, than the
judgments of God.
3. And that thus it has been
in fact I come now to prove by examples. The Ninevites were so terrified with
the threatening of the prophet Jonah that they repented, and escaped the
judgment. The same did Ahab upon the threatening of Elijah, and had the same
success, etc.
II. THE PARTICULAR EXAMPLE of
the good effect the judgments of God had upon those whom the prophet
personates, and in whose name he speaks in the text. In which expressions we
have the description and characters of the most sincere, excellent, and
acceptable conversion of the soul to God which are--
1. To turn the whole bent and
force of our desire wholly to God alone.
2. To turn the attention and
application of our soul inward, to God dwelling within us, by endeavouring to
live in a constant sense of His presence, and in a continual seeking Him and
lifting up our hearts to Him in prayer. (Val. Nalson.)
God¡¦s relation to evil
There is a very dark side to human history: calamity,
disappointment, disease, death are facts and factors in human history that no
one of us can deny. And the minds of men have always been attempting a solution
of this dark aspect of human experience. There have been three solutions which have
been suggested:
The Divine sovereignty
If you take the Bible, and study this subject from Genesis to
Revelation, it will grow upon you how magnificently awful is this sovereignty
of God. Take the ten plagues of Egypt; they were an early lesson in human
history about this sovereignty of God, that reaches through all things as well
as to all creatures. In these ten plagues, for instance, we have examples of
God¡¦s control over the forces of nature. In those same plagues we have
illustrations of God¡¦s control over animated nature. And we have illustrated
God¡¦s control over those subtle and mysterious influences that we cannot
define, and the nature of which we do not understand, but which lie at the
bottom of disease--the murrain among cattle, the boils and the blains, the
death of the firstborn. Now, if we pass along in this remarkable history we
shall next meet, in Exodus 23:1-33, the declaration, ¡§I will
send the hornet before you, and drive out the people of the land of Canaan,
that ye may take possession.¡¨ We go still further, and we read, in the Book of
the Psalms, that He ¡§called for the famine¡¨; as though the famine were an
obedient servant, summoned to the Master¡¦s presence, to go forth and do the
Master¡¦s bidding. In these Psalms we are likewise told that He makes the winds
His messengers, and the flames of fire His ministers. In Isaiah 54:1-17 we are told distinctly,
¡§I have created the waster to destroy.¡¨ We pass to the Book of Jonah, and Jonah
is a revelation of the sovereignty of God in human affairs. For instance, we
are told here, in four separate places, how the Lord had ¡§prepared a great fish¡¨
to swallow Jonah, and He ¡§spake unto the fish.¡¨ ¡§The Lord prepared a gourd,¡¨
and made it to come up over Jonah. ¡§The Lord prepared a worm,¡¨ that it might
smite the gourd. The Lord ¡§prepared a vehement east wind,¡¨ that it might smite
upon the head of Jonah. Notice the comprehensiveness of these declarations. God
controls the wind, which is not an intelligent form of life; God controls the
gourd, which belongs to the vegetable kingdom; God controls the worm that is
among the insects; God controls the great fish that is among those that swim
the waters. Turn now to the Book of Joel 1:4. And what does he say in
2:25? ¡§And I will restore to you the years that the locust hath eaten, the
cankerworm, and the caterpillar, and the palmerworm, My great army which I sent
among you.¡¨ There is no more sublimely awful verse in the whole Old Testament
than that--¡§My great army which I sent among you.¡¨ And just think what an army
is this going forth in four detachments one after the other! The student of
history will observe that about three times in a century there comes among men
some form of disease with regard to which science is utterly ignorant and
impotent. No one knows how to prevent it, no one knows how to cure the
disasters which it engenders. And it is another remarkable fact, that just as
soon as science begins to have a limited control over these forms of scourge a
new plague develops about which they know nothing; simply shewing that Almighty
God has not surrendered the throne of the universe, nor given up His control
even over the malignant and destructive forces of nature. If God did not keep
the scourges of nature doing their work, the human race would rot in its own
iniquity. (A. T. Pierson, D. D.)
God¡¦s judgments and their lessons
What are we to understand by ¡§judgments of God¡¨? Judgments are the
activities of a judge, and a judge is one that scans the conduct of men, and
visits it accordingly. We do not say, of course, that every individual instance
of suffering from this chastisement is an individual instance of judgment for
personal sin. We are bound up in society, and it is impossible that a scourge
shall come down upon the human family that does not involve the good as well as
the wicked; for we are dependent upon one another, and intimately associated in
social life. Why are these judgements of God visited?
1. There is judgment on the
sin of dirt, on the sin of physical uncleanness, unwholesome habits,
unwholesome diet, clothing, habitation; and for that reason the most of these
scourges originate in those districts where humanity is most thickly
congregated, and where all sanitary laws are set at defiance.
2. There are God¡¦s judgments
on moral iniquity.
3. These scourges are God¡¦s
judgments on the sin of greed and selfishness. Think how many forms of social
evil there are in the various communities that are upheld by the greed and
selfishness of man.
4. There are two sorts of
judgments: one the temporal, which is corrective and preventive; the other the
eternal, which is punitive and retributive only. It is to the former that the
reference is made these judgments that are ¡§in the earth,¡¨ not in the next
world or in the next life. And these judgments are designed not to be
retributive, but to be corrective of iniquity and preventive of further sin.
Therefore, just as soon as these judgments come upon the people, they should
begin to inquire what laws of God have been violated that ought to be obeyed. (A.
T. Pierson, D. D.)
The God of judgment
In the Catskill Mountains, about a quarter of a century ago, an
infidel got up on one of those heights, and, in the presence of some atheistic
companions, defied the God of heaven to show Himself in battle. He swung his
sword to and fro, and challenged the Almighty to meet him in single combat. The
Almighty paid no attention to him, of course; but He just commissioned a little
gnat, so small that it could scarcely be seen by a microscope, to lodge in his
windpipe and choke him to death. (A. T. Pierson, D. D.)
God¡¦s judgment on American slavery
It reigned in the United States of America for a hundred years. It
was defended by almost the entire body of preachers in the southern
States--defended and upheld, and its extension vindicated and advocated. And
then God brought an awful war of four years¡¦ duration upon the United States,
and Mr. Lincoln, that heroic man in the midst of that country, made this
significant announcement: ¡§It would not surprise me if, in view of the
long-continued oppression of the slave in this country, it should please
Almighty God that this war shall not cease until the life of one freeman has
been exacted for the life of every slave that has been sacrificed during these
hundred years.¡¨ And the cost of that American war was 500,000 people killed,
300,000 people maimed, 300,000 women made widows, 700,000 children made
orphans, and 3000 millions of dollars, or 600 million sterling expended. God¡¦s
judgment on the sin of greed and selfishness! (A. T. Pierson, D. D.)
Pestilence and prayer
Minnesota is the centre of the great western granary of the world.
There came down upon those splendid fields that extend over thousands of acres,
without even the division of a fence, an awful scourge, known as the
grasshopper scourge. Nothing could be done by man to remove the scourge. The
grasshoppers laid their eggs, and the next year, as soon as the wheat appeared,
the destructive insect appeared alongside of it, and the utmost zeal and effort
of the farmers failed even to abate this dreadful pestilence. The governor of
Minnesota, who was a very high-toned Christian gentleman, called upon the
people of the State to observe a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer for
the removal of the plague. Secular papers, and especially the infidel papers,
scouted the idea of reaching this natural visitation of insects by an appeal to
God. They made the thing as ridiculous as they could make it, but still the
Christian people assembled in their places of prayer, and many came together on
the appointed day. Spring came, the wheat began to appear in the furrow, and
the grasshopper appeared alongside of the wheat; and then the secular papers,
that had scorned the idea of prayer to Almighty God, said, ¡§Where is the result
of your day of prayer, and fasting, and humiliation?¡¨ The grasshoppers
developed, but at the same time there developed a parasite that attached itself
to the grasshopper and accomplished two results. In the first place, it made
the grasshopper impotent to harm the wheat; and in the second place--which was
more important--it made the grasshopper impotent to reproduce itself. And from
that year there has been no scourge of grasshoppers in the State of Minnesota.
And so the righteous have seen it and rejoined, and all iniquity has stopped
her mouth in the presence of the manifest interposition of God. (A. T.
Pierson, D. D.)
Verse 10-11
Let favour be
shewed to the wicked, yet will he not learn righteousness
Insensibility of the
wicked
God has
written, and spread before mankind, three large books, all of which are legible
and intelligible to such as have eyes to see and a disposition of mind to read
them with attention.
These are, the books of Nature, of Scripture, and of Providence. None of these
books should be despised, overlooked, or neglected. To this last our attention
is called by the words of the text.
I. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN LEARNING RIGHTEOUSNESS. It is true
righteousness which is here meant.
1. Not hypocritical righteousness, like that of many of the
Pharisees.
2. Not ceremonial righteousness, like that of most of the Jews, who
confided in circumcision and other ceremonies of their law.
3. Not partial and inconstant righteousness, such as the tithing of ¡§mint,
and anise, and cummin,¡¨ and the neglecting of ¡§the weightier matters of the
law, judgment, mercy, and faith¡¨ (Matthew 23:23).
4. Not merely external righteousness, such as that of St. Paul before
his illumination, and that of all unawakened sinners.
5. Not our own righteousness (Philippians 3:9); a righteousness proceeding from and terminating in ourselves,
performed by the mere strength of nature, and in obedience to an outward law;
which implies neither forgiveness of the past, nor renovation for the present,
nor holiness for the future, but leaves the soul under guilt, and in its
natural state of depravity and weakness.
6. True righteousness is intended: that which was possessed by
¡§righteous Abel¡¨ and others. It is that righteousness through which ¡§grace
reigns unto eternal life¡¨ (Romans 5:21). This righteousness must be learned by experience and practice.
We must be heartily convinced of our unrighteousness, humbled on that account,
and brought to repentance. We must cordially embrace Christ by faith. Consider
the vast importance of learning righteousness in this sense. All other
learning, as of sciences, arts, gaining wealth, or power, or honour, is,
compared to this, insignificant.
This is the end
of all providential dispensations, and especially of God¡¦s judgments in the
earth: to teach us righteousness.
II. WHEN IT IS REASONABLE TO EXPECT MANKIND WILL LEARN RIGHTEOUSNESS.
¡§When Thy judgments are in the earth.¡¨ The judgments of God in Scripture often
mean His ordinances, or His laws (Psalms 119:7; Ezekiel 5:6-8; Ezekiel 5:10). These, if attended to, would teach us righteousness. But, alas!
they are neglected or abused. It becomes, therefore, necessary God should give
us judgments of another kind, and such as are here chiefly meant, as the sword,
the famine, and the pestilence (Ezekiel 7:15; Ezekiel 14:12-21). These visitations cause thoughtfulness. They cause a spirit of
prayer for Divine light and grace; the rectifying of our mistaken views of
God¡¦s government of the world, and of the nature and obligation of holiness;
the acknowledgment of His righteousness in thus correcting us; humiliation and
contrition; hatred to sin, the evil of which we are now so severely taught;
reformation of life; deadness to the world, the vanity and misery of which we
now see and feel. They cause us to seek all our happiness in God, as the only
certain source of felicity, and they cause subjection to His will; these
judgments naturally tending to subdue us. They actually do produce this effect
on the people of God, and on persons disposed to be His people (Isaiah 26:8-9). It is, moreover, highly reasonable they should have this
effect. Those thus chastised may hereby see that God governs the world, and
that He does not connive at sin, but severely punishes it; and that ¡§it is an
evil thing and bitter to forsake the Lord God,¡¨ whether as individuals,
families, or as a nation. But it may be asked, Will not gentler methods answer
the same end? To answer this inquiry brings me to show--
III. IF THEY DO NOT LEARN RIGHTEOUSNESS THEN, THERE IS REASON TO FEAR
THEY NEVER WILL (Isaiah 26:10). (J. Benson, D. D.)
Man¡¦s wickedness provokes
God¡¦s wrath
I. SINNERS WALK CONTRARY TO GOD, and refuse to comply with the means
used for their reformation, and to answer the intentions of them.
1. Favour is showed to them. Yet it is all in vain. They will not
learn righteousness; will not be led to repentance by the goodness of God.
2. They live in a ¡§land of uprightness,¡¨ where religion is professed
and is in reputation, and the Word of God preached, and where they have many
good examples set them; yet there they will deal unjustly, and go on frowardly
in their evil ways. They that do wickedly deal unjustly both with God and man,
and with their own souls. God¡¦s majesty appears in all the dispensations of His
providence, but they regard it not, and therefore study not to answer the ends
of those dispensations.
3. God lifts up His hand to give them warning, that they may, by
repentance and prayer, make their peace with Him; but they take no notice of
it, are not aware that God is angry with them, or coming forth against them;
¡§they will not see¡¨--and none so blind as those that will not sea--who ascribe
that to chance or common fate which is manifestly a Divine rebuke.
II. GOD WILL AT LENGTH BE TOO HARD FOR THEM. When He judgeth He will
overcome. ¡§They will not see, but they shall see.¡¨ They will not see the evil
of sin, and particularly the sin of hating and persecuting the people of God;
but they shall see, by the tokens of God¡¦s displeasure against them for it, and
the deliverances in which God will plead His people¡¦s cause, that what is done
against them He takes as done against Himself, and will reckon for it
accordingly. ¡§They shall see¡¨ that they have done God¡¦s people a great deal of
wrong, and therefore shall ¡§be ashamed¡¨ of their enmity, and envy towards them,
and then in usage of such it deserved better treatment. (Matthew Henry.)
Verse 11
Lord, when Thy hand is lifted up they will not see
Man¡¦s blindness to the Divine working
Modern scepticism seeks to undeify the Deity; and yet, feeling
that man must have a god of some sort, it deifies nature, and invests matter
and the laws of the universe with the attributes of Divinity.
This is no new form of scepticism. The same evil existed among the Jews in the
days of Isaiah. To this the prophet emphatically refers in our text. The
lifting up of the hand refers to the gracious and loving tokens He had given of
Himself; but a wilful blindness hid the Divine glory from the people.
I. MAN¡¦S BLINDNESS
TO THE DIVINE WORKING--
1. In the realm of
matter. There are men who, while they behold and admire the work, care not to
see or own the Worker.
2. In the realm of
history. Men who look at events, whether small or great, in the lives of
individuals or of nations, and are content to account for them by alluding
simply to second causes, without learning to trace the hand of God, are guilty
of the sin to which the text refers. National sins bring national judgments.
One wicked king is often employed to scourge another, and when the scourger has
done his work, then he himself in turn is also scourged. One wicked nation is
employed to punish another for its sins, to humble its pride, and to check its guilty
ambition.
3. In the realm of
spirit. A vile and wicked person enters the sanctuary. His character is
notoriously bad. He takes his seat in the pew beside you. During the service,
God by His Spirit comes down upon him with mighty power. In answer to his
prayer he experiences a renewal of heart. He announces the fact to you. And yet
you think little or nothing about it. This does not affect you half as much as
if you were told that you had made a hundred pounds by some fortunate
speculation. Look at the Lord Jesus in Gethsemane. The ease is unique.
Innocence is in agony. A merciful God pours the sorrows of abandonment and
death into the soul of our holy Substitute. Yet His friends, His disciples, for
whom He suffers, are fast asleep. But the disciples are only types of other
men.
II. THE CAUSES OF
THIS BLINDNESS.
1. Ignorance. The
heathen, having no direct written revelation, are in darkness, and know not the
truth. But their blindness to the supernatural can scarcely be pronounced
wilful or criminal; it must be regarded as the fruit of ignorance. But as
ignorance cannot be pleaded in our case, with our fulness of light, our
blindness is wilful.
2. Indifference.
3. Absorption of
thought in other things.
4. Pride of
intellect. This reason reveals itself in the undue homage rendered to human
reason. ¡§Thus saith the Lord¡¨ must give way to ¡§Thus saith human reason.¡¨
5. Pride of heart.
It develops itself in an obstinate refusal to submit to the authority of God.
III. THE REMOVAL OF
THIS BLINDNESS. ¡§They shall see, and be ashamed,¡¨ etc.
1. Sometimes men
are brought to see by sad calamities and sore judgments.
2. Men are also
brought to see by the agency of the Holy Spirit.
3. Many will see
God in the hour of death. At the moment of dissolution, who will venture to say
what strange visions of the supernatural will people the whole scene around
them? Every object then will seem full of God.
4. In the day of
judgment all men shall see. God will vindicate Himself, and overthrow the
unbelief of His deniers by a personal revelation of Himself.
5. The result of
all this unveiling will be shame and envy.
Verse 12
Lord,
Thou wilt ordain peace for us
God ordaining
peace
The expression
seems to allude to the action of a commander-in-chief in the army, who marshals
his soldiers according to the plan he had formed, and assigns to each the
proper station which he is to occupy in carrying into execution his projected
enterprises.
It plainly intimates the lively hope which they felt that the supreme Disposer
of all persons and events would be graciously pleased to assign for them both
outward and inward tranquillity. (R. Macculloch.)
National peace
the gift of God
(1814):--
I. WHAT THERE IS IN THE RESTORATION OF PEACE, GENERALLY CONSIDERED,
TO EXCITE OUR GRATITUDE.
1. The first consequence of peace which naturally presents itself to
our attention is, that the effusion of human blood is stayed.
2. The injurious effects produced by war upon the human character
afford another reason for thanksgiving on the return of peace. It is impossible
that a state of warfare should be long continued without greatly deteriorating,
in some important respects, both individual and national character. War is
unfriendly to humanity. Tender as the heart may naturally be, the frequent
recurrence of scenes of suffering tends to harden it. During the state of
warfare, too, communities are usually distracted by intestine dissensions; and
political strife gives birth to no virtues. Another effect of war is, that,
when long-continued, it embitters the animosities of nations, and tends to
confirm those national antipathies which, if unchecked by peace, would settle
into a confirmed and malignant hatred.
3. A third reason for gratitude with reference to the peace is, that
it has been produced by the signal triumph of a righteous cause. Peace is not
always a blessing. In some cases it is only a term for the stillness, the quiet
of desolation and death. Peace is often the result of the superiority acquired
by the aggressor. The cause of right does not always at once prevail.
4. We rejoice in peace as the completion of a course of providential
dispensations highly conducive to the instruction of the world.
II. WHAT THERE IS IN THE PARTICULAR CIRCUMSTANCES OF THIS COUNTRY TO
WARRANT US IN CONSIDERING THE BLESSING AS OF SPECIAL AND PARTICULAR VALUE.
1. We have preserved our national honour.
2. The peace was seasonable.
3. The peace may be considered indicative of the Divine favour and
approbation.
4. We see a particular reason to be thankful for peace, as it will
increase our means of promoting the kingdom of Christ in the world, and thus
establish our national prosperity by continuing to us the blessing of God.
III. THE REASON OF OUR THANKFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF GOD. He is the giver
of the blessing of peace. ¡§Thou hast ordained peace for us.¡¨ This is a most
important principle; and if our hearts be not firmly grounded in it, our
thanksgivings are mockery; for why do we thank Him, if we ascribe the work to
second causes? (R. Watson.)
Peace from God
A
tourist writes of a spring as sweet as any that ever gushed from sunny
hillside, which one day he found by the sea when the tides had ebbed away.
Taking his cup he tasted the water and it was sweet. Soon the sea came again
and poured its bitter surf over the little spring, hiding it out of sight. When
the tide ebbed away again, the tourist stood once more by the spring to see if
the brackish waves had left their bitterness in its waters; but they were sweet
as ever. This is a picture of the peace in the heart of the Christian when
floods of bitter sorrow and trial sweep over his life. From secret wells the
sweet waters flow, crystal and fresh as ever. They have their source in the
heart of God. (J. R. Miller, D. D.)
Verse 13-14
Other lords beside Thee
have had dominion over us
The captivity and the
return
About five hundred years
before the birth of Christ an event occulted which stands almost alone in the
world¡¦s history.
After a long period of exile a whole nation, at least so much of it as was
disposed, was freely permitted to return to its own land. The despotic king
under whose sceptre they were then living not only issued an edict to that
effect, but gave up the sacred vessels of the Holy House which had been brought
away as trophies by previous monarchs, empowered the leader of the host to draw
on the royal treasury for whatever might be necessary to refurnish the Holy
House, and supplied him liberally with money, corn, wine, and oil for the
homeward journey. For three days that mighty host of returning exiles rested in
their tents on the banks of the Ahava. A solemn and sacred fast succeeded. Then
came the marshalling of the enormous caravan. At last, on the dawning of the
fifteenth morning from their first setting out, they began in real earnest
their homeward march. Four long and wearisome months did that great caravan of
exiles creep on towards their beloved land. At the beginning of the fifth
month, with their ranks greatly swelled by others who had joined them during
their progress, they stood in sight of Jerusalem. The song now broke forth, ¡§We
have a strong city: salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks¡¨; to
which a chorus of many thousand voices responded, ¡§Open ye the gates, that the
righteous nation which keepeth truth may enter in.¡¨ Then followed the
declaration of the first voices, ¡§Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose
mind is stayed on Thee. Trust ye in the Lord forever; for in the Lord Jehovah
is everlasting strength.¡¨ So the mighty song of praise rolled on, until, with
all voices blending as the voice of many waters, the words were heard, ¡§O
Jehovah our God! other lords beside Thee have ruled over us; but henceforth
Thee, Thy name only, will we celebrate. They are dead, they shall not live;
they are shades, they shall not rise; because Thou hast visited and destroyed
them, and hast made all their memory to perish.¡¨ In effect these words describe
the whole history of that nation in its exile, and its purpose now it had come
back to Judah. (J. J. Goadby.)
Bondage and freedom
A nation is, after all,
only an aggregate of single units; and that which is thus declared of a whole
nation was equally true of each separate man of whom that nation was composed.
It is the history and purpose of a single soul.
I. Here
is an illustration of THE MANIFOLD BONDAGE OF THE SOUL. The Jews had bowed
before many idols. They had served under many kings. Each idol and king had
ruled them according to the caprice of the hierophants or viziers. There are
also many lords who rule over the souls of men; whose dominion is capricious,
despotic, and even destructive.
1. There
is worldliness, one of the hardest of tyrants.
2. Closely
akin to worldliness is frivolity; the disposition which shows itself in a
strong dislike to anything grave in thought, or speech, or life; a vague
belief, so far as frivolity can entertain belief, that the chief end in life is
to be amused.
3. Others
are in the thralls of doubt. One man doubts concerning all goodness whatsoever.
He has been bitterly deceived by some unworthy man who had won his confidence,
and he refuses to believe now that disinterestedness is possible in any
quarter. Another man doubts whether it be possible to discover truth amidst
such a wrangle of apparently conflicting opinions, upon it. Perhaps he has
allowed his mind to be biassed in one direction, and has never seriously set
himself to get free from his bias. Or, he may never have struggled after the
truth with any deep and true wrestling of soul. A third has doubts concerning
evangelic Christianity. A fourth doubts of the possibility of his own
salvation.
4. There
are other forms of tyranny over the soul; e.g., the slavery of that
which is known to be sin. The particular kind of sin differs with different
mere.
5. Does
it not become of unspeakable interest to know if deliverance can actually be
secured; by whom it is to be effected, and by what means; and what are the
signs that freedom has been actually obtained? To all these questions the song
of the liberated exiles points to the sufficient answer. ¡§O Jehovah our God!
other lords beside Thee have ruled over us,¡¨ etc.
II. Jehovah
was the Author of the Jews¡¦ liberation: GOD ALONE EFFECTS THE DELIVERANCE OF
THE SOUL.
1. He
conceived the plan of that redemption, not as a temporary expedient, a Divine
after thought, but as an ¡§eternal purpose which He purposed in His Son Jesus
Christ our Lord.¡¨
2. The
method of this deliverance is also depicted in the words of the exiles. ¡§Thou
hast visited and destroyed them.¡¨ ¡§Visited,¡¨ that is, searched out with the
keenest scrutiny, examined, exposed. How, then, deem God ¡§visit¡¨ these tyrants
of man¡¦s soul? He reveals their true character to those who are under their
dominion. God lays bare the worthlessness and the wickedness of worldliness,
frivolity, and sin. Sometimes He does this, by the force of contrast, bringing
in close proximity the brightness of an opposite life to the life which w
ourselves are living. Sometimes He awakens a seed of Divine truth that has long
been buried in our hearts. Sometimes the revelation is made by creating a sense
of satiety, or of nausea. Sometimes the change is produced by incidents of
God¡¦s good providence. But the one great means which Divine wisdom has set
apart for the spiritual liberation of man is--the Gospel of His love.
3. There
are, therefore, certain criteria by which men may surely know that they have
actually entered this condition of freedom. One is, their relation to the past.
The Jews did not forget the hard usage they tad received from those idol
priests and capricious tyrants who had ¡§ruled them with a rod of iron.¡¨ But the
grave closed over their oppressors, one after another. They were extinct
tyrants; ¡§shades,¡¨ not men; powerless phantoms, fallen to rise no more. They
were remembered, but as dead men. Nor can anyone who has obtained spiritual
deliverance utterly forget the past. The recollection of what that past was
flits across the mind, like a cloud over the face of the sun at noonday. But
there is no desire to return to that condition. The past has lost its power of
attraction, and has become hateful. The old tyrants are dead; and so long as we
keep ourselves in the love of God they shall live no more. There is, further,
the soul¡¦s relation to the future. But henceforth Thee, Thy name only, will we
celebrate. Whatever allegiance may have been rendered to others in the past,
the allegiance is now to be given alone to God. We have also the idea of
service. The ¡§celebration¡¨ is incomplete without this, the worship a solemn and
offensive pretence. But he who worships most sincerely is certain to live most
uprightly. He is bound to faithful service by the strongest of all ties--the
tie of a grateful love.
4. ¡§But,¡¨
says someone, ¡§is not this mere poetic exaggeration? Where are the proofs that
this freedom has actually been won?¡¨ Where? In every age of the Church¡¦s
history, from the day when publicans and sinners crowded about the pathway of
the Divine Redeemer, until this hour. The Gospel is not an exhausted force. It
is ¡§the power of God unto salvation, to everyone that believeth.¡¨ (J. J.
Goadby.)
The moral history of the
soul
Here we have the soul
under the sway--
I. OF
MANY DEITIES. ¡§Other lords beside Thee.¡¨ The Jews in Babylon had knelt at the
shrine of many false deities, and rendered allegiance to a succession of kings.
Many ¡§lords¡¨ had ruled them. This is true of all souls in an unregenerate
state. Who is the real Lord or God of the soul? Unhesitatingly and
emphatically, the chief love. Whatever man loves most, is his spiritual
monarch, the deity of his life. The chief love of some is money. The chief love
of others is pleasure--sensual indulgence. ¡§Their god is their belly.¡¨ The
chief love of others is power. Ambition is their god.
II. OF
ONE GOD. ¡§By Thee only will we make mention of Thy name,¡¨ or, as some render
it, ¡§Henceforth Thee, Thy name, will we celebrate. They had left heathen altars,
and come back to the altar of Jehovah. What a blessed change from many masters
to one, and therefore free from spiritual distraction. From worthless masters
to the supremely good, and therefore realising all that the soul craves for or
requires.
1. The
rule of this one God is the rule of right.
2. The
rule of peace. From the moral constitution of man no peace of soul can be
experienced under the sway of any other. Under no other will the various
sympathies flow into one channel, the faculties blend in harmonious action, the
heart fix itself in a centre.
3. The
rule of growth. Can vegetation grow and flourish under the reign of stars,
however numerous or brilliant? No; it must have the empire of the sun. And can
the soul advance under the sway of any infinite powers, however illustrious?
No; it must have the rule of God, the ¡§Sun of Righteousness.¡¨ Here we have the
soul--
III. PASSING
FROM THE SWAY OF THE MANY TO THE ONE. It is that great moral experience which
is represented in the New Testament as a new birth, a resurrection, a
conversion, a repentance, etc. (Homilist.)
Confession, resolution,
and dependence
I. CONFESSION.
¡§O Lord our God, other lords beside Thee have had dominion over us.¡¨ There are
two things connected with this confession; one is recollection, and the other
adoration.
II. RESOLUTION.
¡§Henceforth we will make mention of Thy name.¡¨ God¡¦s name is His
character,--what He is in Himself, and what He is to His people. And it is a
name not to be ashamed of: it is connected with every thing that is excellent,
glorious, and sacred. It is a ¡§name that is above every name.¡¨ Not only so, it
is a name you need not be afraid of with a slavish fear; but you may well be
afraid of it with a holy fear. It is a name that you ought to love with all your
hearts!
III. DEPENDENCE.
¡§By Thee only will we make mention of Thy name¡¨; as much as if it was said, We
are full of sin, but Thou art full of grace and mercy; we are not worthy to
take Thy name upon our lips--to stand before Thee, or to enter into covenant
with Thee, but we do it depending upon Thee, and upon Thee alone. (T.
Mortimer, B. D.)
Verses 14-19
Verse 15
Thou
hast increased the nation, O Lord
The increase of
the true Israel
On
the first preaching of the Gospel, the Lord greatly increased the nation of
them that are Israelites indeed.
In following ages the Lord still continued to increase them; hence the
remarkable words of an ancient apologist for Christianity (Tertullian), who
openly told the heathen ¡§that this despised sect had filled their cities and
provinces, their councils and camps, the palace and the senate house, and what
not,--that such was their multitude that should they have withdrawn themselves
into some remote part of the world, the empire would have been depopulated and
left in dismal solitude and silence.¡¨ (R. Macculloch.)
Verse 16
Lord, in trouble have they
visited Thee
God a harbour of refuge
It is a blessed loss that
makes us find our God! What we gain is in finitely more than what we have lost.
What a mercy that God is willing to hear us in the time of trouble, that all
our putting off and rejection of Him do not make Him put us off! I remember one
who wished to hire a conveyance to go to a certain town, and he went to the
place where he could hire it, and asked the price; he thought that it was too
much, so he went round the town to other people, and found that he could not
get it any cheaper; but when he came back to the place visited first, the man
said to him, ¡§Oh, no, no! I will not let my horses to you. You have been round
to everybody else, and now you come back to me because you cannot get what you
want elsewhere; I will have nothing to do with you.¡¨ That is man¡¦s way of
dealing with his fellow man; but it is not the Lord¡¦s method of dealing with
us. When you and I have gone round to everybody else, the Lord still welcomes
us when we come back to Him. Yes, just as harbours of refuge are meant for
ships in distress that would not have put in there except for the storm and
danger, such is the mercy of the Lord God in Jesus Christ. If you are forced to
accept it, you are still welcome to it. If you are driven to it by stress of
weather, you may come in, for the harbour was made for just such as you are.
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse
19
Thy dead men shall live
The Jewish hope of resurrection
Granted the pardon, the justice, the temple, and the God which the
returning exiles now enjoyed, the possession of these only makes more painful
the shortness of life itself.
This life is too shallow and too frail a vessel to hold, peace and
righteousness and worship and the love of God. St. Paul has said, ¡§If in this
life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable.¡¨ What
avails it to have been pardoned, to have regained the Holy Land and the face of
God, if the dear dead are left behind in graves of exile, and all the living
must soon pass into that captivity (Hezekiah¡¦s expression for death, Isaiah 38:12) from which there is no
return? It must have been thoughtslike these which led to the expression of one
of the most abrupt and powerful of the few hopes of the resurrection which the
Old Testament contains. This hope, which lightens Isaiah 25:7-8, bursts through
again--without logical connection with the context--in verses 14-19 of chap.
26. (Prof.
G. A. Smith, D. D.)
The resurrection of the life to come
I. THE RESURRECTION OF THE
BODIES OF BELIEVERS. ¡§Thy dead men shall live,¡¨ etc.
II. THE EFFICIENT CAUSE OF THE
RESURRECTION. ¡§Thy dew is as the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the
dead.¡¨ In Eastern countries the dew is extremely heavy and almost entirely
supplies the place of rain. It is frequently referred to in Scripture (Psalms 133:3; Hosea 14:5). The ¡§dew¡¨ means the
influence of the Holy Spirit, which is the great efficient cause of the raising
of the bodies of believers; not the primary cause--that is the atonement made
by our Lord Jesus. But the text adds, ¡§The earth shall cast out the dead.¡¨ The
word ¡§cast out¡¨ means to travail. The earth shall put forth them that are now
buried. The whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together; but when
the Spirit shall come forth with His mighty influence, the earth shall be no
longer able to retain its dead.
III. THE JOY OF THIS
RESURRECTION. Without doubt the joy of departed saints is exceeding great; but
the joy will be so much greater at the resurrection that the Church may with
propriety sing in concert, ¡§Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust.¡¨ They
will then see the full glory of Christ established; they will see sin and Satan
in chains; they will see hell subdued, death quite swallowed up. (R. W.
Sibthorp.)
The dust of death
If one has seen a place of graves in the East, he will appreciate
the elements of this figure, which takes ¡§dust¡¨ for death and ¡§dew¡¨ for life.
With our damp graveyards mould has become the traditional trappings of death;
but where under the hot Eastern sun things do not rot into lower forms of life,
but crumble into sapless powder, that will not keep a worm in life, dust is the
natural symbol of death. When they die, men go not to feed fat the mould, but
¡§down into the dust¡¨; and there the foot of the living falls silent, and his
voice is choked, and the light is thickened and in retreat, as if it were
creeping away to die. The only creatures the visitor starts are timid, unclean
bats, that flutter and whisper about him like the ghosts of the dead. There are
no flowers in an Eastern cemetery; and the withered branches and other
ornaments are thickly powdered with the same dust that chokes and silences and
darkens all. Hence the Semitic conception of the underworld was dominated by
dust. It was not water nor fire nor frost nor altogether darkness which made
the infernal prison horrible, but that upon its floors and rafters, hewn from
the roots and ribs of the primeval mountains, dust lay deep and choking. Amid
all the horrors he imagined for the dead, Dante did not include one more awful
than the horror of dust. (Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
Dew for dust
For dust there is dew, and even to graveyards the morning comes
that brings dew and light together. As, when the dawn comes, the drooping
flowers of yesterday are seen erect and lustrous with the dew, every spike a
crown of glory, so also shall be the resurrection of the dead. (Prof. G. A.
Smith, D. D.)
Awake and sing, ye that
dwell in dust
The Divine call to moral grovellers
This call may he addressed--
I. To the SENSUALIST. All his
thoughts and activities are directed to the pampering of his animal appetites
and the gratification of his animal lusts. To such the word may be fairly
addressed, ¡§Arise from the dust.¡¨ Why live in mud, when you ought and might
live in ¡§heavenly places¡¨?
II. To the WORLDLING.
By a worldling, I mean a man who gives his heart and energies and
time to the accumulation of wealth; a man who had no idea of worth but money;
no idea of dignity apart from material parade and possessions; a man whose
inspiration in everything is love of gold. Such a man is literally in the dust.
He is a grub. Now, to such a man the call come with power: ¡§Arise from the
dust; break away from that wretched materialism that imprisons thy spirit.¡¨ A
man¡¦s life ¡§consisteth not in the abundance of the things of this world.¡¨
CONCLUSION. All unregenerate men are in the dust. ¡§He that is born of the
flesh, is flesh¡¨--is flesh in experience, in character, known by his compeers
only by fleshly or material characteristics. ¡§He that is born of the Spirit, is
spirit¡¨--the spirit has been liberated from the bondage of the flesh, called up
to his true regal position, and is known hence on, not by material features,
but by high mental and moral characteristics. (Homilist.)
Souls sleeping in the dust
There are two senses in which men may be considered dead while yet
living inhabitants of the earth.
I. THE SPIRITUAL CONDITION of
unregenerated men. They ¡§dwell in the dust.¡¨
1. Scientific materialists are in the dust. All their attention is
taken up with material substances, combinations, forces, operations, laws. They
have no world outside beyond the tangible and the visible.
2. Mercenary worldlings are in the dust.
3. Voluptuous sensualists are in the dust.
4. Ceremonial religionists are in the dust.
II. THE URGENT CALL MADE on
unregenerate men. ¡§Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust.¡¨ But why awake?
1. Because the sleep is injurious. Physical sleep is refreshing, but
spiritual sleep is pernicious; it enervates the powers; it is a disease that
wastes and destroys.
2. Because the sleep is sinful. It is a sin against our constitution,
against the ordination of Heaven, against the well being of the universe.
3. Because it is perilous. In their dreams they feel that they are
¡§increasing in goods and have need of nothing, whereas they are poor and
wretched, blind and naked.¡¨ (Homilist.)
Dwelling in the dust
I. AN INVOCATION OR ADDRESS.
¡§Ye that dwell in dust.¡¨ To whom is this designation applicable, and to whom
does it in point of fact apply?
1. All men, without exception, may be described as dwelling in dust.
They live in houses of clay; their foundation is in the dust; they are crushed
before the moth. They are made of the earth, earthy.
2. This address is still more descriptive of mankind, as it refers to
their sin and guilt in the sight of God. They are sunk in the depths of abject
servitude.
3. But it is not to sinners in their natural state that the words of
our text are addressed. God directs them to His chosen people, and says even
unto them, ¡§Ye that dwell in dust.¡¨ Nor is the expression inappropriate. For
humble and lowly is the spiritual estate even of the believer. His home is in
Heaven, his treasure is there, his heart is there, his Redeemer is there; and
though he wishes to be in thought and feeling continually there, the opposing
influences of sin, Satan, the world, and the flesh, retard his efforts, and cloud
the sunshine of his joys with ever-recurring darkness. Is it not strange that
an heir of immortality, a participant in Christ¡¦s everlasting redemption, a
member of the Saviour¡¦s ever-living body, a being who is destined for eternal
glory should drink the cup of humiliation and suffering in the dust? There is
another sense in which God¡¦s people may be described by this epithet. They
dwell in dust, inasmuch as their life in this world is a life of affliction.
4. But, lastly, the address contained in our text refers literally to
those who dwell in the dust--who reside in the cold and cheerless tomb.
II. A SUMMONS OR COMMAND.
¡§Awake and ring.¡¨ The passage is not addressed to all who dwell in dust, as the
context clearly shows, but only to those who are God¡¦s chosen and willing
people. There is a night of death that has no morning, but it is yet future,
distant, and unseen. All who are in their graves shall hear the voice of the
Son of Man, and shall come forth, they that have done evil as well as they that
have done good. But it is only to the righteous that the voice of Omnipotence
shall say, Awake and sing! Brightly and beautifully on them will dawn the
resurrection morning.
III. THE REASON WHY GOD
COMMANDS THEM THAT DWELL IN DUST TO AWAKE AND SING. It is because their dew is
as the dew of herbs. Dew in countries such as Judea, where rain seldom falls,
is the grand agent that fertilises, fructifies, and waters the earth. They that
dwell in dust have their dew. Their dew is the beneficent law of Heaven, which
seals them up in the grave, until such time as the fructifying influence of the
Spirit shall quicken them into a resurrection life.
IV. THE RESULT OF THE COMMAND,
Awake and sing. The earth shall cast out the dead. The subject presents to us--
1. A ground of comfort amidst all the distresses of life.
2. A most powerful motive to holiness and duty. (A. Nisbet.)
Thy dew is as the dew of
herbs
Resurrection preservation
I. AGAINST DECOMPOSITION. One
of the great difficulties connected with the resurrection is the fact that the
bodies of the dead decompose, and that oftentimes some of their parts go to
make up the growth of plants and animals. But is not this difficulty removed by
the law of the text; the law that governs the reproduction of plants, and which
is so forcibly presented by the apostle in his argument to the Corinthians for
the resurrection of the dead?
II. AGAINST DEPORTATION. Other
dangers threaten the bodies of the dead. Being on the surface of the earth and
mingled with its particles, they must necessarily be moved about. The winds may
waft them to other regions; birds or animals or men may carry them abroad; the
rivers may float them in their rapid currents; the ocean may heave them on its
mighty billows. How then shall they be preserved? God has purposely made many
of the seeds so that they are wafted on the winds, not that they may be
destroyed, but may be brought into better positions for their preservation and
subsequent prosperity. And shall we disbelieve the fact that the great God who performs
these wonders in the ordinary operations of nature, is able and willing so to
control winds, and birds, and beasts, and living men, and flowing rivers, and
heaving oceans, as to preserve and carry to safer or better places the germs of
those bodies which He has taught us shall rise at the resurrection of the last
day?
III. AGAINST INTERMINGLING OR
LOSS OF IDENTITY. Take the many hundreds of plants that exist about us--there
are computed to be more than 80,000 kinds on the globe--with their millions of
seeds. The God of nature never mixes them up. Whatever may be true about the
amalgamation of growing plants, when their seeds or germs are perfected it is
impossible so to mix them as to confound them. And think you that the God who
works such wonders of infallible certainty in the identification of the untold
millions of these varieties of plant seeds, every year and through so many
centuries, however they may be mixed up, cannot or will not, even when He has
promised it, preserve the identity of each different human body, so that it
shall be enstamped with all the characteristics of its own individuality,
though it be mingled with so many other human bodies through so many centuries?
IV. AGAINST DESTRUCTION BY
EXTERNAL FORCES. The seeds of many species resist the destructive power, not
only of cold but of great heat, and of drought and moisture, in a wonderful
manner, not only through the lapse of one season, but of centuries. And as God
does thus preserve these inferior and feebler creations of His, amid such great
and long continued action of the elements of destruction, will He not much
rather preserve against all accidents and all assaults of the forces of
destruction, those nobler creations of His for whose use and control the
inferior things of earth were made and preserved?
V. AGAINST THE ¡§GNAWING
TOOTH¡¨ OF TIME. So far as the law of life has been developed, it is evident
that mere lapse of time has no effect to destroy life, so long as circumstances
are favourable to its continuation. Some Celtic tombs were discovered not very
long since in France, which had been filled nearly two thousand years ago.
Under the Lead of each corpse was found a tile, and under each tile a circular
hole covered with cement, and containing a few seeds. These seeds were planted,
¡§they soon vegetated; and the heliotrope, the trefoil, and the cornflower were
seen rising to life again, and expanding their flowers in the light of spring
with admirable display, after their seeds had slept two thousand years beneath
the pillows of the dead in the dust of the tomb.¡¨ Can we believe less of the
power and willingness of God, with reference to the preservation through the
onstretching centuries, of the bodies of men whom He made in His own image, and
whom He rescued from destruction by the death of His well-beloved Son, who ¡§is
risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of them that slept¡¨?
VI. AGAINST PREMATURE
DEVELOPMENT. But, says a persistent objector, if all these things are true, why
do we not have some evidence of it; why do we not find such occasionally
appearing in the body? We know that there are plants in tropical countries
called ¡§air plants,¡¨ which grow from the sustenance they receive out of the
atmosphere. One species of these--the ¡§live-forever¡¨ plant,--grows in the
temperate zone; and some of us may remember seeing these plants suspended from
the beams of houses and flourishing there. Suppose a man who had never seen an
oak grow, but who was told that an acorn contained the germ of an oak, should
fasten that acorn by the side of his air plants to a beam of his house, or
fasten ten, or twenty, or a hundred acorns there; and then, when he saw his air
plants growing, and his acorns remaining dry and unsprouted, should declare to
you that there was ¡§no such fact as that oaks would grow from acorns, or that,
anyhow, those acorns would never produce oaks¡¨; what would be your reply? You
would say to him, ¡§There is a law of germination and growth belonging to those
acorns; and whenever you bring them into the position where that law is met,
they will grow.¡¨ We are ignorant equally of the facts in what the identity or
germ of a human dead body consists, and what conditions are necessary to bring
it into active resurrection life; these are the affairs of the Author of existence.
But we do know, that whatever it is that constitutes the identity of the dead
body¡¦s existence, cannot and will not develop itself in a resurrection life
power, until the great Keeper of man brings it into a position and condition
where the laws of its development are fulfilled. (N. D. Williamson.)
Verse 20-21
Come, My people, enter
thou into thy chambers
A gracious invitation
I.
THE FORM OF THE INVITATION,
including in it the qualified subject. ¡§Come, My people.¡¨ God¡¦s own peculiar
people, who have chosen God for their protection, and resigned up themselves
sincerely to Him in the covenant, are the persons here invited, the same which
He before called ¡§the righteous nation that kept the truth¡¨ (Isaiah 26:2). He means those that remained faithful to God in Babylon. The
form of invitation is full of tender compassion. ¡§Come, My people.¡¨ Like a
tender father who sees a storm coming upon his children in the fields, and
takes them by the hand.
II. THE PRIVILEGE
INVITED TO. ¡§Enter thou into thy chambers.¡¨ The Divine attributes engaged in
the promises and exercised or actuated in the providences of God--these are the
sanctuaries of God¡¦s people in days of trouble.
III. A NEEDFUL
CAUTION far the securing of this privilege to ourselves in evil times. ¡§Shut
thy doors about thee.¡¨ Care must be taken that no passage be left open for the
devil to creep in after us, and drive us out of our refuge; for so it falls out
too often with God¡¦s people when they are at rest in God¡¦s name or promises.
Satan creeps in by unbelieving doubts and puzzling objections, and heats them
out of their refuge back again into trouble.
IV. Note with what
ARGUMENTS OR MOTIVES they are pressed to betake themselves to this refuge.
1. A supposition of a storm coming. The indignation of God will fall
like a tempest; this is supposed in the text, and plainly expressed in the words
following.
2. Though His indignation fall like a storm, yet it will not continue
long; better days and more comfortable dispensations will follow. (J.
Flavel.)
The righteous man¡¦s refuge
Doctrine--That the
attributes, promises, and providences of God are the chambers of rest and
security in which His people are to hide themselves when they foresee the
storms of His indignation coming upon the world. Propositions--
1. That there times and seasons appointed by God for the pouring out
of His indignation upon the world.
2. That God¡¦s own people are concerned in, and ought to be affected
with, those judgments.
3. That God hath a special and particular care of His people in the
days of His indignation.
4. That God usually premonishes the world, especially His own people,
of His judgments before they befall them.
5. That God¡¦s attributes, promises, and providences are prepared for
the security of His people, in the greatest distresses that befall them in the
world.
6. That one but God¡¦s people are taken into those chambers of
security, or can expect His special protection in evil times. For the right
stating of this proposition, three things must be heedfully regarded--
Chambers for God¡¦s people
Let us view our chambers,
and see how well God hath provided for His children in all the distresses that
befall them in this world.
I. The first
chamber which comes to be opened as a refuge to distressed believers in a
stormy day is the attribute of DIVINE POWER.
1. Consider the power of God in itself. Omnipotent, supreme,
everlasting.
2. In the vast extent of its operations. You will find it working
beyond the line
3. In its relation to the promises. If the power of God be the
chamber, it is the promise of God which is that golden key that opens it. If we
win consult the Scriptures, we shall find the almighty power of God made over
to His people by promise, for many excellent ends and uses in the day of their
trouble.
4. As it is continually opened by the hand of Providence, to receive
and secure the people of God in all their dangers (2 Chronicles 16:9).
II. The next
chamber of Divine protection into which I shall lead you is, THE INFINITE
WISDOM OF GOD--the original, essential, perfect, only wisdom. The wisdom of God
makes advantage out of your troubles.
1. In fortifying your souls and bodies with suitable strength when
any eminent trial is intended for you (2 Corinthians 1:5).
2. The wisdom of God can, and often doth, make your very troubles and
sufferings so many ordinances to strengthen your faith and fortify your
patience.
III. A third chamber
of safety for the saints¡¦ refuge is, THE FAITHFULNESS OF GOD--His sincerity,
firmness, and constancy in performing His word to His people in all times and
cases. Let us behold with delight the faithfulness of God making good six sorts
of promises to His people in the days of their affliction and trouble, namely,
the promises of--
1. Preservation.
2. Support.
3. Direction.
4. Provision.
5. Deliverance.
6. Ordering and directing the event to their advantage.
IV. The
faithfulness of God leads into a fourth much like unto it, namely, THE
UNCHANGEABLENESS OF GOD.
V. THE CARE OF GOD
FOR HIS PEOPLE in times of trouble is the fifth chamber of rest. It is--
1. A fatherly care.
2. An universal care, watching over all His people, in all ages,
places, and dangers.
3. Assiduous and continual (Lamentations 3:22-23).
4. Exceeding tender (Isaiah 49:15).
5. Seasonable.
VI. THE LOVE OF GOD
is a resting place to believing souls. (J. Flavel.)
Trust in God¡¦s protection
induces calmness
The heart of a good man
should at all times be like the higher heavens, serene, tranquil, and clear,
whatever thunders and lightnings, storms and tempests trouble and terrify the
lower world. If a man have a good roof over his head, where he can sit dry and
warm, what need he trouble himself to hear the winds roar, see the lightnings
flash, and the rains pour down without doors? Why, this is thy privilege,
Christian (Isaiah 32:2). (Chrysostom.)
Religious retirement
The retreat from the world
which the Scripture recommends, is temporary and not total; it is advised, not
indeed that we become disjoined from the world, but that we may be the fitter
for intercourse with it.
I. RETIREMENT IS
EMINENTLY FAVOURABLE TO SELF-EXAMINATION. It is only by a searching inquiry
into the purity of his motives, and the tendencies of his actions, that the
Christian can be enabled to discern and correct what in them has been amiss,
and to ¡§walk worthily of the high vocation, whereunto he hath been called.¡¨
II. RETIREMENT IS
FAVOURABLE TO THE CHRISTIAN, INASMUCH AS IT ENABLES HIM TO RECOVER THAT
SPIRITUAL TONS OF MIND SO ESSENTIAL TO HIS HAPPINESS, which, in his unavoidable
collision with the world, must necessarily have been disturbed, as well as to
take off that tendency to evil which its presence always generates. As the
health of the plant is affected by its soil, and the nature of the animal by
the pasture on which he feeds and couches, so must the character of man catch a
line from what is immediately about him, and his mind be tinged by the
circumstances in which it lives and has its being. But in solitude we are in a
world of our own, where we can to a great extent command our ideas and
feelings.
III. RETIREMENT IS
FAVOURABLE TO THE CHRISTIAN, AS AN OPPORTUNITY FOR PRAYER.
IV. RETIREMENT IS
EMINENTLY FAVOURABLE FOR THE CONTEMPLATION OF GOD.
V. RETIREMENT IS
FAVOURABLE FOR THE CONTEMPLATION OF THE SUFFERINGS AND LOVE OF HIM WHO HATH
BROUGHT ¡§LIFE AND IMMORTALITY TO LIGHT, THROUGH THE GOSPEL.¡¨
VI. RETIREMENT IS
FAVOURABLE FOR THE CONTEMPLATION OF YOUR ETERNAL DESTINY. (Essex
Congregational Remembrancer.)
The advantages of
religious retirement
Although man was made for
action, he was also intended for contemplation. There is a time when solitude
has a charm for the soul; when weary of the world, its follies and its cares,
we love to be alone, and in silence to commune with our heart. Such a
retirement, when devoted to pious purposes, is highly useful to man, and most
acceptable to God.
I. RELIGIOUS
RETIREMENT TAKES OFF THE IMPRESSION WHICH THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF EVIL EXAMPLE HAS
A TENDENCY TO MAKE UPON THE MIND.
II. THIS DEVOUT
RETIREMENT IS FAVOURABLE FOR FIXING PIOUS PURPOSES IN THE MIND AND
STRENGTHENING OUR HABITS OF VIRTUE.
III. BY MEANS OF
RELIGIOUS RETIREMENT THOU WILT BE BROUGHT TO THE KNOWLEDGE OF THYSELF. Here
wisdom begins.
IV. RETIREMENT AND
MEDITATION WILL OPEN A SOURCE OF NEW AND BETTER ENTERTAINMENT THAN YOU MEET
WITH IN THE WORLD. You will soon find that the world does not perform what it
promises. The circle of earthly enjoyments is narrow, the career of sensual
pleasure is soon run, and when the novelty is over, the charm is gone. But the
wise man has treasures within himself. (J. Logan, F. R. S.)
The hour of solitude
The hour of solitude is
the hour of meditation. He communes with his heart alone. He reviews the
actions of his past life. He corrects what is amiss. He rejoices in what is
right, and, wiser by experience, lays the plan of his future life. The great
and the noble, the wise and the learned, the pious and the good, have been
lovers of serious retirement. On this field the patriot forms his schemes, the
philosopher pursues his discoveries, the saint improves himself in wisdom and
goodness. Solitude is the hallowed ground which religion in every age has
adopted as its own. There her sacred inspiration is felt, and her holy
mysteries elevate the soul; there devotion lifts up the voice; there falls the
tear of contrition; there the heart pours itself forth before Him who made, and
Him who redeemed it. Apart from men, you live with nature, and converse with
God. (J. Logan, F. R. S.)
¡§Enter thou into thy
chambers¡¨
The entering rote the chambers
may, not improbably, allude to the command that the children of Israel should
not go out during the night of the destruction of the first born of Egypt. (Sir
E. Strachey, Bart.)
Duty of reflection on
God¡¦s judgments
I. THE PEOPLE
ADDRESSED. ¡§My people.¡¨
1. The Lord addresses, in these words, all, in general, who profess
His name, and are named from Him; who receive His Word as the rule of their
faith and practice; who attend His ordinances, and use the means of grace.
2. Therefore His true people are more especially meant in this
passage. But who are these! They are described by St. Peter, who, having termed
them ¡§a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar
people,¡¨ says, they ¡§are translated out of darkness into His marvellous light.¡¨
II. THE ADVANCE HE
GIVES THEM. ¡§Come, My people.¡¨ Come to Me, and--
1. Make confession.
2. Utter your complaint.
3. Exercise trust and dependence upon Me.
4. Praise Me for My long suffering and mercies, and devote thyself to
Me afresh. ¡§Come with Me into thy chambers.¡¨ The word means retired, secret,
and safe places. ¡§Let the storm which disperses others bring you nearer
together, to Me and to each other¡¨ (Henry). Withdraw into the changers of
defence. The attributes of God are the ¡§secret of His tabernacle¡¨ (Psalms 27:5). His name is ¡§a strong tower¡¨ (Proverbs 18:10).
III. THE REASON OF
THIS ADVICE (Isaiah 26:21). God ¡§comes out of His place¡¨ when He shows Himself in an
extraordinary manner from heaven. The expression is borrowed from the usage of
princes who come out of their palaces, either to sit in judgment, or to fight
against their enemies. (J. Benson, D. D.)
God¡¦s care for His people
Suppose your child is out
of doors, and you see danger--a storm gathering, or something about to cross
his path that may be fatal to him, what do you do? You hasten forth. You call
out with anxious voice, ¡§Come in! Come in, my child! There is danger where you
are! Make haste into the house, and stay here safe until the storm is over
past!¡¨ The great Father of the Church is not less watchful of His children.
Look at Noah¡¦s case just before the flood broke forth. Look again at Israel¡¦s
case on the night of the Passover. Behold, in my text, a third instance of the
Lord¡¦s fatherly care over His people. It is an instance which extends even to
ourselves.
I. THE DANGER
POINTED OUT. The words are applicable, in some measure, to every instance of
almighty vengeance. But they seem to refer to some more sweeping act of
vengeance than ever yet has taken place. It is the day of judgment that we must
cast our eyes upon. It is then that, in the fullest sense, ¡§the Lord will come
out of His place, to punish the inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity.¡¨
An awful phrase that! ¡§The Lord will come out of His place.¡¨ For what is His
place--the place He occupies at present? It is a mercy seat. He sits there as a
Saviour--to receive and bless applying sinners. But on that day He ¡§will come
out of His place.¡¨ He will leave the mercy seat for a throne of judgment.
II. THE COUNSEL
GIVEN. How tender this invitation! For such it is. Look at the first word of
it. ¡§Come¡¨--not¡¨ go. Not ¡§go and seek a shelter where you can¡¨; but ¡§Come.¡¨
¡§Come¡¨ is an inviting word. ¡§Come, My people¡¨; that is a general invitation.
¡§Enter thou into thy chambers¡¨; that is an invitation addressed to each
particularly, calling them in one by one.
III. THE PROMISES
IMPLIED. ¡§Hide thyself,¡¨ etc. These words are a command so worded as to convey,
at the same time, three comfortable promises
1. ¡§Hide thyself.¡¨ What is this but to assure them that by doing what
He had just been telling them to do they shall be hid? We may safely view this
as a promise of security to all who separate from the world and flee for refuge
to a Saviour.
2. ¡§For a little moment.¡¨ Here is another comfortable hint thrown out
for the believer. As soon as this short life is over with him, all danger shall
be past. There will be nothing more to hide from. He will have a broad Heaven
to move about in, where there are no enemies to fear, no wrath to apprehend.
3. ¡§The indignation shall be over past¡¨--there is the third
encouraging assurance. The clouds will be dispersed forever; and, having put
all enemies under His feet, He will bless all those that are about Him with His
constant smile. (A. Roberts, M. A.)
Good advice for troublous
times
I. BEFORE OR IN
TIMES OF TROUBLE IT IS WELL TO DRAW NEAR TO GOD. As the hen gives her peculiar
¡§cluck¡¨ when the hawk is in the air, to bid her chicks come and hide under her
wings, so does God here give a gentle, loving note of alarm, and a gracious call
of invitation. We should come--
1. To spread our case before God.
2. To consider His mind about such a case.
3. To make sure of the greatest matters. The world may come and take
away many of our external and temporary comforts, but we have a treasure that
it never gave us, and cannot take away from us.
4. Having made sure of the great things, you may leave all the little
things with God.
II. IT IS WISE TO
ENTER INTO THE CHAMBERS OF SECURITY WHICH GOD HAS PROVIDED FOR US.
1. The store chamber of Divine power.
2. The council chamber of Divine wisdom.
3. The drawing room of Divine love.
4. The muniment room of Divine faithfulness.
5. The strong room of Divine immutability.
6. The best chamber of Divine salvation.
III. WHEN WE ENTER
THOSE CHAMBERS IT IS NECESSARY TO SHUT THE DOOR.
1. To shut out all doubt.
2. To shut ourselves in with God.
IV. IT IS
DELIGHTFUL TO THINK THAT TROUBLE WILL NOT LAST LONG. ¡§A little moment.¡¨ (C.
H. Spurgeon)
Verse 21
For, behold, the Lord cometh out of His place
Associations in judgment
1.
Few
circumstances of our life are more mysterious and few more important than the
influence of associations.
2. The language suggests a subtle sympathy between the earth and the
earth born; the earth, it is suggested, has been the reluctant witness of human
guilt: within her bosom she holds the memorials of human crime, and in due
course, when her Creator summons her to His bar, she will confess her fatal
secrets.
3. This notion of the repugnance of nature to human crime underlies
the constant association of physical portents and disturbances with exceptional
crimes. They strain the tolerance of nature to breaking point; she proclaims
her horror. This involuntary association emerges in the record of the
Redeemer¡¦s Passion. ¡§The darkest hour that ever dawned on sinful earth¡¨ was
dark naturally, as well as morally.
4. There is something higher than rhetoric, something deeper than
poetry, in the prophetic habit of bringing into their moral witness appeals,
earnest to the point of passion, to the familiar features of the country. The
patriot¡¦s affection is blended with the mystic¡¦s sympathy and the seer¡¦s
insight Micah 6:1-2; Jeremiah 22:29; Joshua 24:26-27).
5. I have said that there is more in all this than rhetoric and
poetry, and my justification lies in the power over men of associations, their
origin in human volition, and the witness they are able to bear to men¡¦s
character and experience. The dramatic language of the prophet conveys, and
perhaps, to modern ears, conceals, a truth which we can ill afford to forget.
We may express it in this way. Every man is at once the author and the victim
of the associations with which he invests material things; so that, if we could
know what associations these possess for him, what thoughts they set in motion
in his mind, what coercion they exercise upon his will, what appeals they
address to his affections, we should be well informed as to his past life, and
his present character. In truth, we may judge ourselves, we ought to judge
ourselves, by habitual associations. What is the moral furniture of our earthly
environment! Be sure it is the faithful reflection of ourselves. ¡§To the pure,¡¨
says St. Paul, ¡§all things are pure: but to them that are defiled and
unbelieving nothing is pure; but both their mind and their conscience are
defiled.¡¨ The prophet suggests that associations will appear as accusing
witnesses in the day of the Lord. Here they are written in cipher, and each man
keeps his own key; but then the cipher shall be open and manifest. The origin
of associations will be confessed. ¡§The earth shall disclose her blood, and
shall no more cover her slain.¡¨ Before us an lies exposure, inexorable and
complete.
6. Associations so potent, so relentless, so minatory in their
suggestiveness, may be redeemed, cleansed, transformed. The scenes we
desecrated with our sins may be purged by our penitence, and reconsecrated by
our sacrifice. History records the reclaiming of associations, the transmutation
of the symbols and scenes of evil into the very beacons and homes of goodness.
But do not underrate the cost of this great conversion. It is no light task to
strip off one set of associations and to invest with another. Yet one final
stage. Memories of evil may themselves become transmuted into allies of
goodness. Christian history is full of this paradox. The protagonists of virtue
are, not the flawless saints, but the great penitents. There are who find in
their abandoned sins perpetual incitements to service, as she of whom He said,
Her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much: but to whom little
is forgiven, the same loveth little.¡¨ (H. H. Henson, B. D.)
The earth disclosing her blood
In a characteristic passage Lord Macaulay has described the
impression made on observers by the rank growth of scarlet poppies on the
battlefield of Landen. ¡§During many months the ground was strewn with skulls
and bones of men and horses, and with fragments of hats and shoes, saddles and
holsters. The next summer the soil, fertilised by twenty thousand corpses,
broke forth into millions of poppies. The traveller who, on the road from St.
Tron to Tirlemont, saw that vast sheet of rich scarlet spreading from Landen to
Neerwinden, could hardly help fancying that the figurative prediction of the
Hebrew prophet was literally accomplished, that the earth was disclosing her
blood, and refusing to cover the slain.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n