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Isaiah Chapter
Forty-one
Isaiah 41
Chapter Contents
God's care of his people. (1-9) they are encouraged not
to fear. (10-20) The vanity and folly of idolatry. (21-29)
Commentary on Isaiah 41:1-9
(Read Isaiah 41:1-9)
Can any heathen god raise up one in righteousness, make
what use of him he pleases, and make him victorious over the nations? The Lord
did so with Abraham, or rather, he would do so with Cyrus. Sinners encourage
one another in the ways of sin; shall not the servants of the living God stir
up one another in his service? God's people are the seed of Abraham his friend.
This is certainly the highest title ever given to a mortal. It means that
Abraham, by Divine grace, was made like to God, and that he was admitted to
communion with Him. Happy are the servants of the Lord, whom he has called to
be his friends, and to walk with him in faith and holy obedience. Let not such
as have thus been favoured yield to fear; for the contest may be sharp, but the
victory shall be sure.
Commentary on Isaiah 41:10-20
(Read Isaiah 41:10-20)
God speaks with tenderness; Fear thou not, for I am with
thee: not only within call, but present with thee. Art thou weak? I will
strengthen thee. Art thou in want of friends? I will help thee in the time of
need. Art thou ready to fall? I will uphold thee with that right hand which is
full of righteousness, dealing forth rewards and punishments. There are those
that strive with God's people, that seek their ruin. Let not God's people
render evil for evil, but wait God's time. It is the worm Jacob; so little, so
weak, so despised and trampled on by every body. God's people are as worms, in
humble thoughts of themselves, and in their enemies' haughty thoughts of them;
worms, but not vipers, not of the serpent's seed. Every part of God's word is
calculated to humble man's pride, and to make him appear little in his own
eyes. The Lord will help them, for he is their Redeemer. The Lord will make
Jacob to become a threshing instrument. God will make him fit for use, new, and
having sharp spikes. This has fulfilment in the triumphs of the gospel of
Christ, and of all faithful followers of Christ, over the power of darkness.
God has provided comforts to supply all their wants, and to answer all their
prayers. Our way to heaven lies through the wilderness of this world. The soul
of man is in want, and seeks for satisfaction; but becomes weary of seeking
that in the world, which is not to be had in it. Yet they shall have a constant
supply, where one would least expect it. I will open rivers of grace, rivers of
living water, which Christ spake of the Spirit, John 7:38,39. When God sets up his church in the
Gentile wilderness, there shall be a great change, as if thorns and briers were
turned into cedars, and fir-trees, and myrtles. These blessings are kept for
the poor in spirit, who long for Divine enlightening, pardon, and holiness. And
God will render their barren souls fruitful in the grace of his Spirit, that
all who behold may consider it.
Commentary on Isaiah 41:21-29
(Read Isaiah 41:21-29)
There needs no more to show the folly of sin, than to
bring to notice the reasons given in defence of it. There is nothing in idols
worthy of regard. They are less than nothing, and worse than nothing. Let the
advocates of other doctrines than that of salvation through Christ, bring their
arguments. Can they tell of a cure for human depravity? Jehovah has power which
cannot be withstood; this he will make appear. But the certain knowledge of the
future must be only with Jehovah, who fulfils his own plans. All prophecies,
except those of the Bible, have been uncertain. In the work of redemption the
Lord showed himself much more than in the release of the Jews from Babylon. The
good tidings the Lord will send in the gospel, is a mystery hid from ages and
generations. A Deliverer is raised up for us, of nobler name and greater power
than the deliverer of the captive Jews. May we be numbered among his obedient
servants and faithful friends.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 41
Verse 1
[1] Keep
silence before me, O islands; and let the people renew their strength: let them
come near; then let them speak: let us come near together to judgment.
Keep silence ¡X
Attend diligently to my plea.
Islands ¡X By
islands he means countries remote from Judea, inhabited by the idolatrous
Gentiles.
Renew ¡X
Strengthen themselves to maintain their cause against me; let them unite all
their strength together.
Near ¡X
Unto me that we may stand together, and plead our cause, and I will give them
free liberty to say what they can on their own behalf.
Verse 2
[2] Who raised up the righteous man from the east, called him to his foot,
gave the nations before him, and made him rule over kings? he gave them as the
dust to his sword, and as driven stubble to his bow.
Who ¡X
Was it not my work alone? Raised - Into being and power, stirring up his
spirit, and strengthening him to the work.
The man ¡X
Cyrus.
The east ¡X
Persia was directly eastward, both from Judea and from Babylon. He was raised
up by God in an eminent manner. And although these things were yet to come; yet
the prophet speaks of them as if they were already past. And by this instance
he pleads his cause against the Gentiles; because this was an evident proof of
God's almighty power, and of the vanity of idols, which eminently appeared in
the destruction of the Babylonians, who were a people mad upon their idols.
Called him ¡X To
march after him, and under God's banner against Babylon.
Verse 3
[3] He
pursued them, and passed safely; even by the way that he had not gone with his
feet.
Pursued ¡X
Went on in the pursuit with ease and safety.
Even ¡X
Through unknown paths.
Verse 4
[4] Who
hath wrought and done it, calling the generations from the beginning? I the
LORD, the first, and with the last; I am he.
Calling ¡X
Them out of nothing, giving them breath and being: disposing and employing them
as he sees fit.
From the beginning ¡X
All persons and generations of mankind from the beginning of the world.
I ¡X Who was before all
things even from eternity, and shall be unto eternity.
Verse 5
[5] The isles saw it, and feared; the ends of the earth were afraid, drew
near, and came.
The isles ¡X
Even remote countries.
Saw ¡X
Discerned the mighty work of God in delivering his people, and overthrowing
their enemies.
Feared ¡X
Lest they should be involved in the same calamity.
Came ¡X
They gathered themselves together.
Verse 7
[7] So
the carpenter encouraged the goldsmith, and he that smootheth with the hammer
him that smote the anvil, saying, It is ready for the sodering: and he fastened
it with nails, that it should not be moved.
Fastened it ¡X To
the wall or pillar.
Verse 9
[9] Thou
whom I have taken from the ends of the earth, and called thee from the chief
men thereof, and said unto thee, Thou art my servant; I have chosen thee, and
not cast thee away.
Thou ¡X
Thou Israel, whom I took to myself, and brought hither in the loins of thy
father Abraham, from a remote country.
Called thee ¡X
From the midst of many great persons among whom he lived in Chaldea.
Chosen ¡X I
have chosen thee and thy seed through all generations.
Verse 11
[11]
Behold, all they that were incensed against thee shall be ashamed and
confounded: they shall be as nothing; and they that strive with thee shall
perish.
Confounded ¡X
Because the mischief which they contrived against thee shall fall upon
themselves.
Verse 13
[13] For
I the LORD thy God will hold thy right hand, saying unto thee, Fear not; I will
help thee.
Will hold ¡X
Will enable thee to vanquish all thine enemies.
Verse 14
[14] Fear
not, thou worm Jacob, and ye men of Israel; I will help thee, saith the LORD,
and thy redeemer, the Holy One of Israel.
Thou worm ¡X
Who art weak in thyself, and trodden under foot by thy proud enemies.
Verse 15
[15]
Behold, I will make thee a new sharp threshing instrument having teeth: thou
shalt thresh the mountains, and beat them small, and shalt make the hills as
chaff.
An instrument ¡X
Such as were usual in those times and places.
The mountains ¡X
The great and lofty potentates of the world.
Verse 16
[16] Thou
shalt fan them, and the wind shall carry them away, and the whirlwind shall
scatter them: and thou shalt rejoice in the LORD, and shalt glory in the Holy
One of Israel.
Fan ¡X
When thou hast beaten them as small as chaff.
In the Holy One ¡X
For to him, thou shalt ascribe thy victory.
Verse 18
[18] I
will open rivers in high places, and fountains in the midst of the valleys: I
will make the wilderness a pool of water, and the dry land springs of water.
In high places ¡X
Upon the mountains where by the course of nature there are no rivers.
The dry land ¡X
Their people who are like a dry and barren wilderness. I will abundantly water
with my blessings.
Verse 19
[19] I
will plant in the wilderness the cedar, the shittah tree, and the myrtle, and
the oil tree; I will set in the desert the fir tree, and the pine, and the box
tree together:
The box tree ¡X
Trees which are both useful and pleasant to the eye, and giving a good shadow
to the traveller. But what particular trees these Hebrew words signify, is not
certainly known.
Verse 22
[22] Let
them bring them forth, and shew us what shall happen: let them shew the former
things, what they be, that we may consider them, and know the latter end of
them; or declare us things for to come.
Them ¡X
The idols.
Former things ¡X
Such things as should shortly come to pass.
The latter end ¡X
Whether the events answer to their predictions.
Verse 23
[23] Shew
the things that are to come hereafter, that we may know that ye are gods: yea,
do good, or do evil, that we may be dismayed, and behold it together.
Do good ¡X
Protect your worshippers whom I intend to destroy, and destroy my people whom I
intend to save.
That ¡X
That I and my people may be astonished, and forced to acknowledge your godhead.
Verse 24
[24]
Behold, ye are of nothing, and your work of nought: an abomination is he that
chooseth you.
Your work ¡X
Your operations are like your beings: there is no reality in your beings, nor
efficacy in your actions.
Verse 25
[25] I
have raised up one from the north, and he shall come: from the rising of the
sun shall he call upon my name: and he shall come upon princes as upon morter,
and as the potter treadeth clay.
Raised ¡X
Cyrus, might be said to come from the north, because he was a Mede by his
mother, as he was a Persian by his father; or because a great part of his army
was gathered out of Media, which was northward, in reference to Judea, and
because Darius the Mede was joined with him in this expedition.
Proclaim ¡X
This Cyrus did in express, emphatical terms, Ezra 1:1,2.
As on mortar ¡X
Treading them down, as easily as a man treads down mortar.
Verse 26
[26] Who
hath declared from the beginning, that we may know? and beforetime, that we may
say, He is righteous? yea, there is none that sheweth, yea, there is none that
declareth, yea, there is none that heareth your words.
Who ¡X
Which of your idols could foretel such things as these from the beginning of
the world unto this day? Before-time - Before the things come to pass.
Righteous ¡X
His cause is good: he is a God indeed.
Heareth ¡X
Because you are dumb and cannot speak.
Verse 27
[27] The
first shall say to Zion, Behold, behold them: and I will give to Jerusalem one
that bringeth good tidings.
The first ¡X I
who am the first, do and will foretel to my people things to come.
Them ¡X I
also represent future things as if they were present. By them he means things
which are to come.
One ¡X
Messengers, who shall foretel the good tidings of their deliverance from
captivity.
Verse 28
[28] For
I beheld, and there was no man; even among them, and there was no counsellor,
that, when I asked of them, could answer a word.
For ¡X I
looked to see if I could find any man that could foretel future events.
No man ¡X
Not any, of the idols; for the word man is sometimes used by the Hebrews of
brute creatures, and even of lifeless things.
No counsellor ¡X
Though these idols were often consulted, yet none of them were able to give any
solid and certain advice concerning future things.
Verse 29
[29]
Behold, they are all vanity; their works are nothing: their molten images are
wind and confusion.
Behold ¡X
This is the conclusion of the dispute, but under these he comprehends all
images whatsoever.
Wind ¡X Empty
and unsatisfying things.
Confusion ¡X
Confused and useless things, like that rude heap in the beginning of God's
creation, of which this very word is used, Genesis 1:2.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
41 Chapter 41
Verses 1-29
Verse 1
Keep silence before Me, O islands
The convocation of the nations
(whole chapter):--The conception of this passage is superb.
Jehovah is represented as summoning the earth, as far as the remote isles of
the west, to determine once and for ever who is the true God: whether He, or
the idols and oracles of which there were myriads worshipped and believed in by
every nation under heaven. The test proposed is a very simple one. The gods of
the nations were to predict events in the near future, or to show that they had
had a clear understanding of the events of former days. On the other hand, the
servant of Jehovah was prepared to show how fast-sealed prophecies, committed
to the custody of his race, had been precisely verified in the event, and to
utter minute predictions about Cyrus, ¡§the one from the East,¡¨ which should be
fulfilled before that generation had passed away. Not, as in Elijah¡¦s case,
would the appeal be made to the descending flame; but to the fitting of
prophecy and historical fact. Immediately there is a great commotion, the isles
see and fear, the ends of the earth tremble, they draw near and come to the
judgment-seat. On their way thither each bids the other take courage. There is
an industrious furbishing up of the dilapidated idols, and manufacturing of new
ones. The carpenter encourages the goldsmith; and he that smooths with the
hammer him that smites the anvil. They examine the soldering to see if it will
stand, and drive great nails to render the idols steadfast. The universal
desire is to make a strong set of gods who will be able to meet the Divine
challenge--much as if a Roman Catholic priest were to regild and repaint the
images of the saints on the time-worn altar of a fishing hamlet, in the hope of
securing from them greater help in quelling the winter storms. Amidst the
excitement of this vast convocation the idols are dumb. We can almost see them
borne into the arena by their attendant priests, resplendent in gold and
tinsel, flashing with jewels, bedizened in gorgeous apparel. They are set in a
row, their acolytes swing high the censer, the monotonous drawl of their
votaries arises in supplication. Silence is proclaimed that they may have an
opportunity of pronouncing on the subject submitted to them; but they are
speechless. Jehovah pronounces the verdict against which there can be no
appeal, ¡§Behold, ye are of nothing, and your work of nought; an abomination is
he that chooseth you¡¨ (Isaiah 41:24). As Jehovah looks, there is
no one. When He asks of them, there is no counsellor that can answer a word.
¡§Behold they are all vanity; their works are nought; their molten images are
wind and confusion.¡¨ (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Heathen oracles and Scripture prophecy
History furnishes some interesting confirmations of this contrast
between the predictions of heathen oracles and the clear prophecies of Old
Testament Scripture, which were so literally and minutely realised. For
instance, Herodotus tells us that when Croesus heard of the growing power of
Cyrus, he was so alarmed for his kingdom, that he sent rich presents to the
oracles at Delphi, Dodona, and elsewhere, asking what would be the outcome of
his victorious march. That at Delphi gave this ambiguous reply, ¡§That he would
destroy a great empire,¡¨ but whether the empire would be that of Cyrus or of
Croesus was left unexplained: thus, whichever way the event turned, the oracle
could claim to have predicted it. This is a fair illustration of the manner in
which the oracles answered the appeals made to them by men or nations when in
the agony of fear. How striking a contrast the precise prediction of these
pages which give us the name of the conqueror; the quarter from which he would
fall upon Babylon; the marvellous series of successes that gave kings as dust
to his sword, and as the driven stubble to his bow; his reverence towards God,
his simplicity and integrity of purpose (Isaiah 41:2; Isaiah 14:3; Isaiah 14:25; Isaiah 45:1). (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
A drama
In form the chapter is dramatic. Two great debates are imagined:
the first (Isaiah 41:1-7) between Jehovah and the
nations; the second (Isaiah 41:21-29) between Jehovah and the
idols, the subject of both being the appearance of Cyrus. In the intervening
passage (Isaiah 41:8-20) Jehovah encourages His
servant Israel in view of this great crisis of history. (Prof. J. Skinner,
D. D.)
A trial at law
Chapter 41. is loosely cast in the same form of a trial at law
which we found in chapter 1. (Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
God¡¦s response to Israel¡¦s complaint
In reply to Israel¡¦s complaint Isaiah 40:27) that his cause against the
heathen oppressors is neglectedor dismissed by the Great Judge, God now summons
the nations to His court of justice; and as Israel had just been assured that,
if they would wait upon Jehovah, they would renew their strength and discern
His wisdom, an interval is granted to the heathen and their gods, in which they
too may renew their strength and have time to produce evidence of the powers of
design and action possessed by their gods, and in virtue of which they claim
the right to keep Israel in subjection. The solemn pause thus allowed--¡§Keep
silence . . . then let them speak¡¨--is filled (how bitter the irony!)by the
nations employing their carpenters and goldsmiths m make a particularly good
and strong set of gods, because there is a general alarm that the emergency is
great. For it is already seen that the judgment goes against them by default:
that these gods can show no plans, can do nothing good or bad; and that they
and their worshippers have neither right nor power to break up the designs of
Almighty wisdom. They have been trying to do this by those oppressions of
Israel which were only permitted for a time, because they fell into and formed
a part of God¡¦s own plan. But Israel had from the first an appointed and chief
place in that plan: He who is at once King of Israel and God of all the earth,
has been maintaining His chosen people in their place, generation after
generation, when He made Abraham His friend, and gave the blessing to his seed,
and then He made the well yield springs of water under the rod of Moses; and
now, though they are reduced to extremity of weakness and dismay, the Holy One
of Israel bids them fear not, for He has taken upon Himself to be their Redeemer.
(Sir E. Strachey, Bart.)
A lawsuit
If Jehovah is a party, who then is the presiding judge? This
question is to be answered as in Isaiah 5:3. The decisive authority is
reason, which must acknowledge the state of the case and the conclusions
following therefrom. (P. Delitzsch, D. D.)
A fair trial
1. The cause of God and His kingdom is not afraid of s fair trial. If
the case be but fairly stated it will be surely carried in favour of religion.
2. The enemies of God¡¦s Church and His holy religion may safely be
challenged to say and do their worst for the support of their unrighteous
cause. (M. Henry.)
Islands
A characteristic word of the second half of Isaiah occurring
twelve times. In the general usage of the Old Testament it denotes the islands
and coastlands of the Mediterranean (comp the use of the singular by Isaiah in Isaiah 20:6). Etymologically, it probably
means simply ¡§habitable lands¡¨; and this prophet uses it with great laxity,
hardly distinguishing it from ¡§lands¡¨ (Isaiah 42:15). (Prof. J. Skinner, D.
D.)
Solemn pleadings for revival
We also who worship the Lord God have a controversy with Him. We
have not seen His Church and His cause prospering in the world as we could
desire; as yet heathenism is not put to the rout by Christianity, neither does
the truth everywhere trample down error. We desire to reason with God about
this, and He Himself instructs us how to prepare for this sacred debate. He
bids us be silent; He bids us consider, and then draw near to Him with holy
boldness and plead with Him, produce our cause and bring forth our strong
reasons.
I. FIRST, THEN,
LET US BE SILENT.
1. Before the controversy opens let us be silent with solemn awe, for
we have to speak with the Lord God Almighty! Let us not open our mouths to
impugn His wisdom, nor allow our hearts to question His love. We are going to
make bold to speak with Him, but still He is the eternal God, and we are dust
and ashes. It is the glory of God to conceal a thing, and if He chooses to
conceal it, let it be concealed. Truly, God is good to Israel, and His mercy endureth
for ever.
2. Our silence of awe should deepen into that of shame; for, though
it is true that the cause of God has not prospered, whoso fault is this?
3. Go further than this, and keep the silence of consideration. This
is a noisy age, and the Church of Christ herself is too noisy. We have very
little silent worship, I fear. Let us be silent, now, for a minute, and
consider what it is that we desire of the Lord. The conversion of thousands,
the overthrow of error, the spread of the Redeemer¡¦s kingdom. Think in your
minds what the blessings are which your soul pants after. Suppose they were to
be now bestowed, are you ready? If thousands of converts were to be born unto
this one Church, are you prepared to teach them and comfort them? You pray for grace--are
you using the grace you have? You want to see more power--how about the power
you have? Are you employing it? If a mighty wave of revival sweeps over London,
are your hearts ready? Are your hands ready? Are your purses ready? If you
reflect, you will see that God is able to give His Church the largest blessing,
and to give it at any time. Keep silence and consider, and you will see that He
can give the blessing by you or by me. Ask yourselves in the quiet of your
spirits, what can we do to get the blessing? Are we doing that?
4. Then we shall pass on to the silence of attention. Keep silence
that God may speak to you. We cannot expect Him to hear us if We will not hear
Him.
5. If you have learned attention, be silent with submission.
II. In that silence
LET US RENEW OUR STRENGTH. Noise wears us; silence feeds us, To run upon the
Master¡¦s errands is always well, but to sit at the Master¡¦s feet is quite as
necessary; or, like the angels which excel in strength, our power to do His
commandments arises out of our hearkening to the voice of His Word. But how
happens it that such silence renews our strength?
1. It does so by giving space for the strengthening word to come into
the soul, and the energy of the Holy Spirit to be really felt.
2. We must be silent to renew our strength, by using silence for
consideration as to who it is that we are dealing with. We are going to speak
with God about the weakness of His Church, and the slowness of its progress. We
are coming to plead now with One whose arm is not shortened, and whose ear is
not heavy. Renew your strength as you think of Him. Hath not the Lord said
concerning His beloved Son that He shall divide the spoil with the strong, and
the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in His hands? Shall it not be so? Think,
too, that you are about to appeal to the Holy Spirit. What cannot the Spirit of
God do?
3. In silence, too, let us renew our strength by remembering His
promises. There are a thousand promises. Let us think of that, and however
difficult the enterprise may be, and however dark our present prospects, we
shall not dare to doubt when Jehovah has spoken and pledged His Word.
4. Our strength will be renewed next, if in silence we yield up to
God all our own wisdom and strength.
5. Keep silence, then, ye saints, till ye have felt your folly and
your weakness, and then renew your strength most gloriously by casting
yourselves upon the strength of God.
III. Our text
proceeds to add, ¡§Then let them draw near.¡¨ You that know the Lord DRAW NEAR.
You are silent, you have renewed your strength, now enjoy access with boldness.
The condition in which to intercede for others is not that of distance from
God, but that of great nearness to Him. Even thus did Abraham draw nigh when he
pleaded for Sodom and Gomorrah.
1. Let us remember how near we really are. We are one with Christ,
and members of His body. How could we be nearer?
2. You are coming to a Father.
3. The desire in our heart for God¡¦s glory and the extension of His
Church, is a desire written there by the Holy Spirit.
4. What we ask, if we are about to plead with God concerning His
kingdom, is according to His own mind.
5. Moreover, there is this further consideration; the Lord loves to
be pleaded with. He might have given all the covenant blessings without prayer;
wherefore does He compel us to use entreaties, unless it be that He loves to
hear the voices of His children?
IV. I now come to
the last point, which is, ¡§LET US SPEAK.¡¨ Be silent, renew your strength, draw
near, and then speak. What have we to say upon the matter which concerns us?
1. Let us first speak in the spirit of adoring gratitude. How sweet
to think that there should be a Saviour at all. To think that there should be a
heavenly kingdom set up, as it is set up; that it should have made such
advances as it has made, and should still grow mightily!
2. Next, let us speak in humble expostulation.
3. Then turn to pleading.
4. Let us speak in the way of dedication.
5. Let us speak still in the way of confidence. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Silence and speech before God
God addresses men here by two designations, the one having
reference to their remoteness and isolation, and the other to their unity. The
series of injunctions begins with silence and ends with speech. Right silence
before God, passing on through stirring up of energy and earnest confiding
approach, issues m speech. We shall consider the beginning and the end of this
series--silence before God and speech to God.
I. SILENCE BEFORE
GOD. Shall we not be silent in the endeavour to realise that God is, and what
He is? Would not this do more for us than any urging of ourselves or any kind
of activity and noise whatever? And can anything have its proper effect on our
soul without this? If we but realise with ourselves that we have to do with an
Infinite One, that there is One Being of spotless perfection, almighty power,
unchangeableness, boundless love, complete and earnest opposition to evil, what
an effect this will produce on us! Unless we can bear to be silent and brood,
the thought of God will not rise before us in fulness and splendour. But God
speaks, and we must listen in silence. With what glad silence should we listen
to the Divine voice. A single word of God must be worth more to us than all
other words. When we read the Word of God we should say to ourselves, Hush! God
is speaking. We should listen to it as a message conveying what we are to
believe and embrace and ponder and do. We may spoil everything by letting the
murmur of our own thoughts arise. Our silence in the presence of God will often
take the form of thinking of ourselves. Thinking of self becomes sincere and
profitable when it goes on consciously in God¡¦s presence. The felt presence of
God revives memory, prevents besetting self-deception, and turns the survey of
the future from chaotic dreams into earnest outlook. Can any man make such a
survey, however imperfectly, without shame? Shame makes him silent. He who
knows the bitterness of being put to silence in the presence of God, will
scarcely be without experience of the sweetness of silent satisfaction and
rest. He will be led to see such a graciousness in God, such a benign healing
aspect of His mercy, such a fulness in Christ, such a might of forgiveness,
such a sublime oblivion, that he will feel for a while as if he had nothing
more to ask. This satisfaction passes into expectation.
II. SPEECH TO GOD
FOLLOWING UPON THE SILENCE. Silence before God in which such thoughts as these
go on leads to a stirring of the soul, a forth-putting of endeavour, and a
drawing near to God. Silence before God heaps a load on the heart which can
only be thrown off by speaking to God. One thing after another brings fresh
penitence, new discovery of sin, new sense of the greatness of God; new fears
spring up, new resolutions gather, and all these weigh very heavily. And much
more than freedom from pressure will be experienced. The convictions that
gather in silence will be strengthened by speech. If they did not find
expression they would begin to decay. In short, speaking to God of the things
that have lain on the soul in its silence is a necessity at once for relief,
for understanding, for intensity, for permanence, and for growth, It would be a
wrong inference to draw from this passage that one ought not to speak to God
without consciously going through these stages of the text. There may be true
speaking to God which seems to break forth at once and immediately from the
soul. It is not always a bad sign when we feel that we cannot speak, but must
be silent before God. This state is not, indeed, to be prolonged. Nor must it
be a dull, dead, distant silence, but one that has its own peculiar activities.
Hasting to cut short the period of silence may enervate and chill. The silence
may be more acceptable to God for the time than any words could be. We should
expect times of silence before God--times in which speaking to God is not
indeed absent, but in which silence is the dominating element. If it is a
silence before God, it is a leaving of space for God to speak, and surely this
is implied in communion. (J. Leckie, D. D.)
The silence of reverence
The silence of reverence is the soil in which earnestness and
energy grow. By this reverent silence resolution takes shape and gathers force.
Men gird up their energies afresh when in solemn silence they have gone over
the actualities and the possibilities of life. Then with purpose and intensity
they come near to God. (J. Leckie, D. D.)
The relief of speech after silence
You may have seen a reservoir of water which, by continuous rain,
had become so full that it threatened to overflow all its banks or burst
them--the rain through days and nights had been pouring on its broad bosom, and
the brooks and rills from miles around had been hurrying their foaming tributes
into it, till the ordinary small outlet is wholly unable to relieve the immense
pressure, and the very edge of ruin is reached, when, lo! the great sluice is
raised, and away rushes the pent-up flood in immense volume. There is relief
and safety at once. So is it with the burdened soul on which silence before God
has been laying load after load, pressing and crushing it with memories,
convictions, fears, resolutions. Relief and freedom are gained by pouring out
the soul in words before God. (J. Leckie, D. D.)
Conviction aided by both silence and speech
In silence there is the rooting of conviction, but in speaking to
God its expansion and growth. When you have hyacinths in water glasses, you put
them first in darkness for some weeks till the roots strike down into the
water. You find that the roots have spread and filled the glass, but there is
scarcely a sign of growth upward, the stalk remains undeveloped. Light is
needed for that. So speech to God is needed to raise and expand the feelings
that have been rooted in silence. (J. Leckie, D. D.)
Verse 2
The righteous man from the East
The righteous man from the East
The question, whose appearance is predicted, has been always a
subject of dispute.
Eusebius, Theodoret, and Procopius understand it as describing the triumphs of
the true religion, or the Gospel, here called ¡§righteousness.¡¨ Cyril and Jerome
apply it to the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, as the Righteous One, or the Lord
our Righteousness. Cocceius stands alone in his application of the verso to the
apostle Paul. The Jews make Abraham the subject of the passage, excepting Aben
Ezra, who, with Vitringa and all the latest writers, understands it as a
prophecy of Cyrus. The inappropriateness of the terms employed to our Saviour
or the Gospel, to Abraham or Paul, is almost self-evident, and equally clear is
its appropriateness to the case of Cyrus. The argument in favour of the latter
application, drawn from the analogy of Isaiah 45:1; Isaiah 46:11, is less conclusive, because
he is there expresslynamed. The truth appears to be that this is a more general
intimation of a great eventful movement from the East, which is afterwards
repeated with specific reference to Cyrus and his conquests. It might even be
supposed without absurdity that there is here an allusion to the general
progress of the human race, of conquest, civilisation, and religion from the
East to the West. Umbreit supposes a specific reference to the course of the
sun, from which the name of Cyrus was derived. (J. A. Alexander.)
Cyrus raised up by God
¡§Stirred up¡¨ the sense is ¡§impelled into activity.¡¨ (Prof. S.
R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus from the East, yet from the North
¡§From the East¡¨; Cyrus¡¦ home, Susiania being to the east of
Babylonia. ¡§From the North¡¨ (Isaiah 41:25), alludes to the ¡§Medes, who
united with the Persians under Cyrus, and whose home was to the north or
north-east of Babylonia. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus called in righteousness
(see R.V.):--Cyrus¡¦ career being a furtherance of God¡¦s righteous
purpose for the government of the world. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus called to God¡¦s foot
To call to one¡¦s foot is a Hebrew idiom for calling to one¡¦s
service, or summoning to take a place among one¡¦s followers. (J. A.
Alexander.)
Verse 2
The righteous man from the East
The righteous man from the East
The question, whose appearance is predicted, has been always a
subject of dispute.
Eusebius, Theodoret, and Procopius understand it as describing the triumphs of
the true religion, or the Gospel, here called ¡§righteousness.¡¨ Cyril and Jerome
apply it to the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, as the Righteous One, or the Lord
our Righteousness. Cocceius stands alone in his application of the verso to the
apostle Paul. The Jews make Abraham the subject of the passage, excepting Aben
Ezra, who, with Vitringa and all the latest writers, understands it as a
prophecy of Cyrus. The inappropriateness of the terms employed to our Saviour
or the Gospel, to Abraham or Paul, is almost self-evident, and equally clear is
its appropriateness to the case of Cyrus. The argument in favour of the latter
application, drawn from the analogy of Isaiah 45:1; Isaiah 46:11, is less conclusive, because
he is there expresslynamed. The truth appears to be that this is a more general
intimation of a great eventful movement from the East, which is afterwards
repeated with specific reference to Cyrus and his conquests. It might even be
supposed without absurdity that there is here an allusion to the general
progress of the human race, of conquest, civilisation, and religion from the
East to the West. Umbreit supposes a specific reference to the course of the
sun, from which the name of Cyrus was derived. (J. A. Alexander.)
Cyrus raised up by God
¡§Stirred up¡¨ the sense is ¡§impelled into activity.¡¨ (Prof. S.
R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus from the East, yet from the North
¡§From the East¡¨; Cyrus¡¦ home, Susiania being to the east of
Babylonia. ¡§From the North¡¨ (Isaiah 41:25), alludes to the ¡§Medes, who
united with the Persians under Cyrus, and whose home was to the north or
north-east of Babylonia. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus called in righteousness
(see R.V.):--Cyrus¡¦ career being a furtherance of God¡¦s righteous
purpose for the government of the world. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Cyrus called to God¡¦s foot
To call to one¡¦s foot is a Hebrew idiom for calling to one¡¦s
service, or summoning to take a place among one¡¦s followers. (J. A.
Alexander.)
Verse 4
I the Lord, the first, and with the last
I.
LOOK
AT GOD IN HIS PRIMARY RELATION TO HIS CREATURE. Understand clearly that
everything which is was first an idea in the mind of God. Thence, by a creative
act, it came forth and took form and being. So God was first, long before all
His works--as the mould is before the castings. Here is the truth and glory of
predestination, that great argument of all comfort. It places God far away,
beyond our little horizon, in advance of everything. Whatever is, is to fulfil
its preordained purpose; each thing coming up and rising in its turn;
everything a reflection of the eternal love, care, and wisdom which dwelt from
everlasting in the mind of God.
II. ¡§WITH THE
LAST.¡¨ There are those who say, ¡§This world is on the decline and growing
worse.¡¨ Can it be, if He who was First is with the last--the same God
yesterday, to-day, and for ever,the equal portion of all times? Is it not
sufficient argument? The golden age cannot be over. From the fleeting and the
changing, from the disappointing and the dying, I yearn to ask, ¡§Where is the
true?¡¨ Where is that which my soul wants, and for which my restless spirit has
so long been craving, what shall satisfy my immortality? And the answer comes,
as a whisper in the desert, louder and clearer from the solitude of my heart¡¦s
waste places, ¡§I the Lord, the First, and with the last; I am He.¡¨ (J.
Vaughan, M. A.)
Verse 6-7
They helped every one his neighbour.
--
Idolatry the subject of sarcasm:
The sarcasm consists in making the idolaters dependent upon idols
which are themselves dependent upon common workmen and the most trivial
mechanical operations for their form and their stability. Hence the particular
enumeration of the different artificers employed in the manufacture of these
deities. The last clause implies that the strength of the idol is not in
itself, but in the nails that keep it in its place, or hold its parts together.
(J. A. Alexander.)
Lessons from the idol-makers
Idolatry being threatened with an overthrow, their ¡§craft¡¨ was
endangered, and hence the earnestness and co-operation of these makers of
idols. The text is suggestive.
I. It affords an
illustration of THE WAY THE WICKED COMBINE IN THEIR FIGHT AGAINST THE RIGHT.
Jeremiah gives us a picture of this combination in the family (Jeremiah 7:17-18). Isaiah, carrying it up
higher, here shows how the different crafts cheer and help each other. Take the
history of the world; follow the struggle between the powers of light and the
powers of darkness, and you will find that this has always been the case. When
Jesus Christ made His appearance upon the earth for the purpose of inaugurating
the overthrow of paganism and planting His kingdom on its ruins, witness what
varied and unhallowed combinations arrayed themselves against Him. See how the
liquor-dealers are now banded together in that strong association, which has
for its object the protection and perpetuity of their iniquitous traffic. And
if certain questions are touched there are manifested some strange
combinations.
II. We see the
importance of UNANIMITY OF FEELING AND CONCERT OF ACTION IN CHURCH WORK.
1. This should be true in the individual Churches. The various ages,
classes, and organisations of a Church ought to work for the same ends.
2. On the great leading questions there must be co-operation between
the various denominations.
III. We have a
suggestion as to THE MUTUAL DEPENDENCE OF MEN. Notice how many crafts the idols
passed through before they were finished. Take any article in your possession,
and a great many different persons and trades have contributed to its
production. No profession or trade is independent of other professions and
trades; no class is independent of other classes.
IV. We are reminded
that OUR AIM IN LIFE SHOULD BE TO HELP THOSE WITH WHOM WE COME IN CONTACT.
¡§They helped every one his neighbour.¡¨ Jesus Christ came into this world not to
seek His own ease or profit or pleasure, but to help the needy sons of men.
Have we caught anything of His spirit? There are many ways in which we can
help.
1. Like these idolaters, we can do it by our words of cheer. We are
too chary with our praise.
2. Help by our deeds. (J. W. Rogan.)
Mutual encouragement
How much of mutuality there is in the teaching of the Bible! This
is mutual encouragement, and applies to higher forms of service. The next verse
reads, ¡§But thou, Israel, art My servant.¡¨ To be a carpenter who works on wood
is merely to do something outward, but ¡§thou art My servant¡¨ introduces us into
the moral sphere of action. Now encouragement is not flattery. You are not to
forget the great ethical basis on which all our life must rest. It is not right
to flatter. It is right to encourage, because there are always circumstances in
human life that tend to depress, and there are specific temperamental
constitutions that need a great deal of gladdening from without, for some are
not easily inspired. I believe in encouragement all through. Many young people
never play the piano well because their parents have not encouraged them.
Sometimes we fail to encourage our servants.
I. ENCOURAGEMENT
MUST BE LIVED AS WELL AS SPOKEN. We are to give courage through the possession
of it. It will not do for those who are to inspire others to whimper over their
troubles! If the general is beaten the army is often defeated.
II. ENCOURAGEMENT
MUST BEGIN AT THE NEAREST POINT. ¡§Everyone said to his neighbour.¡¨ The man next
to me is to catch the influence. If I do not encourage him it is a poor
compliment to encourage somebody in Spain or Jerusalem. It is of no use for me
to write the foreign letter to my friend far away, if I do not encourage the
charwoman who comes for a day¡¦s work. All these splendid heroics of distance
are mere romance. Your neighbour nigh you often needs encouragement, and God
has placed you there to give it.
III. ENCOURAGEMENT
MUST NOT BE MERELY SEASONAL. Because you do not know when a man wants you! It
is to be the atmosphere of duty; you are to live in it. We need encouragement
when things are bright with us to stimulate us to make a right and thankful use
of our mercies. We need encouragement in adversity, for patience needs
sustaining in long hours of pain, in mysteries we cannot fathom, in paths where
we see no turning. You can encourage someone best of all when you can say, Thus
and thus it has been with me.
IV. ENCOURAGEMENT
MUST NOT BE WITHDRAWN BY FREQUENT FAILURES. Do not say, I will give it up, it
is a bad job. As the R.V. says, ¡§Despairing of no man.¡¨ What do you say? Am I
to encourage the man who has broken so many vows? Yes. His next step may be on
to the rock. Am I to be the one to bear upon my heart the responsibility of
cheering those who never seem to cheer me? Yes. Your relation to me is not to
affect my relation to you. Encourage the doubter, the erring, the deserter, as
you would be encouraged yourself.
V. ENCOURAGEMENT
MUST BE TRUE, BASED ON REASONS. No one can really encourage me unless he speaks
on the ground of truth. For truth will not encourage me by hiding my symptoms
and using soft, seductive words! Encourage one another, because the work in
which we are engaged is the only immortal work of the ages, and to unite in
Christian work is to lay hold of the ¡§everlasting.¡¨ (W. M. Statham.)
Mutual help a law of nature
1. The commonwealth is not served till the different branches of
industry merge their jealousies in goodwill.
2. The very composition of the earth we walk over offers a strong
hint of this intention. You read it in the beautiful balancings of clouds and
tides, the equations of astronomy, the adjustments of growth and climate, all
the musical accord by which the Divine Spirit has attuned His creation to an
everlasting anthem. Sky and water, vapour and vegetation, earth and sun are
ever friendly and hospitable; they are perpetually running on some missionary
errand on each other¡¦s behalf.
3. Indeed, It is most interesting to see how liberally the Creator
has given hints and illustrations of this social principle by His own
arrangements, even in what we call the humbler departments of His creation. For
society does not stand apart from nature, but interlinks its laws with hers.
Very wonderful it is, and very beautiful, to see how God twines together, into
a system of mutual benefits, the operations that different creatures carry on
for their own advantage, thus revealing His intention that they should be
fellow-helpers, even these dumb and soulless things. He scarcely lets any good
end with the being that produced it, but carries it over into some wider
usefulness. He pushes out the doings of each animal and person into results
that help other animals and other persons. The silkworm, with no thought of a
charity, spins for himself an elaborate and complicated coffin, to hold the
chrysalis, till its resurrection with wings. But the strands of that delicate
fabric, the ingenuity of man winds off into the material of his costliest and
most durable vestures. Coral insects build their reefs with the slow toil of
ages, not certainly as philanthropists, but simply by the instinct that bids
living things provide a habitation. Yet they are all the time laying the
foundations of islands that men will some time inhabit, when overpopulated
continents shall send out their swarming colonies, and thus God ¡§layeth the
beams of His chambers in the waters.¡¨ The spider weaves a web, out in the air,
for certain economical purposes of his own. But God bathes it overnight in
drops of dew, and in the morning sun it hangs like a silver shield, with
miniature rainbows for its quarterings, ¡§a thing of beauty¡¨ at which children
clap their hands with rapture, and which every beauty-loving passenger is the
better for. The spider had no thought of being an artist; but the Creator made
him one to shed delight unconsciously. Or else astronomy stretches one of those
slender fibres across the glass in her telescope to mark the passage of a star,
and the little insect under a clover leaf gives a measuring line to science to
tell the august motions of the constellations of the sky.
4. So in another and higher grade of creation. When men forget to
help each other, God overrules their plans, and makes them do it, to a certain
extent, in despite of themselves. He is for ever defeating the plots of
selfishness. He suffers no immunities to be strictly personal. It is the
settled policy of Providence, so to speak, to break up monopolies. He regards
always the good, not only of the greatest number, but of the whole. He allows
no mortal to live for himself alone, however much disposed to. A capitalist,
without the remotest intention of being a public benefactor perhaps, founds a
factory, to enlarge his private fortune. But the enterprise calls into
employment an army of labourers, and the wages forestall their starvation. A
few men, in a corporation, as the ease may be, build a railway, for the sake of
the dividends; but it becomes an immeasurable facility of travel and
transportation, and while it enriches a few is a convenience to millions. (F.
D. Huntington, D. D.)
Verse 7
So the carpenter encouraged the goldsmith
The hardships of working men
If men in bad work can encourage each other, should not men
engaged in honest artisanship and mechanism speak words of good cheer?
1. Men see in their own work hardships and trials, while they
recognise no hardships or trials in anybody else¡¦s occupation. Every man¡¦s
burden is the heaviest, and every woman¡¦s task is the hardest. We find people
wanting to get other occupations and professions. Now, the beauty of our holy
religion is that God looks down upon all the occupations and professions; and
while I cannot understand your annoyances, and you cannot understand mine, God
understands them all. I will speak this warning of the general hardships of the
working classes. You may not belong to this class, but you are bound as
Christian men and women to know their sorrows and sympathise with them, and as
political economists to come to their rescue. You do a great wrong to the
labouring classes if you hold them responsible for the work of the scoundrelly
anarchists. You may do your duty toward your employes, but many do not, and the
biggest business firm to-day is Grip, Gouge, Grind and Company. By what
principle of justice is it that women in many of our cities get only two-thirds
as much as men, and in many cases only half? Here is the gigantic injustice,
that for work equally well, if not better, done woman receives far less
compensation than man. Has toil frosted the colour of your cheeks? Has it taken
all spontaneity from your laughter? Has it subtracted the spring from your
step, and the lustre from your eye, until it has left you only half the man you
were when you first put your hand on the hammer and your foot on the wheel?
To-morrow in your place of toil, listen, and you will hear a voice above the
hiss of the furnace, and the groan of the foundry, and the clatter of the
shuttle--a voice not of machinery, nor of the task-master, but the voice of an
all-sympathetic God, as He says, ¡§Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are
heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.¡¨ Let all men and women of toil remember
that this work will soon be over. Have they not heard that there is a great
holiday coming? Oh, that home, and no long walk to get to it! I wish they would
put their head on this pillow stuffed with the down from the wing of all God¡¦s
promises. ¡§There remains a rest for the people of God.¡¨
2. Another great trial is privation of taste and sentiment. I do not
know of anything much more painful than to have a fine taste for painting and
sculpture and music and glorious sunsets and the expanse of the blue sky, and
yet, not to be able to get the dollar for the oratorio, or to get a picture, or
to buy one¡¦s way into the country to look at the setting sun and at the bright
heavens.
3. Then there are a great many who suffer not only in the privation
of their tastes, but in the apprehension and the oppressive surroundings of
life. (T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D.)
Encouragements for working men
1. One of the greatest safeguards against evil is plenty to do. I see
a pool of water in the country, and I say, ¡§Thou slimy fetid thing, what does all
this mean? Didn¡¦t I see you playing with those shuttles and turning that
grist-mill?¡¨ ¡§Oh yes,¡¨ says the water, ¡§I used to earn my living.¡¨ I say again,
¡§Then what makes you look so sick? Why are you covered with this green scum?
Why is your breath so vile?¡¨ ¡§Oh,¡¨ says the water, ¡§I have nothing to do. I am
disgusted with shuttles and wheels. I am going to spend my whole lifetime here,
and while yonder stream sings on its way down the mountain-side, here I am left
to fester and die accursed of God because I have nothing to do!¡¨ Sin is an old
pirate that bears down on vessels whose sails are flapping idly in the wind.
The arrow of sin has hard work to puncture the leather of an old working-apron.
2. Another encouragement is the fact that their families are going to
have the very best opportunity for development and usefulness. That may sound
strange to you, but the children of fortune are very apt to turn out poorly.
The son of the porter that kept the gate learns his trade, gets a robust
physical constitution, achieves high moral culture, and stands in the front
rank of Church and State.
3. Again, I offer as encouragement that you have so many
opportunities of gaining information. The Countess of Anjou gave two hundred
sheep for one volume. Jerome ruined himself financially by buying one copy of
Origen. Oh, the contrast!
4. Your toils in this world are only intended to be a discipline by
which you shall be prepared for heaven. (T. De Witt Talmage, D. D.)
A call to action
I propose to address myself--
I. TO THOSE WHO
PROFESS THE FAITH OF CHRIST. Is there no work for you to do? Join some of the
regiments; belong to the artillery, or the cavalry, or the infantry of the
Church. Woe unto them that are at ease in Zion.
II. TO THOSE WHO
PROFESS NOT TO BE CHRISTIANS.
1. There are some of you who say you are kept back by your worldly
engagements. Will you let your store, your office, your shop, stand between you
and heaven?
2. There is somebody who says: ¡§I am afraid someone will laugh at me
if I become a Christian.¡¨ Will you allow your soul to be caught in such a thin
trap as human scorn? Can these people who laugh at your seriousness insure you
for the future?
3. There may be young people who say, ¡§We are too young yet. Wait a
little while, after we have enjoyed the world more; and then we will become
Christians.¡¨ I ask any young man if that is fair--to sit down at a banquet all
your life long, and have everything you want, and then at the close, when you
are utterly exhausted, say, ¡§Lord Jesus, there are dregs in that cup; you may
drink them. Lord Jesus, there are crumbs under that table; you may take them
up¡¨?
4. I heard some say, ¡§I am too old.¡¨ If thou canst not do any more
than tremble towards the Cross, if thou art too weak to-night to hold the
staff, if all thy soul seems to be bowed down with sorrow, just stumble the
way, and put thy withered arms around that Cross, and life, and joy, and
pardon, and salvation will come to you.
5. I hear someone say, ¡§Give me more time to think of this!¡¨ What is
time? (T. DeWitt Talmage, D. D.)
A model Church
I. It is a scene
of ACTIVITY. We all enjoy activity in the natural world. When the winter frosts
have melted, and the streams gush down the mountain-side, and the trees begin
to put out their livery of green, we enjoy it. Life is a scene of activity in
the physical universe. So it is in the business world. So it is with
intellectual activity. The long years of the Middle Ages have passed, and the
darkness enveloping Europe lifts up. The printing-press is doing a work beyond
that of the old feudal castle. Still more is it the case when there comes
spiritual life in a church or in a parish; everybody feels happy.
II. It is a scene
of CHEERFUL, COURAGEOUS TOIL. The carpenter encourages the goldsmith. Many
people discourage. The carpenter is querulous, and he says, ¡§Look here, Mr.
Goldsmith, I think you had better do your work so.¡¨ ¡§What do you know about
goldsmithing?¡¨ says the other; ¡§you are a carpenter; attend to your own
business,¡¨ and thus angry words pass between them. It is so in our churches.
¡§Singing,¡¨ says one; ¡§what do you know about singing?¡¨ ¡§You don¡¦t preach quite
right,¡¨ says one. ¡§Would you like to try?¡¨ A sensible man says, ¡§I cannot
preach; I think my minister knows how to preach, and I will pray for him if he
makes a mistake now and then.¡¨ He knows how to encourage him.
III. It is a scene
of PROMPT INDUSTRY AND THOROUGH WORK. When a man gets a reputation for
dilatoriness his fate is sealed. The model Church does thorough work, and does
it promptly.
IV. THEY ARE ALL
WORKING FOR ONE COMMON END. The Church has one end. This man attends to the
singing; this man to the children; this man looks after the working men¡¦s
class; this man attends to outdoor relief; another visits the mothers; others
attend to this, that, and the other, but they are all working for one end. The
Church is a unity--a unity in spirit, in aim, in end. (E. P. Thwing.)
All at work
I. THEY WERE ALL
AT WORK. Many of us like activity. In the intellectual world all is life and
go. In the political world it is the same. ¡§Rest and be thankful¡¨ belongs to
other days. It should be just like that in the Church of Jesus Christ. Here,
stagnation means death.
II. THE
ENCOURAGEMENT WHICH THEY GAVE EACH OTHER. Men will work, and work well, when
their efforts are appreciated. Even the dumb animals which have become the
companion and worker for man seem to understand encouragement, and will, in
many ways, show their appreciation of it.
III. THE QUALITY OF
THEIR WORK. ¡§It was fastened with nails, and could not be moved.¡¨ Work done
under the circumstances of the text was sure to be good--do your work well. Do
not catch the spirit of the age. This is the day of the jerry builder. Quantity
is often considered rather than quality. Outward show is the order of the day.
It is important for us all to remember that what we can do for God depends upon
what we are before God. We can only teach what we know. (C. Leach, D. D.)
A society of encouragers
Societies already exist in multitude--societies religious,
political, social, literary, etc; but there is room for another. It need not
displace any existing ones that are worthy of continuance; it can fulfil its
purpose by infusing into them all a new spirit--a spirit of brightness, of good
cheer, and strengthening comradeship. Ipropose to call it ¡§The Society of
Encouragers.¡¨
I. ITS BASIS IS
LAID IN NEIGHBOURLINESS AND BROTHERLINESS. Does anyone ask, ¡§Who is my
neighbour?¡¨ Let him read again the parable of the Good Samaritan. In that story
neighbourliness stands for love, sympathy, kindness, help, and all those
qualities that constitute practical religion. It bridges, at a leap, the chasm
of national distinctions. My neighbour¡¦s house may be near or far in situation,
his rental may stand at £80 a year, and mine at £20. His walls may be adorned
with the costliest pictures, and I may be indebted to the enterprising activity
of tradesmen at Christmas-time for any adornment on mine; or the financial
positions of each may be transposed, but we are neighbours. We live to help each
other. Is there trouble anywhere? That is enough, my place is there; and when
the hour of distress comes for me, I shall not be without a friend. But there
is a deeper word still In the new society, we are brothers. ¡§Every one said to
his brother, Be of good cheer.¡¨ This strikes a yet tenderer chord. ¡§Have we not
all one Father?¡¨ This will settle the relations between capital and labour by
uniting master and man in a common bond of reciprocal interest. Carry it to its
furthest issue, and it will solve all questions of national and international
strife by brining in the reign of ¡§Peace on earth and goodwill to men.¡¨
II. AS TO ITS
RAISON D¡¦ETRE.
1. The new society exists for kindly speech to one another. ¡§Every
one said to his brother, Be of good courage.¡¨ A word in season, how good it is!
There is helpfulness and inspiration in kindly, encouraging speech. The
ministry that never fails is the ministry of encouragement.
2. It exists for kindly speech of one another. In the new society we
pledge ourselves to think and act towards the living as we do for those who
have passed into the Great Silence. Many have died before their time for want
of a Society of Encouragers. Sympathy is vain that is reserved for the eulogy
of the dead or flower-wreaths for the coffin-lid. Expend it now.
3. The new society exists also for mutual effort. ¡§They helped every
one his neighbour.¡¨ The kindly word is valuable and precious, but it is better
still when crystalised into action. What the world wants is the practical
application of the religion of Jesus Christ, whose human life is summed up in
the brief sentence: ¡§Who went about doing good.¡¨
4. The new society is a society of workers ¡§The carpenter encouraged
the goldsmith.¡¨ You can put your own trade or profession in. All may be
included whose calling is honest, just, and pure. What is wanted is a sense of
comradeship, and this the new society provides. The isolation is removed. We no
longer work alone, but side by side, in the world¡¦s great workshop.
III. THE UNITING
BOND OF ALL IS LOVE. Love is the common bond that unites man to man, neighbour
to neighbour, brother to brother, and all together to Him who is Love s primal
fount and source. (A. Hancock.)
Humble co-operation
A traveller, standing outside Cologne Cathedral, expressed his
admiration of its beauty. ¡§Yes,¡¨ said a labourer, who was near; ¡§it¡¦s a fine
building, and took us many a year to finish.¡¨ ¡§Took you!¡¨ exclaimed the
tourist; ¡§why, what have you to do with it?¡¨ ¡§I mixed the mortar, sir,¡¨ was the
modest yet proud reply. (Home Magazine.)
Verses 8-20
Verse 8
But thou, Israel, art My servant
The servant of Jehovah
It is reasonable to seek the origin of the idea in the first
passage in which the term occurs (Isaiah 41:8).
Here there can be no doubt as to what the term denotes. It denotes the
Israelitish nation, treated, however, not as the mere aggregate of the members
composing it, but as a unity, developing historically, and maintaining its
continuity and essential character through successive generations. (S. R.
Driver.)
The seed of Abraham, My
friend
God blessing for the sake of another
God turns the eyes of Israel to the past. He reminds them that
they are the children of His friend Abraham. You may find a man in distress,
and may be tempted to turn away from him; but as he talks to you about himself
and his antecedents, you find that he is the son of an old friend of yours.
That alters the case. There is another motive operating on you now--the desire
to be faithful to your friend. Israel was the seed of God¡¦s friend Abraham. God
would be faithful to them for His friend¡¦s sake. ¡§For Jesus Christ¡¦s sake¡¨ is the
highest expression and application of this principle. (J. A. Davies, B. D.)
The seed of Abraham
(with Matthew 3:9):--There is between these two
passages an ascertainable relation. In the passage which we have read from the
Book of Isaiah is exhibited the greatest element in the Israelitish national
consciousness. Apparently these people never forgot their vocation as the
children of Abraham. Sometimes they attributed more importance to it, sometimes
less. When the nation was at its best they spiritualised the ideal; when it was
at its worst they materialised it; but they never wholly ignored it. Here is a
prophet speaking in a stern time with the purpose of heartening the people who were
listening to him. See how he does it. In the chapter which precedes the one
whence our text is taken the opening sentences are: ¡§Comfort ye, comfort ye, My
people, saith your God,¡¨ etc. The last verse of the chapter is more beautiful
still: ¡§They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength, they shall
mount up with wings as eagles, they shall run and not be weary, and they shall
walk and not faint.¡¨ We see the mood in which Isaiah speaks and the tenderness
which is evident in his message. It is as though he would say to Israel: You
have passed through a stern testing time, but you have not ceased to be the
people of God. Indeed, the testing time was permitted because you are never to
be anything else than the chosen ones, God¡¦s Israel. You have Abraham for your
father, and the covenant which God made with Abraham He will keep with you.
¡§Fear thou not, for I am with thee; be not dismayed, for I am thy God. I will
strengthen thee, yea, I will help thee, yea, I will uphold thee with the right
hand of my righteousness. ¡¥ In the light of this Old Testament consciousness
let us now look at the passage which we have chosen from the New. Isaiah and
John are both heralds; there is at least this similarity between them, that
they both come as the bearers of good tidings concerning a better day. But they
are different in this: while Isaiah speaks with the gorgeous magnificence of
Oriental symbolism, and his message is one full of comfort and tenderness, the
words of St. John are utterly unadorned; rugged and grim is the speech of this
child of the desert. He comes less with a message of comfort than with one of
rebuke; and yet, like Isaiah, he is the herald of a glorious day. But the
people are not ready for his message nor for the blessing which he announces. And
so his words to them are words of warning, especially, shall I say, to the
Pharisees. The people and their leaders had been too much inclined to content
themselves with making much of the tradition of the covenant of God with
Abraham, and they thought comparatively, little of what was required from them
in the keeping of it. ¡§O generation of vipers! who hath warned you to flee from
the wrath to come? Bring forth, therefore, fruits meet for repentance.¡¨ The
Pharisees were conspicuous for two particular vices; and may I say, in
parenthesis, that Pharisees were by no means in their entirety pact men. There
were many sincere men in their ranks, and yet Jesus, like John, had more
difficulty with the Pharisees than with any other class in the community. Their
chief sin was that of spiritual pride; but another was, they believed in the
externals of religion rather than in change of heart. They insisted much upon
their lineage: here we are the chosen people, the descendants of Abraham--would
not God keep His word to us? What part or lot has the race of mankind in this
which is a special privilege of Israel? John¡¦s reply to them is this: ¡§Think
not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father.¡¨ Why should God
trouble to show His favour to men like you, for you are very different from
Abraham? God is able to raise up from these stones children unto Abraham. Shall
we spend a little more time in discovering what John the Baptist means by
saying, ¡§God is able of the stones to raise up children unto Abraham¡¨? I have
heard an exegesis of this kind, and it is not a modern one only: ¡§Oh, it is
obvious that St. John meant that the hearts around him might be changed by his
glorious message, that God would give to these men a heart of flesh in place of
a heart of stone, and then they would be children of Abraham indeed.¡¨ Well, the
inference is not unjustifiable, but I do not think it is correct. I believe
that St. John meant exactly and literally what he said: ¡§God is able of these
stones to raise up children unto Abraham.¡¨ To believe that he meant it
literally adds force to the warning and the appeal. What he meant, then, was
something like this: It is in the power of God to breathe the breath of life
into these rocks of the desert, and they should become living souls; and if so
it is conceivable they would be better men than you and worthier successors of
Abraham, the friend of God. For who was, what was, this Abraham? If you turn to
Hebrews 11:1-40. you will read a
Christian description of the man and his character: ¡§By faith Abraham, when he
was called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an
inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowing whither he went,¡¨ etc.
Momentous results followed that far-off choice. It was the dawning of a great
hour in which Israel was born, and with Israel the Messiah, and with the
Messiah the gospel under which you and I live our lives to-day. Here, then, is
the Abraham of whose seed these Pharisees claimed to be. They had not his moral
courage, nor his noble spirit; these were not of the kind who would have gone
out in pursuit of a spiritual ideal. These were men who had hardened into
insensibility, who by their lives denied the spiritual idea Abraham had
bequeathed to them, and therefore the Baptist¡¦s remonstrance was apt indeed.
¡§Think not to say, we have Abraham to our father.¡¨ You are not of the spiritual
lineage of Abraham; you would never dare for God; you are content with the
grovelling things, your gaze is never lifted to the eternal. God could raise up
another Abraham, yea, of these stones he could raise up children worthier than
you. As an illustration of what the fiery, indomitable prophet of the desert
meant, let me remind you of something, perhaps, that may have crossed your lips
but yesterday. Looking upon the degenerate son of a noble sire, what was it you
remarked to your companion? ¡§His only recommendation is that he is his father¡¦s
son.¡¨ Any worthless profligate who soils a noble name and brings degradation
upon the record of a noble race receives and deserves the reprobation of honest
men. The question whether England is Israel is not worth discussing, believe
me. If you could prove it to-morrow, some John the Baptist might rise and tell
you you are out of the spiritual succession altogether. This is merely the
negative side of the question. The seed of Abraham in spirit and in truth are
those who hear the Word of God speaking within their own hearts, and rise and
go forth and obey. Hear what Jesus has to say on this theme in John 8:39. If Jesus is correctly reported
by one who at any rate knew Him well, as addressing the indignant Jews, He
says: ¡§I speak that which I have seen with My Father; and ye do that which ye
have seen with your father. They answered and said unto Him, Abraham is our
father. Jesus saith unto them, If ye were Abraham¡¦s children, ye would do the
works of Abraham. But now ye seek to kill Me, a man that hath told you the
truth, which I have heard of God: this did not Abraham.¡¨ We can classify easily
the men that are of the quality of Abraham. Did these pharisaic time-servers,
these bigoted Jews, who were questioning Jesus with the object of destroying
Him, really think that they stood in the succession of him who was the friend
of God? Verily they did; but the consciousness of humanity since has put them
right. An Ambrose, in the early years of Christianity, a rough soldier, is
chosen by the people, who know him and his character, to be their bishop; and
now as prelate of Milan it is the duty of this erstwhile soldier to turn from
the church door the bloodstained emperor who had been his commander. He dare
not do otherwise, for he is serving a greater than the emperor. Here speaks the
seed of Abraham. And who knows? God knows, maybe, that in this church this
morning there are some of the lineage of Abraham of whom the world will never
hear. The rest of us, perhaps, in the gaze of heaven, may have to be put in
another category--the category of those who have not dared for justice and
right and truth. There is one more thought suggested in our second text. There
is something contained in the very phrase ¡§these stones,¡¨ which I think was not
merely accidental. The prophet knew well what he meant: the stones are
unpromising material Con version is a turning from sin and a turning towards
God. Get firm hold of that fact. Feelings are an endowment which may or may not
accompany it; but the man whose heart is right with holiness and truth, whose
faith is turned that way, is of the seed of Abraham and the friend of God. I
want you to recognise, what is the very truth, that Abraham had far less to
guide him than you. He heard the same voice as you, but it had not told the
world as much then as it has told it since. When you take up this Old Testament
again and read of the wonders achieved by the heroes of old, remember that the
voice that spake to them spake within their own hearts, and not without, just as
it speaks now to you. This Abraham heard a voice, and he said he would obey it;
he could trust it; he established his covenant with God, and it never failed
him. How shall I know I am of the seed of Abraham? Is my face turned the way
his was? How shall I know I belong to the Lord Christ? Here is my charter:
¡§Whosoever shall do the will of God (even seek to do it), the same is My
brother and sister and mother.¡¨ Jesus will never turn away from His own
spiritual kindred. Yet there may be one more experience here to which I ought
to speak. There is, perhaps, a man who says, ¡§Ah yes; but I have made shipwreck
of my career. Such lives as these may look back upon their life and say, ¡¥I
have done the best I could with my manhood.¡¦ But I have failed; my road is strewn
with the dust and ashes of vain regrets. ¡¥The stones are the rubbish of the
desert. They only serve to accentuate its desolation.¡¦ Just so; I am the
stones.¡¨ Well, I want you to hear a voice that I am fond of listening to--with
deepest reverence be it spoken--One that spoke with authority;and I think you
will agree with me it has power in it still:-- John 8:56 :¡§Your father Abraham rejoiced
to see My day, and he saw it and was glad.¡¨ Picture the astonishment of those
Jews. ¡§Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast Thou seen Abraham?¡¨ Poor
literalists! Abraham in his lonely desert vigil never saw Jesus; he had no
foregleam of the day when Jesus should speak such words as these; but what he
did have was the vision by which he saw the Sun of Righteousness arising in his
own heart. That was Jesus¡¦ day. The Abraham who spent his early days in a
guilty household, in the midst of men who never thought of the unworthiness of
serving God by lascivious rites and brutal deeds, one day said to himself,
¡§This life has to be left behind.¡¨ So soon as he had seen that, he had seen
Jesus¡¦ day, and he rose up and went out to meet it. And that is just what we
have to do. For the same voice that spake to Abraham is speaking to the world
to-day, is speaking through Jesus: ¡§Before Abraham was I am.¡¨ Children of
Abraham, friends of Jesus, is not that voice speaking to you even now? (R.
J. Campbell, M. A.)
Scripture characters
1. There is in Scripture a hidden truth which we gradually become
acquainted with, and which we may not thoroughly know for years. God has
attached certain names and titles to men in the Bible which seem to have some
great hidden meaning, as showing what character God approves. There are certain
men to whose characters He has attached a distinct approval which is most
striking. Abraham is called ¡§the friend of God¡¨; David, ¡§the man after God¡¦s
own heart¡¨; St. John, ¡§the beloved disciple.¡¨ There is some deep meaning in
each of these titles not to be passed by casually.
2. The characters of Holy Scripture are so various that we are
impressed with the view that the Old Testament is a volume of character,
written to show the application of religious privileges to the varieties of
men. Look at Abraham. What is our first feeling in thinking of him? that is, in
what did his character seem peculiar? In faith and unworldliness. In what
David¡¦s? A tender love of God. In what St. John¡¦s? Love. Now how do they
assimilate essentially with each other? Who else was especially faithful? Not
so strikingly, Jacob or Isaac or Solomon. Abraham¡¦s faithfulness bore the great
fruit of faithfulness, unworldliness. Samuel, Elijah, and Ezekiel were
characters who seemed especially to have lived by faith, to have lived free of
the world. How did Abraham differ from them? In having a tender disposition, a
deeper well.spring of human feeling. He was a man of much strong and domestic
affection, really attached to earthly ties, and mentioned in close connection
with them throughout his history. The three characters, then, which are thus
distinguished by especial names of God¡¦s favour, all agree in this respect, a
deep and tender love in their dispositions; yet prevented from so ruling them
as to draw off their faith from God, which faith was shown by a life of freedom
from the world.
3. Let this, then, be the lesson and comfort we draw, that however
little we may be living a life of public usefulness, yet a retired one may be
the life God has placed us in. (E. Monte.)
The friend of God
(with James 2:23):--Abraham was called the
friendof God because he was so. The name does not occur in his life as given in
the Book of Genesis, and it has been questioned whether it occurs anywhere else
in Holy Scripture; for many have preferred to translate the word in Isaiah, and
in 2 Chronicles 20:7, as ¡§lover,¡¨ or
¡§beloved,¡¨ rather than ¡§friend.¡¨ However this may be, it is quite certain that
among the Jewish people Abraham was frequently spoken of as ¡§the friend of
God.¡¨ At this present moment, among the Arabs and other Mohammedans, the name
of Abraham is not often mentioned, but they speak of him as Khalil Allah, or
the ¡§friend of God,¡¨ or more briefly as of Khalil, ¡§the friend.¡¨ Those tribes
which boast of their descent from him through Ishmael, or through the sons of
Keturah, greatly reverence the patriarch, and are wont to speak of him under the
name which the Holy Spirit here ascribes to him. It is a noble title, not to be
equalled by all the names of greatness which have been bestowed by princes,
even if they should all meet in one. Patents of nobility are mere vanity when
laid side by side with this transcendent honour. I think I hear you say, ¡§Yes,
it was indeed a high degree to which Abraham reached: so high that we cannot
attain unto it.¡¨ Think not so. We also may be called friends of God (John 15:14).
I. A TITLE TO BE
WONDERED AT.
1. Admire and adore the condescending God, who thus makes of a man,
like ourselves, His friend. In this case the august Friend displays His pure
love, since He has nothing to gain. Surely God does not need friends. How sweet
it is to mingle the current of our life with that of some choice bosom friend!
Can God have a friend? Friend ship cannot all be on one side. In this
particular instance it is intended that we should know that while God was
Abraham¡¦s Friend, this was not all; but Abraham was God¡¦s friend. He received
and returned the friendship of God. Friendship creates a measure of equality
between the persons concerned. I say not that absolute equality is at all
necessary to friendship, for a great king may have a firm friend in one of the
least of his subjects; but the tendency is towards an equalising of the two
friends: the one comes down gladly, and the other rises up in sympathy.
Friendship begets fellowship, and this bridges over the dividing gulf. We must
keep our place, or we shall not be friends.
2. Note the singular excellence of Abraham. How could he have been
God¡¦s friend had not grace wrought wonderfully in him? Although a plain man,
dwelling in tents, the father of the faithful is always a right royal
personage. A calm dignity surrounds him, and the sons of Heth and the kings of
Egypt feel its power. His character is well balanced.
3. Note some of the points in which this Divine friendship showed
itself.
II. THE TITLE VINDICATED.
Abraham was the friend of God in a truthful sense. There was great propriety
and fulness of meaning in the name as applied to him.
1. Abraham¡¦s trust in God was implicit. He ¡§staggered not at the
promise through unbelief,¡¨ for he knew that what the Lord had promised He was
able also to perform.
2. There was joined to this implicit trust a practical confidence as
to the accomplishment of everything that God had promised.
3. Abraham¡¦s obedience to God was unquestioning.
4. Abraham¡¦s desire for God¡¦s glory was uppermost at all times.
5. Abraham¡¦s communion with God was constant.
III. Regard this
name as THE TITLE TO BE SOUGHT AFTER. Oh, that we may get to ourselves this
good degree, this diploma, ¡§friend of God¡¨!
1. You must be fully reconciled to Him.
2. We must exercise a mutual choice. The God who has chosen you must
be chosen by you.
3. There must be a conformity of heart, and will, and design, and
character to God.
4. There must be a continual intercourse. The friend of God must not
spend a day without God, and he must undertake no work apart from his God.
5. If we are to be friends of God, we must be co partners with Him.
6. Friendship, if it exists, will breed mutual delight.
IV. THE TITLE TO BE
UTILISED for practical purposes.
1. Here is a great encouragement to the people of God. See what
possibilities lie before you!
2. Here is a solemn thought for those who would be friends of God. A
man¡¦s friend must show himself friendly, and behave with tender care for his
friend. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 10
Fear thou not; for I am with thee
¡§Fear thou not!¡¨
I.
THE
CIRCUMSTANCES IN WHICH GOD ADDRESSES HIS PEOPLE. They are poor and needy. It is
necessary that God should have room in which to work. Emptiness to receive Him;
weakness to be empowered by Him. It is into the empty branch that the vine-sap
pours; into the hollowed basin that the water flows; the weakness of the child
gives scope for the man¡¦s strength.
II. THE ASSURANCES
THAT HE MAKES TO THEM. No height, however bare, nor depth, however profound,
can separate us from His love.
III. THE DIVINE
PROVISION FOR THEIR NEED. Life is not easy for any of us, if we regard the
external conditions only: but directly we learn the Divine secret, rivers flow
over bare heights in magnificent cascades; fountains arise in the rock-strewn
sterile valleys; the wilderness becomes a pool (Isaiah 41:17-18). To the ordinary eye it
is probable that there would appear no difference. Still the tiny garret, and
the wasting illness; still the pining child; still the straitened
circumstances--still the deferred hope. But the eye of faith beholds a paradise
of beauty, murmuring brooks filling the air with melody, leafy trees spreading
their shade. What makes the difference? What does faith see? How is she able to
work such transformations?
1. Faith is conscious that God is there, and that His presence is the
complement of every need. To her eye common desert bushes burn with His
Shechinah
2. Faith recognises the reality of an eternal choice, that God has
entered into a covenant which cannot be dissolved, and that His love and
fidelity are bound to finish the work He has commenced.
3. Faith knows that there is a loving purpose running through every
moment of trial, and that the Great Refiner has a meaning in every degree of
heat to which the furnace is raised; and she anticipates the moment when she
will see what God has foreseen all the time, and towards which He has been
working.
4. Faith realises that others are learning from her experiences
lessons which nothing else would teach them; and that glory is accruing to God
in the highest, because men and angels see and know and consider and understand
together that the hand of the Lord hath done this, and the Holy One of Israel
hath created it (Isaiah 41:20). (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
No fear for God¡¦s people
I. THE SPEAKER.
The words derive all their importance from this. So many are our enemies, so
mighty, so subtle, so malignant, so ceaseless in their attacks, that all finite
beings would be powerless to help. We want Omniscience, Omnipotence,
Omnipresence on our side. A patience, a compassion, a pity, a love that belongs
only to God. We want One to help who embraces all being, all time, all
eternity. We want even more than this. We want One who has engaged all these
perfections on our behalf. We want even more than this: One who stands in the
tenderest relation to us in all these. And such is the Speaker of these words.
II. THE PERSONS TO
WHOM SPOKEN. Literally to His ancient people. But spiritually to all the people
of God, the true descendants of Jacob, everywhere, in all ages. They need them
in every stage of their journey, every moment of their lives, every step they
take. They are strangers on the earth. The world is a strange place to them,
and they are strangers in it. The path which their are treading was never trod
by them before. The religion of the world is not theirs; its habits,
amusements, principles, practice, are all foreign to them. It is a strange
land, and hostile too, for there is much in it that opposes them. They are sailors
on a stormy ocean, where sun and stars in many days appear not, and no small
tempest lies on them. They are soldiers in a field of hard fighting; their
enemies vastly out-number them, overmatch them, and besides this, in themselves
they are but weak, yea, powerless, and, unless perpetually encouraged, timid.
III. THE WORDS
THEMSELVES. ¡§Fear not.¡¨ He says it more than seventy times in the Scripture. (J.
H. Evans, M. A.)
Fear not
Three times within the compass of a few verses, the exhortation,
¡§Fear not,¡¨ is given.
I. THE
EXHORTATION. ¡§Fear not.¡¨ A great honour comes to anyone who is thus addressed
by God. It shows that God cares for that person, and desires to live on terms
of intimacy with him; for God binds His friends to Him by ties of love as well
as reverence. True religion differs from false in this respect. How wonderful
to hear God say to any man, ¡§Fear not¡¨; because all have reason to fear Him.
Ever since Adam hid himself in the garden, fear has been characteristic of our
attitude towards God. We sin against Him. He hates and punishes sin. Does it
not look like mockery for us sinners to be told, ¡§Fear not¡¨? Terror often
disappears as a fuller knowledge is gained of the object which caused it.
Friday trembled all over on first meeting Robinson Crusoe; but soon his terror
vanished. Much of our fear of God arises from ignorance; and will vanish when
the light of the knowledge of God in Christ dawns on our souls.
II. THE GROUNDS ON
WHICH THIS INJUNCTION IS BASED. Remember that God never gives His children a
stone when they ask Him for bread. If He says, ¡§Fear not,¡¨ He means it. Why
¡§Fear not¡¨? ¡§I am with thee,¡¨ He assures Israel How tenderly God speaks to
Israel in Isaiah 41:8-9. His voice is like that of
a mother crooning to her child--Israel, whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham
My friend, I have taken thee, and called thee, and chosen thee, and not cast
thee away. God is nearer to us than He was to even the Old Testament saints.
Immanuel means ¡§God with us.¡¨
III. THIS TEACHES US
TO CLING TO CHRIST ALL THROUGH LIFE. Lord Chamberlain Leslie was once riding
through a dangerous ford with the Queen of Scotland sitting behind, in the old
fashion, and fastened to him by a belt. As she slipped backwards during the
steep ascent, out of the river, the Lord Chamberlain shouted encouragingly,
¡§Grip fast.¡¨ ¡§Ay,¡¨ said Her Majesty, ¡§gin the buckle baud¡¨ They landed safely,
and to make security double sure in the future, two additional buckles were
sewed on to the belt. God¡¦s command to us regarding Christ is, ¡§Grip fast.¡¨ The
bond that binds a believing sinner to Him will never break. Why, then, should
we fear? (D. A.Mackinnon, M. A.)
Encouragement not to fear
I. THE TEMPER OF
SPIRIT that the Lord aims to reduce His people unto. ¡§Fear not; be not
dismayed.¡¨ Quietness, settledness, and undauntedness of spirit.
II. THE COURSE HE
TAKES to reduce them to it. A proposal of motives and arguments of sufficient
effect and prevalency to pull down vain fear out of the heart. (T. Crisp, D.
D.)
Fear, and its remedy.
I. WHAT IT IS FOR
A PERSON NOT TO FEAR, nor be dismayed. Fear is a very distracting, disturbing,
confounding passion; it is a kind of besetting passion that makes men lose
themselves, especially if it be in the extremity of fear; it ariseth from an
apprehension of some unavoidable, insupportable evil growing upon a person, and
occasioned either by some symptoms of that evil, or by some messenger or other
relating it, or by some foresight of it in the eye. Now, as evil appears
greater or lesser, and more or less tolerable, so the passion of fear is more
or less in persons.
II. WHAT THE PEOPLE
OF GOD SHOULD NOT FEAR. There is a threefold fear; a natural, a religious, and
a turbulent fear. A natural fear is nothing else but such an affection as is in
men by nature, that they cannot be freed from; such a fear was in Christ
Himself, without sin. A religious fear is nothing but an awful reverence,
whereby people keep a fit distance between the glorious majesty of God and the
meanness of a creature. A turbulent fear is a fear of disquietness. Now all
disquieting fear is that which the Lord endeavours to take off from His people.
1. The people of God need not be afraid of their sins. I do not say
they must not be afraid to sin (Romans 8:1).
2. Neither ought we to fear the sins of others. They cannot do God¡¦s
people any hurt.
3. They that have God for their God must not be afraid of men.
III. WHAT THE FRUIT
OF FEAR IS or what prejudice or disadvantage fear and dismayedness bring along
with them.
1. Fearfulness of spirit casts many slanders upon God. Upon His
power, His faithfulness, His care and providence, the freeness of His grace,
the efficacy of the sufferings of Christ.
2. As it respects God¡¦s service.
It makes all duties merely selfish. Fear puts a man beside his
wits, that while he is in such a passion, he is to seek for common ways of
safety; so that, whereas men think that fear will help them to avoid danger,
commonly, in amazement, you shall have people stand still, not able to stir to
save themselves. Besides, this fear is such a torment, that commonly those
evils so much feared, prove not so hurtful nor evil to a person as the present
fears; and, besides this, it many times doth not only daunt the spirit of a man
in himself, but proves very dangerous to others.
IV. GOD¡¦S MOTIVES,
by which He attempts to prevail over the spirits of His people, not to be
afraid or dismayed, come what can or may. God is our God.
1. What is it for God to be our God? While you have all things else
but this, you have the rays of the sun; while you have this, you have the sun
itself in its brightness and lustre. ¡§I am thy God,¡¨ is as much as to say, Thou
hast a propriety in Me. God¡¦s all-sufficiency reaches beyond all wants.
2. What a person hath in this. There are three particulars whereby
specially you may observe what great treasure people have in having God.
3. How it is so well with those that are the Lord¡¦s. God, in giving
Himself unto persons, gives Himself to be communicated unto them at sundry
seasons, and in divers kinds and measures, and yet so that He will be the judge
of the fitness of the time.
4. How He becomes their God, and upon what terms. The gift of Him is
as cheap as it is rich. He never looks the creature should bring anything that
he might procure it.
5. How He will be found of them. The way of finding out God
efficiently to be our God, is the Spirit of the Lord. God makes Himself known
passively to be the God of His people, by the word of His grace, and faith
laying hold upon it revealed, and more subordinately in prayer, fasting,
receiving of the Lord¡¦s supper, and such ordinances, so far as they are mixed
with faith. (T. Crisp, D. D.)
Fear conquered.
Many good people are full of fears. Bunyan says of Mr. Fearing,
¡§He was a man that had the root of the matter in him, but he was one of the
most troublesome pilgrims that I ever met with in all my days.¡¨ Many things may
help us to conquer our fears.
I. IT IS WRONG TO
FEAR. We are quite safe in God¡¦s hands, and fear is really unbelief. It
dishonours God.
II. IT PREVENTS US
FROM DOING OUR DUTY. If a gardener is afraid to sow his seed he will have no
flowers, or if the farmer is afraid to plough he will have no crop. If a boy is
afraid it is of no use to try for the prize, he will not get it. Fear is
ruinous to our work.
III. IT DISCOURAGES
OTHERS (Numbers 13:31-33; Numbers 14:1). Fear kept the Israelites
out of the promised land.
IV. IT IS
UNNECESSARY. We are afraid because the dangers seem so great, or the work so
hard, and ourselves so weal But we forget who is for us--more than all that can
be against us.
1. God is with us.
2. God is our God. What a possession God is!
3. God will strengthen us as He did David and Samson.
4. He will hold us up by His right hand. Who then can lay us low?
Away then with fear for ever. (R. Brewin.)
Never despair
I. GOD¡¦S PEOPLE
PASS THROUGH ADVERSITY.
II. TRIBULATION
STRENGTHENS GOD¡¦S PEOPLE.
III. GOD IS WITH HIS
PEOPLE IN THE DAY OF THEIR TROUBLE.
IV. A PERSONAL
ENCOURAGEMENT. ¡§I am with thee.¡¨
1. Your fellow-men may ridicule you because you have become
religious.
2. In your trade you may have to pass through much tribulation.
3. You may have felt much fear about making a profession of your
faith.
4. Temporal calamity often visits the people of God.
5. There may be affliction and pain coming to you.
V. AN INVITATION
TO SINNERS. You say this invitation is not in the text. Never mind, I must go
over hedge and ditch to call the sinner to Jesus. (W. Birch.)
Missionary encouragement
The missionary could not take with him a higher word of manifold
comfort than is here contained.
I. THE COMMAND.
1. ¡§Fear not, thou.¡¨ Fear throws a paralysis over the senses and
faculties of man, so that flight and safety are more thought of than holding one¡¦s
ground, or making headway against the enemy.
2. ¡§Be not dismayed.¡¨ If one have fear, he loses both courage and
hope; and in this state no valuable work can be done. The soldiers of the first
French Revolution Were destitute of fear, and by nothing dismayed; hence, all
the armies of Europe prevailed not against them, until, in the terms of
Carlyle, they had provoked all men, and the Gaelic fire had kindled another
kind of fire--the Teutonic kind.
II. ITS GROUND.
1. ¡§I am with thee.¡¨ God promised Moses that His presence should go
with him; and without that, said Moses, send me not up.
2. ¡§For I am thy God.¡¨ It is Jehovah that speaks, who created the
universe and governs it still.
3. ¡§I will strengthen thee.¡¨ God will renew not merely such strength
as is natural to us, but a surplusage of strength for special service. In the
strength of heavenly food and drink¡¨ Elijah ¡§went forty days and forty nights.¡¨
4. ¡§Yea, I will help thee.¡¨ Joseph in Egypt, or Daniel in Babylon,
would have been destroyed by their enemies, and would never have become prime
ministers but for the Divine interposition.
5. ¡§Yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of My righteousness.¡¨
The right hand is an emblem of power--here, of omnipotent power--so that the
work of righteousness which you do shall never cease. Truth is omnipotent, and
shall rule the eternal years.
III. ITS
ENCOURAGEMENT.
1. If God be for us in mission work, who can be against us?
2. If He favour and command it, how can it ever cease? Deus vult,
said Peter the Hermit, and for two centuries the Crusades flamed on high.
3. If truth and righteousness he eternal, how bold and hopeful ought
the missionary to be! The Gospel is stronger than the strongest battalions. (Homiletic
Review.)
The Christian¡¦s fears and the Christian¡¦s encouragement
I. THE CHRISTIAN¡¦S
FEARS. It may be asked why does the Christian fear? I answer, because of his
knowledge. Do you say, ¡§If this be so, then ignorance is bliss¡¨? I answer, No.
I do not say that our knowledge causes our danger, I only say it produces our
fear. I may be in danger and not know it; but my ignorance does not diminish my
danger; it rather increases it. See Captain Williams in the Atlantic. He is
asleep in his cabin; maybe dreaming of wife, and home, and joys to come. He knows
nothing of the rocks ahead on which, in a few moments, the vessel may dash, and
where many a precious life will soon be gone for ever. If he were awake, there
would be agony in his face instead of a smile; but there would be a chance of
escape. His knowledge would produce fear, but might lead to safety. So with the
sinner; he enters upon this year amidst smiles and songs, and little dreams
that ere the next year comes he will be in eternity. If he were to awake there
would be deep anxiety, but that anxiety might end in life and heaven. The
Christian, however, is awake.
1. He knows that he is on trial for eternity.
2. That he is surrounded by enemies.
3. He knows himself: every day he lives he makes discoveries of his
character that fill him with shame and sorrow. His constant acknowledgment is,
¡§By the grace of God I am what I am.¡¨
4. He knows that many a fellow-soldier has fallen.
II. THE CHRISTIAN¡¦S
ENCOURAGEMENT.
1. There is the assurance of God¡¦s presence.
2. There are several exceeding great and precious promises.
Conclusion--¡§To whom wilt thou flee for help? and where wilt thou leave thy
glory?¡¨ Talk about destitution, there are none so destitute as those who have
no God. (C. Garrett.)
Courage
There is no virtue more highly and widely esteemed than courage,
and no vice more generally detested than cowardice. Courage makes heroes, and
amongst the ancients, at least, heroes were second in rank to the gods. Amongst
savage tribes it may almost be said that courage is the only virtue, for without
it all other good qualities lose their value, and where it exists it covers a
multitude of sins. This is also the virtue which children most admire. Jack the
Giant Killer is a story of perennial interest to the children. Nor is
hero-worship a thing unknown among older people.
I. THE NEED FOR
COURAGE. Courage is the quality which enables one to resist. It is the power to
say ¡§No.¡¨
II. THE NATURE OF
COURAGE. Courage displays itself in many ways. It may be seen on the
battlefield, and in the quiet endurance of difficulties in the home. It may be
seen in maintaining unpopular opinions amid difficult or dangerous
circumstances, or in meeting death with unblanched cheek. What is courage?
1. Courage is not blindness to danger. It is no virtue to be
unconcerned in the presence of dangers, about which one is totally ignorant.
The greatest courage often goes along with the keenest sense of danger. The
young officer who was fighting by the side of an old veteran was surprised to
find his face blanched with fear. The young man being reckless of danger
himself, asked with considerable surprise, ¡§You are not afraid, are you?¡¨ ¡§I am
afraid,¡¨ was the reply; ¡§and if you were half as afraid as I am you would run.¡¨
Two of our Lord¡¦s disciples once displayed the courage of ignorance. When
Christ asked them if they were able to drink of the cup which He should drink,
and be baptized with His baptism, they readily replied that they were able.
They -were unconscious of the greatness of the task to which they were willing
to pledge themselves.
2. Courage is a true estimate of dangers. ¡§Knowledge is the antidote
to fear.¡¨ ¡§Courage is equality to the problem before us.¡¨ Socrates was
condemned to drink the hemlock cup because he taught the youth of Athens noble
truths about God, which were esteemed by the authorities as heresy. He might
have won his life by a recantation, or an apology to his judges. He preferred
death, when the executioner brought in the poison cup, the friends who were
gathered round him wept, and Socrates alone was calm. He explained to them that
he knew it was a dangerous thing to tell a lie; but that it might even be a
blessing to die. At least he would not do what he knew to be evil, in
preference to suffering what might possibly be evil, or what might even prove a
blessing. The lie was the greater danger.
III. MOTIVES FOR
COURAGE. The possession of such courage is to be coveted. How is it to be
gained? what motive can be found sufficient to inspire one to such acts of
bravery?
1. Pity for the oppressed.
2. Consciousness of companionship.
3. Knowledge that the cause is God¡¦s. (R. C. Ford, M. A.)
Fear and dismay--an antidote
There is no doubt of the fact that we have all some fears, and
that there are moments when we are dismayed, for life stands connected not only
with to-day and man, but with God and eternity. The words of our text come to
those who are faithful.
I. THE REASONS WHY
SOME OF GOD¡¦S PEOPLE HAVE OCCASION AT TIMES TO FEAR AND EVEN TO BE DISMAYED.
1. Our own nature is our enemy. In its depravity, in its ungodliness,
the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh, and
these are contrary the one to the other.
2. Then there are these things that surround us, and those people who
constitute the world around.
3. Then there is the great enemy. God often teaches us our inability.
Is it not a solemn thing to stand in the midst of these enemies with that other
world coming., and Christ to be the Judge? Is it not a solemn life when we
think of all its responsibilities, if we are not found looking to the true
source and finding the true power?
II. THE
ENCOURAGEMENT IN THE TEXT.
1. ¡§Fear thou not, for I am with thee; be not dismayed, for I am thy
God.¡¨ Do not imagine for a moment that it is your wants that bring to you this
succour. The tendency with us all is always to make it our doing. Let us lay
aside the thought that we have any power, and remember that from first to last
it is all of grace. The first encouragement, then, is found in the Divine
presence: ¡§I am with thee.¡¨
2. But there is yet a deeper depth. Sometimes the spirit of dismay
comes over us. What will be the end? Cast away? What does the prophet tell us
in regard to our covenant-keeping God? ¡§Be not dismayed, for I am thy God.¡¨
Here is the most endearing relationship in the universe! There is not an angel
in heaven but feels as he thinks of God that he is all safe. Now it is the same
relationship between us and God; nay, it is a more sanctified one, for it is a
relationship which exhibits the infinitude of His love, the unspeakableness of
His mercy.
3. ¡§I am thy God, I will strengthen thee.¡¨ One of the finest things
that one finds after affliction is when the strength is returning and weakness
is departing. There is a gladness and a gratitude in connection with such an
experience as this which only those who have been afflicted can know. The
downcast ones who are in the depths and ready to perish, ready to faint by the
way, in that condition hear a voice; and what does it say to them? ¡§I will
strengthen thee.¡¨
4. That is not all. ¡§I will help thee.¡¨ Now this implies one step
further. It implies that you and I have a burden, and as we are going through
the world we are carrying it; but the burden is too heavy for us. We are tired;
we are overloaded, and there is one Traveller by our side who can help us.
5. Then His support is effectual. ¡§Yea, I will uphold thee with the
right hand of My righteousness.¡¨ There is no left-hand work with God; no
sinister work; it is all right-hand work with Him. And then all that is with it
and all that it introduces is righteousness. I know of no encouragement like
this text if we properly appreciate it. (A. M. Brown, LL. D.)
God¡¦s all-sufficiency a reason for fearlessness
God can be God and fearless, but we can scarcely be creatures and
fearless. Still less is it likely that sinful creatures should be fearless. It
is more than the Father looks for under the present mode of our existence. But
when the fearful thing is coming down, or when the children see it looming in
the distance and are frightened, and they catch the Father¡¦s countenance, and
see that He is not frightened, it wonderfully reassures the poor children to
see a fearlessness on the Father¡¦s face. Heaven is full of ¡§Fear nots.¡¨ And if
you have faith as a grain of mustard seed, it will break out of your midnight,
and up from your deepest valley too, that voice of the Father, the All-in-all.
I. The meaning of
the word is that GOD IS OUR ALL-SUFFICIENCY, and not dis-related, but related
to us.
II. CONSIDER THE
USE THE CHILDREN SHOULD MAKE OF THIS SUFFICIENCY OF THEIR FATHER. See what
liberties we take with God¡¦s earth--We get stones wherever we like. They are
not our stones. And we get gold wherever we like, and we get iron wherever we
like, and we get coal wherever we can. I hope the day will come when, even
without thought or intention, we shall, from the new nature of our being, take
up God as easily as the blade of grass takes up atmosphere and light. Let us
enter our home--enter and be comforted, as all helpless things are, to find their
source ofsupply so near. And let us not leave our nest and then fret that our
rest is gone, but abide encircled by the everlasting strength. (J. Pulsford.)
The sweet harp of consolation
We sometimes speak very lightly of doubts and fears; but such is not
God¡¦s estimate of them- Our Heavenly Father evidently considers them to be
great evils, extremely mischievous to us, and exceedingly dishonourable to
Himself, for He very frequently forbids our fears, and as often affords us the
most potent remedies for them. ¡§Fear not¡¨ is a frequent utterance of the Divine
mouth. ¡§I am with thee¡¨ is the fervent, soul-cheering argument to support it.
Martin Luther used to say, that to comfort a desponding spirit is as difficult
as to raise the dead; but, then, we have a God who both raises the dead from
their graves and His people from their despair. Saul was subject to fits of
deep despondency, but when David, the skilful harper, laid his hand among the
obedient strings, the evil spirit departed, overcome by the subduing power of
melody. My text is such a harp.
I. WE SHALL NOTE
THE TIMES WHEN ITS SWEET STRAINS ARE MOST NEEDED. Occasions when comfort is
needed are many; for some there be, who, like the willow, will only flourish in
a soil which is always wet with consolation. If their mothers did not bear them
with sorrow, like Jabez, they commenced very early on their own account to
accumulate a heritage of woe. As John Bunyan would say, they need not be afraid
of the Slough of Despond, for they carry a slough within their own hearts, and
are never out of it, or it is never out of them. They are plants which flourish
best in shady places, among the damps of sorrow. They delight most to dwell in
the Valley of Humiliation; and when they are journeying through that peaceful vale,
like Mr. Fearing, they could lie down and kiss the flowers, because the place
is so suitable to their meek and lowly spirit. There is something sadly weak
about this state of experience, though there is also much to admire: these are
they whom the Master carries in His bosom, and doth gently lead. More or less,
believers need consolation at all times, because their life is a very peculiar
one.
1. Yet are there special occasions when the Comforter¡¦s work is
needed, and one of these certainly is when we are racked with much physical
pain. Many bodily pains can be borne without affecting the mind, but there are
others whose sharp fangs insinuate themselves into the marrow of our nature,
boring their way most horribly through the brain and the spirit: for these much
grace is wanted
2. When the trouble comes in another shape, namely, in our relative
sorrows, borne personally by those dear to us.
3. When all the currents of providence run counter to us.
4. Some of us know what it is to hear this voice of God in the midst
of unusual responsibilities, heavy labours, and great enterprises.
5. Did you ever stand, as a servant of God, alone in the midst of
opposition? Have you heard the clamour of many, some saying this thing, and
some the other--some saying, ¡§He is a good man,¡¨ but others saying, ¡§Nay, but
he decieveth the people¡¨? Did you never feel the delight of saying, ¡§The best
of all is, God is with us; and, in the name of God, instead of folding up the
standard, we will set up our banners.¡¨ If you have ever passed through that
ordeal, then have you needed the words, ¡§Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be
not dismayed; for I am thy God.¡¨ ¡§Who art thou, that thou shouldest be afraid
of a man that shall die, and of the son of man which shall be made as grass?¡¨
6. We shall want this word of comfort most of all when we go down the
shelving banks of the black river.
7. After death, we read in this Word of great events, what shall
happen to us; but we feebly comprehend the revelation. Solemnities shall follow
which may well strike a man with awe as he thinks upon them. What about that
future? Why, faith can look forward to it without a single tremor; she fears
not, for she hears the voice of the everlasting God saying to her, ¡§I am with
thee.¡¨ Thus have I mentioned a few of the occasions in which this harp sounds
most sweetly. All through life I may picture the saints as marching to its
music, even as the children of Israel set forward to the notes of the silver
trumpets.
II. We come to you,
harp in hand, and pray you DISTINCTLY TO HEAR ITS NOTES. The sweetness of all
the notes melt into each other, but now we shall touch each string severally
and by itself, and if you have an educated ear you will hear that which will
solace your souls. ¡§Fear thou not; for I am with thee.¡¨ What does it mean?
1. ¡§I am with thee in deepest sympathy.¡¨ When you suffer, you suffer
not a new pang; Christ knew that pain long ago.
2. The Lord is with us in community of interests. That is to say, if
the believer should fail, God himself would be dishonoured. Luther rejoiced
greatly whenever he felt that he had brought God into his quarrel. ¡§Well,¡¨ said
he, ¡§if it were I, Martin Luther, and the Pope of Rome who had to fight it out,
I might well despair; but if it be the Pope against Martin Luther and Martin
Luther¡¦s God, then woe be unto Antichrist.¡¨ God is in the quarrel of the man
who attacks error; God is in the quarrel of the man who is trying to do good,
to reclaim his fellow-creatures from sin, and to establish the kingdom of Christ.
Ay, and when you can quote a Divine promise, God is engaged in your affairs,
because if He do not keep that promise, He is not true. It is with us as it is
with the timid traveller in the Alps, who is attended by a faithful guide. He
shivers as he passes under overhanging cliffs, or glides down shelving
precipices, or climbs the slippery steeps of glaciers, but if his guide has
linked himself with him he is reassured. The guide has said, ¡§You are
trembling, sir, but the way is safe; I have passed it many a time with many a
traveller as weak as you are. But to reassure you and make you feel how safe
you are, see here!¡¨ and he straps a rope round the traveller and round himself.
¡§Now,¡¨ says he, ¡§both of us or neither. We shall both get safely home or neither.¡¨
3. The next string of the harp gives this sound, ¡§I am with thee in
providential aid.¡¨ In the old days of the post horses, there were always relays
of swift horses ready to carry onward the king¡¦s mails. It is wonderful how God
has His relays of providential agents; how when He has done with one, there is
always another just ready to take his place.
4. God is with us in secret sustaining power. He well knows how, if
He do not interpose openly, to deliver us in trouble, to infuse strength into
our sinking hearts. I have read of those who bathe in those baths of Germany
which are much impregnated with iron, that they have felt after bathing as if
they were made of iron, and were able in the heat of the sun to cast off the
heat as though they were dressed in steel. Happy indeed are they who bathe in
the bath of such a promise as this, ¡§I am with thee!¡¨
5. There is a way by which the Lord can be with His people, which is
best of all, namely, by sensible manifestations of His presence, imparting joy
and peace which surpass all understanding.
III. MEDITATE MUCH
UPON THE SWEETNESS OF THOSE NOTES.
1. The comfort of my text excels all other comfort under heaven.
2. There is all the comfort here that heaven itself could afford. The
Manx people have for their motto three legs, so that whichever way you throw
them they are sure to stand; but as for the saints, it is impossible for them
to be thrown down by misfortune, or even by the infernal powers. We shall
stand, for God upholds us. Now divide the words, and view them separately. ¡§I
AM.¡¨ Know you what this meaneth? God is selfexistent, eternal, independent,
sitting on no precarious throne, nor borrowing leave to be. It is no other than
¡§JEHOVAH,¡¨ ¡§JAH,¡¨ ¡§I AM.¡¨ who has become the Friend of His people. Note the tense
of it--not ¡§I was,¡¨ not ¡§I shall be,¡¨ but ¡§I am.¡¨ We have yesterday, to-day,
and for ever, the same great ¡§I am.¡¨ ¡§I am¡¨--what? ¡§I am with thee,¡¨ poor,
feeble thing as thou art.
IV. Though I have
spoken of my text as a harp yielding rarest music, yet IT NEEDS THAT THE EAR BE
TUNED BEFORE ITS MUSIC CAN BE APPRECIATED. It is not every man that understands
the delights of harmony, even in ordinary music. So there are tens of thousands
of men who know nothing at all of what it is to have God with them. Yea, this
would be their dread; they would be glad to escape from God if they could. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
Fear and its antidote
To whom are these words spoken? We must not steal from God¡¦s
Scripture any more than from man¡¦s treasury. They were spoken--
1. To God¡¦s chosen ones (Isaiah 41:8).
2. To those whom God has called (Isaiah 41:9).
3. They are God¡¦s servants, doing His will (Isaiah 41:8).
4. They are those whom He has not rejected from His service, in spite
of the imperfections of which they are penitently conscious (Isaiah 41:9). To these every
honey-dropping word of this text belongs.
I. A VERY COMMON
DISEASE OF GOOD MEN--FEAR.
1. This disease came into man¡¦s heart with sin (Genesis 3:8).
2. Fear continues in good men because sin continues in them.
3. Fear coming in by sin, and being sustained by sin, readily finds
food upon which it may live.
4. If fear finds food within, it also readily finds food without.
Poverty, sickness, etc.
5. In certain instances the habit of fearing has reached a monstrous
growth.
6. Even the strongest of God¡¦s servants are sometimes the subjects of
fear 1 Kings 19:4).
II. GOD¡¦S COMMAND
AGAINST FEAR. ¡§Fear thou not; be not dismayed.¡¨ That precept is absolute and
unqualified; we are not to fear at all Why?
1. Because it is sinful. It almost always results from unbelief, the
sin of sins.
2. It feeds sin.
3. It injures yourself.
4. It weakens the believer¡¦s influence and so causes mischief to
others.
III. THE PROMISES
WHICH GOD GIVES TO PREVENT PEAR AND DISMAY.
1. Many a man fears because he is afraid of loneliness. You are not
alone, because God is with you.
2. Men fear they may lose all they have in the world, and they know
very well that if they lose their property they usually lose their friends.
Your goods may go, but your God will not.
3. Fear sometimes arises from a sense of personal weakness. ¡§I will
strengthen thee.¡¨ God can, if He wills it, put Samson¡¦s strength into an
infant¡¦s arm.
4. Some fear that friendly succour will fail. If the work on which we
have set our hearts is God¡¦s work, He will send to our aid all the succour we
need.
5. Many a child of God is afflicted with a fear that he shall one
day, in some unguarded moment, bring dishonour upon the Cross of Christ. This
is a very natural, and in some respects a very proper fear. ¡§I will uphold thee
with the right hand of My righteousness.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Helpful presence
It was said of Simpson, the discoverer of chloroform, that his
presence in a sick-room half cured his patients. Pain lost half its terror, and
seemed to expect its dismission, once he stood by the sick. (J. A.Davies, B.
D.)
A trinity of Divine forces
¡§Strengthen,¡¨ ¡§help,¡¨ ¡§uphold,¡¨ a trinity of Divine forces, a
triple wall of Divine protection. ¡§If God be for us, who can be against us?¡¨ (J.
R. Macduff, D. D.)
A grand staircase
When the late Dr. William Anderson lay dying, his friend, Mr.
Logan, read this passage to him, and the noble old man at once seized it, and
looking at his friend, said with great emphasis, ¡§What a grand staircase that
is up which to go to God!¡¨ (C. Garrett.)
Security in God¡¦s company
If Caesar could say to the fearful ferryman, in a terrible storm,
¡§Be of good cheer; thou carriest Caesar, and therefore canst not miscarry,¡¨ how
much more may he presume to be safe that hath God in his company! A child in
the dark fears nothing while he hath his father by the hand. (J. Trapp.)
The protection of God¡¦s presence
Zwingle, in spite of all the machinations of his enemies, went
about unharmed. It was as though an unseen bodyguard encompassed him, and his
enemies despaired of attaining their end. ¡§God is with me,¡¨ he said; ¡§and with
Him on my side I fear my enemies as little as the crag fears the ocean¡¦s foam.¡¨
(Sunday School Chronicle.)
God a background
Dr. Dale of Birmingham, towards the close of his life, made the
following entry in his diary: ¡§Of course, when Sir Andrew Clark was sent for,
and--and--came, I understood that my position was regarded as critical. I was
too weak, however, to be much moved by it--too weak to find much direct
consolation in the eternal springs of strength and joy. God was a kind of
background to everything--hardly discerned, but there; this was all.¡¨ (Life
of R. W. Dale.)
General Gordon¡¦s faith
¡§I go as alone,¡¨ wrote General Gordon, as he started from Cairo to
Khartoum, ¡§with an infinite almighty God to direct and guide me, and I am so
called to trust in Him, as to fear nothing, and, indeed, to feel sure of
success.¡¨ (Sunday School Chronicle.)
I will help thee
God¡¦s ¡§I wills¡¨
I will, I will, I will. Oh, the rhetoric of God! Oh, the certainty
of the promise! (J. Trapp.)
The best Helper
Two persons are spoken of here: ¡§I¡¨ and ¡§thee.¡¨ ¡§I,¡¨ the person
speaking, is our God and Saviour; and ¡§thee,¡¨ the person spoken to, means
everybody who needs His help and seeks it. There are four reasons why Jesus is
the best Helper.
I. BECAUSE HE IS
ALWAYS NEAR TO HELP. God is always near when people are in trouble. He always
could help them if He saw it best. But sometimes He sees good reasons for not
helping those who are in need.
II. BECAUSE HE IS
ALWAYS ABLE TO HELP.
III. BECAUSE HE IS ALWAYS
WILLING TO HELP. He may not always be willing to help us just at the time, or
in the way we desire,--that may not be best; but in His own time and way He is
always willing to help.
IV. BECAUSE HE IS
ALWAYS KIND IN HELPING. There are some people who are willing and able to help
others, and who do help them too, but it is done in a very rough manner. (R.
Newton, D. D.)
Our Helper
I. WHO MAKES THE
PROMISE? A promise is nothing to me unless I have good security that it will be
kept. When a man makes a promise to me that he will do so and so, I value the
promise according to his ability and disposition to make it good. If, now, you
read from Isaiah 41:10, you will see who it is that
promises help. It is a well-guaranteed promise. He who made you knows all about
you. His knowledge of you is even more exact than is the watchmaker¡¦s knowledge
of the delicate machinery which he takes apart and puts together again.
II. HOW MUCH WE ALL
NEED HELP. We begin to need it in many ways as soon as we are born, and we
never cease to need it as long as we live. (J. W. Teal.)
God¡¦s help
A minister was one day bringing his books upstairs into another
room, for he was going to have his study on the first floor, instead of
downstairs, and his little boy wanted to help father carry some of the books.
¡§Now,¡¨ said the father, ¡§I knew he could not do it, but as he wanted to be
doing something, to please him and to do him good by encouraging his industry,
I told him he might take a book and carry it up.¡¨ So away he went, and picked
out one of the biggest volumes--Caryl on Job or Poli Synopsis, I should
think--and when he had climbed a step or two up the stairs, down he sat and
began to cry. He could not manage to carry his big book any farther; he was
disappointed and unhappy. How did the matter end? Why, the father had to go to
the rescue, and carry both the great book and the little man. So, when the Lord
gives us a work to do, we are glad to do it, but our strength is not equal to
the work, and then we sit down and cry, and it comes to this, that our blessed
Father carries the work and carries the little man too, and then it is all done
and done gloriously. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Verse 13
For I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand
The Christian¡¦s help
I.
IT
IS A PERSONAL HELP. ¡§I will help thee.¡¨ When the religious element was strongly
felt amongst the Jews, they looked to the King eternal for guidance and
protection; nothing but His counsel would satisfy them. Man seems to have the
special intuition of a personal God, as if nothing but personal contact with
Him could revive the latent powers. Truth in the abstract cannot touch the
heart so as to cause an inner revolution. Truth must come from God as from a
living Being.
II. THIS PERSONAL
HELP WILL BE GIVEN ONLY IN THE WAY OF RIGHTEOUSNESS. The children of Israel had
departed from the right way, and as long as they sought their own gratification
they could not expect help from the God of their fathers. The way of
righteousness is not the most pleasant at all times for flesh and blood, but it
is always the safest.
III. IT IS THE MOST
TENDER AND CONSTANT HELP WITHIN THE REACH OF MAN. The Jewish people were
bruised by their terrible fall, they had but little strength left, they were
almost hopeless of ever seeing their own country. The Lord knew their
helplessness, so these words are full of the greatest kindness. The way of holiness,
the way to heaven, is so strange to a person who has defiled himself with sin
that but little progress could be made without a guide. So the Lord tenderly
takes each traveller by the hand. (Homilist.)
The promised help
I. THE LORD GIVETH
STRENGTH. What a precious truth is this, if believed in, to such a feeble
creature as man. It is as a covenant God in Christ that the Lord comforts the
believing soul with the promise, ¡§I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand,¡¨
etc. The Lord ¡§thy¡¨ God.
II. MAN NEEDS THE
STRENGTH which the Lord promises, and which He alone can give. Man needs
strength for obedience to God¡¦s holy laws. Vain is the help or salvation of
man, even far more in things spiritual and eternal than in our temporal
concerns; so that those who trust in and pray to saints and angels, and expect
salvation from them, will be overcome: they will not tread down their enemies,
nor obtain the conqueror¡¦s crown. (W. Firth, B. D.)
Courage, its source and its necessity
I. ITS SOURCE. ¡§I
will hold thy right hand.¡¨ The grasp of the hand is significant of close and
present friendship, of the living nearness of the deliverer. And that sense of
God¡¦s presence, so near that our faith can touch His hand and hear the deep
still music of His voice--realised as it may be in Christ, is the source of a
courage which no danger can dispel, no suffering exhaust, and no death destroy.
The clearest way of illustrating this will be to take the higher forms of
courage among men, and observe what states of soul are most conducive to it.
1. Beginning with the courage of active resistance, we find its great
element in the fixed survey of the means of conquest.
2. Passing on to the courage needful for passive endurance, we find
that its great feature is self-surrender to the highest law of life. The
Christian endures, because the law of his being has become resignation to the
will of God.
II. ITS NECESSITY.
1. It requires courage to manifest the Christian character before
men.
2. To maintain steadfast obedience to the will of God.
3. To hold fast to our highest aspirations. (E. L. Hull, B. A.)
The repetitions of love
God repeats His love for, and His purpose concerning, Israel.
Lacordaire said that love is always saying the same thing, yet never repeats
itself. And though God repeats in both parts His love and purpose, yet it would
be new all through to the Jew, sick with his sorrow and captivity; and the sum
of the consolation is--¡§I am with thee. Fear not; rather rejoice.¡¨ No trial
could or would befall the Jew but God would help him to bear it. (J. A.
Davies, B. D.)
Held by God¡¦s hand
A little lad in the hospital was asked if he could bear a severe
operation. ¡§Yes,¡¨ was his reply, ¡§if father will hold my hand.¡¨ When we feel
God¡¦s hand holding us in times of trial, the touch gives us nerve and calm. (J.
A. Davies, B. D.)
Verse 14
Fear not, thou worm Jacob
Fear not
I.
The
first qualification for serving God with any amount of success, and for doing
God¡¦s work well, is a SENSE OF OUR OWN WEAKNESS. When God¡¦s warrior marches
forth to battle with plumed helmet, and with mail about his loins, strong in
his own majesty--when he says, ¡§I know that I shall conquer, my own right arm
and my mighty sword shall get unto me the victory,¡¨ defeat is not far distant.
God will not go forth with that man who goeth forth in his own strength. The
text addresses us as worms. Now, the mere rationalist, the man who boasts of
the dignity of human nature, will never subscribe his name to such a title as
this. Not so, however, he who is wise and understandeth; he knows that he is a
worm, and he knows it in this way--
1. By contemplation. Those who think, must think their pride down-if
God is with them in their thinking. Lift up now your eyes, behold the heavens,
the work of God¡¦s fingers; and if ye be men of sense and your souls are attuned
to the high music of the spheres, ye will say, ¡§What is man that Thou art
mindful of him, and the son of man that Thou visitest him?¡¨
2. Again, if you want to know your own nothingness, consider what you
are in suffering.
3. Try some great labour for Christ.
II. THERE SHOULD BE
TRUST IN THE PROMISED STRENGTH. There is no saying what man can do when God is
with him. Put God into a man¡¦s arm, and he may have only the jawbone of an ass
to fight with, but he will lay the Philistines in heaps: put God into a man¡¦s
hand, and he may have a giant to deal with, and nothing but a sling and a
stone, but he will lodge the stone in the giant¡¦s brow before long; put God
into a man¡¦s eye, and he will flash defiance on kings and princes; put God into
a man¡¦s lip, and he will speak right honestly, though his death should be the
wages of his speech.
III. WE MUST LABOUR
TO GET RID, AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE, OF FEAR. The prophet says, ¡§Fear not¡¨; thou
art a worm, but do not fear; God will help thee; why shouldest thou fear?
1. Get rid of fear, because fear is painful.
2. Fear is weakening.
3. Fear dishonours God.
4. Doubt not the Lord, oh, Christian, for in so doing thou dost lower
thyself. The more thou believest, the greater thou art; but the more thou
doubtest, the less thou becomest. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
¡§Thou worm Jacob!¡¨
I. JACOB WAS A
WORM IN OTHER PEOPLE¡¦S EYES. Is there not many a ¡§worm¡¨ still under the same
experience? I may be speaking to a clerk who gets laughed at by his
fellow-clerks, with their master¡¦s permission, because he is a Christian. I may
be speaking to some one who is despised and scoffed at, and called a
Sabbatarian, because he keeps the Sabbath day. Take comfort! He who is now thy
Redeemer was treated as a worm. ¡§I am a worm, and no man,¡¨ sang the Messianic
psalmist.
II. JACOB WAS ALSO
A WORM IN HIS OWN EYES, which is far more to the purpose. Look at the Jews
drawing together into some little sanctuary on a Sabbath morning or evening,
amid the scoffs of the Babylonians. Look at the aged patriarch when the doors
are shut, opening the roll of the prophet Isaiah, and reading, ¡§Fear not, thou
worm Jacob.¡¨ ¡§Ay, worms indeed:¡¨ the hearers would reply from the bottom of
their hearts; ¡§worms indeed!¡¨ We may writhe under men¡¦s contempt; but there is
no writhing like the writhing under a sense of personal sin. There is no nerve
like the nerve that passes through the conscience. Job was perhaps the noblest
man of his day; and yet we find him saying, ¡§I have said to corruption, Thou
art my father: to the worm, Thou art my mother and my sister.¡¨ None of you are
so low as that! Our Lord called Himself a worm because He was treated as a
worm; but Job uses the word in a very different sense; for Job knew he was a
sinner, and it is almost an insult to a worm for a sinner to call himself by
the name. The Septuagint has left out this word in the text. How that came
about passes my comprehension. Were these proud translators of Alexandria too
good for the Bible? Were they too high and holy to put in what Isaiah wrote?
Coleridge says, ¡§God¡¦s Word is God¡¦s Word to me, because it finds me.¡¨ Has it
found us? Have we seen the sin and the misery of our own heart? Can we look
back on that action we did yesterday, and say, ¡§It was the action of a worm,
and not of a man¡¨?
III. JACOB WAS A
WORM IN GOD¡¦S EYES. ¡§God,¡¨ says Calvin, ¡§here seems to speak disrespectfully of
His people¡¨; but if you are to speak t? worms, you must speak in their
language. Fine names would never suit Jacob in this case, and the Jacob-minded
soul finds comfort in such words, knowing that they were used in love. ¡§Fear
not, thou worm Jacob, I will help thee.¡¨ ¡§Thee¡¨ is an individualising, singularising
word. The Lord places His finger upon the humble man¡¦s heart, and says, ¡§I will
help thee. I, the Highest, will seek out the lowest, and let others, who think
themselves better, help themselves.¡¨ ¡§The Holy One of Israel¡¨--blessed name!
name He will never lay aside!--is the Portion, the Helper, the Friend of ¡§worm
Jacob.¡¨ Oh ¡§worm Jacob,¡¨ it doth not yet appear what thou shalt be; but when He
shall appear whose thou art, ¡§thou shalt be like Him, for thou shalt see Him as
He is. (A. Whyte, D. D.)
Fears dispelled
I. THE CHARACTER
OF GOD¡¦S PEOPLE.
1. The language employed refers to the Jews as the descendants of
Jacob, afterwards called Israel.
2. The epithet which designates their character. ¡§Worm.¡¨ This word
describes a person--mean, weak, vile, and despised (Job 25:5-6). This epithet implies--
II. GOD¡¦S PEOPLE
ARE SUBJECT TO FEAR. ¡§Fear not, worm Jacob.¡¨ The Israelites in Babylon were
sadly depressed in mind, fearing that God would be gracious no more. The people
of God are subject to fear.
1. Their character, as represented by meanness, pollution, danger,
and weakness, causes them to fear.
2. The multitude of their enemies causes fear
3. They fear Divine chastisements. These are needful, but ¡§grievous¡¨ Hebrews 12:11).
4. They sometimes fear the tests and trials of the future.
5. They fear death.
III. THE EXHORTATION
AND PROMISE. ¡§Fear not, thou worm Jacob, I will help thee.¡¨ ¡§Fear not!¡¨ Look
from earthly resources to the mighty God of Jacob. Fear not thy foes. ¡§He that
is for thee is more than all that are against thee.¡¨ I will help thee, for--
1. I have chosen thee.
2. I have redeemed thee.
3. I have adopted thee.
4. I have the ability as well as the will. By all means.
5. I will help thee with the ministration of My angels, by the events
of providence.
6. I will guide thee in all perplexities.
7. I will not only help, but will glorify thee. Thou art a worm here.
I will change thy vile body when the dead shall be raised, even as the
chrysalis becomes a beautiful being after its temporary sleep, (Homilist.)
Biblical illustrations from the animal kingdom
It is not unusual to find the Bible writers borrowing names from
the animal kingdom end applying them to men. Isaiah does so again and again.
Bold in his calling, ha stands beside Jehovah in the circle of the heavens, and
sees men like grasshoppers. But among the grass and the grasshoppers he sees a
people over whom Jehovah rules, and he calls them ¡§sheep,¡¨ and the little
people he calls ¡§lambs.¡¨ And then he sees his sheep and his lambs changing into
eagles and eaglets--¡§They shall mount up with wings as eagles.¡¨ Prophets,
psalmists, apostles, all employ the same method, and draw their illustrations
from the same source. There is fine education in the Bible I No wonder that
John Bunyan wrote the finest style in the English language, getting his
vocabulary between its boards! (A. Whyte, D. D.)
¡§Thou worm Jacob!:¡¨
The worm here indicated is elsewhere referred to as being
injurious to vineyards (Deuteronomy 28:39). It was the destroyer
of Jonah¡¦s gourd (Jonah 4:7). It is said to be the coccus,
a genus which includes the cochineal insect. Naturalists describe the coccus as
living upon trees and plants, and as being very small. When collected in
districts where these insects are cultivated for the dye which they yield,
there are found to be about 70,000 of them in a pound. Two kinds of insect are
designated ¡§worm¡¨ in Isaiah 14:11. ¡§The worm (mite of
corruption) is spread under thee, and worms (cocci) cover thee.¡¨ This is also
the case in Job 25:6. In the passage before us, then,
the descendants of Jacob are compared with a creature that is despicable,
because it is insignificant and noxious (Psalms 22:6). Orelli, explaining that
¡§worm Jacob¡¨ denotes here smallness, weakness, and helplessness, seems to have
presented to his mind some such insignificant creature as the coccus; but the
commentators generally have thought rather of the familiar earthworm, which
they regard as a symbol of debasement and affliction, after the manner of
Glo¡¦ster in King Lear, when he says of the supposed idiot beggar--
¡§I¡¦
the last night¡¦s storm I such a fellow saw,
Which
made me think a man a worm.¡¨
¡§God¡¦s people,¡¨ says Henry, ¡§are as ¡¥worms¡¦ in humble thoughts of
themselves, and in their enemies¡¦ haughty thoughts of them: worms, but not
vipers, or of the serpent¡¦s seed.¡¨ Other writers use the expressions
¡§despicable and trampled upon¡¨ (Lowth); ¡§weak and despised,¡¨ and ¡§trodden under
foot¡¨ (Wordsworth); creature of the dust, prostrate and helpless¡¨ (Kay);
¡§abject, weak, and wretched of thyself¡¨ (Diodati). We must turn to Micah 7:17 for a passage in which
reference is expressly made to the earthworm. The comments supplied by
Cornelius a Lapide show that expositors have not always been content to regard
the epithet ¡§worm Jacob¡¨ merely as a suggestion of lowliness and meanness. In
the opinion of the more ancient among them it signifies, historically and
typically, the Jews afflicted by the Assyrians, but antitypically the apostles
and early Christians, turn ob paucitatem, turn ob contemptum et humilitatem.
Allusion was made to Luke 12:32 and 1 Corinthians 4:9; while Ezekiel 28:11-12 was referred to as a
parallel passage. Jerome is quoted as saying, Sicut vermis terram penetrat,
ita sermo Apostolicus penetravit Gentium civitates, et ingressus est corda
prius durissima. On Luke 12:32 Bengel comments, Grex est
non numerissimus, si ad mundum comparetur; and by applying the thought thus
expressed to the phrase under discussion we get a slight, but useful, addition
to the suggestions made elsewhere. (F. Jarratt.)
Thy Redeemer
Thy Redeemer
And why does it say, ¡§and thy Redeemer¡¨? What was the use of
appending the Redeemer¡¦s name to this precious exhortation?
I. It was added
FOR AMPLIFICATION. There are some preachers from whom you will never learn
anything; not because they do not say much which is instructive, but because
they just mention the instructive thought once, and immediately pass on to
another thought, never expanding the second thought, but immediately passing
on, almost without connection, to a third. Other preachers, on the other hand,
follow a better method. Having given one idea, they endeavour to amplify it, so
that their hearers, if they are not able to receive the idea in the abstract,
at least are able to lay hold upon some of its points, when they come to the
amplification of it. Now God, the great Author of the Book, the great Preacher
of the truth by His prophets, when He would preach it, and when He would write
it, so amplifies a fact, so extends a truth, and enlarges upon a doctrine. ¡§I
will help thee,¡¨ saith Jehovah-That means Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. ¡§All!
but,¡¨ said God, ¡§My people will forget that, unless I amplify the thought, so I
will even break it up; I will remind them of My Trinity. They understand My
Unity; I will bid them recollect that there are Three in One, though these
Three be One¡¨; and He adds, ¡§Thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel.¡¨ Jehovah--Redeemer--Holy
One of Israel--three persons, all included, indeed, in the word Jehovah, but
very likely to be forgotten unless they had been distinctly enumerated. Suffer
your thoughts to enlarge upon the fact, that the promise contained in this
verse, ¡§Fear not, I will help thee,¡¨ is a promise from Three Divine Persons.
II. It is a
SWEETENING OF THE PROMISE. All the promises are yea and amen in Christ Jesus;
but when a promise mentions the name of the Redeemer, it imparts a peculiar
blessedness to it. It is something like, if I may represent it by such a
figure, the beautiful effect of certain decorations of stained glass. There are
some persons whose eyes are so weak that the light seems to be injurious to
them, especially the red rays of the sun, and a glass has been invented, which
rejects the rays that are injurious, and allows only those to pass which are
softened and modified to the weakness of the eye. It seems as if the Lord Jesus
were some such a glass as this. The grace of God the Trinity, shining through
the man Christ Jesus, becomes a mellow, soft light, so that mortal eye can bear
it.
III. I think this is
put in by way of CONFIRMATION. Read the promise, recollecting that it says,
¡§Thy Redeemer¡¨; and then, as you read it through, you will see how the word
¡§Redeemer¡¨ seems to confirm it all. Now begin. ¡§I will help thee¡¨: lay,
a stress on that word. If you read it so, there is one blow at your unbelief. ¡§I
will help thee,¡¨ saith the Redeemer. There is the Master¡¦s handwriting; it is
His own autograph, it is written by Himself; behold the bloody signature! It is
stamped with His Cross. And now let us read the promise again, and lay the
stress on the ¡§will.¡¨ Oh, the ¡§wills¡¨ and the ¡§shalls¡¨: they are the
sweetest words in the Bible. When God says ¡§I will,¡¨ there is something in it.
And now we lay stress on another word: ¡§I will help thee.¡¨ That is very
little for Me to do, to help thee. Consider what I have done already. What! not
help thee? Why, I bought thee with My blood. And now, just take the last word,
¡§I will help thee.¡¨ (C. H.Spurgeon.)
¡§Thy Redeemer¡¨
The word ¡§Redeemer¡¨ would suggest to a Hebrew reader the idea of a
near kinsman (Leviticus 25:24-25), and of deliverance
from bondage by the payment of a ransom. Its highest application occurs here
and in Job 19:25. The reference to the Son of
God, although it might not be perceptible of old, is now rendered necessary by
the knowledge that this act, even under the old dispensation, is always
referred to the same person of the Trinity. (J. A. Alexander.)
The Holy One thy Redeemer
Of the two names applied by Isaiah to the Saviour, which are
nearly peculiar to him, Qudosh, or Holy One, is common to both sections of his
book, while Goel, the Redeemer, though not confined to the second part,
receives there its peculiar significance. Here it is that ¡§the Holy One thy
Redeemer,¡¨ becomes altogether merged in the Goel. (F. Sessions.)
Verse 15
A new sharp threshing instrument
Evil and good
I.
THE
FORMS OF GOOD AND EVIL. Evil is a mountain--a big thing occupying immense space,
bounding the horizon and darkening the sun. Good often appears as small as a
worm.
II. THE CONFLICT OF
GOOD AND EVIL. The worm shall ¡§thresh the mountain.¡¨ Worms in nature are mighty
things; they build up islands fair as Eden. Good has made an attack upon evil,
and it will thresh its ¡§mountains and beat them small.¡¨ (Homilist.)
Worm Jacob threshing the mountains
I. WHAT THE CHURCH
AND PEOPLE OF GOD ARE. They are named by Him who misnames none, ¡§worm Jacob.¡¨
Their name from their nature is a worm; they are weak, despised creatures,
ready to be crushed by the foot of every passerby: yet ¡§worm Jacob,¡¨ believing,
praying, wrestling worm as he was.
II. WHAT THEY SHALL
CERTAINLY AND INFALLIBLY DO. ¡§Thresh the mountains,¡¨ etc. Interpreters
generally understand by the ¡§mountains¡¨ the great and lofty potentares of the
earth, setting themselves against the Church. And, no doubt, these were in the
prophet¡¦s view; but the view was not confined to them. God¡¦s bringing down the
Babylonian monarchy at their prayers, and the victories afterward of the
Maccabees over their enemies, cannot reasonably be supposed to complete the
intent of this prophecy. We must needs look to the kingdom of Christ for it, of
which there is plainly an account (Isaiah 41:17-19). Compare Daniel 2:34-35. And we must carry on our
view all along to the end of time (Revelation 2:26-27); the rather that it
is the manner of the prophet to wrap up in one expression, temporal, spiritual,
and eternal deliverance; the deliverance from Babylon, which was temporal,
being the first and nearest in view, but not terminating it. Here then we may
consider--
1. What ¡§worm Jacob¡¨ has to encounter. ¡§Mountains,¡¨ and ¡§hills,¡¨
whose weight is sufficient to crush millions of him; difficulties quite
disproportionable to his strength, as a mountain to that of a worm.
2. The success of this so very unequal match. The mountains shall not
crush the worm; but the worm shall thresh the mountains, as one does a sheaf of
corn with repeated strokes.
3. The degree and pitch of the worm¡¦s success against those
mountains. It shall beat them small, till they be like dust or chaff: so that
they shall be blown away with the wind, and no vestige of them remain.
4. The insurance of this success of the worm. Who could insure it,
but the mighty God? Jesus Christ, Jehovah, the most high God, and worm Jacob¡¦s
Kinsman-Redeemer, hath, by His word of promise, engaged His almighty power on
the side of the worm against the mountains. Let not then the worm fear or doubt
the success. (T. Boston.)
A mystery of grace
I. THE CHARACTER
OF THE SUBJECT wherein this mystery of grace is carried on by Jesus Christ. It
is in worm Jacob, denoting the Church in general, and every believer or true
member thereof in particular. One would think, that one designed to be a
thresher of the mountains should be a party of a signally great and swelling
character, a hero, a giant, or if there were anything could carry the character
higher: but, on the contrary, it is very low, surprisingly low, worm Jacob.
II. THE MYSTERY OF
GRACE CARRIED ON IN THEM BY JESUS CHRIST.
1. An apparently hopeless encounter they are led to by Him. Worm
Jacob threshing the mountains.
2. A surprising success; even as surprising as a worm¡¦s threshing and
beating the mountains small to dust, and threshing them away.
III. I SHALL ACCOUNT
FOR THIS MYSTERY.
1. God has said it, and therefore it cannot fail.
2. The glory of His grace, which is the great design of the whole
mystery of God, necessarily requires it.
3. By an unalterable decree, there must be a conformity betwixt the
little worm and the great worm Jacob, the little one¡¦s Kinsman-Redeemer. The
great worm, the man Christ, ¡§a worm and no man,¡¨ has encountered mountains, and
threshed them away. Where are the four monarchies, the most towering mountains
that ever set up their heads on the earth? The chief worm Jacob has threshed
them away to chaff, which is away with the Daniel 2:35). The mountains stood before
Him through the world, with all the fastness that human learning and the power
of the sword could give; but by His few fishermen He threshed them away.
4. The little worm Jacob is-in reality but a member of the great one,
Jesus Christ.
5. All the mountains that stand before worm Jacob are burnt
mountains; so they are far easier to thresh than one would think. (T.
Boston.)
God¡¦s sharp threshing instrument
Three things this threshing instrument is shod with.
1. A word of command, calling to the work.
2. A word of promise, securing the success.
3. The use of means of Heaven s appointment for reaching the end. (T.
Boston.)
¡§A sharp threshing instrument having teeth¡¨
A people who shall leave their mark on the world. (Prof. G. A.
Smith, D. D.)
A threshing roller
¡§Behold, I have made thee a threshing-roller, a sharp one, new,
with double edge.¡¨ (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
Earth-worms useful
People hate the obscure animal, popularly said to play undertaker
to all flesh, although as a matter of fact worms seldom burrow deeper than a
few inches, except to go to sleep. Suddenly, however, the gentle sunbeam of
genius has shone into the dark region where these despised beings dwell and
work. Dr. Darwin has studied these among other neglected denizens of our common
planet, and gives us the fruits of his investigations in a little volume
bearing the title of Vegetable Mould and Earth-worms. At the touch of
his transcendently patient intellect a new glory breaks over the degraded,
writhing, offensive worm. Instead of being useless or even harmful, it turns
out that we could never do without these humble creatures. They, and they
alone, in their countless millions, and by their ceaseless hidden toil, have
made the globe what it is, fit for agriculture and the residence of man. The
bulk of the humus or vegetable mould of his fields everywhere is mainly of
their manufacture, and goes perpetually through and through their organs to be
fitted and perfected for fertility. The most assiduous and wealthy farmer does
not lavish half as much nourishment upon his crops as the earth-worms, which in
many parts of the British Isles make and bring to the surface of each acre of
land ten tons or more of rich fine mould yearly. All things considered, Dr.
Darwin inclines to rank the earth-worm higher in the scale of constructive
agencies than the coral insect itself, though the last named rears islands, and
ocean-kingdoms. It is the worm which, by perpetually consuming decayed leaves
and small particles of soil, disintegrates and renews all the face of our
earth. Their castings, hardly noticed, alter invisibly the contour of a whole
country. Brought up from below, they make stones and rocks gradually sink,
covering these by the collapse of their tiny burrows, so that the surface grows
smooth for our use by their viewless help. Antiquarians owe to the earth-worm
the preservation of almost every ancient pavement and foundation by the soft
coat of mould with which they overlay these relics. They remove decaying
leaves, facilitate the germination of seeds and the growth of plants, and
create for us most of our wide, level, turf-covered expanses. Thus at one
stroke our great natural philosopher has raised them to an honourable rank in
the vast family of creation. (Public Opinion.)
Verse 17-18
When the poor and needy seek water
An image of God¡¦s care
The thought of the caravans returning homewards through the
thirsty desert suggests to the prophet an effective image symbolising the
Divine care which will attend them: the ground at their side bursts into
waterpools, and noble trees cast their shade about them! (Prof.
S. R. Driver, D. D.)
God¡¦s promise to the poor and needy
I. By the ¡§POOR
AND NEEDY¡¨ are not meant those who are poor and needy in the things of this
world; but in a spiritual point of view.
1. The life of the Christian may be compared to a barren wilderness,
leading from this world to that which is to come; in their journey through this
wilderness the Lord¡¦s people often feel themselves to be ¡§poor and needy¡¨
without the cheering presence of their God, destitute of the usual
manifestations of His love and the consolations of His Spirit. Water is an
emblem frequently employed in Scripture to represent Divine influences, which
refresh, gladden, and cleanse the soul, as water does the body. The children of
God are sometimes reduced to straits; they ¡§seek water, and there is none, and
their tongue faileth for thirst.¡¨ They realise the feeling of David whilst they
are constrained to adopt his language in the Forty-second Psalm, ¡§As the hart
panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God,¡¨ etc.
2. But there is another sense in which the Lord¡¦s people may be
represented as ¡§poor and needy, seeking water and finding none¡¨; it is when
they are anxiously desirous of larger measures of grace and knowledge,
increasing holiness and spirituality of mind, more complete superiority to the
world with the affections and lusts of the flesh, and a growing conformity to
the precepts of the Gospel It is a striking feature in the character of every
real Christian, that he is never satisfied with present attainments in
religion. The real Christian will daily labour to abound yet more and more in
the fair and beautiful ¡§fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ unto
the glory and praise of God.¡¨ Here is the difference between nominal
Christianity and real Christianity.
II. THE CONSOLATORY
PROMISE. The Lord assures His people that they shall not be disappointed in the
objects of their desire: in their extremity of distress, and when they are
almost without hope, the Lord will hear their cry. Prayer, which is the earnest
expression of the desires of the heart, shall never be offered up in vain.
Nothing is impossible with God; possessed of infinite power and infinite love,
He can and will do for His people more than they ask or think. But further, He
is represented as ¡§the God of Israel.¡¨ The history of the saints in all ages
will ¡§bear testimony¡¨ to the truth of that Scripture, ¡§He giveth power to the
faint, and to them that have no might, He increaseth strength.¡¨ (C.
Rawlings, B. A.)
Water for the needy
The first sense of this passage belongs to God¡¦s ancient people,
and was partially accomplished after their return from Babylon, partially when the
kingdom of heaven was spiritually set up at Jerusalem, but was to be still more
gloriously fulfilled hereafter. But a child of God claims all the promises.
I. THE DESCRIPTION
OF THE PEOPLE OF GOD HERE GIVEN.
1. ¡§Poor, and needy.¡¨ All creatures are poor compared with God--even
the pure spirits, the highest angel, yea, archangels themselves. Especially
must this be true of a fallen creature, yea, a restored creature.
2. ¡§They seek water.¡¨ This spiritually sets forth the sacred
influences of the Holy Spirit. They want refreshing views of God¡¦s love,
realising apprehensions of an interest in Christ, more of the real power of
religion, more faith, more repentance, more love, more uprightness, more purity
of heart, more humility, more true prayer, more gratitude and praise, more
brokenness, more joy, more devotedness. They seek this water. Sometimes with
great ardour, sometimes, alas! with little. In the means of grace they seek it,
and it seems as if ¡§there is none.¡¨ They strive, they fight, but they only find
their own weakness, their enemies, darkness, and deadness in their souls.
3. ¡§Their tongue faileth for thirst.¡¨ Few states are so disconsolate.
It is vast discouragement. That this is a state into which the soul has brought
itself through its own sin, I am led to conclude--
II. THE VAST
ENCOURAGEMENT. my people are honestly, uprightly seeking Me. Out of Infinite
love, Infinite wisdom, Infinite grace and mercy, I have delayed the answer.
Their faith is small, their strength little, their souls discouraged. But I
have not forgotten. ¡§I, the Lord, will hear them.¡¨ The subject is one of
unutterable sweetness and consolation to a true child of God. In few things,
perhaps, are we more tried than in prayer. But the words of the text encourage
not only persevering prayer, they do more. They encourage expecting prayer. Be
not afraid of seasons of need. They are usually seasons of prayer, and these
are our greatest seasons of happiness. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
God¡¦s tenderness to the poor and needy
I. GOD HAS LEFT PECULIARLY
TENDER AND GRACIOUS PROMISES TO THE POOR AND NEEDY. It is not the healthy and
strong,child of the family around whom the father¡¦s love is most closely
entwined. Like as a father pitieth his children,¡¨ etc.
II. GOD HAS PLEDGED
HIS ALMIGHTY POWER TO WORK MIRACLES, IF NECESSARY, TO SUPPLY THEIR NEED. ¡§I
will open rivers in high places,¡¨ etc. This would be reversing the order of
nature. Rivers do not flow in high places; fountains do not spring in the
depths of valleys. God simply says that, ere the poor and needy shall lack
water, He will reverse the order of nature and turn the world upside down.
III. THE PROMISES
ARE MADE ONLY TO THOSE WHO SEEK AND CRY UNTO GOD FOR HIS HELP. God¡¦s unchanging
tenderness does not make prayer unnecessary. There must be expectation, desire,
and confidence. (Homiletic Review.)
Spiritual thirst
The application is world-wide. Who is there to whom this
description, more or less, does not apply--¡§The or and needy seek water--there
is none--their tongue faileth for thirst¡¨? Is it not the too faithful
delineation of weary humanity? It is a commonplace saying, but its truthfulness
redeems its triteness, that there is nothing in this world which can satisfy
immortal longings. ¡§Thirst again,¡¨ is the too frequent verdict after its sweetest
fountains have been drained. Its best joys leave behind them aching voids,
unfulfilled aspirations. After the thirst of its votaries has apparently been
quenched at their favourite rills, of riches, honours, ambition, glory,--their
name is the same as before, ¡§Poor and needy¡¨; their search is the same as ever,
¡§They seek water¡¨; the epitaph they write over every fresh grave of their hopes
is the same, ¡§There is none--their tongue faileth them for thirst.¡¨ And where,
then, is that thirst to be quenched; where else are the wells of water to be
had, ¡§springing up into everlasting life,¡¨ but in the grace and promises of God
as revealed in His blessed Word? And, like the waters seen by Ezekiel bursting
from the threshold of the sanctuary, ¡§Everything lives whither the river
cometh.¡¨ (J. R.Macduff, D. D.)
Supply for the poor and needy
This double promise to the poor and needy stands in connection
with other great promises which guarantee the gift of wonderful strength and
blessing to God¡¦s people. These promises seem to be such as the mightiest
servant of God might well desire to have fulfilled in himself. Look, for
instance, at the one in Isaiah 41:15-16. I think that the promise
of our text specially comes in, not for you mountain-threshers,--not for you
who are made so strong in the Lord, but for some who cannot as yet get a grip
of that grand word of His. ¡§When the poor and needy are not trying to thresh
mountains, but are looking for that which is needful for the supply of their
own personal wants,--seeking water; when they are in too low a condition to be
able to rise to the dignity of service, but are just like poor Hagar and
Ishmael in the wilderness, seeking water; when they have fallen into such a sad
and sorrowful state of heart that, instead of testifying to the goodness of God
they cannot testify to anything, for ¡§their tongue faileth for thirst¡¨;--it is
then, in their extremity, that the blessed promises shall come to them: ¡§I the
Lord will hear them, I the God of Israel will not forsake them.¡¨ (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Wordless prayers heard in heaven
I. Here is POVERTY
OF CONDITION. ¡§Poor and needy.¡¨ This description applies to poverty of
spiritual condition.
1. Most of us would take the position of great poverty as to anything
like merit.
2. We have poverty as to anything like strength.
3. As to grace, many of the children of God are, to their shame,
obliged to confess that they are poor and needy where they ought to be rich,
and where they might be rich; poor in patience, in courage, in faith, in hope,
in love, in private prayer, in public influence, poor in every way. There axe
many of God¡¦s children who seem scarcely to have a penny of spending-money, and
they never appear to go to the King s treasury, and dip their hand in, and take
out great handfuls of the precious gold of grace.
II. URGENCY OF
NEED. ¡§When the poor and needy seek¡¨--what? Money? No; that is only to be poor
and needy. Bread? Ay; that shows a harder poverty than merely being ¡§poor and
needy.¡¨ But it is not bread that these poor and needy ones are seeking, but
¡§water.¡¨ Why, that is generally to be had for nothing,--a drink of water. It
must be very hard times indeed when poor souls are in such a state that they
axe longing for water, and seeking for it afar, as though there were none near
at hand. Are any of you in such a condition, sighing after the living water?
Though you have drunk of it before, you are still sighing for more of it, and
feel as if you could not tell where to find it.
1. This is an urgent necessity, for it touches a vital point. A man
can exist without money, he can live without garments, he could live longer
without bread than without water.
2. Do I address one in whom this vital necessity has become an
agonising thirst?
3. Further, there is an immediate necessity. When a man¡¦s tongue
faileth for thirst, and he seeks water, he wants it at once.
III. The third step
down--and it is a very long one--is this, DISAPPOINTMENT OF HOPE. ¡§There is
none.¡¨
1. ¡§There is none¡¨ even where they have found it before. Have not
some of you at times found it so in attending the means of grace?
2. It makes their case even more disappointing when they have, side
by side with them, others who are seeking water, and finding it. Have you never
been to the Lord¡¦s table,--say, with your own wife,--and when she has been
going home, she has said, ¡§Oh, what a precious communion service! Was not the
Lord manifestly among His people in the breaking of bread?¡¨--and you have
hardly liked to tell her that you have not seen the Lordeven in His own
ordinance?
3. If you go to places where there is none of the living water, then
you have only yourself to blame when you cannot find it.
IV. THE NECESSITY
OF PRAYER. ¡§And their tongue faileth for thirst.¡¨
1. They cannot speak; they cannot tell their fellow-Christians about
their trouble. They are ashamed to tell others what they feel If a hymn is
given out, they feel as if they must not sing it. If there is a promise quoted,
they feel as if they could not appropriate it, and sometimes the prayer of a
joyous brother seems to shoot over their head,--they cannot attain to his
experience.
2. If they were called upon to state their own feelings and
convictions before the living God, it may be that they have become so mournful
that they could not describe themselves. I think we have gone about as low as
we can. Here is a man who, to begin with, is poor and needy. Here is a man who
is wanting water, who has sought it, but who cannot find it. Here is a man
whose tongue is so parched with thirst that he cannot now say a single word, he
must sit down in sorrowful silence.
V. Yet, strange to
say, now is the time that he learns that SALVATION IS OF GOD. ¡§I the Lord will
hear them.¡¨ What? Why, they cannot speak: ¡§their tongue faileth for thirst.¡¨
1. That brings me to this point, that God¡¦s great object in bringing
His people down so low as this, is to make them pray directly to Himself; that
now they may not seek any water, but just cry to Him who is the Fountain of
living waters; that now they may not tell their friends about their need, nor
even tell it to themselves, but just, in the very silence of their soul, speak
with God, for there is a kind of speech which is perfectly consistent with
silence,--the speech of sorrow,--the exhibition of the wounds of misery,--the
opening up of the brokenness of the heart,--the setting before God, not in
eloquent descriptions, but in indescribable revelation, the intolerable want
which lies within the soul. The text does not even say that they pray; because,
sometimes, even prayer becomes a mechanical act, and we are apt to rely upon it
for comfort, instead of upon our God.
2. The prayer which is hidden away in the text--for although there is
no mention of prayer in it, yet it is hidden away there--is the prayer of
inward thirst.
3. This is the prayer of one who despairs of all means.
4. This is the prayer of faintness.
5. Now comes the declaration of God. ¡§I the Lord will hear them, I
the God of Israel will not forsake them.¡¨ Is it not something that God hears
you? I have frequently had to explain this word by speaking of the poor woman
who was so pleased to see her minister. She was very poor, and so was her
minister; what good, then, did he do her? Did he speak to her a very comforting
word? No. The good man did not happen that day to be in much of a mood to do
so, yet he did that sister a deal of good, she said. Why? Because he let her
talk, and she just told out all her trouble, and he looked sympathetic, for
that is how he felt, and that was just what she wanted. She wanted somebody who
would listen to her. It is wonderfully condescending on God¡¦s part to listen to
us. Many of our complaints are only rubbish, yet He hears them patiently.
Sometimes, when people begin groaning and grumbling, I wish I was down the next
street; but God is so patient and long-suffering, that He hears all that His
people say.
6. You know that you have only to get a hearing from God, and you
know what the consequence will be when your Heavenly Father knoweth what things
you have need of. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
God¡¦s faithfulness tested
The late Dr. Parsons, of York, had a tea-caddy which he inherited
from his father, who was also a spiritual preacher. Its history was curious. A
husband and father, reduced to abject poverty, set out on a Sabbath morning to
drown himself, and so escape the agony of looking at starving wife and
children. A crowd was entering the Tottenham Court Road Chapel, London, and the
man somehow was drawn along with the crowd. Mr. Parsons preached from Isaiah 41:17, ¡§When the poorand needy
seek water,¡¨ etc. He appealed to his hearers needing temporal and spiritual
blessings, ¡§Have you put the God of Jacob to the test?¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨ thought the
desperate man, ¡§I have not.¡¨ He went back, told his wife, joined in prayer, and
all day seemingly in vain. But next morning temporary aid came, with directions
as to work, which he found, did faithfully, and rose to comfort and notable
prosperity. He offered a large gift to the good preacher, but it was declined.
He sent the tea-caddy as a memento of his gratitude, which he felt could not be
refused. (J. Hall, LL. D.)
Verse 18
I will open rivers in high places
God¡¦s ¡§I wills¡¨
In this verso the Lord twice says, ¡§I will¡¨; and in that respect
this verse is in harmony with the rest of the chapter.
When we come to the ¡§I wills¡¨ of God, then we get among the precious things,
the deep things, the things which minister comfort and strength to the people
of God. We sometimes say ¡§I will¡¨; but it is in a feeble fashion compared with
the way in which God says it. People say ¡§¡¥Must¡¦ is for the king.¡¨ So ¡§I will¡¨
is for the King of kings. It is His prerogative to will
1. It is an ¡§I will,¡¨ uttered with deliberation. James said, ¡§Known
unto God are all His works from the beginning of the world.¡¨ We say, ¡§I will¡¨
in a hurry, and then we take time to repent of it. We are under excitement,
persuasion, or compulsion, and we say, ¡§I will,¡¨ and we are very sorry
afterwards, and perhaps we are so unfaithful as not to keep our word; but God
never speaks under compulsion; He is almighty. God never speaks in a hurry; He
has infinite leisure. Now, when a man speaks a thing prudently and wisely, you
believe that he will carry it out, if he can. You may have much more confidence
with regard to what the Lord says, for He has not spoken without due deliberation.
2. When God says, ¡§I will,¡¨ His resolution is supported by
omnipotence. You say, ¡§I will,¡¨ but you cannot do what you have promised. That
can never happen with God.
3. When God says, ¡§I will,¡¨ it is sealed with immutability. We are
always changing. Hence, we say to-day, ¡§I will,¡¨ and we mean it; but to-morrow
we wish that we had never said. ¡§I will,¡¨ and the next day we say, ¡§I will
not.¡¨ But God never changes.
4. When God says, ¡§I will,¡¨ it will be carried out in faithfulness. (C.
H.Spurgeon.)
Two ¡§I wills¡¨ in Isaiah 41:1-29.
I propose to apply the text as a general promise to many things.
I. TO THE TRIALS
OF SAINTS.
1. Their temporal trials. What though there is nothing at present,
perhaps by to-morrow morning the Lord may have opened rivers in high places,
and fountains in the midst of the valleys.
2. The spiritual experience of believers. There are in our text four
words relating to water. Everything had been dry before, and there was no water
for the thirsty to drink. Now, here you have rivers, fountains, a pool, and
springs of water. There is a difference in the four words. The first is
¡§rivers.¡¨ There shall come directly from God a rush of mighty grace, like the
streams of flowing rivers. There shall be ¡§waters to swim in.¡¨ You shall have
abundance where before you had nothing. The next word is ¡§fountains,¡¨ which may
be rendered ¡§wells.¡¨ Wells are places to which people regularly go for water.
They represent the means of grace. Perhaps you have been to the means of grace,
and obtained no comfort. But, on a sudden, God appears, and opens wells in the
midst of the valley. Now the service is all full of refreshment. There is a
third word, ¡§I will make the wilderness a pool of water.¡¨ Here you have the
idea of overflowing abundance. God can give you so much joy that you will not
know how to hold it all; you will have to let it be like a pool that overflows
its banks. God can give you so much earnestness that you can hardly employ it
all in the work that you have to do. He can give you so much nearness to
Himself, that your heart shall scarcely be able to contain your delight. The
fourth word is ¡§springs.¡¨ It seems to indicate a perpetual freshness. Where
there was a long-continued drought, there shall come perpetual freshness;
always something new--new thoughts of Christ, new delights in holy service, new
prospects of the world to come, new communion with God.
II. To the
experience of converts.
1. Who were these people to whom the Lord spoke? They were people who
were poor and needy. God will not do much for spiritually rich people; I mean
you who say that you are rich in yourselves.
2. When will He do it? When they begin to seek Him. ¡§When the poor
and needy seek water.¡¨ Can you expect God to bless you if you do not seek Him?
3. But the time is noted further still. It is not only when they
begin to seek, but when they begin silently to plead. ¡§When their tongue
faileth for thirst, I the Lord will hear them.¡¨ They could not speak. Yet says
the Lord, ¡§I will hear them.¡¨ A glib tongue is bad at praying. When a man prays
in his heart, he is often like Moses, slow of speech
4. But the time mentioned is more sorrowful still; these people were
in abject distress. ¡§When the poor and needy seek water, and there is none.¡¨
¡§My day of grace in past, says one. I wonder whoever told you that he! Ah,
well,¡¨ says one, ¡§I have gone to look for mercy, and there is none.¡¨ So you
think. Now is the time for Divine interposition. When you seek water, and find
none, God will open rivers for you.
5. The promise also relates to those who are in various positions.
Some are in very high places. You run up to the very tops of the mountains, and
you fancy God cannot reach you there, but He says, ¡§I will open rivers in high
places.¡¨ A river on the top of a mountain is a wonderful thing; but God can
make it so. Others are ordinary sinners down in the valleys. ¡§Well,¡¨ says the
Lord, ¡§I will open fountains in the midst of the valleys.¡¨ Yes, and to vary the
promise still more the Lord says, ¡§I will make the wilderness a pool of water.¡¨
Have you ever seen a large extent of flat country covered with sand and stones?
God pictures you as being like that barren, dried-up land, and He says that He
will turn you into a pool of water. In a word, no condition can be so bad but
God can change it.
III. TO THE LABOURS
OF WORKERS FOR GOD. God can soon change the condition of the plot of ground on
which you are at work.
1. I may be speaking to one who says, ¡§Mine is a very bad place to
work in, for I cannot get the people to come and hear the Gospel; there seems
to be no spirit of hearing.¡¨ Do not give up preaching; do not give up working,
you who long for souls to be saved, for God can suddenly give a love for His house,
and an eagerness to hear the Gospel.
2. Another says, ¡§I get the people to hear, but there is no feeling.¡¨
When the old St. Paul¡¦s Cathedral had to be taken down for the present one to
be built, Sir Christopher Wren had to remove some massive walls that had stood
for hundreds of years; so he had a battering-ram, with a great mass of people,
working away to break down the walls. I think that for four-and-twenty hours
they kept right on, and there seemed to be no sign of giving way, the walls
were so well built, very different from our modem walls. The structure was like
a rock, it could not be stirred; but the battering-ram kept on and on and on,
blow after blow, stroke after stroke, and at last the whole mass began to
quiver, like a jelly, and by and by over went the massive walls. You have only
to keep on long enough, and the same thing will happen in your work. The first
blows upon the wall were not wasted; they were preparing for the others, and
getting the whole structure into a condition of disintegration; and when that
was done, down it came, and great was the fall thereof.
3. ¡§Well,¡¨ says one, ¡§what we want in our place is for the ministry
itself to be supplied.¡¨ If the minister himself is dry, what is to be done?
Find fault with him, and leave him? No! if he is a man of God, pray for him,
and never rest till the Lord makes the dry land springs of water.
4. But what is wanted, too, is the same blessing upon the helpers.
What is the preacher to do, what is the Church to do, if the workers are half
asleep? One sleepy Christian in a Church may do much mischief. In some
businesses the whole thing is so arranged, that if one person goes to sleep,
all the machinery goes wrong; and I believe that it is very much so in the
Church of God.
5. Then we may look for a change throughout the whole congregation.
Men and women will cry out, ¡§What must we do to be saved?¡¨ There will be plenty
of people to be talked to about their souls. We shall have no difficulty in
increasing the Church, month by month, with such as shall be saved.
6. Then all the neighbour-hood will be transformed. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
God¡¦s abounding generosity
He does not measure His gifts of water by the pint and by the
gallon; but here you have pools, and springs, and rivers. When He has given waters,
He will give trees to grow by the waters. When God gives blessing, He makes
other blessings to spring out of it. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Verse 19
I will plant in the wilderness
Trees
The ¡§cedar¡¨ grew on Mount Lebanon, and was of great height, and
had extended branches, which afforded kindly shade.
The ¡§shittah¡¨ tree is probably, as the R.V. renders it, the acacia. This was ¡§a
large tree, growing abundantly in Egypt and Arabia, and is the tree from which
gum-arabic is obtained. It is covered with black thorns, and the wood is hard,
and when old resembles ebony.¡¨ The ¡§myrtle¡¨ rises eight or ten feet high, its
characteristic being ¡§a dense, full head.¡¨ It is thus convenient for shade.
The ¡§off tree¡¨ is probably the olive tree. The ¡§fir tree¡¨ usually
denotes the cypress, an evergreen. This is also a tree whose wide-spread
foliage would afford shade. The ¡§pine¡¨ tree is perhaps the poplar (according to
the Septuagint), or elm (according to the Vulgate), or a kind of hard oak
(according to Gesenius). The ¡§box¡¨ tree is probably some tall tree of the cedar
kind, also affording shade. The chief common characteristic of these trees is
that they afford welcome shade. In Western lands the intensity of the sun¡¦s
heat and rays is not felt; but in the East he is at his fiercest, and a shadow
is a most grateful possession. A missionary from the South Seas said: ¡§Oh, the
shining of the sun! The one thing we wanted to hide from was the sun. Its glare
was intolerable!¡¨ (J. A. Davies, B. D.)
The rejoicing wilderness
What meaneth this figurative picture of a vast oasis--a
wen-watered grove of stately, fragrant shady trees? Observe, there are seven
kinds of these mentioned; seven--the Hebrew symbol of abundance, diversity,
perfection. The words may well be taken, therefore, to denote the plenitude of
Divine grace vouchsafed in the hour of deepest perplexity and sorrow. (J. R.
Macduff, D. D.)
Divine grace adapted to human need
The beautiful part of the picture is, that God bestows grace
varied in its manifestations; adapted in its wondrous diversity to meet the
wants and necessities and trials of all His suffering people. He has sustaining
grace for one, restraining grace for another; strengthening grace for one,
sanctifying grace for another; comforting grace for one, dying grace for
another. But all these ¡§trees of God¡¨ are ¡§full of sap,¡¨ from the lowly: ¡§nabk¡¨
or mountain-thorn, to the ¡§cedar of Lebanon which He hath planted.¡¨ Each tree
may be taken as the type or emblem of a cluster of Bible promises. To the weak,
there is the cedar in its strength; to the bereaved, there is the olive, with
its ashen leaves, and yet with its ¡§oil of joy¡¨ for the mourner; to the
fainting and downcast, there is the tall pine and tapering cypress pointing
upwards; to the wounded spirit, there is the balsam tree of Gilead and the
fragrant myrtle; to the dying, there is the palm tree with its graceful fronds,
according to the Eastern tradition, whispering in the ear the name of Jesus!
And the further peculiarity of this promise is, that it is in the hour of
sorest want and trial and perplexity that that grace is most abundant. It is in
the depths of the arid desert, with hillocks of sand on all sides bounding the
horizon,--in seasons of loneliest bereavement and uttermost sorrow,--that these
palm and acacia and olive and myrtle groves, as if by the hand of an enchanter,
rise up to view. It was ¡§at the fourth watch of the night (when the darkness
was deepest, and the hearts of the disciples were most despairing and
desponding) that Jesus ¡§cometh unto them walking upon the sea.¡¨ Man¡¦s extremity
is often God¡¦s opportunity. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The symbolism of trees
In the more figurative sense it intimates that the Lord God would
raise up, for the benefit of His Church, men of distinguished eminence and
usefulness, such as judges and generals, to afford them protection; rulers and
governors, who should prove both ornamental and useful to them; and choice
ministers of the Word, from whose doctrine they were to derive defence from
evil, spiritual nourishment, and consolation. (R. Macculloch.)
Verse 21
Produce your cause
Heaven¡¦s appeal to the reason of the sinner
The text implies--
I.
THAT
THE SINNER HAS SOME REASONS FOR THE EVIL COURSE HE PURSUES.
II. THAT THESE
REASONS HE IS BOUND TO STATE BEFORE HIS MAKER. ¡§Bring forth your reasons.¡¨ Why
bring them forth?
1. The question of a sinful course of conduct is a public question.
The sinner has no right to say that his conduct concerns no one but himself.
2. Because it is the only way of exposing their moral absurdity. They
will scarcely bear to be stated. Bring them out and they will frighten you.
III. THAT HIS MAKER
WILL GIVE THE STATEMENT OF THEM HIS ATTENTION.
1. His readiness to attend¡¨ to them shows that your conduct towards
Him will not bear investigation.
2. His readiness to attend to them shows the existence of mediation.
He does not attend to the reasons of the lost.
3. His readiness to attend to them shows His infinite condescension.
(Homilist.)
God¡¦s challenge to the sinner
These words are a challenge to such as serve not God. The study of
this question may be a wise anticipation of the judgment day. Now we may search
for our reasons; and if they be found to be unsound, we may put our conduct
right; but when we stand before the judgment-seat of Christ it will be too late
for repentance. To form a court now in which to hear this cause, it is only
needful that we should remember that the great God can judge the very secrets
of our hearts. The Judge of all the earth is upon His holy seat. Before Him we
now stand. While the doom of each is not yet fixed, the voice of the Almighty
is heard, ¡§Produce your cause,¡¨ etc.
1. The great Searcher of hearts may come into the midst of such as
are given to the love of present things, and say, ¡§Produce your cause.¡¨ What
such will bring forward is this: they are not persons addicted to any
particular vice; they are amiable, kind, sincere; they live without strife with
men; they live without hostility towards God. But they have great love for
things as they are: they are powerfully influenced by things seen and temporal;
they are contented with their earthly portion; and they seldom have any strong
concern or desire about the things not seen and eternal. Their cause is that of
listlessness about the things of the soul, of an unwillingness to admit what
seem to be melancholy thoughts, as they cast a shadow over a fair scene of
earthly comfort, with which they feel that they can remain content. It is that
of the orderly members of society, towards whom our respect and our affection
are so soon drawn. It seems almost unkind to wake up such out of their soft sleep.
But God says, ¡§Bring forth your strong reasons¡¨ to justify such a life. And
reasons are given. It is so pleasant to be a peace, that we care not to be
disturbed. Yes, if there were to be no sudden shock of death: if this loved
world were to continue unchanged: if there were no cunning enemy plotting while
the careless sleep: if there were no holy service to be done for God, no
brotherly counsel to be given to man! But love of ease is no strong reason to
justify a careless career, which is to end in unrest for ever. You may say, we
are of the quieter sort; and may we not float in the eddies of life, without
being hurried on by the current of evil? Why cannot our religion be of the
passive order? But the answer comes at once, Are you so safe as you endeavour
to think? Is there really the calm which your spirits in their drowsiness think
there may be? There are, no doubt, beautiful Christian graces which bloom best
in the shade. But do not such daily open their petals, and breathe out
fragrance towards heaven? The cause of the careless, or the worldly-minded, of
such as sit still in sloth as to spiritual concerns, will not stand in the
judgment.
2. How much less will that other man prosper, whose cause may be thus
produced. He is a man willing to admit that much may be said in favour of a
religious life. Up to a certain point he is prepared to accept and to carry
into effect the duties which rise because of a man¡¦s relation to God who made
him. But religion has been made to ask too much: is pressed too indiscriminately
upon every period and transaction of life. The law of God cannot be observed,
and therefore it ought to be powered, or adapted to the condition of modern
thought and feeling. The man will not pretend to justify all he does. But his
strong reasons are that it cannot be otherwise. He lives in a world where
perfect obedience is not to be expected. Other men sin, and their sinning
involves sin in him. He is made with passions which do and will take fire, when
temptation finds its convenient seasons. He is ready to listen to advice how he
may avoid the grossest sins; but he is not prepared to care about opinions
concerning a holiness which he never hopes to reach. Behind these strong
reasons men entrench themselves, and seem to keep the conscience untouched by
the arrow from the Lord¡¦s bow. The cause so produced wants one great feature;
there is no real sorrow for sin. The blame of sin is skilfully shifted from the
sinner to his God. ¡§Why hast Thou made me thus?¡¨ is the complaint which such a
man makes. It is considered a misfortune rather than a fault, that he has not
obeyed the commandment of the Lord. How can God justify a man who thus blames
his Maker! How can a man justify himself, when it shall be brought out against
him that if he had hated sin it might have been forgiven, if he had resisted
sin it might have been overcome in the strength and according to the grace
which God gives. Such reasons to support a cause will be weak in the day of the
Lord.
3. A man will say, My life is not right, my conscience is not quiet,
my position is not safe; but what am I to do? The religion of many so disgusts
me that I have no faith to follow them. The opinions vary so much among those
who call themselves Christ¡¦s servants that I am at a loss what to believe. My
cause is bad: but which shall I accept as a better? And my reasons for
remaining as I am are strong, from the difficulty as to whether I may not move
and only sink lower. And such arguments satisfy a man for a time: they excuse,
if they do not justify. But are they really sound? Is it true that there are no
sincere followers of Jesus? Is it true that there are no saving truths which
stand out as a rock, notwithstanding all that party spirit has done to hide it
by party walls? Is Christ so covered that He cannot be found? I boldly assert
that no such difficulties exist. There are, it may be, hypocrites everywhere.
Sincere Christians are inconsistent and weak in many things; but salvation,
God¡¦s grace, Divine life in the soul, is a real thing. The sinner who searches
for a perfect Church or a perfect Christian, and stands aloof from Christ
because such things are not to be found, may have grounds for finding fault
with his neighbour, but he has no strong reason by which to defend himself.
Such a cause, so supported, must fall to the ground, when the truthful test of
God¡¦s own touch shall show what manner of cause it was.
4. But it is time to produce another cause: that of a man who holds
the truth in unrighteousness; who is orthodox in creed and incorrect in life;
who has the form of godliness, but denies the power thereof. It is the case of
many to be found in the house of God on each Sabbath day: professors of Christ,
but followers of the world, its vanities, or its sins. Such men bring no
objections against the truth or service of God; but they do not savingly
believe, they do not honestly serve. Religion with them is a thing without
life. They have a horror of over-zeal. The reasonable man is earnest. He is
calm and self-contained; but he has been strongly moved at the sight of sin, he
has been deeply moved by the power of grace, and he cannot but give himself,
body, soul, and spirit, to do his Lord¡¦s will. He, too, can produce his cause
and bring forth his strong reasons. Is it not reasonable that, when God works
by the Holy Ghost upon a sinner¡¦s soul, the effect should be felt and seen t
Conclusion--The believer has his strong reasons. He says the time is short, and
the work is great. He says sin is too terrible to be trifled with: salvation is
too great a thing to be dealt with carelessly. The devil is in earnest--Jesus
is in earnest--the wicked are in earnest; why should the Lord¡¦s people hang
back, as from a cause they doubt or a conflict about which they feel afraid?
And these reasons have the solidity of truth and the power of truth. They
commend themselves to a man¡¦s judgment the more he weighs them well and the
nearer he comes to the day of death. Let us all be warned. It is not a question
about one man taking another man¡¦s advice. It is a far higher matter than a
triumph of believer over unbeliever. As those who would not part when the Lord
comes,--as those who cannot envy each other a place in heaven, inlet us give
diligence to make our calling and election sure.¡¨ (J. Richardson, M. A.)
Verse 27
One that bringeth good tidings
Divine ordination
I.
MINISTERS
ARE DIVINELY ORDAINED. They come from God. ¡§f will give.¡¨ The ministry is not
one of the literary professions, nor a secular office. Colleges and seminaries
do not make them.
II. THEY ARE A GIFT
OF GOD¡¦S GRACE. Neither the Church¡¦s merit, wealth, or respectability has s
claim to them, nor does a salary hire them, nor ordination commission them in
the highest sense. They are a benefaction.
III. THE MINISTER¡¦S
CHIEF WORK IS TO BE THE BEARER OF GOOD TIDINGS. It does not exclude other
things that accompany salvation, but the Gospel proclamation is to be his
specific, constant, cheerful, enthusiastic, confident employment. In season,
out of season, in pulpit and private, his heart and lips are to overflow with
the ¡§good tidings.¡¨ Because--
1. They are what men, all men, all men everywhere and always need,
and need most imperatively.
2. The more the good tidings are preached the more open is the way
for everything else connected with the pastor¡¦s work, and the more effective
all departments of his ministry.
3. It, and it alone, is the power of God and the wisdom of God unto
salvation and sanctification. (Homiletic Review.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n