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Isaiah Chapter
Forty-three
Isaiah 43
Chapter Contents
God's unchangeable love for his people. (1-7) Apostates
and idolaters addressed. (8-13) The deliverance from Babylon, and the
conversion of the Gentiles. (14-21) Admonition to repent of sin. (22-28)
Commentary on Isaiah 43:1-7
(Read Isaiah 43:1-7)
God's favour and good-will to his people speak abundant
comfort to all believers. The new creature, wherever it is, is of God's
forming. All who are redeemed with the blood of his Son, he has set apart for
himself. Those that have God for them need not fear who or what can be against
them. What are Egypt and Ethiopia, all their lives and treasures, compared with
the blood of Christ? True believers are precious in God's sight, his delight is
in them, above any people. Though they went as through fire and water, yet,
while they had God with them, they need fear no evil; they should be born up,
and brought out. The faithful are encouraged. They were to be assembled from
every quarter. And with this pleasing object in view, the prophet again
dissuades from anxious fears.
Commentary on Isaiah 43:8-13
(Read Isaiah 43:8-13)
Idolaters are called to appear in defence of their idols.
Those who make them, and trust in them, are like unto them. They have the shape
and faculties of men; but they have not common sense. But God's people know the
power of his grace, the sweetness of his comforts, the kind care of his
providence, and the truth of his promise. All servants of God can give such an
account of what he has wrought in them, and done for them, as may lead others
to know and believe his power, truth, and love
Commentary on Isaiah 43:14-21
(Read Isaiah 43:14-21)
The deliverance from Babylon is foretold, but there is
reference to greater events. The redemption of sinners by Christ, the
conversion of the Gentiles, and the recall of the Jews, are described. All that
is to be done to rescue sinners, and to bring the believer to glory, is little,
compared with that wondrous work of love, the redemption of man.
Commentary on Isaiah 43:22-28
(Read Isaiah 43:22-28)
Those who neglect to call upon God, are weary of him. The
Master tired not the servants with his commands, but they tired him with
disobedience. What were the riches of God's mercy toward them? I, even I, am he
who yet blotteth out thy transgressions. This encourages us to repent, because
there is forgiveness with God, and shows the freeness of Divine mercy. When God
forgives, he forgets. It is not for any thing in us, but for his mercies' sake,
his promise' sake; especially for his Son's sake. He is pleased to reckon it
his honour. Would man justify himself before God? The attempt is desperate: our
first father broke the covenant, and we all have copied his example. We have no
reason to expect pardon, except we seek it by faith in Christ; and that is
always attended by true repentance, and followed by newness of life, by hatred
of sin, and love to God. Let us then put him in remembrance of the promises he
has made to the penitent, and the satisfaction his Son has made for them. Plead
these with him in wrestling for pardon; and declare these things, that thou
mayest be justified freely by his grace. This is the only way, and it is a sure
way to peace.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 43
Verse 1
[1] But
now thus saith the LORD that created thee, O Jacob, and he that formed thee, O
Israel, Fear not: for I have redeemed thee, I have called thee by thy name;
thou art mine.
But ¡X
Notwithstanding thy gross insensibleness, I will deal mercifully with thee.
Created ¡X
That made thee his people, and that in so miraculous a manner as if he had
created thee a second time.
Redeemed ¡X
From the Egyptians.
Called thee ¡X By
the name of God's people, which was as proper and peculiar to them, as the name
of Israel.
Verse 3
[3] For I am the LORD thy God, the Holy One of Israel, thy Saviour: I gave Egypt
for thy ransom, Ethiopia and Seba for thee.
I gave Egypt ¡X
This was fulfilled when the king of Assyria, Esar-haddon, who designed to
revenge his father's disgrace, upon the Jews, was diverted and directed by God
to employ his forces against Egypt, and Ethiopia, and Seba.
Seba ¡X
The Sabaeans were confederate with the Ethiopians.
Verse 4
[4]
Since thou wast precious in my sight, thou hast been honourable, and I have
loved thee: therefore will I give men for thee, and people for thy life.
Since ¡X
From the time that I chose thee for my people, I have had an affection for
thee.
Men ¡X As
I gave up the Egyptians, so I am ready to give up others to save thee, as
occasion requires.
Verse 7
[7] Even
every one that is called by my name: for I have created him for my glory, I
have formed him; yea, I have made him.
For my glory ¡X
And therefore I will glorify my power and goodness, and faithfulness in
delivering them.
Formed ¡X I
have not only created them out of nothing, but I have also formed and made them
my peculiar people.
Verse 8
[8] Bring forth the blind people that have eyes, and the deaf that have ears.
Bring ¡X O
ye idolatrous Gentiles, bring forth your false gods, which have eyes but see
not, and ears but hear not.
Verse 9
[9] Let
all the nations be gathered together, and let the people be assembled: who
among them can declare this, and shew us former things? let them bring forth
their witnesses, that they may be justified: or let them hear, and say, It is
truth.
Assembled ¡X To
plead the cause of their idols with me.
This ¡X
This wonderful work of mine in bringing my people out of captivity.
Former things ¡X
Such things as shall happen long before the return from the captivity, which
yet your blind idols cannot foresee.
Witnesses ¡X
Who can testify the truth of any such predictions of theirs, that they may be
owned for true gods; or if they can produce no evidence of any such thing, let
them confess, that what I say is truth, that I only am the true God.
Verse 10
[10] Ye
are my witnesses, saith the LORD, and my servant whom I have chosen: that ye
may know and believe me, and understand that I am he: before me there was no
God formed, neither shall there be after me.
Ye ¡X You my people are
able to witness for me, that I have given you plain demonstrations of my certain
knowledge of future events.
My servant ¡X
Cyrus who is an eminent instance and proof of God's foreknowledge: or, the
Messiah, who is the most eminent witness in this cause.
Understand ¡X
That I am the true God.
Nor after me ¡X
The gods of the Heathens neither had a being before me nor shall continue after
me: whereas the Lord is God from everlasting to everlasting; but these
pretenders are but of yesterday. And withal he calls them formed gods, in a way
of contempt, and to shew the ridiculousness of their pretence.
Verse 12
[12] I
have declared, and have saved, and I have shewed, when there was no strange god
among you: therefore ye are my witnesses, saith the LORD, that I am God.
I ¡X I first foretold your
deliverance, and then effected it.
When ¡X
And this I did when you did not worship any idols.
Verse 13
[13] Yea,
before the day was I am he; and there is none that can deliver out of my hand:
I will work, and who shall let it?
Yea ¡X
Before all time; from all eternity, I am God.
Verse 14
[14] Thus
saith the LORD, your redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; For your sake I have
sent to Babylon, and have brought down all their nobles, and the Chaldeans,
whose cry is in the ships.
Sent ¡X I
have sent Cyrus against Babylon, to this very end, that he might deliver you
out of captivity.
Chaldeans ¡X
The common people of Chaldea, who make fearful outcries, as they flee away from
the Persians in ships.
Verse 17
[17]
Which bringeth forth the chariot and horse, the army and the power; they shall
lie down together, they shall not rise: they are extinct, they are quenched as
tow.
The chariot ¡X
Pharaoh and his chariots and horses, and army.
Lay down ¡X In
the bottom of the sea. They never rose again to molest the Israelites.
Quenched ¡X As
the wick of a candle when it is put into the water, is extinguished.
Verse 18
[18]
Remember ye not the former things, neither consider the things of old.
Remember not ¡X
Tho' your former deliverance out of Egypt was glorious: yet in comparison of
that inestimable mercy of sending the Messiah, all your former deliverances are
scarce worthy of your remembrance and consideration.
Verse 19
[19]
Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it?
I will even make a way in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert.
A new thing ¡X
Such a work as was never yet done in the world.
Now ¡X
The scripture often speaks of things at a great distance of time, as if they
were now at hand; to make us sensible of the inconsiderableness of time, and
all temporal things, in comparison of God, and eternal things; upon which
account it is said, that a thousand years are in God's sight but as one day.
Verse 20
[20] The
beast of the field shall honour me, the dragons and the owls: because I give
waters in the wilderness, and rivers in the desert, to give drink to my people,
my chosen.
The beast ¡X
Shall have cause, if they had abilities, to praise me for their share in this
mercy.
Dragons ¡X
Which live in dry and barren deserts.
Verse 22
[22] But
thou hast not called upon me, O Jacob; but thou hast been weary of me, O
Israel.
For ¡X
God called to the Gentiles to be his people, because the Jews forsook him.
Weary ¡X
Thou hast not esteemed my service to be a privilege, but a burden and bondage.
Verse 23
[23] Thou
hast not brought me the small cattle of thy burnt offerings; neither hast thou
honoured me with thy sacrifices. I have not caused thee to serve with an
offering, nor wearied thee with incense.
Honoured ¡X
Either thou didst neglect sacrificing to me; or didst perform it merely out of
custom or didst dishonour me, and pollute thy sacrifices by thy wicked life.
Although ¡X
Altho' God had not laid such heavy burdens upon them, nor required such costly
offerings, as might give them cause to be weary, nor such as idolaters did
freely perform in the service of their idols.
Verse 24
[24] Thou
hast bought me no sweet cane with money, neither hast thou filled me with the
fat of thy sacrifices: but thou hast made me to serve with thy sins, thou hast
wearied me with thine iniquities.
Sweet cane ¡X
This was used in the making of that precious ointment, Exodus 30:34, and for the incense, Exodus 30:7. Thou hast been niggardly in my service,
when thou hast, spared for no cost in the service of thine idols.
Nor filled me ¡X
Thou hast not multiplied thy thank-offerings and free-will offerings, tho' I
have given thee sufficient occasion to do so.
But ¡X
Thou hast made me to bear the load and burden of thy sins.
Verse 25
[25] I,
even I, am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake, and will
not remember thy sins.
I ¡X I whom thou hast thus
provoked.
Mine own sake ¡X
Not for thy merits, but my own mere goodness.
Verse 26
[26] Put
me in remembrance: let us plead together: declare thou, that thou mayest be
justified.
Put me ¡X I
remember nothing by which thou hast deserved my favour.
Verse 27
[27] Thy
first father hath sinned, and thy teachers have transgressed against me.
Thy father ¡X
This may be put for their forefathers; and so he tells them, that as they were
sinners, so also were their progenitors, yea even the best of them.
Teachers ¡X
Thy priests and prophets; who were their intercessors with God: and if these
were transgressors, the people had no reason to fancy themselves innocent.
Verse 28
[28]
Therefore I have profaned the princes of the sanctuary, and have given Jacob to
the curse, and Israel to reproaches.
Therefore ¡X I
have exposed them to contempt and destruction.
Princes ¡X
The highest and best of your priests.
Curse ¡X To
utter destruction, to which persons or things accursed were devoted.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
43 Chapter 43
Verses 1-28
Verses 1-4
But now thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob
The true relation of Israel to Jehovah
The main subject of this chapter is the true relation of Israel to
Jehovah, and its application in the way both of warning and encouragement.
The doctrine taught is that their segregation from the rest of men, as a
peculiar people, was an act of sovereignty, independent of all merit in
themselves, and not even intended for their benefit exclusively, but for the
accomplishment of God¡¦s gracious purposes respecting men in general. The
inferences drawn from the fact are, that Israel would certainly escape the
dangers which environed him, however imminent; and, on the other hand, that he
must suffer for his unfaithfulness to God. In illustration of these truths the
prophet introduces several historical allusions and specific prophecies, the
most striking of the former having respect to the exodus from Egypt, and of the
latter to the fall of Babylon. It is important to the just interpretation of
the chapter that these parts of it should be seen in their true light and
proportion as incidental illustrations, not as the main subject of the
prophecy, which, as already stated, is the general relation between God and His
ancient people, and His mode of dealing with them, not at one time, but at all
times. (J. A. Alexander.)
The right of the Creator
1. In reviewing Providence, men do not go far enough back. The Lord
Himself always takes a great sweep of time. Here is an instance in point. ¡§But
now, thus saith the Lord that created thee,. . . and He that formed thee.¡¨ No
argument is built upon what happened an hour ago. Thus God will have us go back
to creation day, to formation time, and take in all the childhood, all the
youthhood, all the manhood, all the education and strife and discipline, all
the attrition and all the harmony, all the week-days and all the Sabbath-days;
and He would bid us watch the mystery of time, until it comes out in blossoming
and fruitfulness and benediction. We should have no pain if we had the right
line of review and pursued it, and comprehended it, in its continuity and
entirety. There are many creations.
God is always creating life, and always forming it. There is an
individual existence; there is a national organisation; there are birthdays of
empires and birthdays of reform.
2. The Church must recognise its period of creation and formation.
Jacob was not always a people; Israel was not always a significant name, a
symbol in language; and individuals are gathered together into societies, and
they are charged with the administration of the kingdom of Christ, and as such
they must go back and remember their Creator, and adore their Maker, and serve
their Saviour, and renew their inspiration where it was originated.
3. Right relations to God on the part of man should be realised. This
appeal rises into climax, into convincing and triumphant words. I have ¡§created
thee¡¨; that is the basal line--¡§formed thee,¡¨ given thee shape and relation;
¡§redeemed thee,¡¨ paid for thee; ¡§called thee By thy name,¡¨ like a friend or
child: ¡§thou art
Mine.¡¨ Yet all this is in the Old Testament! Do we not fly from the Old
Testament into the New, that we may have some sight of the tenderness of God?
There is no need for such flight. There are tenderer words about God in the Old
Testament than there are in the New.
4. This relation carries everything else along with it. After this
there can be nothing but detail. ¡§When thou passest,¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 43:2). (J. Parker, D. D.)
Guarantees
Absolute ownership. He who speaks is our Creator. He claims our
attention also because He knows us. Fear is the apprehension of danger, both
natural and moral. With regard to natural tear, some are more timid than
others. But this is no index to the moral state of the heart. Nerves which are
strong do not constitute faith; nerves which are weak do not indicate distrust
in God. To remove the distrust which Israel felt, three guarantees are
offered--
I. REDEMPTION.
¡§For I have redeemed thee.¡¨ From whence came the idea of redemption? (Leviticus 25:25-34.) This is the figure
used in the text and elsewhere to show that God has taken away the moral
disabilities under which we had fallen through sin. The principle is not
without analogy. When the golden grain is enslaved in the earth, the ray of
light, the drop of water, and the warm breeze come to redeem their brother.
1. The right to redeem was vested in the next of kin, hence the
necessity for the incarnation of the Son of God. The transaction was confined
to the family of the brother who had waxen ¡§poor.¡¨ No portion of the
inheritance must ultimately go out of the family, for even if no one of the
next of kin was able to redeem it, in the year of Jubilee a full restoration
was made. Not only the inheritance must have remained in the family, but the
redemption of it was restricted to the family, that it might ever appear of
value to the members of the family as a sacred trust from God. This is the very
estimate of human life which the Incarnation conveys: to redeem that life the redeemer must be
one of the family. But the necessity appears, because the family of man must be
impressed with the value of the inheritance which God hath given. The life of
Jesus brings home to us the facts that human life is infinitely valuable, and
that God has His hold upon it, although mortgaged to another. ¡§All souls are
Mine.¡¨ ¡§I know that my Redeemer liveth.¡¨
2. To free the possession the ransom must be paid. The sovereignty of
the gift did not free the inheritance from encumbrances contracted by the
possessor. Justice demanded the redemption price. In the interest of rectitude
and the influence of the moral law, Christ ¡§gave Himself for us, that He might
redeem us from all iniquity,¡¨ etc. As to the nature of the ransom, St. Peter
says, ¡§Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things
as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your
fathers, but with the precious blood of Christ.¡¨
II. CALLED. ¡§And
called thee by thy name.¡¨ The reference here is either to a legal form of
calling out the name of the mortgagor, with the declaration that henceforth his
possession was free; or to the trumpet of the Jubilee, which was a direct call
to every debtor to resume his liberty.
1. Personal salvation. When we are accosted by name the whole being
is involved, with every interest concerned. God calls the sinner to repentance.
2. Personal realisation. The brother who had waxen poor knew he was
free, because his name had been called that he might be assured of his freedom.
The deed was handed over to him re.conveying the property into his name. Faith
leads to the realising of forgiveness and peace.
III. REINSTATED.
¡§Thou art Mine.¡¨ The idea is that by grace man is brought back to the peace and
service of God.
1. The claim is universal. Wherever the new heart is, God claims it
for His own.
2. The claim is absolute. We are no longer our own, but, having been
bought with a price, we glorify God in body and mind.
3. We are now on trial, but there will be a final recognition. ¡§They
shall be Mine,¡¨ etc. (T. Davies, M. A.)
The Divine responsibility
1. Responsibility is not a word that can be limited to man. It must
belong to those higher orders of created intelligence known to us as angels of
various degrees. It must belong to the Eternal One Himself. It must be that He
holds Himself responsible for the creation and its consequences. If
responsibility belongs to the creature made in the image of God, it is
inherited responsibility; it comes down from Him who made him.
2. Let us approach the subject cautiously. God¡¦s revelation of
Himself is intended to be a light to the mind and a joy to the heart. Everyone
who knows anything of Scripture knows how gradual has been the revelation of
God to the human race. Not till we reach the time of David do we get the word
father as applied to Deity, and then only in a figurative sort of way. Isaiah
prophesies that one of the signs of the Christian dispensation shall be that
the name of God as revealed in Christ shall be ¡§the Everlasting Father.¡¨ Men
had known Deity as the Self-Existent God--the source of life. They had thought
of Him as the God of providence, the Great Provider, who had them in His hands,
and would care for them, and that is about the utmost practical view attained
to in the Old Testament. In that wonderful book of Job, the epitomised life of
the human race, we have the thought of an unrealised Redeemer,--but ¡§My Father
and your Father, My God and your God¡¨ is new Testament language, and
post-resurrection speech at that.
3. This speech leads us to the thought of the Divine responsibility.
It is not our invention but God¡¦s revelation that, like as a father pitieth his
children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear Him. We have a right, then, to say
that at least the same measure of responsibility which belongs to a father for
the nourishment, education, and development of his child belongs to the great
Eternal Father for us all. We are not responsible for the laws which work in
our own constitutions, for we did not create those laws. We are not responsible
for anything which is out of our own power. I am not responsible for the
original tendency to sinfulness which was in my nature when born into this
world. Nor am I responsible for being born; nor for being born where I was
born; nor for having just those parents which were mine; nor for being just so
high and just so heavy; nor for having the temperament and disposition with
which I was born.
4. I suppose that in the generations behind us there have lived
people who verily persuaded themselves that they were responsible for the sin
of Adam, that they were doomed because an ancestor of generations ago was a
wilful sinner. Every man inherits tendencies from past generations. When the first
of men wilfully disobeyed God, he started in himself a tendency which, if not
resisted, would become a habit of wrong-doing--and that habit would be
propagated into the next generation, and into the next, and so on. And that is
what is meant by original sin--the tendency created by generations past to
wrong--stamping its impress upon mind and heart, yea, upon the physical
organism. It is so in the animal world. In the past, dogs have been trained to
fold sheep, and the instruction has become a habit, and the habit has created a
tendency in the next generation to do the same thing, and has become fixed--a
second nature, as we say. And this law runs through all creation, even into the
vegetable world. Now, He who made man is responsible for the original law by
which tendencies to good and evil can be propagated from sire to son. The law
is not evil; it is good. But good laws are often used for bad purposes. From a
reservoir of pure water pipes are laid to every house in the city. Those pipes
were laid for the conveyance of pure, wholesome water for the benefit of a
large population. That was the original design and intention. But suppose that
city should be besieged by a barbarian army--suppose the army should surround
the reservoir and poison the waters, the very pipes which were laid for the
conveyance of life would be conduits for the conveyance of death. But that was
not their original design. And so our guilt does not extend to Deity. He is
responsible for the beneficent law, not for the sin which has been transmitted
along it. The very idea of intelligence involves freedom. Either there must be
freedom, or there can be no intelligence and no morality.
5. We cannot conceive of an omniscient God, without admitting that He
must have foreseen that the creature He made would abuse His liberty. Does the
Divine responsibility extend to making such provision as would prevent it?
Clearly not. We cannot conceive how it could be made, and yet leave man a free
moral agent, not a machine. The Divine responsibility extends to the providing
a means whereby not simply to develop an innocent man, but to save a guilty man
from the spiritual consequences of his sin. From all the consequences he cannot
be saved; from the fatal consequences he can. That God did anticipate the fall
from innocence of His creature, and provide for meeting man in a fallen
condition, is evident from one single expression, ¡§the Lamb slain before the
foundation of the world.¡¨ Redemption was no afterthought. For our own
convenience, it may be necessary at times to speak of justice, and at other
times of mercy. But justice and mercy in God are never represented as in
antagonism. They ever go hand-in-hand, like light and heat in the sunbeams.
When God opened the eyes of the great apostle he saw this truth, that ¡§where
sin abounded, grace did much more abound,¡¨ or, as it is more correctly,
¡§superabounded,¡¨ abounded over and above. In this dispensation of things a lost
man has not simply to reject God as a Creator, but God as a Redeemer--God in
Christ--the God who has done all and everything possible to be done to nullify
the fatal results of sin.
6. You remember the complimentary word uttered respecting Abraham: ¡§I know him that he
will command his children¡¨; and in every father there is lodged the right to
command--the duty to command. That weak tenderness which permits disobedience
to go unrebuked and unpunished, is not Divine tenderness. It is the frailty of
human irresoluteness. There is nothing of that in God. (R. Thomas, D. D.)
Divine consolation
The vision of Isaiah contains a representation of the present and
future state of Israel and Judah. And because some of his expressions might be
interpreted as if all the twelve tribes should be utterly cast away, he
frequently intersperses such consolations as this, to assure the people that if
they were duly corrected and reformed by their captivity, God would bring them
out of it, and raise them up again to be His Church and people.
I. To confirm them
in the belief of such a restoration, He puts them in mind of SEVERAL ARGUMENTS
AND REASONS to expect it.
1. He tells them that upon their repentance God had promised them
such a restoration.
2. Isaiah calls upon the people to consider that this promise of
salvation is made to them by that God ¡§who created Jacob and formed Israel.¡¨
This, indeed, is a common topic of con solation to every pious man, that He who
created him will have mercy on him, and is able, in all circumstances, to make
good His promises, and preserve the work of His own hands. But it was very
proper for this people, above all others, to make such inferences, because they
had been in a peculiar manner created and formed of God.
3. They might conclude this from former redemptions which God had
wrought for them. ¡§Fear not, for I have redeemed thee.¡¨
4. A fourth ground of Israel¡¦s hope for God¡¦s future mercies, were
the gracious appellations which He had bestowed upon them. ¡§I have called thee
by thy name; thou art Mine.¡¨ He had changed their father Jacob¡¦s name to
Israel. He had named them His ¡§holy nation,¡¨ His ¡§peculiar people.¡¨
5. A further argument to Israel to trust in God, were the
deliverances which He had vouchsafed to some of them. ¡§When thou goest (or hast
gone) through the waters, they have not overflowed thee; and through the fire,
it hath not kindled upon thee.¡¨
II. The words are
certainly a common topic of CONSOLATION TO ALL THE FAITHFUL SERVANTS OF GOD. So
that, to find our own blessing in them, and to understand them as the voice of
our own merciful Father, we have nothing else to do but to approve ourselves
His obedient children; for He is no respecter of persons.
1. As God promised His people a restoration from their captivity,
upon their true repentance and return to their duty, so will He rescue us from
the slavery of sin and Satan, if we do in good earnest feel the oppression and
misery of it, and would much rather be employed in doing God¡¦s will, and
keeping His commandments.
2. Was it an argument to Israel to trust in God, because He had
created them and formed them in so special a manner as is before represented?
The like consideration is equally comfortable to every member of the Church of
Christ. For in Him we are born again.
3. All the redemptions which God vouchsafed to Israel are proofs to
us of His infinite power and goodness, and figures of greater things which He
will do for us.
4. If God¡¦s gracious appellations of Israel assured them of His
special regard for them, no less ground of rejoicing have we in the like
assurance of His favour towards us.
5. In cases of extreme danger, particularly in perils of fire and
water, God has shown Himself the same in the Christian u He was of old in the
Jewish Church, a sufficient Helper to deliver out of such troubles. (W.
Reading, M. A.)
The goodness of God to Israel
In the latter part of the preceding chapter we read of the sins,
not of the obedience of Israel. After this, what might have been expected but
that He would punish them still more severely, if not abandon them as
incorrigible? In the text, however, He promises to magnify His mercy in doing
them good. Consider--
I. THE CHARACTER
OF THE PEOPLE HERE SPOKEN OF. It may be inferred from the names given to them
in the text. They are addressed by the convertible names of ¡§Jacob,¡¨ and
¡§Israel.¡¨ His name Jacob was changed because he had wrestled with God for His
blessing till he succeeded in obtaining it. Hence, then, we may learn the
character of His spiritual children--they wrestle with God in prayer for His
blessing till they prevail. But this general description of them includes
several particulars. Consider--
1. What they do. They pray. And does not this at once distinguish
them from thousands around them?
2. To whom are their prayers addressed? To the true God who is also
their own God--the God of Israel. This also separates them from an immense
number of the human race; for how many, alas, are there in the world who are
totally mistaken as to the proper object of worship!
3. They pray to Him alone. There are not a few in the world who unite
the worship of Jehovah with that of their own idols.
4. But what does Israel pray for? For God¡¦s blessing. This implies
that they feel their need of it, and, by consequence, that they differ
essentially from all persons of a self-righteous and self-sufficient spirit.
5. How do they pray? In faith. They pray also fervently. They are not
like many, cold, formal, and lifeless in prayer. They persevere, too, till they
prevail. But were they always such characters? No; there was a time when they
were as prayerless as others. Who, then, has made them to differ? God alone.
II. WHAT HE HAS
DONE FOR THEM IN TIME PAST or what are the steps which He has taken to make
them what they are. These steps are three--
1. He has created them. ¡§Thus saith the Lord that created thee, O
Jacob,¡¨ etc. They are subjects of a creation to which all others are entire
strangers. What renders this creation necessary is the corruption of our
nature, which is total, since the Fall. It is a creation of good substituted
for evil, a heart of flesh for a heart of stone, light for darkness, holiness
for sin, faith for sense, life for death, happiness for misery. Every real
Christian is the subject of it. It is ejected by the operation of the Holy
Ghost. To God, therefore, belongs the whole glory of it.
2. He has redeemed them. ¡§Fear not; for I have redeemed thee.¡¨
3. He has called them by their names. ¡§I have called thee by thy
name.¡¨ And what does this imply?
4. This, then, is what the Lord has done for Israel His people; and
He therefore calls them His, saying, ¡§Thou art Mine.¡¨ Has He not the most
indisputable title to their persons and services?
III. WHAT HE
PROMISES TO DO FOR THEM IN TIME TO COME, ¡§When thou passest through the waters,
I will be with thee,¡¨ etc.
1. To pass through fire and water appears to have been a proverbial
expression for passing through various kinds of dangers, trials, and
afflictions.
2. But why does God suffer His people to be thus afflicted? Because
they are children whom He loves.
3. And do their tribulations answer the ends which He has in view?
Yes; there is not one of His afflicted ones who has not had cause to say,
sooner or later, ¡§It is good for me that I have been afflicted.¡¨
4. We are not, however, to suppose that afflictions of themselves
ever bear these blessed fruits. Unblest and unsanctified, they have rather a
contrary tendency, and produce very different effects. And were it not for the
presence of God with His people, in the water and the fire, they would be
injured and destroyed by them. But they need not fear; for faithful is He that
hath promised.
5. Need I remind you how this promise has been verified, or how the
presence of God has been with His people in every age of the Church?
The exhortation and promises of God to the afflicted
I. THE AFFLICTIONS
TO WHICH THE PEOPLE OF GOD ARE LIABLE.
1. The text intimates that they may be great. ¡§Waters¡¨: ¡§rivers¡¨; calamities
which seem as deep and overwhelming as sweeping torrents, and as likely to
destroy them.
2. Their troubles may be diversified. They may be in the waters to-day
and may have deliverance, but to-morrow they may be called on to walk through
¡§the fire¡¨ and ¡§the flame¡¨; to endure trials which are unexpected and strange,
different in their nature from any they have yet experienced, and far more
severe and biter.
3. The text implies also that these afflictions are certain. It
speaks of them as things of course.
II. HOW SEASONABLE
AND ENCOURAGING IS THE EXHORTATION.
1. There is a fear of afflictions which is a natural, and by no means
sinful, feeling; a fear which leads us to avoid them, if the will of God will
allow us to avoid them, and if not, to receive them with much thoughtfulness
and prayer; to be aware of the dangers with which they are invariably
accompanied, and of our utter inability in ourselves to escape or overcome
them.
2. But there is a fear of another kind. It springs from unbelief, and
is the cause of tour, touring, despondency, and wretchedness. It is a fear
which tempts us to choose sin rather than affliction; which prevents us from
praising God under our trials, and from trusting to Him to bring us out of
them. Such a fear is as dishonourable to God as it is disquieting to ourselves,
and He who values nothing so highly as His own honour and our happiness
commands us to lay it aside. It might have been supposed that such an
exhortation from such a Being would have been sufficient of itself to dispel
the fears of those to whom it is addressed; but a compassionate God does not
leave it to its own unaided authority.
III. He supports and
strengthens it by TWO MOST GRACIOUS PROMISES.
1. He promises us His own presence with us in our trials. ¡§When thou
passest through the waters, I will be with thee.¡¨ His people are the objects of
His special attention.
2. There is the promise of preservation under all our calamities.
What does preservation imply? It implies that our trials shall not injure us.
Rivers are likely to overflow, and flames likely to burn, those who pass
through them. Affliction is likely to injure, and would inevitably ruin us, if
God were not near. It tempts us to rebel against the Divine providence and to
distrust the Divine goodness; to be thankless, impatient, and repining. The
mind, already weakened, perhaps, and bewildered by the pressure of adversity,
is easily led to apprehend still greater troubles, and faints at the prospect.
This, too, is the season when our great adversary is most to be dreaded. It is
in the night that the wild beasts of the forest roar after their prey; and it
is in the darkness of spiritual or temporal adversity that Satan directs
against us his most violent assaults. The fact is that our spiritual interests
are much more endangered by tribulation than our worldly prosperity. It is the
soul which is most exposed, and which most needs preservation; and preservation
is here promised to it. The Christian often enters the furnace cold-hearted,
earthly-minded, and comfortless; he comes out of it peaceful, confiding,
burning with love for his delivering God, and thirsting after the enjoyment of
His presence.
IV. The Lord
vouchsafes to add to His precious promises several reasons or ARGUMENTS TO
ASSURE US OF THEIR FULFILMENT.
1. The first is drawn from the relation in which He stands to us as
our Creator. ¡§Thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob, and He that formed
thee, O Israel.¡¨ This language refers to our spiritual as well as to our
natural existence. Here, then, is a solid ground of confidence. The Father of
our spirits must be well acquainted with their infirmities and weakness. ¡§He
knoweth our frame, and remembereth that we are dust.¡¨ Neither will He ever
forsake the work of His own hands.
2. The Almighty draws another argument to enforce His exhortation,
from the property which He has in His people, and the manner in which He
acquired it. ¡§Fear not,¡¨ He says, ¡§for I have redeemed thee,¡¨ etc. We are His
by creation, but He has also made us His by redemption. And what a mighty price
did He pay for us! Will He then abandon that which He so much values, which
cost Him so dear?
3. There is yet another reason assigned why we should cast away fear
in the hour of tribulation--the covenant God has formed with His people ensures
the fulfilment of His promises. ¡§I am the Lord thy God,¡¨ He says, ¡§the Holy One
of Israel, thy Saviour¡¨; thus implying that He has entered into some engagement
with His Israel; that He considers Himself bound to be with them in their
troubles and distresses; that His own veracity, His own faithfulness, are at
stake, and would be sacrificed if Israel were forsaken or injured. He thus
connects His own honour with their safety. Lessons--
1. How rich in consolation is the Word of¡¦God!
2. How essential to our happiness is a knowledge of our interest in
the Divine promises!--to appropriate them to ourselves, and rejoice in them.
3. How full of confidence and praise ought they to be, who live in
the enjoyment of the Divine presence in trouble!
4. How blind to their own interest are they who reject the Gospel of
Christ! (C. Bradley, M. A.)
Love abounding, love complaining, love abiding
(with Isaiah 43:22-24; Isaiah 44:21-23):--
I. We have in our
first text, LOVE ABOUDING.
1. Notice the time when that love is declared. The first verse
begins, ¡§But now, thus saith the Lord.¡¨ When was that? It was the very time
when He was angry with the nation by reason of their great sins (Isaiah 42:25). It was a time, then, of
special sin, and of amazing hardness of heart. When a man begins to burn, he
generally feels and cries out; he must be far gone in deadly apathy when he is
touched with fire and yet lays it not to heart. It was a time of love with God,
though a time of carelessness with His people.
2. The Lord shows His abounding love by the sweetness of His
consolations, ¡§But now, thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob, and He
that formed thee, O Israel, Fear not.¡¨ ¡§Fear not¡¨ is a little word measured by
space and letters; but it is an abyss of consolation if we remember who it is
that saith it, and what a wide sweep the comfort takes. Fear hath torment, and
the Lord would cast it out. You that are the people of God may be smarting, and
crying, and sighing. But, oh the love of God to you. He hears your cries, and
His compassions are moved towards you! Nothing touches Him like the groans of
His children. There is a wonderful intensity of affection in this passage,
spoken, as it is, by the great God to His people while they are under the rod
which they so richly deserve.
3. The fulness of God¡¦s love is to be seen in the way in which He
dwells with evident satisfaction upon His past dealings with His people. When
we love some favoured one, we like to think of all our love passages in years
gone by; and the Lord so loves His people, that, even when they are under His
chastening hand, He still delights to remember His former loving-kindnesses. We
may forget the wonders of His grace, but He doth not forget. He ¡§created,¡¨
¡§redeemed,¡¨ ¡§called.¡¨ He dwells upon His possession of His people. ¡§Thou art
Mine.¡¨
4. If you desire to see the overflowings of God¡¦s love in another
form, notice in the next verse how He declares what He means to do. ¡§When thou
passest through the waters, I will be with thee,¡¨ etc. His love casts its eye
upon your future. He loves you too well to make your way to heaven free from
adversity and tribulation, for these things work your lasting good. But He does
promise you that the deepest waters shall not overflow you, and the fiercest
torrents shall not drown you, for this one all-sufficient reason, that He will
be with you.
5. The overflowings of Divine love are seen in the Lord¡¦s avowing
Himself still to be His people¡¦s God: ¡§I am Jehovah thy God, the Holy One of
Israel, thy Saviour.¡¨
6. Though one would think He might have come to a close here, the
Lord adds His valuation of His people, this was so high that He says, ¡§I gave
Egypt for thy ransom, Ethiopia and Seba for thee.¡¨ Pharaoh and his firstborn
were nobodies as compared with Jacob¡¦s seed. Further on in history, after
Isaiah¡¦s day, the Lord moved Cyrus to set Israel flee from Babylon, and then
gave to the son of Cyrus a rich return for liberating the Jews; for He made Him
conqueror of Egypt and of Ethiopia and of Seba. God will give more than the
whole world to save His Church, seeing He gave His only begotten Son.
7. Then the Lord adds another note of great love. He says that He has
thought so much of His people that He regarded them as honourable. ¡§Since thou
wast precious in My sight,¡¨ etc. He publishes His love, not only by His deeds,
but by express words. What a wealth of grace is here!
8. Such is the Lord¡¦s love, that even in the time when they were not
acting as they should, but grieving Him, He stands to His love of them, and
sets the same value on them as before: ¡§Since thou wast precious in My sight, thou
hast been honourable, and I have loved thee: therefore will I give men for thee, and
people for thy life.¡¨ As if He said, ¡§What I have done I will do again. My love
is unalterable.¡¨
II. Our second text
is in the minor key, it is LOVE LAMENTING. ¡§But thou hast not called upon Me, O
Jacob¡¨ (verse 22). Observe the contrast; for it runs all through, and may be
seen in every sentence: I have called thee by thy name; but thou hast not
called upon Me, O Jacob. I have called thee Mine; but thou hast been weary of
Me. I have redeemed thee with a matchless price; but thou hast bought Me no
sweet cane with money.
1. Israel rendered little worship to God. May not the Lord of
infinite mercy justly say to some of us, ¡§But thou hast not called upon Me, O
Jacob¡¨?
2. There has been little fellowship; for the Lord goes on to say,
¡§Thou hast been weary of Me, O Israel.¡¨ Are we tired of our God? If not, how is
it that we do not walk with Him from day to day?
3. We are moved by this passage to confess how little of spirituality
has been found in the worship which we have rendered. ¡§Thou hast not honoured
Me with thy sacrifices.¡¨ When we have come to worship, in public and in
private, we have not honoured the Lord by being intense therein. The heart has
been cold, the mind wandering.
4. Again, the Lord mentions that His people have brought Him little
sacrifice: ¡§Thou
hast not brought Me the small cattle,¡¨ etc. What small returns have we made! In
the religion of Christ there is no taxation; everything is of love.
5. Once more, it is said that we have been very slack in our
consideration of our God. The Lord says, ¡§I have not caused thee to serve with
an offering, nor wearied thee with incense; but thou hast made Me to serve with
thy sins; thou hast wearied Me with thine iniquities.¡¨ The Lord is thoughtful
of us, but we are not thoughtful towards Him. If the Lord did not love us very
much He would not care so much about our love towards Himself. It is the plaint
of love. The Lord does not need our sweet canes nor our money. But when He
chides us for withholding our love-tokens, it is because He values our love,
and is grieved when it grows cold.
III. Our third text
exhibits LOVE ABIDING.
1. Notice, in Isaiah 44:21, how the Lord still calls
His people by the same name:
¡§Remember these, O Jacob and Israel.¡¨ Still are the names of His elect like
music in the ears of God. One would have feared that He would have dropped the
¡§Israel,¡¨ that honourable name, which came of prevailing prayer, since they had
not called upon Him. Why call him a prevailing prince who had grown weary of
his God? But no, He harps upon the double title: He loves to think of His beloved as what
they were, and what His grace made them. O heir of heaven, God loves you still!
2. Notice how the Lord claims His servants: ¡§Thou art My servant: I have formed thee; thou art My servant.¡¨
He has not discharged us, though He has had cause enough for so doing. This
should bind us to Him. This should quicken our pace in His service.
3. Then notice how the Lord assures us in the next line: ¡§O Israel, thou shalt
not be forgotten of Me.¡¨ God cannot forget His chosen. You that have Bibles
with margins will find that it is also written there, ¡§O Israel, forget not
Me.¡¨ The Lord longs to be remembered by us. Did not our loving Lord institute
the Sacred Supper to prevent our forgetting Him?
4. Notice with delight the triumph of love, how still He pardons: ¡§I have blotted out,
as a thick cloud,¡¨ etc.
5. See how our text closes with the Lord¡¦s own precept to be glad: ¡§Sing, O ye heavens;
for the Lord hath done it,¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 44:23). Out of all dejection
arise! There is more cause for gladness than for sorrow. What you have done
should cause distress of heart; but what the Lord has done is cause for
rapture. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Four contrasts
(with Isaiah 43:22-25):--There are many lights in which we can see
sin; and our perception of sin very much depends upon the light in which we
look at it. Sin is very terrible by the blaze of Sinai. It is an awful thing to
see sin by the light of your dying day. More terrible still will it be to see
it by the light of the judgment day. But of all the lights that ever fall upon
sin, that which makes it ¡§like itself appear¡¨ is that which falls upon it when
it is set in the light of God¡¦s countenance. To see sin by the light of God¡¦s
love, to read its awful character by the light of the Cross, is the way to see
sin. I am going to speak mainly concerning God¡¦s own people, and I want to set
their sins in the light of God¡¦s love to them. My object will be to set before
you the contrast between God¡¦s action towards His people and His people¡¦s,
usual action towards Him.¡¨
I. The first contrast
lies in THE CALL.
1. I have redeemed thee, I have called thee by thy name¡¨ (Isaiah 43:1).
2. Turn to the other side of the question, the neglected call on our
part. ¡§Thou hast not called upon Me, O Jacob¡¨ (Isaiah 43:22). That may not mean that
there has been literally no calling upon God on thy side, but it does mean that
there has been too little of it. Let us put this matter to the test.
II. Let us consider
another contrast which is equally striking--that is, upon the matter of THE
CONVERSE between the Lord and His people.
1. Notice, first, God¡¦s side of it. ¡§When thou passest through the
waters, I will be with thee,¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 43:2). Notice how God is with His
people in strange places. Wherever they are, He will not leave them; He will go
right through the waters with them. God also keeps close to His people in
dangerous places, fatal places as they seem.
2. Now listen to your side of this matter of converse with God. ¡§But
thou hast been weary of Me, O Israel¡¨ (Isaiah 43:22).
III. Notice the
contrast in THE SACRIFICE.
1. ¡§I gave Egypt for thy ransom,¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 43:3).
2. Now look at the other side. ¡§Thou hast not brought Me the small
cattle of thy burnt offerings¡¨ (Isaiah 43:23). I wonder how little some
people really do give to God! I believe, in some cases, not as much as it costs
them for the blacking of their boots. Then the Lord adds, ¡§Thou hast bought Me
no sweet cane with money.¡¨ Not even the smallest offering has been given to the
Most High by some who profess to have been redeemed by the precious blood of
Christ. How little is given by the most generous of us!
IV. I close with
one snore contrast, which refers to THE HONOUR given by God, and the honour
given to God.
1. God gives great honour to those whom He saves (Isaiah 43:4). I have known persons who,
before their conversion, were unclean in their lives, and when they have been
converted, they have joined a Christian Church, and in the society of God¡¦s
people they have become honourable. They have been taken into the fellowship of
the saints just as if there had never been a fault in their lives; nobody has
mentioned the past to them, it has been forgotten. This is the highest honour
that God can put upon us, that He fixes His love upon us. ¡§Thou hast been
honourable, and I have loved thee.¡¨
2. Have you honoured God? He says, ¡§Neither hast thou honoured Me
with thy sacrifices.¡¨ Have you honoured God by your lives? By your confidence
in Him? By your patience? By defending His truth when it has been assailed? By
speaking to poor sinners about Him? Are you trying every day to honour Him? (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
¡§Fear not¡¨
I. A CHARGE GIVEN.
¡§Fear not.¡¨ A godly fear the believer may have; but the cowardice of the world,
which is loud to boast, and slow to act, and quick to doubt, he must never
know. It becomes neither the dignity of his calling, nor the faithfulness of
his God.
II. A REASON
ASSIGNED. ¡§Thou art Mine.¡¨ These words were spoken to Israel after the flesh,
and to them they still remain a covenant of peace, sure and steadfast for ever;
yet as the relations named--Creator, Redeemer, Saviour--are not peculiar to
them, but are enjoyed in the same degree by every believing heart, we may take
to ourselves a share in this animating promise. The certainty of the believer¡¦s
hope does not depend on our holding God, but on God¡¦s holding us; not on our
faithfulness to Him, but on His faithfulness to us.
III. A PROTECTION
PROMISED. This does not consist in any absence of trial and danger; the
expressions rather imply their presence, many in number and various in kind.
The protection promised consists in the constant presence with the soul of its
unseen but Almighty Saviour. (E. Garbett.)
I have called thee by thy
name
Named and claimed
I. THE PERSON.
¡§I--thee--thou--Mine.¡¨ How this sentence tingles with personality! If one
person can call another person, those two persons are alike. Those two persons
have a common life interest. Personality in God is substantially similar to
personality in man.
II. THE NAME. Would
it be an untrue fancy to suppose that we each have a name before God? When you
look at your little sleeping child to-night, you will, perhaps, not only think
of the name that everybody knows him by, but you will murmur over him some
little special name that you have given him--you hardly know how, but that
gives to you the very sense of theessence of the true life sleeping there.
Remember that something just like that is in the heart of your God¡¦s feeling
for you. Science generalises, love particularises. Then, with this loving name,
comes possession. There is a strange, yearning intensity in that language,
¡§Thou art Mine.¡¨ The mystery and rapture of life are in that strange sense of
possession which comes through love, as though the loved one had become a part
of ourselves to be dissevered from us nevermore. ¡§Thou art Mine,¡¨ says our
God--Mine to carry, to nurture, to protect--My very own, never to part from Me
for evermore.
III. THE CALL OF THE
NAME. It would be very much to know that God even thought of us by our name in
this personal and special way; but the text asserts that this power of God
finds expression; that life is filled not only with a thought of us on the part
of God, but with an expression of that thought; so that there is something
vocalised, something articulate in life, which comes to us, if we can really
understand that it is God calling us by this name we have.
1. The very first awakening feeling in childhood is a personal call.
When you first really prayed as a little child and thought what you were doing,
what a sense of individuality there was. You were yourself then, and nobody
else. It was God speaking to you, and calling you by your name.
2. Then another period which comes, usually s little later, when
God¡¦s call is addressed to us, is in our first assumption of responsibility. I
think some of the most solitary times a man ever has are when he has just
assumed a serious responsibility. Now, in that solitude, if a man listens, he
can hear his God calling to him, speaking his name right then and there. How tenderly,
how warmly, how encouragingly! And the reason is, because God loves the thing
that that responsibility will give you. He loves the thing that will make for
you, and that is character; that is manhood.
3. Then, again, in a moment of danger, a man may hear God calling his
name; because danger, like duty, particularises. Supposing we see a man in
danger; we ask, Who is he? What is his name? And if the man does not realise
the peril he is in, you call to him by the name that will cut through the air,
and strike on his ear, and arouse his individual attention. Suppose moral
danger comes and God sees the danger coming, and He calls out to you by that
name He knows you by. If you could hear that call, would it not cause you to
repel the evil? as though the Voice said, ¡§I remember you; you are Mine. Your
name is known to Me. I am your heavenly Friend, and I call on you now to do
your duty, to repel the evil.¡¨
4. He speaks our name when we are in trouble.
5. There are certain other experiences of life darker than duty or
danger or sorrow. We name them by that strong, common monosyllable, sin. These
moral experiences that cut into the soul within us--sin, the sting and stab of
remorse, repentance, reformation--all are experiences of an arena in which God
calls a man by his name. (A. J. Lyman, D. D.)
God¡¦s claim on the soul
What a drama, what tragedy, life is! The world goes by, and,
pointing to you, exclaims:
¡§That man is mine. He has been forty years in my service. He has sold his soul
to me. He is mine.¡¨ ¡§Not so,¡¨ replies the heavenly Voice; ¡§He is Mine. I knew
him as a child. I have never lost sight of him.¡¨ Pleasure comes by, and claims
you and says: ¡§He
is mine, that young man.¡¨ Dissipation comes by., and points to you with
fascinating smile, and says:
¡§That young man is mine. Let his mother give him up. Let the angels forget him.
He has taken my cup in his hand; he has drunk of my poison. He is mine.¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨
the heavenly Voice answers: ¡§Not
yet; not yet. I know him, and love him. I suffered to save him, and he is Mine.
Mine by right of love, and Mine by right of pain.¡¨ That is the drama, that is
the tragedy, that is going on! (A. J. Lyman, D. D.)
Israel called by name
To call by name includes the ideas of specific designation, public
announcement, and solemn consecration to a certain work. (J. A. Alexander.)
¡§Thou art Mine¡¨
Three little words, three little syllables; a child¡¦s motto; words
that might be printed by a little hand and sent as a message of love; words
that might be engraved on a signet ring: yet words the whole meaning -of which the
firmament has not space enough to hold the entire development. (J. Parker,
D. D.)
Verse 2
When thou passest through the waters
Through
water and fire.
I. Notice the
frank and matter-of-course way in which your AFFLICTIONS AND TRIALS are
mentioned. ¡§The waters,¡¨ ¡§the rivers,¡¨ ¡§the fire,¡¨ ¡§the flame¡¨; it takes it for
granted that you will meet with some or all of them before you have finished
your course, and they are mentioned in a way, too, that will not suffer you to
think lightly of them. ¡§Waters,¡¨ many of them, and may be deep; ¡§rivers,¡¨
rushing calamities that threaten to carry you away; ¡§fire and flame!¡¨ hard
words these, and I gather that your tribulations, Jacob, are great, various,
and sure.
II. But the words,
¡§When thou passest,¡¨--¡§And when thou walkest,¡¨ clearly intimate that JACOB IS
TRAVELLING, MOVING FROM ONE POINT TO ANOTHER. We may be quite sure that the
¡§waters,¡¨ ¡§rivers,¡¨ ¡§fire,¡¨ ¡§flame¡¨ we read of:here have reference only to such
of them as are met with on Jacob¡¦s proper track. If these perilous
possibilities do not confront him on the way of duty; and if he makes a
voluntary circumbendibus, to serve only his own pleasure, so that he confronts
them; then, such waters and such fires are very likely to destroy him. Lot goes
and settles down in Sodom; he had no more business there than has flour in a
soot-bag; and the fire burnt him. The waters overflowed Jonah to some purpose;
but that was because he went where he liked, and not where he ought.
III. Not only shall
Jacob be safe in the flood, and brought through the fire; not only shall both
flood and fire become vanquished perils living only in the victor¡¦s memory, but
THE PASSING THROUGH THEM SHALL DO GOOD TO JACOB! He shall be a nobler soul for
being tossed by waves; he shall be a purer being for being tried by fire, and
like the finely tempered steel which was first in the red-hot furnace, and was
then plunged into the ice-cold cistern, and so became the keen, invincible
blade: so the trial, afflictions, testings of the Christian do mould and temper
and shape and brighten Jacob¡¦s character, and ennoble after the Christly
pattern his moral manhood, which is the glory of his immortal soul! Note two
things to be remembered in the day of the flood and fire.
1. Thy God has promised to be ever at thy side.
2. This gracious God, who controls the waters and restrains the fires
end conducts His people through them both, reveals Himself here as ¡§the Lord
that created thee, O Jacob; and He that formed thee, O Israel.¡¨ He made thee, O
Jacob; then He knows thee, knows thy frame; remembereth that thou art
dust,--will not put upon thee more than thou canst bear, neither will He forsake
the work of His hands. He raised us from the ruins of the fall, made us temples
for Himself to dwell in. Then He will never suffer the structures He has
erected at so much care and cost to be thrown down by violence, swept away by
turbulent waters, or devoured by the ruthless flame. ¡§Thou art mine!¡¨ He says.
It is the language of complacency and delight. Thou art mine! My property! My
charge! My joy! My jewel! And I will guard My own! Surely with such a text as
this to fall back upon, O thou redeemed one, thou wilt not doubt or fear. (J.
J. Wray.)
Divine convoy
I. THE PATHWAY
THAT THE PEOPLE OF GOD TREAD. Through waters, rivers, fires, and flames. ¡§It is
through much tribulation we must enter into the kingdom.¡¨
1. If I look at the temporalities first, the wilderness through which
we pass is full of troubles. Thorns and thistles has it brought forth ever
since the curse was pronounced upon it; and you can scarcely look into a circle
of your acquaintance without finding sicknesses, sorrows, losses, cares, broils,
contentions, all the fruits of sin, constantly presented to your view. Is not
this, then, a tribulated path?
2. Mark, among the tribulations, the rigour of a fiery law.
3. In this unceasing warfare ¡§the flesh hateth against the spirit and
the spirit against the flesh.¡¨
4. Look at the grand adversary of souls, and his fiery temptations.
That is another fire to pass through--Satan¡¦s suggestions.
II. THE UPHOLDING
POWER. I will be with thee.¡¨ Good company at all events. Was He not with all
the worthies recorded in the Old Testament Scriptures, in their sharp
conflicts, giving them all the victory? There are two views that may be taken
of this precious promise. There is such a thing as God being with His people,
and they not knowing it; and there is such a thing as their sensible enjoyment
of it. There are two things to be considered. The immutable faithfulness of God
has bound Him never to desert the objects of His love. But there have been many
instances in which people have been groping in the dark; it has been a long
while before they could find Him; and in many instances they have been ready to
say, ¡§My prayer is shut out¡¨; and led to exclaim, ¡§Hath God in anger shut up
His tender mercies? Will His compassion fail?¡¨
III. THE TERMINUS.
Heavenly rest--not a wave of trouble shall roll across this peaceful breast. (J.
Irons.)
God¡¦s presence in crisis moments
It is surprising to note how the facts of this people¡¦s history
have impressed themselves upon the language and thought of Christendom.
I. THAT SPIRITUAL
EXPERIENCE IS THE SAME IN ALL AGES. These words were written by the prophet of
the Exile, who could speak of himself and his comrades as passing through the
waters. He shows in this way that he realises that the exiles are one in
experience with their ancestors who passed through the waters of the Red Sea
and the Jordan. Though their circumstances were different, the variation in
outward detail was insignificant. The same parts of their nature were tested,
and the same virtues were disciplined. Thus this prophet becomes the link
between us, who are the disciples of Christ, and the Israelites who crossed the
Jordan.
II. THAT IN EVERY
LIFE THERE ARE A FEW BRIEF BUT INTENSE TRIALS. There was the long and weary
strain of desert life to be constantly borne. The passage of the sea and the
river came but twice, and then lasted but a few hours, though the agony for the
time was intense. They entered the sea in a night of awful storm, because the
terror of their enemies was upon them. They entered the river in broad daylight
in utter trust of God, knowing that only thus could the enjoyment of Canaan¡¦s
goodly land be theirs. One was a struggle of fear, the other the yielding of
all to God in simple faith. In the Christian life peace only comes after this
second struggle.
III. THAT LIFE
BEFORE AND AFTER SUCH A CRISIS IS WHOLLY DIFFERENT. The Red Sea was the
boundary line between bondage and freedom; the Jordan between wandering and
rest, between hope and possession. It seems as though such struggles were the
birth-throes of a new life. To pass on to a higher plane such struggle must be
encountered. It was such a trial as God called upon Job to pass through.
IV. THAT ONE SUCH
CRISIS IS DEATH. In the life of Christ it would appear that the temptation
connected with His baptism was His Red Sea, just as St. Paul tells us that the
sea was Israel¡¦s baptism: ¡§They were all baptized into Moses in the cloud and
in the sea.¡¨ We know that this temptation was one of the crises of our
Saviour¡¦s life. Then the devil leaveth Him for a season, not to return with
like power until he meets Him again at Gethsemane. This was Christ¡¦s Jordan.
Not until this was passed was His sorrow vanquished or His labour ¡§finished.¡¨
When Christian reached this river he was dazed and despondent, and began to
look this way and that to see if he could not escape the river. Truly, death is
the last and not the least enemy.
V. THAT HUMAN
FRIENDSHIP CAN AVAIL BUT LITTLE HERE. Friends may say, ¡§I am with you¡¨ in
sympathy; but they can render no help. Viewing the struggle, they may long to
share it, but here they must leave their friends in the hands of God.
VI. THAT GOD IS
WITH US IN ALL SUCH CRISIS MOMENTS. Hopeful¡¦s comforting words did Christian
little good. But he heard a voice say, ¡§When thou passest through the waters, I
will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee.¡¨
Indeed, that is His name, Immanuel, God with us. And Christ has said, ¡§Lo, I am
with you alway, even unto the end.¡¨ If God has brought us through the sea, if He
has commenced the good work within us, He will bring us through the Jordan, and
thus complete what He has begun. In virtue of such a precious promise we need
have no fear. (R. C. Ford, M. A.)
The floods and the flames
I. CONTEMPLATE THE
SCENES THROUGH WHICH THE PEOPLE OF GOD ARE CALLED TO PASS. No metaphor is more
frequent in the Bible than that by which sudden calamities are represented by a
deluge of waters (Psalms 42:7; Psalms 69:1; Psalms 96:2).
1. All must pass through--
2. We are all familiar with affliction under the image of fire (Ps 1 Corinthians 3:13; Isaiah 48:10; 1 Peter 4:12). It is the tendency of
fire to--
II. CONSIDER THE
PROMISES MADE TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD WHEN PASSING THROUGH THESE SCENES.
1. The Divine presence. We naturally look for sympathy in the day of
trouble (Job 6:14): Sometimes friends who are with us in
sunshine forsake us in storm (Job 19:21; Acts 28:15, with 2 Timothy 4:16). But God will never
forsake us.
2. Divine protection. ¡§The rivers shall not overflow,¡¨ etc. (Joshua 1:9; Acts 23:11; Deuteronomy 33:25).
3. Divine deliverance. We are not always to be fording rivers,
struggling with floods, or walking through fires. We are to leave them all
behind. The rest of Canaan compensated for all the toils of the wilderness (Romans 8:18). (Clergyman¡¦s Magazine.)
The godly in trouble
1. The godly have the best company in the worst places in which their
lot is east. ¡§When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee.¡¨
2. The godly have special help in their times of deepest trouble.
¡§And through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee.¡¨
3. The godly are the subjects of miracles of mercy in seasons of
greatest distress. ¡§When thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be
burned.¡¨ (C. H.Spurgeon.)
God¡¦s people not exempt from trouble
If God has a favoured people whom He has chosen, upon whom His
distinguishing grace has lighted to make them great and honourable, you would
suppose that the verse would run thus: ¡§Thou shalt not go through the waters, for
I will be with thee to keep thee out of them; neither shalt thou pass through
the rivers, for I have bridged them on thy behalf. Thou shalt never go through
the fire, and therefore thou shalt not be burned; neither shall there be any
fear that the flame shall kindle upon thee, for it shall not come near thee.¡¨
There is no such word of promise; it would be contrary to the whole tenor of
the covenant, which ever speaks of a rod, and of the chosen passing under it. (C.
H.Spurgeon.)
Light on the billow¡¦s crest
There is a story of a shipwreck which tells how the crew and
passengers had to leave the broken vessel and take to the boats. The sea was
rough, and great care in rowing and steering was necessary, in order to guard
the heavily laden boats, not from the ordinary waves, which they rode over
easily, but from the great cross seas. Night was approaching, and the hearts of
all sank as they asked what they should do in the darkness when they would no
longer be able to see these terrible waves. To their great joy, however, when
it grew dark, they discovered that they were in phosphorescent waters, and that
each dangerous wave rolled up crested with light which made it as clearly
visible as if it were midday. So it is that life¡¦s dreaded experiences when we
meet them carry in themselves the light which takes away the peril and the
terror. (J. R. Miller, D. D.)
Comfort found in God
During the sixteen weeks in which Sir Bartle Frere was dying,
though he was nearly always in great pain, not one murmur escaped him. Just at
the end he said, ¡§I have looked down into the great abyss, but God has never
left me through it all.¡¨ ¡§Name that Name when I am in pain,¡¨ he once said to
his wife; ¡§it calls me back.¡¨ (Quiver.)
A heartening presence
An exceedingly nervous man was once sentenced to twenty-four hours¡¦
imprisonment in the dungeon of an old prison. Full of fear he sank to the
floor. His brain throbbed as with fever, and mocking voices seemed to sound. He
felt terror would drive him mad. Suddenly, overhead, he heard the prison
chaplain¡¦s voice calling his name. ¡§Are you there?¡¨ he gasped. ¡§Yes, and I am
going to stay till you come out.¡¨ ¡§God bless you,¡¨ he said; ¡§I do not mind it
at all now, with you there.¡¨ ¡§When thou passest through the waters, I will be
with thee.¡¨ (J. R. Miller, D. D.)
Triumphant dying
In her last days Mrs. Booth, of the Salvation Army, sent this
message to her friends,--it is a triumphant death-song: ¡§The waters are rising, but so am I. I am
not going under, but over. Do not be concerned about your dying. Only go on
living well, and the dying will be all right.¡¨
When thou walkest through
the fire
Fire
Walking through the fire here is put for the severest form of
trouble. You have, in the commencement of the verse, trouble described as
passing through the water. This represents the overwhelming influence of trial,
in which the soul is sometimes so covered that it becomes like a man sinking in
the waves. ¡§When thou goest through the rivers,¡¨--those mountain torrents which
with terrific force are often sufficient to carry a man away. This expresses
the force of trouble, the power with which it sometimes lifts a man from the
foothold of his stability, and carries him before it. ¡§When thou passest
through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee.¡¨ But going through the fire
expresses not so much the overwhelming character and the upsetting power of
trouble as the actual consuming and destructive power of trouble and
temptation. The metaphor is more vivid, not to say more terrific, than that
which is employed in the first sentence, and yet, vivid and awful though it be,
it is certainly not too strong a figure to be used as the emblem of the
temptations and afflictions through which the Church and people of God have
been called to pass.
I. THIS TERRIBLE
PATHWAY. The sacramental host of God¡¦s elect has never had an easy road along
which to journey. I see the fields on fire, the prairie is in a blaze, the very
heavens are like a furnace, and the clouds seem rather to be made of fire than
water. Across that prairie lies the pathway to heaven, beneath that blazing sky
the whole Church of God must make its perpetual journey. It started at the
first in fire, and its very glory at the last shall take place in the midst of
the fiery passing away of all things. When first there was a Church of God on
earth, in the person of Abel, it was persecuted. Since that day, what tongue
can tell the sufferings of the people of God! It hath fared well with the
Church when she hath been persecuted, and her pathway hath been through fire.
Her feet are shod with iron and brass. She ought not to tread on paths strewn
with flowers; it is her proper place to suffer.
II. There is AN
AWFUL DANGER. The promise of the text is based on a prophecy that follows it.
The chapter tells us how God taught His people by terrible things in the past,
and how He hath terrible lessons to teach them in the future. The Church has
had very painful experience that persecution is a fire which does burn. How
many ministers of Christ, when the day of tribulation came, forsook their
flocks and fled. Again: I see iniquity raging on every side. Its flames are
fanned by every wind of fashion- And fresh victims are being constantly drawn
in. It spreads to every class. Not the palace nor the hovel is safe. We may
give the alarm to you, young man, who are in the midst of ribald companions. I
may cry ¡§fire!¡¨ to you who are compelled to live in a house where you are
perpetually tempted to evil. I may cry ¡§fire!¡¨ to you who are marked each day,
and have to bear the sneer of the ungodly,--¡§fire!¡¨ to you who are losing your
property and suffering in the flesh, for many have perished thereby. We ought
not to look upon our dangers with contempt; they are dangers, they are trials.
We ought to look upon our temptations as fires.
III. Here is A
DOUBLE INSURANCE. It strikes me that in the second clause we have the higher
gradation of a climax. ¡§Thou shalt not be burned,¡¨ to the destruction of thy
life, nor even scorched to give thee the most superficial injury, for ¡§the
flames shall not kindle upon thee.¡¨ Juat as when the three holy children came
out of the fiery furnace it is said, ¡§Upon their bodies the fire had no power,
nor was a hair of their head singed; neither were their coats changed, nor had
the smell of fire passed on them¡¨; so the text seems to me to teach that the
Christian Church under all its trials has not been consumed; but more than
that--it has not lost anything by its trials. Upon the entire Church, at the
last, there shall not be even the smell of fire. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Fire harmful and harmless
When Jehovah was angry the fire burned Israel (Isaiah 42:25), but now with Jehovah on
its side it is invulnerable in the severest trials. (Prof. J. Skinner, D. D.)
Verse 3
For I am the Lord thy God
Jehovah¡¦s valuation of His people
I.
THE
LORD¡¦S DECLARATION OF HIS OWN NAME. ¡§I am Jehovah thy God, the Holy One of
Israel, thy Saviour.¡¨ He gives His name thus to distinguish Himself from false
gods. He also sets forth His name at large, for the comfort of His people.
There is something in every name of God which may breed faith in our souls. I
think He also does it to excite our wonder mad gratitude. Let us devoutly think
of each of these names separately.
I. ¡§Jehovah, thy
God.¡¨ Jehovah, the glorious I AM, signifies self-existence. He borrows nothing
from others; indeed, all live by His permit and power. He is as complete
without His creatures as with them. Jehovah, again, is a name of immutability.
¡§I AM THAT I AM¡¨ was His name to Moses. Furthermore, Jehovah means sovereignty.
¡§Jehovah reigneth, let the people tremble.¡¨
2. The Holy One of Israel, thy Saviour. What a New Testament
combination this is--¡§The Holy One, thy Saviour¡¨! It reminds us of the
words--¡§Just, and the justifier of him that believeth.¡¨ Here we have one so
holy as to be separate from sinners and yet the Saviour of sinners. Since ¡§the
Holy One of Israel¡¨ is our Saviour, we are confident that He will save us from
all sin. The glorious Lord, who here styles Himself ¡§Jehovah thy God, the Holy
One of Israel, thy Saviour,¡¨ the Creator of all things, and their Preserver, is
come very near to you. In the next verse He saith, ¡§Since thou wast precious in
My sight thou hast been honourable, and I have loved thee.¡¨ Mark, ¡§I have loved
thee.¡¨ It is not enough that He thinks kindly, and deals tenderly; but He
loves! Remember also that this Holy Lord is working upon you still, that you
may reflect His glory. ¡§I have created him for My glory, I have formed him;
yea, I have made him¡¨ (verse 7). He has begun our new creation, He is carrying
it on, and He is completing it.
II. THE LORD¡¦S
ESTIMATE OF HIS PEOPLE. Whatever we may think of the Israel of God, the Lord
thinks more of it than words can express. ¡§I gave Egypt for thy ransom,
Ethiopia and Seba for thee.¡¨ When the Lord chose a nation to be the depository
of His sacred oracles, He might have selected Egypt if He had willed to do so.
Egypt was in the known world the oldest nation. Egypt contained the wisest and
most civilised people of early times. Its very ruins are the wonder of the
ages. Its records show an extraordinary progress in literature, architecture,
and the arts and sciences. Egypt was also the most powerful of empires in the
olden times. Before the banners of Assyria and, Babylon and Medo-Persia came to
the front, the dragon of Egypt was a mighty ensign. Yet the Lord did not choose
the sons of Ham, but passed by Egypt, Ethiopia, and Seba. The Lord chose the
seed of Abraham, and the family of Jacob: He multiplied them, and instructed
them, and made them to be His own peculiar people. In the course of history the
claims of various countries came into collision with those of Israel, and Egypt
proudly oppressed Israel. What did God do? Did He hesitate as to which of the
two peoples should be preserved? No; the Lord brought out Israel, and turned
His artillery upon Egypt. In the days of King Asa, the Ethiopians came up
against Judah to the number of a million of men; but ¡§they were destroyed
before the Lord, and before His host¡¨: thus was Ethiopia given for Israel.
Cambyses conquered Egypt, and destroyed many of its cities, and never since has
there been a native prince sitting upon the throne of Pharaoh. God gave to the
King of Persia, Egypt and the neighbouring cities as the ransom price of His
people. Thus the Lord did of old on the behalf of His literal Israel, and what
does this fact say to us? It means this--God¡¦s chosen are immeasurably precious
in His sight. They are the centre of God¡¦s design. God¡¦s intent was to produce
a race that should be honourable in His sight, and well-beloved of His soul.
This design would be costly, even to Jehovah Himself. To carry out this
purpose, men, having fallen, must be redeemed by blood. To carry out His Divine
resolve He spared not His own Son, but freely delivered Him up for us all. But
even then men could not be saved unless the Holy Ghost should condescend to
come and live in their bodies. Henceforth everything shall be sacrificed for
us. God will give all that He has to save His beloved ones. He will make the
whole o nature and providence subservient to the complete salvation of His
chosen. Kings shall be born and buried; empires shall rise and fall; republics
and systems shall come and go; and all shall be the scaffold for the building
of the house of God, which is His Church. It is God¡¦s grandest, highest purpose
to gather together in one the whole company of His redeemed in Christ Jesus
their Lord and to make them like their Head.
III. THE OUTCOME OF
THIS.
1. If it be so, that the glorious God has really and of a truth loved
us, His people, and valued us at a mighty price, then see how secure His people
are!
2. Note, next, the honour which God puts upon them. God has put us
poor sinners among His honourables. I know one who, in her unconverted state,
had fallen into sad sin, and the remembrance thereof was painful; but the Lord
removed the shame by laying home to her soul these gracious words, ¡§Since thou
wast precious in My sight, thou hast been honourable.¡¨
3. The certainty of the Lord¡¦s gathering together all His people. ¡§I
will bring thy seed,¡¨ etc. (verses 5-7). If God has determined to glorify
Himself by us and in us, let us be in accord with Him. What love we ought to
bear to God! (C. H. Spurgeon.)
I gave Egypt for thy
ransom
God¡¦s redemption of Israel
An amplification of the phrase, ¡§I have redeemed thee¡¨ (Isaiah 43:1). (J. A. Alexander.)
Egypt, Ethiopia, Seba
¡§I give Egypt as thy ransom.¡¨ The meaning appears to be that Cyrus
will be compensated for the emancipation of Israel by the conquest of these
African nations which did not belong to the Babylonian Empire. As a matter of fact,
the conquest of Egypt was effected by Cambyses, the son and successor of Cyrus,
although it is said to have been contemplated by Cyrus himself (Herod. 1:153), and it is
actually (though wrongly) attributed to him by Xenophon. (Prof J. Skinner,
D. D.)
Genesis 10:7; Psalms 72:10; Isaiah 45:14) was, according to Josephus,
Merge, the northern province of Ethiopia, lying between the Blue and the White
Nile. (Prof J. Skinner, D. D.)
Verse 4
Since thou wast precious in My sight
Precious, honourable, loved
¡§Because thou art precious in My sight, art honourable, and I love
thee¡¨--three co-ordinate clauses.
(Prof. J. Skinner, D. D.)
Precious
I. PRECIOUS IN
GOD¡¦S SIGHT IS MAN. This is a new view of life--not man¡¦s natural feeling.
Precious as to the farmer land is which has the possibility of development with
digging and draining, and so on,--precious as satisfying not the mere craving
for usefulness, but the love of a great heart.
II. WHEN ABLE TO
RECOGNISE THIS PRECIOUSNESS IN GOD¡¦S SIGHT WE BECOME HONOURABLE. Before we
could recognise it we must be grafted into Christ by a true and living faith.
This faith, then, makes us honourable. The honour of a Christian is in--
1. Righteous living.
2. Zeal for the Christian cause. The honour of Christ was to have
¡§the heathen for His heritage.¡¨ Entering into this, the honour of Christians is
to win souls; and their ¡§crown of joy¡¨ in seeing many turning from following
idols to the living God.
3. Having a conscience void of offence towards God and man.
III. THE SEAL OF
GOD¡¦S LOVE IS THE GREATEST COMFORT TO THE CHRISTIAN HEART.
IV. ¡§I WILL GIVE
MEN FOR THEE,¡¨ etc. Nation after nation went down into the darkness before the
conquering sword of Israel. God¡¦s pity, great as it is, spared not! So we have
seen men who have lived; and when that tender, all-forgiving time came--when
death laid his icy fingers upon his prey, conscience would not allow us to
settle with the thought that in the great future all was well with them. If we
cannot enter into God¡¦s inscrutable purposes in this respect we may at least
feel that these pass into the arms of death ¡§for us,¡¨--i.e., in the
sense of being warnings to us. (H. Rose Rae.)
Precious, honourable, beloved
I. Believer, the
first wonderful adjective of the text is applicable to thee; thou art
¡§PRECIOUS.¡¨ Notice how that preciousness is enhanced beyond the superlative
degree by the next words, ¡§precious in My sight.¡¨ There are mock jewels now
made which are so exactly like rubies, emeralds, and diamonds that even those
who are connoisseurs of precious stones are deceived, and yet these imitations
are not precious. They are not precious in the sight of the lapidary, who is
able to put them to severer tests, for with him these mimicries are soon proved
to be of little value. The degree of preciousness depends much upon the person
who forms the judgment; and what estimate can be so accurate as that of God the
infallible? What judgment can be so severely exacting as that of God the
infinitely holy? This preciousness cannot arise from anything essentially and
intrinsically precious in us by nature, for we confess freely that we are even
as others in our natural estate. The quarry out of which we were hewn was no
quarry of precious things, and the pit out of which we have been digged was no
pit in which rare stones were glittering: we were taken from common clay, and
out of the ordinary ruin of mankind; yet God saith we are precious, and the
fact of our former degradation and fallen estate cannot gainsay the Divine
declaration. How is this? It springs out of four consideration--
1. We are precious in the sight of God because of the memories which
duster round each one of us. You are to God most precious, as the token and
memorial of the death of the Well-beloved.
2. Things become precious sometimes on account of the workmanship
exercised upon them. Many an article has been in itself intrinsically of small
account, but so much art has been exercised upon it, so much real work thrown
into it, that the value has been increased indefinitely. Now, the Christian is
precious to God on account of the workmanship that has been spent upon him. In
divers ways the Great Worker has wrought mightily in us, and continued
perseveringly to pursue His purpose.
3. Certain articles are precious because of their peculiar fashion.
This was the case with the Portland vase, which to any common observer seemed
to be of very small value, but because of the extreme beauty of the design, the
greatest potter of the age was ready to pay his thousands to possess it. We are
precious in God¡¦s sight, too, because of our fashion and form. We are to be
made like unto Christ.
4. Things are precious often because of their relationship. The most
precious thing a mother hath is her dear babe. Precious, therefore, in the
sight of the Lord are His saints, because they are born in His household, by
regeneration made to be His sons and daughters.
II. Every child of
God is ¡§HONOURABLE.¡¨ Every Christian is, in God¡¦s sight, right honourable and
excellent because the Lord in His discriminating grace has made him precious.
1. Every Christian is honourably born.
2. The Christian, moreover, is honourable in rank. God has been
pleased to take us from the dunghill to set us among princes.
3. Right honourable in their service are the saints. I know of no
service that can be more distinguished than the doing of good. Methinks the
very angels before the throne might envy us poor men who are permitted to talk
of Christ, even though it be to little children.
4. Christians are honourable also in privilege. It was accounted an
eminent honour when a nobleman had the right to go in to his king whenever he
willed to proffer a request. Approach to the royal throne was always, among
Orientals, considered to be the highest token of regard. You are especially
honoured, O ye saints, for ye are ¡§a people near unto Him.¡¨
5. And every child of God who is what he should be becomes through
grace honour-able by his achievements, and this is in some respects the highest
form of honour, to be honoured for what you have been enabled to do, to wear a
coat of arms which you have fairly won in battle, and hatchments that are not
merely attributed to you by the heraldic pencil, but which are due to you
because of your victorious feats of arms. To conquer sin, this is no small
achievement; to keep down through a long life the corruptions of the flesh, to
contend against the world and the devil, these are no deeds of carpet knights.
And what an achievement it will be when Satan shall be bruised beneath our
feet, as he shall be shortly.
III. The last of
these notable words is ¡§BELOVED.¡¨ ¡§I have loved thee.¡¨ God hath loved thee
eternally. He has loved thee actively and effectually, given His Only-Begotten
for thee--an unspeakable gift; given thee everything in Him--a boundless dower
of love. He has loved thee pre-eminently, better than the angels, for unto
which of them has He ever said, ¡§Thou wast honourable, and I have loved thee¡¨?
He has loved thee unchangeably. He has loved thee immeasurably. These three
things being put together, I want you, practically, as they are your own by
faith, to make use of them in other senses. ¡§Since thou wast precious in My
sight, thou hast been honourable, and I have loved thee.¡¨
1. My Saviour, dost thou say that? Why, those words Thou dost put
into my mouth to give back to Thee. Thou also art precious in my sight. Is He
not so--precious beyond compare? Therefore is He honourable in our esteem. Will
you not honour Him? Shall it not be the continual strife of your soul to get
Him renown? ¡§Thou hast been honourable, and I have loved thee.¡¨ You have loved
Him, but, oh, how little! Look not back, then, except with Penitence, but
henceforth say:
¡§Lord, Thou hast been honourable, I will love Thee. Forgive the past, kindle in
my soul a fresh flame of grace.¡¨
2. When you have so used those words turn them in another direction.
Apply them next to every child of God. Let us never think of the children of
God in any other way than as honouring them. Some of them are very poor, many
of them illiterate, some of them not altogether in temper, action, or creed
what we might desire them to be; but if they be bought with the blood of Christ
they are honourable. The Lord declares them so, and let us not treat them
dishonourably.
3. You might use these words in reference to unconverted men and
women. There is a certain sense in which they are applicable to all of woman
born, for they possess immortal souls. If that be the case, how honourable all
men become as objects of our zeal! ¡§Honour all men.¡¨ (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The value and rank of the believer
One of the worst mistakes we could make would be to judge our
condition before God by our outward circumstances. Know ye not that the ungodly
have their portion in this life? As for the people of God, they are often in
great trials.
I. THE LORD COUNTS
HIS PEOPLE TO BE PRECIOUS. A child of God is often far other than precious in
the sight of others. ¡§The precious sons of Zion, comparable to fine gold, how
are they esteemed as earthen pitchers, the work of the hands of the potter!¡¨
Child of God! thou art precious in God¡¦s sight, and that is infinitely more
than being precious to princes. You live in a little room alone, and few know
you, and those who do know you do not think much of you; but the Lord says,
¡§Thou art precious in My sight.¡¨ How can this be? Read the first verse. ¡§But
now thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob, and He that formed thee, O
Israel.¡¨
1. It is clear that we are precious to God because we are His creation.
The first creation was marred upon the wheel by sin; it became a thing without
honour, and came under the curse. But he that believes in Jesus has been
created anew by the work of the Holy Ghost. God has in a very special sense
created him.
2. He has gone beyond mere creation: having first created the clay, He has
formed it. We are not half made or ill made in regeneration; we are formed as
well as created. The Lord who has given us spiritual existence is daily giving
us fashion and completeness.
3. But what next does He say? ¡§I have redeemed thee.¡¨ We have been
bought with precious blood.
4. Another blessing of grace is mentioned in the chapter, and that is
that God has called us. ¡§I have called thee by thy name; thou art Mine.¡¨ He
called us, and we answered the call.
5. We have been ever since kept by His rich grace and preserved, and
this also has endeared us to the Lord. Do you not think that if you are
precious in Christ s sight, then everything that has to do with Him ought to be
precious to you? Remember what Augustine said: he declared that he loved every man that
had ¡§aliquid Christi¡¨--any thing of Christ--about him. Think once more.
If you are precious in God¡¦s sight, do not despise yourself so as to fall into
the follies and vanities which please other men. Nobility has its obligations.
II. Being precious,
He adds another epithet. ¡§Since thou wast precious in My sight, THOU HAST BEEN
HONOURABLE.¡¨ How many of God¡¦s people were the reverse of honourable before
they knew the Lord! Many a dishonourable thing they thought, and said, and did,
and it is the dishonourable life that makes the dis-honourable man. Let a poor
child of God tell out how he believes that he is honourable.
1. We are honourable by birth. Some are proud because they have been
born of fathers who have been made baronets, or elevated to the peerage in
years gone by; thus by birth they are honourable. Descended from the King of
kings, each saint has a lineage before which the pedigrees of princes grow
stale and mean.
2. Next, we become honourable by our possessions. Men pay honour to
those who are immensely rich. ¡§All things are yours.¡¨ What an estate is that
which belongs to every heir of heaven, for we are ¡§heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ¡¨; and thus we become indeed honourable.
3. And the child of God becomes honourable in rank. A child of God is
a prince of the Divine line.
4. We then become ennobled by our relationship. Jesus is ¡§the
first-born among many brethren¡¨; and we as the younger brethren are all
honourable.
5. We are honourable by calling, for He ¡§hath made us kings and
priests unto our God¡¨; and these among men are the most noteworthy of all
callings.
6. By Divine grace we have become honourable by character, for the
Lord has sanctified His people.
7. Theirs is an honour-able life; they live for an honourable
purpose; they are quickened by an honourable spirit; they are wending their way
through an honourable destiny on earth to glory and honour and immortality and
life eternal. The lesson to be learned from it is, do not let any child of God
be bashful, shamefaced, and cowardly in the presence of men of the world.
III. ¡§Since thou
wast precious in My sight, thou hast been honourable, AND I HAVE LOVED THEE.¡¨
The Lord has not only told you of His love in the secret of your soul, but He
has publicly acted love to you. If God loves us so, shall we not love Him? (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
The child of God should live a dignified life
Lions will not be found stealing little bits of meat like cats, or
feeding on carrion like dogs. It is not for eagles to hawk for flies; and it is
not for children of God to stoop below the glorious level of their new birth. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
A great date
Date your birthdays from your regeneration; bury the old nature,
and live in the new. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Therefore will I give men
for thee
Peoples sacrificed for the Jews
¡§Mankind for thee, and peoples for thy life.¡¨ An the world for
this little people? It is intelligible only because this little people are to
be for all the world. ¡§Ye are My witnesses that I am God. I will also give thee
for a light to nations, to be My salvation to the ends of the earth.¡¨ (Prof.
G. A. Smith, D. D.)
Verses 5-10
Verse 5-6
I will bring thy seed from the east
Obligations of Christians to labour for the conversion of the Jews
This prophecy looks far beyond the deliverance of the Jews from
their former captivity.
It evidently points to that great and glorious deliverance which still awaits
them. A deliverance that will eclipse and infinitely outshine their former
deliverances from Egypt and from Babylon. Apply the passage to the recall and
conversion of the Jews.
I. OUR
OBLIGATIONS, AS CHRISTIANS, TO ENGAGE IN THIS WORK.
1. Gratitude for the inestimable benefits which we have derived from
them Romans 3:1-2; Romans 9:4-5).
2. As a reparation of the cruel wrongs and injuries which we have
inflicted upon them. Every Christian country is deep in this guilt, and every
Christian country requires a national expiation of it.
3. From an ardent desire to promote the glory of God.
II. OUR
ENCOURAGEMENT TO PROCEED AND PERSEVERE IN IT. To some, the attempt to convert
the Jews may appear visionary; to others, inexpedient; but they who are
acquainted with their Bibles must know that it is not hopeless. We are
encouraged to attempt this work--
1. From the testimony of prophecy.
2. From the very great attention which has already been excited among
the Jews.
3. From the present signs of the times.
III. THE GLORIOUS
CONSEQUENCES THAT WILL RESULT FROM THE CONVERSION OF THE JEWS.
1. To the world. It will be the commencement of a new and blessed era
to all nations.
2. To the Church of God. The conversion of the Jews shall be the
means of bringing in the whole fulness of the Gentiles.
Verse 6
I will say to the north, Give up
A double challenge
My intention is rather to utilise than to expound the text.
I. The first
counsel is--GIVE UP.
1. With some of you it is imperative that you give up your
prejudices. So have you mis-estimated true religion, that you have been
accustomed to denounce it as cant, and to declaim the professors of it as
hypocrites. Give up this blind bias, and give the Gospel a fair hearing. Should
it turn out to be an imposture, you will at least be the better able to expose
its fictions, after having studied its facts; but should it happen to be
genuine and true, how ill will it be for you if you continue to despise it!
2. Give up in like manner your selfrighteousness.
3. Give up your sins. You cannot be saved from their consequence if
you cling to their company.
4. Give up delays.
5. I might well say to some, give up quibbling. You have never yet
come to the point with your own conscience. You have always been so deft at
finding out knots and raising questions. What is the good of it? If you are
never saved till you get every problem solved, you will never be saved at all.
If a vessel were breaking in pieces on yonder shore, and the rocket apparatus
had fired a rope into the middle of the vessel, would you not think the crew to
be insane if they said to one another, ¡§We do not understand how it is that the
rocket apparatus manages this¡¨? Oh but they just twist the rope round the mast,
get a holdfast, and begin to swing themselves ashore.
6. Give up, you troubled ones; give up despondency; give up the
thought that there is no hope; give up the suspicion that Jesus cannot forgive.
II. KEEP NOT BACK.
1. Keep not back from attending the means of grace.
2. When you do attend the house of the Lord, keep not back from a
simple obedience of the Gospel.
3. When you have looked to Christ, keep not back from the mercyseat.
You will begin to pray, perhaps, and find yourself stammering and trembling,
but keep not back. Your old sins will half choke you in the recollection of
them, but keep not back. If anybody saw you trying to pray they would say,
¡§What you, you old wretch, you trying to pray!¡¨ Oh! but keep not back. ¡¥Tis
mercy calls you; come and pray.
4. When you have really trusted in Christ, and have learned to pray,
then Keep not back from coming forward and making a profession of your faith in
Jesus. Be prompt, if you would be precise in serving the Lord. ¡§I made haste,¡¨
said David, ¡§and delayed not to keep Thy commandments.¡¨
5. To those who are saved, and have avowed their conversion, let me
say, Keep not back from the Lord¡¦s service. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Bring My sons from far
The Church encouraged and exhorted
These words were spoken with the view of encouraging the Church: ¡§Fear not; for I am
with thee: I will
bring thy seed from the east,¡¨ etc. The Lord loves His Church, and He loves to
see her full of courage and confidence. He intends that His cause and kingdom
shall prosper in the world. God has leisure.
I. THE LORD HAS
CHILDREN FAR AWAY. ¡§Bring My sons from far, and My daughters from the ends of
the earth¡¨
1. Some are far away in the matter of locality. They are not dwelling
where the Gospel is preached; some of them are where roads have not as yet been
made, and the commerce of civilisation has not come.
2. He also has many sons and daughters who are far off in a worse
sense than this; they are far off as to character, as opposed to God as
darkness is to light.
3. There are some who are far off in another sense; it is not so much
character that puts them far off from God, as their not being in the way of
hearing the Gospel. The kingdom of God has come nigh to most of you. But there
are great numbers of persons, even in our own land, who are not in the way of
hearing the Gospel. It happens, sometimes, that the more unlikely ones are the
first to be converted.
4. The Lord Jesus Christ saves by His grace some who are far off in
their own apprehension. It is not really true that they have been more sinful
than others, but they think they have. So you see that the Lord has children
who are far off from Him in several senses. What does a father or a mother do
when the son is a long way off? Why, they like to hear all they can about him;
especially, they love to hear from him,--to get a letter or a message from
their boy himself. Well, now, our Heavenly Father watches over all His poor
wandering children.
II. THE LORD IS
BRINGING HOME SOME OF THESE FAR-OFF ONES. In our text He gives this command,
¡§Bring My sons from far.¡¨ To whom is this command spoken? I think we shall be
right if we say that it is spoken much in the same way in which the Lord said,
¡§Let there be light,¡¨ ¡§and there was light.¡¨ His fiat did the deed. So God
says, ¡§Bring My sons from far,¡¨ and therefore we may be sure that they will be
brought to Him.
1. Providence obeys this command. Everything that happens in the
mysterious movements of Providence is operating for the bringing in of His
chosen. The world is all scaffolding; the Church of Christ is the true
building. The like is true on a small scale. All manner of afflictions that
come to men are sent to touch their conscience, and to bring them back to God.
2. This seems to me to be a charge given to all God¡¦s people, as well
as to providence, ¡§¡¥Bring My sons from far.¡¦ You know Me; you love Me; so, look
after My wandering children.¡¨
3. But this command would be of no force unless my text were a fiat.
In consistency with this command, the Holy Spirit goes forth, in ways known to
Himself, and He brings God¡¦s sons from far, and His daughters from the ends of
the earth.
III. THIS IS SAID
FOR THE ENCOURAGEMENT OF GOD¡¦S CHURCH.
1. This command has a very intimate connection with Christ¡¦s Church.
Our text says, ¡§Bring My sons and My daughters¡¨; but the 5 th verse says, ¡§I
will bring thy seed.¡¨ Then, saved souls are the seed of the Church as well as
the sons and daughters of God. God puts a wonderful honour upon human
instrumentality.
2. The Church of Christ has a further interest in these far-off sons
and daughters from the fact that not only are they her seed, but they are
coming home to her. They will help to strengthen the true Church of God.
3. These far-off ones, who are being brought home, will greatly help
us when they do come. Read the 7 th verse: ¡§Even every one that is called by My name: for I have created
him for My glory.¡¨ That is the kind of converts that we want, those who are
created for God¡¦s glory. ¡§But,¡¨ say some of the older friends, ¡§these young
converts are so imprudent.¡¨ Bless them! The Lord increase their imprudence, for
that is one of the grandest things in the world when it is sanctified. It was
most imprudent, on the part of the Apostle Paul, to go into those cities where
he was stoned, and dragged out, and left for dead. It was most imprudent of him
to lose all his reputation and his standing among men simply that he might
preach Jesus Christ and Him crucified. ¡§But, sir,¡¨ say the objectors, ¡§these
young people, who are coming into the Church, do not know much.¡¨ For the matter
of that, we do not know much either, so we cannot keep them out on that ground.
¡§But they have zeal without knowledge.¡¨ Yes, and it is quite possible to have
knowledge without zeal. Both of those things are bad when alone; but if you
have the knowledge, and they bring the zeal, you have only to trade with them a
little in the way of barter to your mutual benefit. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 7
I have created him for My glory
The glory of God the end of man¡¦s creation and redemption
What am I?
For what purpose was I created? Am I answering the great end of my
existence?--are questions which should be frequently proposed by every rational
being.
I. THE GREAT END
OF JEHOVAH IN THE CREATION OF MAN WAS THE MANIFESTATION OF HIS OWN GLORY. By
the glory of God we understand the display of His Divine perfections.
II. IN THE SCHEME
OF HUMAN REDEMPTION THE GLORY OF GOD IS AGAIN STRIKINGLY MANIFESTED. The glory
of God appears--
1. In their redemption.
2. In the application of its blessings by the Holy Ghost--in the
spiritual renovation of man.
3. In the endeared relation into which those who have been thus
redeemed and sanctified are admitted. They are made the ¡§sons and daughters of
the Lord Almighty¡¨; and their disposition and character correspond with their
distinguished privileges.
III. THE GLORY OF
GOD IS THE GREAT END WHICH ALL THE PEOPLE OF GOD ARE TO SEEK TO PROMOTE.
1. By an increased acquaintance with the Divine perfections, as they
are manifested in the work of creation and redemption, and as they are revealed
in the Sacred Scriptures, and in the person and character of the Lord Jesus
Christ.
2. By a cordial reception of all that God has revealed and promised.
3. By cheerful obedience to His commands.
4. By active efforts in the service of God, and by an entire
consecration of all we have to Him. (Essex Remembrancer.)
Verse 10
Ye are My witnesses--What is a witness?
--One who testifies--who gives evidence, unfolds, clears up, makes plain, and
helps men toright decisions in cases of disputed claims, or where personal
integrity is assailed. There are cases on record where such men have been
thanked in complimentary terms by the judge, for the clear, firm,
straightforward way in which they have given evidence; and it has been seen
that but for that witness¡¦s knowledge of the facts of the case, and the
fearless manner in which he told the whole truth, as far as he knew, and
nothing but the truth, there would hare been a miscarriage of justice. And so,
on the other hand, record is supplied of the false swearing of witnesses,
whereby the innocent have been condemned and the guilty have triumphed. Nay
more, where the witness has been full of nervous fear, confusion, and
hesitancy, and has given his evidence in such a feeble, limping, contradictory
manner that his whole testimony has been discredited, and he has vitally
injured the cause he professed to serve, so that his friends sincerely wished
he had been at the Antipodes at the time instead of in the witness-box. A good
witness is of immense value and importance. The term ¡§witness¡¨ is a strong one,
one of the strongest, and throbs with life and energy. Standing out for the truth;
avowing, declaring firmly; unawed by fear, unmoved by flattery; inflexible to
all blandishments; above all price; whom money cannot buy, and sophistry cannot
disturb; who will tell the truth at any cost--these are some of the qualities
of a good witness. (J. Higgins.)
Witnesses
The term ¡§witnesses¡¨ is very large and full, and covers the entire
ground of evidences. All things in heaven and earth are full of voices bearing
witness for the living God. The whole universe, human history, governments,
philosophy, science, art, and institutions, are witnessing for God. But God
selects and addresses one class in the text. ¡§Ye,¡¨ men of Israel, ¡§are My
witnesses.¡¨ These words suggest the high honour, as well as the great
responsibility, of a Christian profession.
I. FOR WHOM DO YOU
WITNESS? God.
1. A primary qualification of a true witness is, an intelligent faith
in God. You are called upon to give evidence on behalf of another, but you know
little of him, only by repute and inference, and your knowledge of the case in
dispute is mainly circumstantial; then, you cannot give your evidence in that
clear, ready, candid, and telling manner that a friend can who knows the man
personally and closely, and who has the highest regard for his integrity and
uprightness, and who is well acquainted also with the whole case down to its
very minutia, and who has a clear, settled conviction that justice and right,
to the fullest extent, are on the side of his friend. Such a man speaks from
knowledge, as well as conviction; he testifies what he knows, and speaks what
he has seen; and when the case is heard you feel that your witnessing, compared
with his, is but as the drops to the ocean. So it is with the man who has only
an intellectual, as compared with the man who has a practical knowledge of God;
the latter can testify from personal acquaintance as well as unbounded faith.
2. Not only is faith needed to make you a successful witness, but
your courage will be tested in this daily testifying. You are placed in a world
whose temper and principles are hostile to sacred things, and while you witness
for God, your whole life will be a constant testifying against the world¡¦s
customs, and an open conflict with what it accounts its best possessions; and
if you will be a faithful and true witness you will often find yourself going
right in the teeth of its tastes, affections, and lusts, and you will discover
that the days of idolatry and martyrdom are not yet past, and that if you will
faithfully give your evidence for the pure and true, you will need a hero¡¦s
courage and a martyr¡¦s faith. You shall have your hours of rest and sweet
communings that you may grow strong to do and suffer the Father¡¦s will, but the
law of the kingdom is that you must gather in order that you may scatter. The very
things of which you are witnesses will show you what you may expect from men,
and what they will demand from you in courage and faith. For what do you
witness? God--His nature and claims; the Bible--its inspiration and
authenticity; Christ--His atoning sacrifice for sin, etc. Will such testimonies
as these win you thanks and praise from your fellows, or will they scatter
roses along your path?
3. See the dignity of this witnessing. ¡§My witnesses, saith the
Lord.¡¨
II. THE MANNER OF
THIS WITNESSING. How do men witness for God?
1. By the living voice.
2. By the eloquence of a holy life. This I take to be the most
powerful testimony, and touches the greatest number of agents.
3. By active service in His cause; and by His cause I mean all and
everything that in any way touches the true interests of the great human
family. Then, how wide the field of labour and service, and how loud the call
to the strong, the hardy, the daring. Witness for God, young men, by deeds of
noble chivalry; emulate your sires. Witness for God, ye strong men in Israel,
who stand to-day in the meridian of life, by faithfully devoting all the energy
and force and fire of your being to His blessed service. Witness for God, ye
fathers and mothers, as you sit in the pensive shades of evening, by recounting
His faithfulness to you throughout your day; the recital will inspire higher
hopes of nobler conquests in the younger soldiers of the Cross.
4. By patient resignation when called to suffer for the truth. The
prophets, the apostles, the reformers, the Huguenots, the Covenanters, the men
of the Mayflower, and some in our own country have stood bravely, and
endured their sufferings nobly when the fierce tide of persecution set in
against them. (C. H. spurgeon.)
Witnesses for Christ
I. TO BE WITNESS
FOR CHRIST IS A SPECIAL DUTY OF ALL CHRISTIANS.
1. That is an unwarranted limitation which practically relegates oral
witness-bearing to the ministry. The text was spoken to all Israel (Isaiah 43:2).
2. Christ and the Word of God claim the testimony of His people,
humble and great; and the duty has been recognised and performed.
3. A query, Have you been witnessing for the Lord?
II. EFFECTIVE
WITNESS-BEARING.
1. It is essential for a witness to have some definite knowledge or
experience, and to tell it.
2. The value of such testimony to a fact.
3. The help afforded by the Holy Ghost fur effective witness-bearing.
III. THE HUMILITY
AND THE HONOUR OF A WITNESS-BEARER FOR THE LORD.
1. How humble an appointment must this have seemed to the disciples
who, full of anticipations of the establishment by Christ of an earthly kingdom
transcending in its glory the kingdom of Solomon, were questioning which
¡§should be greatest.¡¨ Not to be a governor, or a judge, or treasurer, but
simply a witness! Is this a position too humble for you? Do you look down upon
it?
2. Yet what glory and honour belong to it! Into what company does it
introduce us! Of Christ, the faithful and true witness; of the Holy Spirit, who
shall testify of Christ; of the apostles, who were witnesses; and the martyrs.
And in eternity shall those who confess Him here be confessed of Him. Those who
suffer with Him for their testimony shall also reign with Him in His glory. (W.
P. Swartz.)
God¡¦s witnesses
I. SOME OF THE
QUESTIONS UPON WHICH CHRISTIANS ARE CALLED TO GIVE EVIDENCE IN FAVOUR OF THEIR
GOD. These questions are the most weighty which can be discussed.
1. One of the first is this, Is there such a thing now-a-days as a
distinct interposition of God on behalf of man, in answer to believing prayer?
The world ridicules the idea. Suppose I call Mr. George Muller, of Bristol. He
would say, ¡§Look at those three orphan houses, containing no less than one
thousand one hundred and fifty orphan children, who are entirely supported by
funds sent to me in answer to prayer. Look,¡¨ says he, ¡§at this fact, that when
the water was dried up in Bristol, and the waterworks were not able to serve
sufficient to the people, I, with my more than a thousand children dependent
upon me, never asked any man for a drop of water, but went on my knees before
God, and a farmer, who was neither directly nor indirectly asked by me, called
at my door the next hour and offered to bring us water; and when he ceased
because his supplies were dried up, instead of telling anybody, I went to my
God and told Him all about it, and another friend offered to let me fetch water
from his brook,¡¨ Muller is no solitary specimen; we can each of us tell of like
events in our own history.
2. There is a question, also, as to the ultimate results of present
affliction. The world holds as a theory, that if there be a God, He is very
often exceedingly unkind; that He is severe to the best of men, and that some
men are the victims of a cruel fate; that they are greatly to be pitied,
because they have to suffer much without compensating profit. Now, the
Christian holds, first of all, that the woes of sinners are punishments, and
are very different from the chastening sorrows of believers. Of these last he
believes that all things work together for good to them that love God. What is
your testimony with regard to this as a matter of experience? How have you
found it? I must speak for myself, and say, ¡§Before I was afflicted I went
astray, but now have I kept Thy word.¡¨ ¡§It is good for me that I have been
afflicted.¡¨ All of you, who have sounded the deeps of soul-trouble, and have
enjoyed the presence of Jesus, can distinctly testify the same.
3. A third point very much in dispute is as to the joyfulness of a
true believer¡¦s life. The world¡¦s theory is, that we are a very miserable set
of people who take to religion from the necessity of a naturally melancholy
disposition. What is your testimony, Christian? Well, we can say if we be
melancholy, joyous people must be very joyful indeed. I saw a Baptist minister
this week who was ¡§passing rich on forty rounds a year¡¨; owing no man anything.
I told him I hoped he would not die with the secret, for I should like to learn
the art of keeping house on forty pounds a year. But he said to me, when I
smiled at his salary, You see before you the happiest man out of heaven¡¨; and I
know I did too, for his face showed that he meant what he said. True godliness
is our natural element now that we have a new nature given us by the Spirit of
God.
4. Another point in dispute refers to the moral tendencies of
Christianity. There is a growing belief that the preaching of the doctrine of
free grace has a tendency to make men think little of sin, and that especially
the free invitations of the Gospel to the very vilest of sinners, and the
declaration that whoso believeth in Jesus shall be saved, has a tendency to
make men indulge in the worst of crimes. Our testimony is, and we speak
positively here, that there can be nothing which exerts so sanctifying an
influence upon the heart of man, as the doctrine of the love of God in Christ
Jesus. And if ye seek proofs, look around. When do you hate sin most? At the
foot of the Cross. When do you love holiness best? Is it not when you feel that
God has blotted out your sins like a cloud? No truth can so subdue the human
mind as the majesty of infinite love.
5. Again, it has been whispered--nay, it has been boasted--that the
Christian religion has reached its prime, and though it had an influence upon
the world at one time, it is now going down, and we want something a little
more juvenile and vigorous to stir the world and produce noble deeds, Now is
the time for true believers to vindicate the manliness and force of their
faith. It is not true that Christianity has lost its power; and we must make
this clear as noonday. The Gospel can nourish heroes as of old; it could
furnish martyrs to-morrow, if martyrs were required to garnish Smithfield.
There are still a host of facts to prove that the gospel has not lost its power
over the minds of men.
6. It is our daily business to be witnesses for God on another
question, as to whether or no faith in (he blood of Jesus Christ really can
give calm and peace to the mind. Our hallowed peace must be proof of that.
7. The last testimony we shall probably bear will answer the
question, whether Christ can help a man to die well or not. We will prove that
when the time comes; but how many there have been among us whose names we
venerate, who have died rejoicing in the love of Jesus.
II. SOME
SUGGESTIONS AS TO THE MODE OF WITNESSING.
1. You must witness if you be a Christian. You may try to shirk it if
you will, but you must witness, for you are sub poena: that is to say, you will suffer for it
if you do not.
2. Every witness is required to speak the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth. Speak the truth, but let your life be true as well as
your words. Live so that you need not be afraid to have the shutters taken
down, that men may look right through your actions. Tell out for God all the
truth as it is in Jesus, and let your life proclaim the whole teaching of
truth. Let it be nothing but the truth. I am afraid many Christians tell a
great deal which is not true; their life is contrary to their words; and though
they speak truth with their lips, they speak falsehoods with their hands.
Suppose, for instance, I draw a miserable face, and say, ¡§God¡¦s people are a
blessed people,¡¨ nobody believes me; and if I say ¡§Yes, religion has a
sanctifying influence upon its professors and possessors,¡¨ and put my hand into
my neighbour¡¦s pocket in any sort of way, who will believe my testimony? I may
have spoken the truth, but I am also speaking something that is not the truth,
and I am thus rendering my witness of very small effect.
3. When the witness is before the court, his direct evidence is
always the best. Many professing Christians only give witness of what they have
read in books; they have no vital, experimental acquaintance with the things of
God. Second-hand Christianity is one of the worst things in the world.
4. A witness must take care not to damage his own case. How many
professed witnesses for God make very telling witnesses the other way.
5. Every witness must expect to be cross-examined. ¡§He that is first
in his own cause,¡¨ says Solomon, ¡§seemeth just; but his neighbour cometh and
searcheth him.¡¨ You know how a counsel takes a man and turns him inside out,
and though he was one colour before, he looks quite another directly
afterwards. Now you, as God¡¦s witnesses, will be cross-examined. Watch,
therefore, carefully watch. Temptation will be put in your way: the devil will
cross-examine you. Yon say you love God; he will set carnal joys before you,
and see whether you cannot be decoyed from your love to God. You said, you
trusted in your heavenly Father; Providence will cross-examine you. A trial
will dash upon you. How now? Can you trust Him? You said, religion was a joyous
thing; a crushing misfortune will befall you. How now? Can you rejoice when the
fig-tree does not blossom, and the flocks are cut off, and the cattle are dead?
By this species of examination true men will be made manifest, but the deceiver
win be detected. What cross-examinations did the martyrs go through! What fiery
questions had they to answer!
III. THERE IS
ANOTHER WITNESS BESIDE YOU. ¡§Ye are My witnesses, and My Servant whom I have
chosen.¡¨ Who is that? Why, the Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ. Witnesses for
God are not solitary. When they seem alone, there is One with them whom
Nebuchadnezzar saw in the fiery furnace with the three holy children. ¡§The
fourth is like unto the Son of God.¡¨ ¡§Fear not,¡¨ Christ may well my to all His
faithful witnesses, ¡§I am with you, the faithful and true Witness.¡¨ Let us
remark, concerning Christ¡¦s life, that He witnessed the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth. Would you see God¡¦s truth? Observe how Jesus Christ,
in all His actions, with a sacred simplicity, with a transparent sincerity, writes
His heart out in His every act. What testimony you have to God¡¦s holiness in
the life of Christ! In Him was no sin. What witness-bearing, too, there is in
the life of Christ to Divine justice! Above all, read Christ¡¦s witness to God¡¦s
love. The entire circumference of Divine excellence is contained in the life of
Christ. You are to be witnesses for Christ, and Christ is to be a witness with
you. If you want to know how to discharge your duty, look at Him. (C.
H.Spurgeon.)
The church a testimony for God to the world
I. IT HAS EVER
BEEN A REPOSITORY OF THE SACRED DOCUMENTS--the sacred records of the existence
of prophecies long before the events to which they relate, of which they can
bring satisfactory evidence.
II. CHRISTIANS BY
HABITUALLY MEETING TOGETHER FOR DIVINE WORSHIP, FOR THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE
ORDINANCES OF THE CHURCH AND THE PREACHING OF THE GOSPEL, are perpetually
presenting a witness for God:
III. THE INDIVIDUAL
CHRISTIAN IS A ¡§LIVING EPISTLE.¡¨ (T. Binney, D. D.)
The Christian¡¦s all-out testimony for God
The individual believer, by mingling with the world day by
day--without ever speaking a word about religion, it may be--by what he is, and
by what he does, is bearing witness for God. By the holiness that marks the
man¡¦s life, others may learn something of the holiness of the God whom he
serves; by his integrity, by his high appreciation of the great principles of
eternal justice, he may learn something of the justice of God; by the
benevolence of the man, by the mode and kind of that benevolence, by his
yearning anxiety over the souls of men and the moral misery of the species, by
the devotion of his abilities to the removal of these, by his benevolent
attachment to those great institutions which are intended to diffuse the
knowledge of God¡¦s Word, men may learn something of that God who would have all
men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth; by his superiority
to worldly motives and things, and mere sensual gratifications, by his living
above the world, by enjoying a blessedness and placidity which worldly men can
never penetrate, they may learn something of the spirituality of God, and the
blessedness which God can communicate to those whom He makes His own. (T.
Binney, D. D.)
¡§Ye are My witnesses!¡¨--The special function of witness-bearing is
not confined to the Jewish people; but, by the express words of the Lord, it is
shared by the Church. The Church and the Holy Spirit together bear joint
witness to the death, resurrection, and eternal life of the Divine man. This is
also the function of the individual believer: not to argue and dispute, not to
demonstrate and prove, not to perform the part of the advocate; but to live in
direct contact with things which the Holy Ghost reveals to the pure and
childlike nature. And then to come forth attesting that these things are so.
Just as mathematical axioms have no need to be argued, but simply to be stated,
and the statement is sufficient to establish them, because of the affinity
between them and the construction of the human mind; so it is sufficient to
bear witness to truth, amid systems of falsehood and error. And directly it is
uttered, there is an assent in the conscience illumined by the Holy Spirit,
which rises up and declares it to be the very truth of God. There are three points
on which the Christian soul is called to give witness.
I. LET US WITNESS
TO A LOVE THAT NEVER TIRES. At the close of the previous chapter we have a
terrible picture of Israel as a people robbed and spoiled, snared in holes, and
hid in prison-houses; upon whom God was pouring the fury of His anger. Then
most unexpectedly God turns to them, and says, ¡§Fear not! thou art Mine; thou
hast been precious in My sight, and honourable and beloved.¡¨
1. ¡§Thou art Mine.¡¨ Our deepest emotions express themselves in the
simplest words.
2. ¡§Precious.¡¨ Preciousness is due to hardships undergone, purchase
money and time expended, or pains of workmanship; and each of these three
conditions has been marvellously exemplified in the dealings of thy God.
3. ¡§Honourable.¡¨ Demean thyself as one whom God delights to honour.
It ill becomes princes of the blood-royal to lie in the gutter.
4. ¡§Beloved.¡¨ In the darkest hours of life, when thy feet have almost
gone from under thee, and no sun, or moon, or stars appear, never doubt that
God¡¦s love is not less tenacious than that which suggested the epitaph on
Kingsley¡¦s tomb, ¡§We love; we have loved; we will love.¡¨ To know all this, and
to bear witness to it; to attest it in the teeth of adverse circumstances, of
bitter taunts, and of utter desolation; to persist in the affirmation amid the
cross-questioning of a cynical age; never to falter, never to listen to the
suggestion of doubt; never to allow the expression of the face to suggest that
God is hard in His dealings--this is the mission of the believer.
II. LET US WITNESS
TO A PURPOSE THAT NEVER FALTERS. God does not say, ¡§Think of what was done
yesterday¡¨; He goes back on the purposes of eternity; the deeds of Bethlehem
and Calvary; the everlasting covenant; the whole trend of His dealings with us.
Is it likely that a purpose reaching back into the blue azure of the past will
be lightly dropped? It is our duty to bear witness to the far-reach of a
purpose that moves in a slowly-ascending spiral to its end.
III. LET US WITNESS TO
A DELIVERANCE THAT NEVER DISAPPOINTS. We might have expected the verse would
run, ¡§Thou shalt never pass through the waters, or through the river; thou
shalt never have to walk through the fire!¡¨ But so far from this, it seems
taken as a matter of course that there will be the waters and the fire; the
overflowing floods of sorrow; the biting flame of sarcasm and hate. God¡¦s
people are not saved from trial, but in it. We must bear our testimony to this
also, that we may clear the character of God from the aspersions of the
ungodly. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Witnesses to God
The most High has many witnesses to Himself. His works. ¡§That Thy
name is great, Thy wondrous works declare.¡¨ Especially the heavens. They
¡§declare the glory of God.¡¨ His providential care of men. ¡§He left not Himself
without witness, in that He ¡§did good,¡¨ etc. The moral nature of men. ¡§Their
conscience also bearing witness,¡¨ etc. But His people are God¡¦s conscious,
voluntary, grateful, affectionate, and effective witnesses.
I. THE SUBSTANCE
AND MATTER OF OUR WITNESS. To what are we to testify?
1. To man¡¦s spiritual nature and destiny. Witness abounds to man¡¦s
bodily wants, in the arrangements for their supply; to his social nature, in
the institutions of civilised life; to his intellectual being, in books,
schools, and colleges; to his artistic faculties, in picture-galleries,
museums, etc.; and alas I to his evil nature and habits, in the courts of law,
the police and military forces, etc. It is the office of the Church in this
world to testify that man has a nature capable of knowing, loving, and serving,
his heavenly Father.
2. To God¡¦s being and character.
3. To the Gospel of Christ. ¡§Ye shall be witnesses unto Me,¡¨ said the
Lord Jesus to His disciples, before His ascension. To Christ¡¦s person,
character, and doctrine, His people are bound to testify. They whom the Lord
first commissioned, ¡§with great power gave witness to the resurrection of
Christ.¡¨ It is the privilege of Christians to tell of the provision made in
Jesus for the restoration of men to the Divine favour and image.
II. THE MODE OF OUR
WITNESS. How are God¡¦s people to bear the witness required?
1. By speech.
2. By the silent testimony of the life. An unworldly and self-denying
life, a gentle and compassionate spirit;--these are effective methods of
witnessing to a selfish and sinful world.
III. THE CHARACTER
OF OUR WITNESS.
1. Christians are competent witnesses, having a personal and
experimental knowledge of that to which they testify.
2. They are truthful witnesses. Their power lies in their testifying
to facts, not to fables, fictions, fancies.
3. They are consistent witnesses; there is no swerving from their
evidence; and there is an instructive harmony between their testimony and the
principles of their life.
4. They are bold and fearless witnesses. Religion is sometimes
unfashionable or unpopular.
IV. THE SPHERE OF
OUR WITNESS. To whom is this testimony to be borne?
1. Christians are called to be witnesses to one another; for mutual
edification.
2. To nominal, but erring and lukewarm disciples, who need the
powerful witness of a living Church.
3. To the unbelieving world. Here is the vast sphere of the Church¡¦s
labour.
Practical lessons--
1. Consider the high honour of the Christian¡¦s calling.
2. Remember the responsibility attaching to this office ¡§Freely ye
have received, freely give.¡¨
3. Let hearers of the Word receive and act upon the witness that is
borne. What heavier condemnation can there be than that of those to whom it
must be said,--¡§Ye receive not our witness!¡¨ (J. Radford Thomson, M. A.)
God¡¦s witnessess
(with Acts 5:32, ¡§We are witnesses¡¨):--
I. THE WITNESS
BORNE BY THE JEWS IS ONE OF THE MOST MARVELLOUS OF MIRACLES.
1. They stood out in the presence of the whole world; selected,
chosen, taught, disciplined, serrate
2. They were the recipients of the traditions of God. To them was
entrusted the sacred law, the symbolical representation of God¡¦s attributes,
and goodness.
3. They were the mediums of prophecy. Through them the Divine Will
was heard speaking in accents of warning, mercy, and love.
II. THE GENTILE
CHURCH WAS APPOINTED TO DEVELOP, CARRY ON, AND COMPLETE THE WORK BEGUN BY THE
Jews. The work entrusted to them is of infinite importance.
1. The Church is God¡¦s candlestick in the midst of our evil and dark
world. It bestows the radiance of everlasting light on all around.
2. The Church is God¡¦s sun, that warms the dead and cold hearts of
men into life. National life would freeze into eternal death were it not for
this agency.
3. The Church is the salt of the earth, keeping it from moral
putrefaction. Society would rot without, this antiseptic influence. (Homilist.)
Antropomorphism
Granting that there is a Divine Being of whom we can at best Know
exceedingly little, we have nothing to draw upon for our conceptions of Him but
the best and highest of the phenomena of the universe within reach of our
observation; and we have no language in which to express our conceptions but
that which is more, or less anthropomorphic. And it is not only necessary to do
this in order to satisfy our natural aspirations, but it is eminently becoming
so to do. For it accords best with the demands of reason, and also with our
instincts of piety and reverence. Anthropomorphic conceptions of God are not
therefore necessarily false because they are anthropomorphic; nor are they
necessarily false because they are very inadequate. They may be true as far as
they go, and may be trusted provisionally till more light and wider experience
enable us to relinquish them for truer conceptions. It is very important to
this argument to keep continually before our minds the fact of man¡¦s
superiority and supremacy over the whole portion of the universe within human
ken. With all its grandeur and glory and benignant power, we put the sun lower
in the scale of being than the poor, flail man who owes his life and all its
blessings to its heat and light. And why is this, if not because we have found
no trace in the sun of consciousness or intellect; still less of affection and
moral sense?
1. Man¡¦s superiority over other animals is admitted to consist
chiefly in the comparatively enormous preponderance of his reasoning
faculties--which have at length given rise to articulate language, to
literature and to abstract reasoning, to say nothing of the infinite variety
and number of skilful inventions.
2. Man is also distinguished from the lower animals by the possession
of a moral sense, which means not a mere category of things which he may, and
of things which he may not, do, but a sense that he is bound to do what is
believed to be right and because it is right, even though he may not personally
benefit by it.
3. Man is distinguished by the capacity for an altogether nobler
affection than that usually manifested by the other animals. It is true, they
share with us the possession of sexual and parental and sometimes of social
love, and under the influence of domestication are capable of the purest and
most devoted friendships, both for man and for their fellow-creatures; but man
is capable of the highest known form and degree of love, and has manifested
heroic devotion for his fellow-man such as no animals have ever shown.
4. Man is by nature religious, and though he himself is the noblest
being on earth, yet he persists in believing in some One infinitely higher than
himself, to whom, in some yet undefinable way, he and all creatures owe their
being, on whose bounty all things depend, whose will it is the main duty of
life to discover and obey, and who is conscious of our heart¡¦s reverence and
love. That man pictures to himself a God proves one of two things; either that
he is, in this particular, inferior or superior to the other animals. If there
be a God, corresponding however imperfectly with man¡¦s ideal, then it is a mark
of superiority to have imagined one; but if there be no God, it is a mark of
inferiority to have made such a frightful departure from the truth, to have
committed such a blunder. So long as external nature was regarded as superior,
it was natural and rational for man to conceive of the forms or forces of
nature as deities. But when the superiority of man dawned upon the human mind,
by reason of its own progress in knowledge and goodness, then the symbols of
deity were no longer to be drawn from the outer world, but from man himself,
his reason, his conscience, and his heart. Why? Because these were the highest
forms of existence known to him. So it must be Anthropomorphism or Atheism.
Make what provision he will mentally, make what concessions to his own
conscious infirmity, make what margin of error for inevitable ignorance, his
God must be like himself. So far like as to think, and to know and to be
capable of communion and affection with those who seek His face. Only let us
beware of rushing into the opposite error of supposing that the most perfect
man that ever lived is good enough or great enough to be a perfect
representation of God, who is as far above the ¡§brightest and best of the sons
of the morning¡¨ as the heavens are higher than the earth. There are grave
difficulties in the moral government of the world; in fact, if this world be
the end of existence for many living creatures, men included, there would be
much to shock our moral sense and lead us to impute either imbecility or
criminal injustice to the Author and Governor of the world. Now, we have two
means of surmounting these difficulties, but only through Anthropomorphism.
Witnesses for God
¡§Ye,¡¨ men of Judah, people of Israel, ¡§are My
witnesses¡¨--witnesses that I am, and witnesses of what I am. The nations round
about you worship idols. All the world hath corrupted itself, and gone astray,
and worships and serves the creatures more than the Creator. For more than a
thousand years ye have been My witnesses. Such is the force and import of our
text. But God has other witnesses likewise. ¡§The invisible things of Him, even
His eternal power and Godhead, are clearly seen, being revealed by the things
which He hath made.¡¨ We call on you, young Englishman and Englishwoman, for
your own souls¡¦ sake, for your country¡¦s sake, and for the world¡¦s sake, to
become witnesses for God. In order to which these three things are necessary--
I. THE KNOWLEDGE
OF GOD. If you would know Him you must study the Book in which He is revealed.
II. STRONG FAITH IN
GOD AND IN HIS CHRIST. Moses could not have witnessed for God as he did, nor
could Paul, nor Peter, without such faith. The morals and practices and spirit
of our age render a deep and abiding faith essential to a stable and successful
witnessing for God. Now, such faith you cannot have by merely wishing to have
it, or by sighing after it. It is born of light, and nursed in light. To be of
the highest, truest, strongest order, it must be both of the intellect and of
the heart.
III. A WHOLE-HEARTED
DECISION FOR GOD. ¡§Be a whole man in everything,¡¦¡¨ said Joseph John Gurney to
his son,--¡§a whole man in the playground and a whole man in the schoolroom.¡¨ We
must be whole men in our witnessing for God, not two-minded but one-minded, the
conscience not divided from the will, and the will not divided from the
conscience; the lips not divided from the heart, nor the heart from the lips,
nor the hands from either. Vacillation and halfheartedness will make our testimony
of none effect. There need be no roughness or ruggedness of character in order
to all this; Jesus was very gentle. The Christian, full of faith and of the
Holy Ghost, cannot be hid. (J. Kennedy, D. D.)
Witnesses for God
I. TO HIS TRUTH.
They know His truth; they have felt. His truth; they maintain His truth against
all opposition. His Word is truth, as Jesus Himself declared; and all God¡¦s
people, in all ages, are witnesses to His truth. It is a remarkable fact, but
it cannot be denied, that wherever the truth of Scripture hath taken hold of a
man¡¦s heart, in whatever part of the world he may live, he entertains
concerning the Scripture the very same opinion that his brother or sister does
in another part of the world. We all set to our seal, as we read this Book,
that God is certainly true.
II. TO THE POWER OF
HIS GRACE. You, as witnesses, say, Come and hear, all ye that fear God, and I
will tell you what He hath done for my soul.¡¨
III. TO THE EXERCISE
OF HIS GRACIOUS PROVIDENCE. (W. Curling, M. A.)
God¡¦s witnesses summoned to testify to the world
There is one important respect in which all objects in the
universe, from the atom to the archangel, unite--all are ¡§witnesses¡¨ for God.
The visible reveals the Invisible.
I. THE CHURCH OF
GOD IS SPECIALLY DESIGNED TO BE HIS WITNESS TO THE WORLD. The Jewish Church was
designed for this; a local stationary witness. Look at its geographical
position; it was central. Judaea was situated at the top of the Mediterranean,
and, like the sun in the centre of the solar system, it was always in the sight
of the nations. Zion, like the Pharos of the world, was always flinging its
light over the gross darkness of heathenism. When the fulness of time was come
the Christian Church was set up for the purpose of Christ its Founder. Jehovah
said, ¡§I have given him for a witness to the people.¡¨ He was the image of the
invisible God. He selected men--His disciples--for the same purpose to be
witnesses for God.
II. THE CHURCH IN
EVERY AGE HAS PROSPERED OR DECLINED IN PROPORTION AS IT HAS FULFILLED THIS
MISSION.
1. The period of its first and greatest activity was the season of
its greatest prosperity. The banners of the Cross floated over the altars of
idolatry, and caused it to triumph in every place.
2. The cessation of its activity was the cessation of its prosperity.
Witness the dark ages under the influence of a corrupt Christianity, a
Christianity heathenised by Rome.
3. Every return of the Church to its missionary activity has been
Divinely blessed.
III. ITS MOTIVES AND
ITS RESPONSIBILITY FOR FULFILLING ITS MISSION ARE GREATER NOW THAN EVER. The
first witnesses for Christ required no higher motive for duty than the command
of the risen Lord. He gave the command, and they went forth. But whilst there
is the same necessity for witnessing now as then, the wants of the world are
more urgent. The map of the world in the days of the disciples was only as a
map of a province compared to that which lies open to us. Look at it. What a
fearful expanse of darkness around, and that darkness how dense! What hideous
enormities does it conceal! By a very slight effort of the imagination we can
cause the hosts of evil to pass before us. First come the Jews out of all
nations under heaven, each one with a ¡§veil over his heart,¡¨ and stained with
the blood of the Just One. Next, nominal Christians by myriads. Then comes the
crescent of imposture, followed by Turkey and Persia. This reminds us of
another inducement, the testimony of the Gospel is Divinely adapted to them.
Each member of the Church should feel a solemn impression that he is a witness
for God. In connection with this there should be a heart-unity between all
witnesses, and a spirit of self-sacrificing liberality. (J. Harris, D. D.)
The witness of consistency
¡§Early in this year,¡¨ says a Canon of our Church, a recent
traveller in India, ¡§I stood by the side of one of our missionaries while he
preached to a crowd of natives in one of the largest cities in our Indian
Empire. I shall never forget the rapt attention with which he was listened to
up to a certain point. But all at once the eyes that had been so keenly fixed
upon him were withdrawn, and the men exchanged scornful smiles and murmurs, and
shook their heads in doubt, and I inquired the cause of this sudden change of
demeanour, and was told that the preacher had been describing the visible
fruits of conversion to God. He had described the Christian as temperate,
chaste, forgiving and forbearing, pure in heart and in life. But this was too
much for his hearers. They saw Christians day by day, and their observations
gave the lie to it, and they turned away from the preaching of the Word. ¡§A
native of high character and education¡¨ in ¡§another city¡¨ said to the same
clergyman, Let Christians only practise one-tenth of what they profess and
India would soon be converted. What we want from you is not more Christianity,
but more Christians.¡¨ (Church of England Pulpit.)
Practical witnessing for God
William Ewart Gladstone, while at Eton, attended a dinner at which
an indecent toast was proposed. When all the others rose to drink it he turned
his glass upside-down, and remained seated, burying his face in his hands..
Keith Falconer kept hung on the wall of his room at Harrow a roll of texts
which told every one quietly, yet distinctly, on whose side he was. (Sunday
School Chronicle.)
God¡¦s witnesses often inconsistent
The world not only does not believe us, but does not believe that
we ourselves believe what we say. I remember a very striking circumstance which
a neighbouring minister mentioned to me in proof of this. There was in the town
in which he preached a determined and avowed infidel, believing in neither
Christianity nor God. He saw this man one Sunday evening in the place of
worship. He was preaching on some of the great verities of the faith, and the
duties resulting therefrom. As he was the next morning passing the door of the
man, he was standing at it. He said: ¡§I saw you at worship last night, and was
rather surprised to see you there, because you don¡¦t believe what I was saying¡¨
¡§No,¡¨ says he; ¡§nor you either.¡¨ ¡§Indeed! No. Why, if I were to believe the
things you affirm to be true, which you set forth, and which are written in
your books, I should not know how to contain myself; I should feel their
importance so much that I should exhibit them wherever I went; I should not
know how to hold in the enthusiasm which they would excite. But I don¡¦t believe
them, nor do you, or you would be very different people from what you are.¡¨ (T.
Binney.)
The value of personal testimony
Many years ago now, before the Australian goldfields were opened,
a party of experts were sent up the country to explore the district and report
on the probability of gold being, found there. They made their survey, sent in
their report, gave it as their opinion that gold would be found, that there
were ¡§auriferous strata,¡¨ etc., but somehow or other no one was greatly
interested. Nobody disputed their conclusions, and nobody acted on them. But
some time after, one market day, some shepherd lads came down to Melbourne from
the bush with some lumps of yellow ore in their pockets. ¡§Why,¡¨ said those to
whom they showed it, ¡§that¡¦s gold! Where did you get it?¡¨ ¡§Oh¡¨! said they, ¡§we
got it up country; there¡¦s plenty of it up our way.¡¨ Next morning there was a
stampede--everyone that could raise a cart was off to the diggings. Now, my
brother, you may not be able to preach, but does your life show that you have
got the nuggets? (E. W. Moore.)
Verse 11
I, even I, am the Lord
Royal proclamation
I.
THE
OBJECT OF OUR WORSHIP. The heavenly majesty asserted by Himself. ¡§I am the
Lord.¡¨ A self-existent Being, contrasted with idols--dwelling in His own
eternity, independent, everlastingly immutable, the eternal Jehovah. Mark how
this glorious self-existent Being is subject to none, exists in Himself, the
source of all being, and subject to no other beings. Shall we, for a moment,
trifle in the presence of such a being? If I look a little further at this
glorious self-existing Being, as revealed in ¡§His¡¨ Word, I find ¡§Him¡¨
manifesting ¡§Himself¡¨ as sanctity itself inherent. Therefore, again and again,
He says to Israel of old, I will be sanctified before all people; and again,
¡§Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts.¡¨ Moreover, this glorious self-existent
Being, this source of all being, and subject to none either in heaven or in
earth, has made Himself known in the attribute of holiness by solemn oath. ¡§I
have sworn by My holiness that I will not lie unto David.¡¨ Moreover, if we
pause to think of His glorious attributes, all of them are expressly
supernatural, transcendently glorious, and Divine. Advance a step farther, to
notice the veneration and adoration to be given to this glorious Being in His Trinity
of Persons. The glorious self-existent Being is sovereign over all worlds.
II. THE EXCLUSIVE
CLAIM TO THE PREROGATIVE OF BEING A SAVIOUR. ¡§Besides Me there is no Saviour.¡¨
Some men make a Saviour of their priest. Some of their alms and their doings. Some
will make a part Saviour of Christ, and a part saviour of their own doings and
repentings and believings, and they lose both, and must be despised as
neutralists. But ¡§Beside Me,¡¨ the Eternal God the Lord, ¡§there is no Saviour¡¨
It was the Father¡¦s purpose of love that ordained salvation. Then, Christ, as a
Saviour, received salvation to centre entirely in Himself. This salvation is by
the Holy Ghost. Mark the unity of all the Divine Persons in this salvation,
which is exclusive. There is no other Saviour, consequently no salvation but in
our covenant God. (J. Irons.)
Verse 13
I will work, and who shall let it?
--
Salvation through judgment
The words (Isaiah 43:13) intimate that the salvation
foretold comes in the way of judgment. Jehovah will effectually intervene; and
when He does this, who can turn it back, so that it shall not be done? (F. Delitzsch,
D. D.)
A great work
I. THE WORKER AND
THE WORK TO BE DONE. The worker is God Himself. He ¡§worketh all things after
the counsel of His own will.¡¨ And the work which He hath purposed with regard
to the salvation of His people is to gather together in one the children of God
which are scattered abroad. There are, however, subordinate workers whom God
employs for this purpose--ministers of the Gospel, whose chief work lies in the
endeavour to win souls to Christ, who are called labourers together with
God--workers together with Him; and it is theirs to preach the Word, the
substance of which Word is Christ--to invite sinners to Christ by showing His
excellency and dignity as the Son of God, His tenderness and sympathy as the
Son of man--by showing to sinners the perfection of His redeeming work. But as
ministers are fellow-workers together with God by virtue of their office, so
may private Christians be.
II. THE FIELD OF
WORK. God¡¦s field of labour is everywhere. His object is to gather His people
together who are still lying in darkness and sin. For this glorious end He
employs various means. His means are directed particularly to individuals.
III. THE CENTRE IN
WHOM THE WORK IS COMPLETE. This, in one word, is Christ. It is the simple
knowledge of a dependence upon Christ¡¦s person by which God works out His
purpose of salvation. But I should not be preaching to you the whole counsel of
God if I omitted to put before you also the side of your responsibility. (J.
W. Reeve, M. A.)
Verse 19
Behold, I will do a new thing
The future better than the past
How dear to the heart of the Israelites was the remembrance of the
nation¡¦s deliverance from Egypt and their journey to the Land of Promise! To
those great events the religious teachers of the people continually turned for
illustrations and proofs of God¡¦s greatness and power and goodness and love.
From this well used and familiar store of imagery the figurative expressions of
the text are derived. Dropping the figures put of sight for a moment, we may
say this is a gracious promise of suitable help and supply, even under
circumstances most difficult and precarious. It is intended as an encouragement
to repentance and to renewed consecration to God. It is the old message that
God will give to all who look to Him everything that is requisite for spiritual
progress and success. In presence of every untried enterprise; on the threshold
of every unknown experience; in the hearing of every Divine call, this promise
floats as a banner before the soldier¡¦s eye, and rings as the sound of a
trumpet rings upon the soldier¡¦s heart. (T. Stephenson.)
¡§A new thing¡¨
1. This messenger of God proclaims, and he may be regarded as in this
respect representing all God¡¦s messengers of grace to the world, ¡§Look not on
the former things¡¨--listen not now, in these moments of penitence and prayer,
to those threatening voices which tell of an inexorable law of repetition, of
the relentless working out of a foregone conclusion and appointed destiny--old
things may pass away, all things may become new. ¡§Behold, I will do a new
thing!¡¨
2. This ¡§new thing,¡¨ in the instance before us, is compared with the
opening of a path in the wilderness, and the supply of rivers of waters in the
desert. The pathless wilderness of the future is before us--no foot has trodden
it,--it is beset by unknown difficulties and unseen perils; but even their God
will make a way, a road upon which His people shall travel in security and with
unerring certainty to their appointed destination. And although the heat of the
sun may beat fiercely down upon that path, drying up every particle of moisture
and consuming all pleasant vegetation, so that it may seem most unlikely that
life can be sustained in the journey across such an arid waste, God can and
will provide all that is needed; and rivers of water, an abundant and
continuous supply, shall be found there. Preparation and guidance! These are
the ideas involved in the promise to make a path. Difficulty, peril, privation!
These are the thoughts which associate themselves with the desert and the
wilderness. (T. Stephenson.)
The new thing
This doing a new thing is the very achievement which many voices
of high authority are assuring us, just now, is impossible with God. The power
that carries on the universe, they tell us, never does a ¡§new thing.¡¨ What
seems to us the new is only the old revealing itself in an unexpected way.
Continuity is the law that governs all things. It is the language of those
whose symbol of deity is an interrogation mark, or the sign for an unknown
quantity, or a fetter, as they may happen to prefer. It is a phase of thought
by no means modern, although sometimes imagined to be such. It never found more
telling expression anywhere than at the lips of one who flourished a thousand
years before Christ, more or less, and who put it thus: ¡§The thing that hath been, it is that which
shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done, and there is no
new thing under the sun. Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is
new?¡¨ I suggest that we take up the ancient challenge. I will mention some of
the ways in which Christ may be said to have broken in upon the monotony and
uniformity of human life and thought with something new. He brought us--
I. A NEW LIKENESS
OF GOD.
II. THE TRUTH ABOUT
THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS.
III. A NEW HOPE. (W.
R. Huntington, D. D.)
Verse 20
The beast of the field shall honour Me
Hope respecting the profanest persons
I have sometimes laid hold of this text, and have been comforted
by it concerning the conversion of the very worst of men.
Some people say, ¡§What is the good of going among blasphemers and profane
persons with the Word of God?¡¨ Well, if the beast of the field, and the
dragons, and the owls shall honour Him, we need never think of leaving any of
the sons of men to perish. It is not what they are, but what God is, that
should give us confidence concerning them. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Verse 21
This people have I formed for Myself
The altering of God¡¦s purpose
It is the burden of the Book of Deuteronomy that God chose the
seed of Abraham to be a peculiar nation unto Himself above all peoples on the
face of the earth.
Those two words ¡§people¡¨ and ¡§inheritance¡¨ are perpetually linked together in
the Bible. Jehovah¡¦s design is clearly declared in the significant
Passage--¡§They shall show forth My praise.¡¨ By a long process of careful
training it was His intention so to form the people that their history should
turn men¡¦s thoughts to the glory and beauty of His own nature, and elicit
perpetual adoration and praise. On three separate occasions they thwarted
Jehovah. They came nigh unto cursing instead of praising. They gave men false
conceptions of His character. And on three separate occasions they had to learn
the temporary suspension and postponement of His purpose.
1. In the wilderness they murmured against Him, and were sent back to
wander in the waste for forty years.
2. After nineteen kings had ruled from David¡¦s throne, they were
exiled to Babylon for seventy years.
3. Since the rejection of the Beloved Son, they have been driven into
all the world to be a by-word and a proverb. For years God¡¦s purpose has been
under arrest. It shall, no doubt, be ultimately fulfilled. This change of
purpose on the part of God has been the opening of the door for us; and the
words which were originally addressed to Israel are now applicable to
ourselves. By the lips of the apostles Paul and Peter we are told that Jesus
gave Himself for us, to redeem us and to purify us unto Himself, a people for
His own possession; so that we are an elect race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, a people for God¡¦s own possession, that we may show forth the praises
of Him who called us out of darkness into His marvellous light. We are what we
are, that we may show forth God¡¦s praises; but if we fail to realise His ideal,
for us, too, there will be the inevitable postponement of His purpose.
I. THE PURPOSE OF
GOD. ¡§That they should show forth My praise.¡¨ We may promote God¡¦s praise by
suffering, as much as by active service in every life there are three regions.
That of the light, where duty is clearly defined; that of the dark, where wrong
is no less clearly marked; and a great borderland of twilight, where there is
no certainty, where dividing lines are not distinct, and where each man must be
fully persuaded for himself. It is here, however, that the temper of the soul
is tested.
II. THE POSSIBLE
THWARTING OF HIS PURPOSE. ¡§Ye shall know the revoking of My promise¡¨ (Numbers 14:34, R.V., marg.). There is
nothing more terrible in the history of a soul than to frustrate the Divine
ideal in its creation and redemption, and to prevent God deriving from us that
for which He saved us.
1. Prayerlessness (verse 22). Nothing is a surer gauge of our
spiritual state than our prayers.
2. Neglect of little things (verse 23). The people were probably
careful of the larger matters of Jewish ritual, but neglectful of the smaller
details. None of us goes wrong at first in the breach of the great obligations
of the law.
3. Lack of sweetness. ¡§Thou hast bought Me no sweet cane¡¨ (verse 24).
It is possible to do right things from a hard sense of legalism, in which the
sweetness and lovableness of true religion are painfully wanting. Many are the
instances of this change of purpose. David substituted for Saul; Solomon for
Adonijah; the Church for the Hebrew people; Western for Eastern Christianity;
the Moravians and Lollards for the established Churches of their time.
III. THE FULFILMENT
OF GOD¡¦S PURPOSE THROUGH OUR PAIN. God¡¦s purpose cannot be ultimately set
aside. So with Israel, and with each of us. But the cost, how enormous! (F.
B. Meyer B. A.)
The chief end of man
1. God, who made all the lower creatures for some special use,
assuredly did not make man, and endow him with those noble powers, without a
grand distinctive design or end worthy of Himself and them.
2. This end cannot possibly be anything bounded by his transitory
life.
3. The end for which chiefly we were made must needs be that which
the Scriptures tell of:
¡§This people have I formed for Myself; they shall show forth My praise,¡¨--even
to know the ever-blessed God; to serve God; to honour, love God; to enjoy God;
and to be everlastingly blessed in the knowledge, service, and enjoyment of
Him.
The delight of God in forming a people for Himself
In the good work of forming a people for Himself, God has been
engaged from the beginning. The subjects of it have been more numerous in some
periods than in others; but in every age He has created a seed to serve Him.
And in future times--when He who sits on the throne shall ¡§make all things
new¡¨--this people shall abound in number, and ¡§flourish like grass of
theearth.¡¨ And what a thought is this, that in us, if we be indeed new creatures,
God delights.
I. The first
ground of the Divine satisfaction in this people which I mention arises from
THE NATURE OF THE WORK PERFORMED, the character of the effect produced. The
effect produced by the forming power of God is--a people on whose immortal
spirits His image is impressed, the chief features of which are--knowledge,
righteousness, and holiness,--a people enlightened and guided by heavenly
truth, sanctified and regulated by Divine love,--a people assimilated to God in
understanding and heart, in purpose, in action, in blessedness. If a person be
not the partaker of a Divine nature, the most amiable and eminent qualities
which he may possess can ultimately contribute only to increase his capacities
and his means of doing evil, and to render him pre-eminent in disgrace and in
misery.
II. In forming a
people for Himself, God gives AN ILLUSTRIOUS DISPLAY OF HIS GLORY. In no work
has He communicated so much of Himself, has He given so luminous and extensive
a display of His glory, as in that which we are now contemplating, viewed in
its manifold relations. Advert to His sovereignty and His power, both which the
text obviously suggests.
III. God delights in
forming a people for Himself, because He thus GLORIFIES HIS SON. He bears
testimony to the dignity of His person, to the worth of His sacrifice, to the
efficacy of His mediation.
IV. GOD FORMS A
PEOPLE FOR HIMSELF, THAT THEY MAY SHOW FORTH HIS PRAISE and for this reason
also He delights in them. He creates them anew in Christ, not merely that He
may display His perfections in the production of so excellent an effect, but
that they may contemplate and adore the excellencies which He thus manifests;
not merely that they may be a mirror to reflect the splendour of His glory to
others, but that they themselves may utter abundantly its praises. They praise
Him with their hearts. They praise Him with their lips, by formal acts of
devotion; by the celebration of His ordinances; by the public confession of His
name; by commending His service to others; by ordering their speech in His
fear, and to the use of edifying. And they praise Him with their lives, by
avoiding what He forbids, by doing what He requires, by submitting to what He
inflicts; and thus do homage to His authority, wisdom, and love.
V. God rejoiceth
over this people, because HE DELIGHTS IN THEIR HAPPINESS. (J. Stark.)
Showing forth God¡¦s praise
It has been said that the word translated ¡§praise¡¨ is from the
same root as ¡§Hallel¡¨ in ¡§Hallelujah,¡¨ and that it means, first, a clear and
shining light; next, a sweet flute-like sound: from which we learn that the people of God
are to reflect His glory until it shines from their lives, attracting others to
it; and that they are to speak His praise in resonant and harmonious sounds
that shall arrest and attract the listening ear. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
Verse 22
But thou hast not called upon Me, O Jacob
Insincerity in religion
It is a common observation that there is very little sincerity in
the world.
We are now concerned with insincerity of a deeper and more serious
character,--insincerity in religion. I propose to offer some remarks which may
serve to detect a mere formal profession of religion. The subject on which I
shall chiefly remark is the habit and enjoyment of secret prayer.
I. MANY HAVE
CONTINUED FOR A WHILE IN HABITS OF SECRET PRAYER, AND YET ARE ONLY FORMAL
PROFESSORS.
II. MERE FORMAL
PROFESSORS AFTER AWHILE LEAVE OFF PRAYER IN A GREAT DEGREE.
III. It is evident
that these formal worshippers are utterly deceived in thinking they are
converted: THIS WEARINESS IN PRAYER SHOWS THE CHANGE WAS NOT REAL. How are we
to distinguish the feelings of a mere formalist from the presence of God¡¦s
renovating Spirit?
1. They have not the spirit of prayer. Theirs is not prayer
suggested, inspired by God¡¦s Holy Spirit.
2. Mere professors, being deficient in secret prayer, soon fall back
again into their former sins and worldliness.
3. It is utterly impossible for you to be saved so long as you live
in neglect of prayer.
We offer four motives for holy perseverance in prayer.
1. It is wholly necessary for your salvation. ¡§If any man draw back,
My soul hath no pleasure in him.¡¨
2. Take heed to yourselves, and be exceedingly watchful, that you may
persevere in this duty, and maintain the spirit of vigorous piety. Let us never
seek to shelter ourselves under mere doctrines, such as, true saints shall
persevere.
3. To urge you to perseverance in the duty of secret prayer, think
how much you need the help of the Spirit of God.
4. The fourth motive for perseverance in fervent prayer is, the great
advantages that result from it. (W. B. Mackenzie, B. A.)
A fast sermon
There are two distinct charges--
1. A neglect of prayer.
2. Growing weary of God.
The point is this:
people are at a dangerous pass when they begin to neglect prayer. Eliphaz
layeth it as a heavy charge upon Job (Job 15:4): ¡§Surely thou restrainest prayer before
God.¡¨ When conscience is clamorous, wants pressing, and yet men cannot find the
heart to go to God, it is a sad case. So the heathen are described to be the
families that call not upon His name (Jeremiah 10:25); that is, that do not
acknowledge and worship Him. ¡§The workers of iniquity,¡¨ of what religion soever
they profess themselves to he, ¡§they call not upon the Lord¡¨ (Psalms 14:4). The evil of this will
appear if we consider--
I. WHY THE DUTY
WAS APPOINTED.
1. It is a notable part of God¡¦s worship, or a serious calling to
mind His presence and attributes. To withdraw from prayer is to withdraw from
God; and to be unwilling to pray is to be unwilling to draw nigh to God, or to
have any serious thoughts of His being and attributes.
2. It is a profession of our dependence.
3. It is a duty wherein the mysteries of our most holy faith are reduced
to practice. There are two great mysteries in the Christian religion--the
doctrine of the Trinity, and the mediation of the Son of God.
4. One special end of prayer is to nourish communion and familiarity
between God and us; for it is the converse of a loving soul with God, between
whom there is a mutual complacency.
5. Prayer is required to preserve in us a sense of our duty, and to
keep the heart in better frame.
6. To engage our affections to heavenly things.
7. To be a means of comfort and spiritual refreshing. The soul is
disburdened of trouble by this kind of utterance.
II. THE CAUSES WHY
MEN NEGLECT IT.
1. Atheism is at the root. When men neglect prayer, either they
believe there is no God or no providence.
2. Security.
3. Coldness in religion and weariness of God.
4. Want of peace breeds loathness and backwardness, as David hung off
Psalms 32:3) till he had recovered his
peace.
5. Want of spiritual strength. He that hath lame joints cannot
delight in exercise which is a pleasure to them that are strong. (T. Manton,
D. D.)
Thou hast been weary of
Me, O Israel
Weary of God
Marvellous words! We are not surprised to find God saying to us,
¡§Thou hast wearied Me¡¨; but it is astonishing that God, to His own people,
should complain, ¡§Thou hast been weary of Me.¡¨ We are not astonished that the
creature wearies of the creature, man of man, saint of saint. This is in the
very nature of things; it arises from the limitation of the creature¡¦s powers
and resources: no
creature can be to another what every creature wants. God in Christ alone can
slake the thirst and meet the hunger of our needy souls, and it is worse than
useless for men to try to take the place of God in their ministrations and
relations to each other. And that God should stoop to say this is also
marvellous. Many of you would be too proud to make this acknowledgment if you
were placed in a similar position with respect to your fellow-creatures; but
here is God reasoning with those whose hearts have wandered from Him, and
saying, with all the fidelity of a father, and the pleading tenderness of a
mother, ¡§Thou hast been weary of Me, O Israel.¡¨ Many a parent may learn of God
even in such matters as rebuke and chastisement. The power of rebuke is very
intimately connected with the spirit in which it is administered; you may so
rebuke a fault in a child as, by the very rebuking, to attach the child more
strongly to yourself; or you may so rebuke as to increase the distance between
your child and yourself, and at the same time to confirm him in his fault.
Listen to God¡¦s rebukes, and be ¡§followers of God, as dear children.¡¨ The form
in which this being weary of God showed itself was partly the restraint of
prayer. ¡§Thou hast not called upon Me, O Jacob; but thou hast been weary of Me,
O Israel.¡¨ It is very likely that the form of prayer was kept up; yet God says,
¡§Thou hast not called upon Me.¡¨ The day was when they had called upon God
first, and upon God last. But now they restrained prayer, and they tried to
carry their burdens by the independent strength (and their strength was
weakness) of their own shoulders; or they tried to bear their sorrows with the
sympathy and assistance which their fellow-creatures and their fellow-saints
could administer. God noticed this conduct of His people, and He rebuked it.
And not only in the restraint of prayer was this weariness manifested, but also
in the neglect of sacrifice; in indifference towards the ordinances of God, and
carelessness in the worship of God; in disregard to the will of God; and also
in fretful discontent under the dispensations of God (Malachi 1:2.). The prophet here
represents Israel as sent into captivity, and God as justifying His procedure
on the ground of Israel s own spirit and conduct. It is a fault common to God¡¦s
saints.
I. THE NATURE OF
THIS EVIL. We have already indicated it, but we may put it in another light. We
may show it, for example, in contrast. This people, God says, ¡§have I formed
for myself; they shall show forth My praise.¡¨ He made us in His own image, that
we might reflect Himself, and in the sight of which we might rejoice. And He
made us in His own image, that we might reflect Him to each other and to other
people; while, for the same object He redeems us. God, in redeeming us, forms
us for Himself, that we should love Him; that we should trust Him; that we
should honour Him, and that we should try to please and glorify Him. And we
realise the work which our blessed Saviour has wrought for us, and which the
Spirit of God is now working within us, when we are able to say, ¡§I will
rejoice in the God of my salvation.¡¨ Now, what is it to be weary of God? It is
to desire to break the connection that exists between us and God. It is to be
impatient of continued connection with Him; to be tired of calling upon Him;
tired of thinking of Him; tired of trusting Him; tired of waiting for Him;
tired of serving Him. I know not a better illustration than that which is
supplied by the first part of the parable of the Prodigal Son.
II. ITS
MANIFESTATIONS AND DEVELOPMENT.
1. This weariness is first shown by formality in Divine worship.
2. It then shows itself in the outward neglect of Divine
requirements. Declension begins in the heart, and shows itself first in
formality, and then the steps between formality and the outward neglect of
Divine requirements are not very many.
3. Then follows, not looking to God for aid and succour. The man depends
more upon himself than he ought to depend, or he looks more to his
fellow-creatures than he had been accustomed to look.
III. WHAT IS THE
OCCASION OF THE MANIFESTATION OF THIS WEARINESS? You will generally find one of
the following things--disappointed hope, the endurance of affliction, or the
prosperity of the wicked.
IV. ITS CAUSES. You
must be aware of the distinction between an occasion and a cause. God¡¦s
dispensations towards Pharaoh, as we are told, hardened his heart. They were
the occasions of this, but the cause was not in God; neither was the cause in
the dispensation of God--the cause was in Pharaoh. Unless Pharaoh had possessed
a hardened heart, those dispensations of Divine providence, instead of
increasing this obduracy, would have produced a totally different state of
soul. The same dispensations have done it, as in the case of Nineveh; when
Nineveh was threatened, Nineveh repented. The cause is to be found either in
the absence of love or in the feebleness of love.
V. THE BITTER FRUITS
of this weariness. God sees it; and He cannot see it without feeling it. God is
angry, and He corrects; and He corrects so as to make the chastisement answer
to the sin. The man has, to a certain extent, withdrawn from God, and God
withdraws from the man. He deprives the man of whatever influences are still
tending to promote his peace and joy and rest. And, of course, if the heart be
alive, if it be a quickened heart, this state is one of great misery, until the
soul is restored to God. Where there is not life, you find that the case gets
worse and worse, and that very frequently men fall from this weariness into
scepticism, and into atheism.
VI. THE MEANS OF
PREVENTION. Ejecting the first hard thoughts of God; not yielding for a moment
to indolence in the service of God; comprehension (so far as we can comprehend)
of the principles, and of the general plan of the Divine Government, so as not
to be expecting here that which God has given us no reason to hope for here;
following Christ implicitly in the conduct of the spirit towards God; and
cherishing most sacredly the influences of the Holy Spirit.
VII. When you have
fallen into this evil state, WHAT IS THE CURE?
1. Full confession of the weariness. Be willing to speak of it as God
speaks of it; to see it as God sees it; and to condemn it as God condemns it.
Call it weariness of your merciful Father--weariness of your best and kindest
friend.
2. Admission of the Divine goodness in the correction by which you
are made sensible of your weariness.
3. Return to a careful observance of God¡¦s ordinances and precepts,
the obtaining of pardon, and the assurance of forgiveness. While you are in
doubt about pardon with reference to this sin, you will find yourselves keeping
at a distance from God. This subject is suitable for self-examination. Are
there any signs of this weariness of God in you? (S. Martin.)
Weary of God
To be weary of God is to be weary of His worship and service. It
is as sad a character as can be given, either of persons or of a people, to say
that they are weary of God.
I. THE NATURE OF
THE EVIL. Weariness in the body noteth a deficiency of strength, no more mind
to work; in the soul, a falling from God, and we have no mind to His service,
which is either partial or total.
1. Partial. When the heart is more alienated from God than before,
and all our respects to Him grow burdensome and grievous, and the heart begins
to repine at everything we do for Him (Malachi 1:13; Amos 8:5).
2. Total when not only the power of religion is abated, but the very
profession of it is cast off.
II. IT IS INCIDENT
SOMETIMES TO PERSONS CONSIDERED IN THEIR SINGLE CAPACITY SOMETIMES TO A PEOPLE
CONSIDERED IN THEIR COMMUNITY.
1. To persons considered apart, and in their single capacity.
2. It is incident to a people considered in their community.
Usually religion is changed in a nation upon two grounds--
(a) Change of persons. When good old zealous men are gone the stage is
shifted, and there cometh on a new scene of acts and actors; one generation
passeth, and another cometh.
(b) Change of interests. When it is for their own interest to own God,
men think they can never bind themselves fast enough to Him; but when the
posture of interest is changed, God is laid aside, they grow weary of God; they
deal treacherously with the Lord, and walk willingly after the commandment (Hosea 5:7; Hosea 5:11).
III. THE CAUSES WHY
A PEOPLE GROW WEARY OF GOD. Besides those general causes, these may be added--
1. Want of love to God.
2. We are too much led by sense; and if we have not present
satisfaction, we soon grow weary of religion.
3. It argueth too much love of the world, which by long importunity
prevaileth with us to forsake God, and grow dead and cold in religion 2 Timothy 4:10).
4. It comes from indulgence to the ease of the flesh. As bodily
weariness is most incident to the lazy, so is spiritual weariness to those who
do not rouse up themselves.
5. Impatience of troubles, and the manifold discourage merits we meet
with in the way to heaven.
IV. THE EFFECTS.
1. Boldness in sinning.
2. More coldness in duties of worship. Either it is omitted or
performed perfunctorily, and in a careless, stupid manner.
3. Less care and study to please God.
V. What a sad
state of soul it is appeareth--
1. By the heinousness of the sin.
2. The terribleness of the judgment.
Verse 23-24
Thou hast not brought Me the small cattle
Failure in religious details
Failure in religious details may we not ask whether some emphasis
may not be laid upon the designation ¡§the small cattle¡¨?
Do not many men fail in religious details? They are emphatic in their
stupendous word-creed, but they do not bless some little child on the road to
church, or bring some wandering soul to the Church home. We do certain great or
conspicuous things, and we forget the small cattle, the little offerings and
tributes. Every omission is noticed (Isaiah 43:24). Does God care for our
sweet cane? Does He like to see us spending a trifle upon some cane stick that
we may take it and offer it as if it were a flower? He hath no need of any
service of the kind; yet it pleases Him that we should with some small piece of
money buy sweet cane. Observe how He notes the omissions! This might be the
very voice of Christ, who said to Simon the Pharisee, ¡§I entered into thine
house, thou gavest Me no water for My feet; but she hath washed My feet with
tears, and wiped them with the hairs of her head. Thou gavest Me no kiss: but this woman since
the time I came in hath not ceased to kiss My feet. My head with oil thou didst
not anoint: but
this woman hath anointed My feet with ointment.¡¨ What an eye is the eye of
Omniscience! It notices every slip and flaw and omission. That would, indeed,
be a miserable declaration to make if it stood alone; but it only leads to the
fuller declaration that it notices every cup of cold water, every widow¡¦s gift,
every child¡¦s service. God is not unrighteous to forget your work of faith and
labour of love. (J. Parker, D. D.)
God and His people a contrast
In one of those antithetical clauses, or ¡§balances of words,¡¨ so
frequent in Isaiah, He thus contrasts His own and His people¡¦s doings (verse
23): ¡§I have not
burdened thee in exacting oblations; I have not wearied thee in demanding
incense.¡¨. . . ¡§But thou hast burdened Me with thy sins; thou hast wearied Me
with thine iniquities¡¨ (verse 24). (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
Verse 24
Thou hast bought Me no sweet cane
Divine reproach
I.
THE
GROUND ON WHICH ISRAEL IS REPROACHED. Sweet cane, or calamus, is an aromatic
reed which was an exotic in Palestine, and is chiefly to be found in India. The
demand for sweet cane was great, because it formed an ingredient of the incense
in most countries where incense was used. It was one of the things which could
not be obtained by barter. The charge is, ¡§You do not neglect the offices of
religion, but you perform them carelessly; you do not withhold your offerings,
but you do not offer of your best.¡¨ Bad is the best that man has to offer to
God; but less than our best God will not accept.
II. WHEN DID THE
KING ETERNAL, IMMORTAL, INVISIBLE, SERVE? When was God, the Omnipotent, wearied
with our iniquities? When did the Judge of the earth blot out our sins? We,
enlightened by the Gospel, can give an answer which Israel of old could not. We
answer, ¡§When the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.¡¨ He came to serve,
and when we think of Him, the God-man, serving under the law, is it possible
for us to ask, in the spirit of the slave, How little can I render unto the
Lord for all His benefits?--what is the least that He demands, the minimum of
duty? The great principle is this, that we never offer unto the Lord what costs
us nothing, or what involves no thought or trouble. He will not accept the
refuse at our hands. And this principle we are to carry out in all that relates
to our moral conduct and religious life. It is applicable to our private
devotions as well as to our public services. It is implied in our Lord¡¦s
injunction, ¡§Seek ye first the kingdom of God,¡¨ etc. (W. F. Hook, D.
D.)
Verse 25
I, even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions
Pardoning mercy made radiant
As in olden times jewellers were wont to set their most precious
gems in casings of a very inferior nature--and that wisely, in order that the
intrinsic lustre of the jewel might shine forth more brilliant from the
contrast--so doth the Word of God delight to place the long-suffering mercy of
our God in the settings of man¡¦s iniquity and ingratitude, in order that the
most lustrous jewel in God¡¦s all-radiant diadem--even mercy--might glitter the
more brilliantly from its immediate contact with the black foil spots of man¡¦s
sin.
(F. F.Goold, M. A.)
Forgiveness
I. THE RECIPIENTS
OF MERCY. Look at the 22 nd verse, and you will see--
1. That they were prayerless people.
2. They were despisers of religion. ¡§Thou hast been weary of Me, O
Israel.¡¨
3. Thankless people. ¡§Thou hast not brought Me the small cattle of
thy burnt-offerings.¡¨
4. A useless people. Neither hast thou filled Me with the fat, etc.
5. There are some who may be termed sanctuary sinners--sinners in
Zion, and these are the worst of sinners.
6. We have here men who had wearied God: ¡§Thou hast made Me to serve with thy sins,
thou hast wearied Me with thine iniquities.¡¨
II. THE DEED OF
MERCY. It is a deed of forgiveness.
1. A Divine forgiveness. ¡§I, even I, am He.¡¨ Divine pardon is the
only forgiveness possible; for no one can remit sin but God only.
2. Surprising forgiveness; for the text speaks as if God Himself were
surprised that such sins should be remitted: ¡§I, even I¡¨; it is so surprising that it is
repeated in this way, lest any of us should doubt it.
3. A present forgiveness.
4. A complete forgiveness. The bond is destroyed, and He will not
demand payment again.
III. THE REASON FOR
MERCY. Says one poor sinner, ¡§Why should God forgive me? I am sure there is no
reason why He should, for I have never done anything to deserve His mercy.¡¨
Hear what God says, ¡§I am not about to forgive you for your own sake, but for
My own sake.¡¨ ¡§But, Lord, I shall not be thankful enough.¡¨ ¡§I am not about to
pardon you because of your gratitude, but for My name¡¦s sake.¡¨ ¡§But, Lord, if I
am taken into Thy Church, I can do very little for Thy cause in future years,
for I have spent my best days in the devil¡¦s service; surely the impure dregs
of my life cannot be sweet to Thee, O God.¡¨ ¡§I will not engage to forgive you
for your sake, but for My own; I do not want you,¡¨ says God; ¡§I can do as well
without you as with you. I forgive you, therefore, for My own sake.¡¨ Is there
no hope for a guilty sinner here?
IV. THE PROMISE OF
MERCY. ¡§I will not remember thy sins.¡¨ Is it possible for God to forget? Not as
to the absolute fact of the committal of the deed, but there are senses in
which the expression is entirely accurate.
1. He will not exact punishment for them when we come before His
judgment bar at last. The Christian will have many accusers. The devil will
come and say, ¡§That man is a great sinner.¡¨ Let all the demons of the pit
clamour in God¡¦s ear, and let them vehemently shout out a list of our sins, we
may stand boldly forth at that great day and sing, ¡§Who shall lay anything to
the charge of God¡¦s elect?¡¨ The judge does not remember it, and who then shall
punish?¡¨
2. ¡§I will not remember thy sins to suspect thee.¡¨ There is a father,
and he has had a wayward son, who went away that he might live a life of
profligacy; but after a while he comes home again in a state of penitence. The
father says, ¡§I will forgive thee.¡¨ But he says next day to his younger son,
¡§There is business to be done at a distant town to-morrow, and here is the
money for you to do it with.¡¨ He does not trust the returned prodigal with it.
¡§I have trusted him before with money,¡¨ says the father to himself, ¡§and he
robbed me, and it makes me afraid to trust him again;¡¨ but our heavenly Father
says, ¡§I will not remember thy sins.¡¨ He not only forgives the past, but trusts
His people with precious talents.
3. He will not remember in His distribution of the recompense of the
reward. The earthly parent will kindly pass over the faults of the prodigal;
but you know, when that father comes to die, and is about to make his will, the
lawyer sitting by his side, he says, ¡§I shall give so much to William, who
always behaved well, and my other son he shall have so-and-so, and my daughter,
she shall have so much; but there is that prodigal, I spent a large sum upon
him when he was young, but he wasted what he received, and though I have taken
him again into favour, and for the present be is going on well, still I think I
must make a little difference between him and the others; I think it would not
be fair--though I have forgiven him--to treat him precisely as the rest.¡¨ And
so the lawyer puts him down for a few hundred pounds, while the others,
perhaps, get their thousands. But God will not remember your sins like that; He
gives all an inheritance. He will give heaven to the chief of sinners as well
as the chief of saints. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Sin forgiven and forgotten
Free grace blots out our transgressions--
I. FROM GOD¡¦S
BOOK.
II. WITH GOD¡¦S
HAND.
III. FOR GOD¡¦S SAKE.
IV. FROM GOD¡¦S
MEMORY. (H. G. Guinness.)
Evangelical religion
Because of texts like this, the early Church called Isaiah the
Evangelical Prophet. What does ¡§Evangelical¡¨ mean? A ¡§good angel,¡¨ a ¡§good
messenger,¡¨ bringing good tidings of great joy. All who bring the good tidings
from God to sinners are evangelical preachers. All the Bible prophets were
evangelical, else they would not have been there. Moses himself was
evangelical; even law in the Old Testament has evangelical issues, and Moses
was a schoolmaster to lead us to Christ.
I. THE NAME WHICH
GOD GIVES HIMSELF. ¡§I, even I, am He.¡¨ You do not find this style save in the
Bible. This was God¡¦s manner of speech. Baal could not say this, nor the gods
of Egypt. God speaks to you as a man amongst men: ¡§I have something to say to
you.¡¨ When He singles you out, that is often the beginning of personal
religion. God speaks to you and me personally; there is none save Jesus Christ
between God and myself.
Whatever your name is, put it into this text, and lift up your
soul in every sentence, making them petitions. Israel had grown weary of God,
and had got broken and scattered. Are there not those who are weary of Sabbath
services, and wish Monday had come to get back to business? They love
entertainments and social gaieties; but tire of Sabbath preaching. Another of
Israel¡¦s sins is found in the context, ¡§Thou hast bought Me no sweet cane with
money.¡¨ Did God indeed care for sweet cane? If you go back to chapter 3. you
will find a list of the ornaments and dresses, and what they spent their money
upon. Read this and digest it. Bring your bank books and drink books and
tobacco books; compare them with what you have contributed to the upholding of
evangelical religion. Take your sins to God, and He will blot them out.
II. ¡§FOR MINE OWN
SAKE.¡¨ Not for thy sake; that rather takes a man down. It is all owing to
grace. I quite agree to the terms. Pardon my preachings, my sermons, and take
me in a pauper. How does that suit your views?--it suits me. In the New
Testament we have it put for Jesus¡¦ sake; it is the same thing at bottom.
III. ¡§WILL NOT
REMEMBER THY SINS.¡¨ How God forgets, I cannot tell. Isaiah says our sins will
never again come up to mind, but I cannot imagine how I can forget my own sins.
Some men say they have forgiven you; your offence is dead. It¡¦s all past; but
you see from the man¡¦s eyes that it isn¡¦t past, and other people know about it.
Take some examples of Jesus¡¦ way of forgiveness. You might have said, had you
not known, that the first to meet Him after His resurrection would have been
the Virgin, or the women of substance who ministered unto Him. But it was the
Magdalene that was the first to gaze on His resurrection form! This was just
like Himself. And if Judas had not fallen utterly, and gone to his own place,
might he not have been chosen to preach the great coronation sermon of Jesus?
Peter, the next great sinner, was chosen. Look how Jesus did: He gets the best
service out of sinners, such as I. (A. Whyte, D. D.)
Forgiveness
There is one thing that God always does with sin. He removes it
out of His presence. God cannot dwell with sin. When He casts away the guilty
soul into an unapproachable distance, and when He pardons a penitent soul, He
is doing the same thing in both cases--removing sin.
I. THE AUTHOR OF
FORGIVENESS. The expression, ¡§I, even I,¡¨ is not a very unfrequent one in
Scripture; but wherever it occurs--whether in reference to justice or mercy--it
is the mark of the Almighty, at that moment taking to Himself, in some special
degree, some sovereign prerogative. Here, the magnificent repetition of that
Name, first given in the bush, was evidently intended to show one
characteristic feature of God¡¦s love. He forgives like a sovereign. All His
attributes are brought to bear upon our peace.
II. THE NATURE OF
FORGIVENESS.
1. As to time. The verb runs in the present tense--¡§blotteth out.¡¨
2. As to degree. You could not read--Satan could not read--a trace
where God¡¦s obliterating hand has once passed.
3. As to continuance. The present swells out into the future. ¡§Will
not remember¡¨
III. THE REASON OF
FORGIVENESS. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Forgiveness
In the foregoing verses we have a heavy accusation drawn up
against the Jews. But no severity follows hereupon; but, ¡§I, even I, am He that
blotteth out thy transgressions for Mine own sake, and will not remember thy
sins.¡¨ The like parallel place we have concerning Ephraim Isaiah 57:17-18). Here is the prerogative
of free grace: to
infer pardon where the guilty themselves can infer only their own execution. It
is the guise of mercy, to make strange and abrupt inferences from sin to
pardon.
I. Here is THE
PERSON that gives out the pardon, i.e., God. God seems more to triumph
in the glory of His pardoning grace and mercy than He doth in any other of His
attributes. ¡§I, even I, am He.¡¦ Such a stately preface must needs usher in
somewhat wherein God¡¦s honour is much advanced.
II. As for THE
PARDON itself; that is expressed in two things: ¡§blotteth out¡¨; ¡§will not
remember.¡¨
1. Blotting out implies
III. THE IMPULSIVE
CAUSE, that moves God¡¦s hand, as it were, to blot out our transgressions. ¡§For
Mine own sake.¡¨
1. That is, because it is My pleasure.
2. Because of that great honour and glory that will accrue to My
great name by it. (E. Hopkins, D. D.)
Remission of sin
1. Remission of sin is no act of ours, but an act of God¡¦s only.
2. Remission of sin makes sin to be as if it had never been
committed.
3. Upon remission of sin God no longer accounts of us as sinners, but
as just and righteous.
4. Pardoning grace can as easily triumph in the remitting of great
and many sins as of few and small sins. (E. Hopkins, D. D.)
The forgiveness of sins
That article in the Creed, ¡§I believe in the forgiveness of sins,¡¨
is too little thought of. Men flippantly declare that they believe in it when
they are not conscious of any great sin of their own; but when his
transgression is made apparent to a man, and his iniquity comes home to him, it
is quite another matter. No stocks can hold a man so fast as his own guilty
fears. With the desponding, I shall try to deal.
I. THERE IS
FORGIVENESS.
1. This appears in the treatment of sinners by God, inasmuch as He
spares their forfeited lives.
2. Why did God institute the ceremonial law, if there were no ways of
pardoning transgression? The evident design of the whole Mosaic economy was to
reveal to man the existence of mercy in the heart of God, and the effectual
operation of that mercy in washing away sin.
3. If there is no forgiveness of sin, why has the Lord given to
sinful men exhortations to repent?
4. There must be pardons in the hand of God, or why the institution
of religious worship among us to this day?
5. Why did Christ institute the Christian ministry, and send forth
His servants to proclaim His Gospel?
6. Why are we taught in that blessed model of prayer which our
Saviour has left us to say, ¡§Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that
trespass against us¡¨? It is evident that God means us to give a true absolution
to all who have offended us. But then, He has linked with that forgiveness our
prayer for mercy, teaching us to ask that He would forgive us as we forgive
them. If, then, our forgiveness is real, so is His.
7. God has actually forgiven multitudes of sinners.
II. THIS FORGIVENESS
IS TANTAMOUNT TO FORGETTING SIN. He wishes us to know that His pardon is so
true and deep that it amounts to an absolute oblivion, a total forgetting of
all the wrong-doing of the pardoned ones.
1. To speak popularly, a man lays up a thing in his mind; but when
sin is forgiven it is not laid up in God¡¦s mind.
2. In remembering, men also consider and meditate on things; but the
Lord will not think over the sins of His people.
3. Sometimes you have almost forgotten a thing, but an event happens
which recalls it so vividly that it seems as if it were perpetrated but
yesterday. God will not recall the sin of the pardoned.
4. This not remembering means that God will never seek any further
atonement. Under the old law there was remembrance of sins made every year on
the day of atonement; but now the blessed One hath entered once for all within
the veil, and hath put away sin for ever by the sacrifice of Himself, so that
there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin.
5. When it is said that God forgets our sins, it signifies that He
will never punish us for them; next, that He will never upbraid us with them.
6. What does it mean but this--that He will not treat us any the less
generously on account of our having been great sinners? Look how the Lord takes
some of the biggest sinners, and uses them for His glory.
III. FORGIVENESS IS
TO BE HAD. How? Through the atoning blood. Come for it in God¡¦s appointed way.
¡§Repent.¡¨ ¡§Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The forgiveness of sins
I. THE SPEAKER.
Whose voice thus proclaims obliteration of transgressions? A silver trumpet
thus introduces the word: ¡§Thus saith the Lord, your Redeemer, the Holy One of
Israel.¡¨ ¡§I am the Lord, your Holy One, the Creator of Israel, your King.¡¨
Jehovah speaks from His high throne. If other lips had thus addressed
offenders, the word might have been empty, vain, and even worse: it might have
relieved no doubts, healed no wounds, diffused no peace. Sin is terrible,
because it is an offence against God. ¡§Who can forgive sins but God alone? To
the Lord our God,¡¨ and to the Lord our God alone, ¡§belong mercies and
sorgivenesses.¡¨
II. THE REPETITION.
¡§I, even I, am He.¡¨ The Person who forgives twice shows Himself. This
reduplication cannot be without strong cause, for there are no superfluous
words from Divine lips. It is at once apparent that our God, in the riches of
His grace, desires thus to awaken attention, to rivet thought, to banish
apprehension, to deepen confidence, to inscribe the truth deeper on the heart.
Hence the timidity of doubt assumes the aspect of impiety: incredulity becomes
insult. This important view is powerfully established by the context. The
preceding verses exhibit Jehovah arrayed in robes of majesty. As Creator He
claims service from the creatures of His hands; He demands the due revenue of
adoration: ¡§This people have I formed for Myself: they shall show forth My
praise.¡¨ The scene then changes; and He confronts them with appalling charges.
In these, as in a mirror, the vileness of the human heart is seen. Worship is
not rendered; prayer is withheld; communion is shunned. The charge is
unanswerable. What can the issue be? Will patience cease to forbear? Will
indignation blaze? The sentence follows. ¡§I, even I, am He,¡¨ etc. What
exquisite pathos: what marvellous grace! How Godlike: how unlike the utterance
of man!
III. Thus the focal
lustre of the word is reached--THE COMPLETENESS OF FORGIVENESS. God ordains
forgiveness absolute, unrestricted, unfenced by boundaries, unconfined by
barriers. ¡§He blotteth out.¡¨ It is true that the word has different shades of
meaning, according to its context; but its main purport is neither vague nor
obscure. It generally places sins in the most formidable light as recorded
debts. It displays them as written in the pages of a book of reckoning,
rigidly, exactly,--without extenuation; and then leads to the fact that they
are completely erased,--expunged--Not merely crossed, for then they might be
read again, and subsequent demand be made; but so eradicated that no trace can
be discerned. But the vexing thought may intrude, that memory will continually
recall his many and mighty sins. He tremulously may reason, If I cannot forget,
will not God remember too? Amid all tokens of Divine love, will not my mind
revert to former scenes, and be downcast? I shall see, or think I see, amid
heaven¡¦s smiles, a reminder of my sinful course on earth. Let such thought be
cast into oblivion¡¦s lowest depths. It is unscriptural: it is derogatory to the
glorious Gospel of free grace. Mark how the word contradicts it: ¡§I will not
remember thy sins¡¨ (Jeremiah 31:34). Let none say, How can
this be? Let it not be objected, such mental process is contrary to all
experience: it is alien to the properties of retentive thought. Let it be
remembered that we are now dealing with God: His ways are not our ways.
IV. THE MOVING
CAUSE. Man reaps eternal benefit; but the spring from which the blessing flows
is high in heaven. Man and man¡¦s deeds are universal provocation: in him there
is no moving merit. If God did not originate forgiveness for the glory of His
name, no sin could have been blotted out. But God¡¦s glory is His final end;
therefore He blots out transgressions ¡§for His own sake.¡¨ Thus heaven shall
re-echo with His praise, and eternity prolong the grateful hallelujah. (H.
Law, M. A.)
Free pardon
The remarkable point is not merely that the absolution contained
in the text is preceded and succeeded by verses of accusation, but that it
breaks in upon the connection, and cleaves the sense right in the middle. The
king¡¦s messenger of mercy rides through the ranks of the men-at-arms in hot
haste, sounding his silver bugle as he clears his way; he cannot linger, his
message is too precious to be made to tarry. We may conclude that men know and
prize Divine mercy most when they most feel the weight of their sins.
I. THE NATURE OF
THE PARDON WHICH IS HERE SO GRACIOUSLY ANNOUNCED.
1. It is a pardon from God Himself, from Him who is offended. This is
the more delightful because we know that only He could forgive. Inasmuch as the
pardon comes from God, He alone it is who knows the full extent of sin.
2. The reason why it is given. ¡§For Mine own sake.¡¨ The entire motive
of God for forgiving sin lies within Himself. No man has his sins forgiven
because they are little, for the smallest sin will ruin the soul, and every sin
is great. Each sin has the essence of rebellion in it, and rebellion is a great
evil before God. Again, no man¡¦s sin is forgiven on the ground that his
repentance is meritorious. By God¡¦s grace, forgiven men are made to do better;
but it is not the foresight of any betterness on their part which leads God to
the forgiveness. That cannot be a motive, for if they do better their
improvement is His work in them. The only motive which God has for pardoning
sinners is one which lies within Himself: ¡§for Mine own sake.¡¨ And what is that
motive? The Lord knows all His motive, and it is not for us to measure it; but
is it not first, that He may indulge His mercy? Mercy is the last exercised,
but the most pleasing to Himself, of all His attributes. He has this motive,
too, which is within Himself, that He may glorify His Son, who is one with
Himself. What a comfort this is; for if, when looking into my soul, I cannot
see any reason why God should save me, I need not look there, since the motive
lies yonder, in His own gracious bosom.
3. It is noteworthy in this glorious text how complete and universal
the pardon is. The Lord makes a clean sweep of the whole dreadful heap of our
sins. Our sins of omission are all gone. Those are the sins which ruin men. At
the last great day the Judge will say, ¡§I was an hungred, and ye gave Me no
meat,¡¨ etc. Those on the left hand were not condemned for what they did do, but
for what they did not do. Then He mentions actual sins. ¡§Thou hast made Me to
serve with thy sins¡¨; but He blots them out, transgressions and sins, both
forms of evil. This m the very Icy and glory of Gospel absolution. The believer
knows that his sins are not in the process of being pardoned, but are actually
pardoned at this moment. The pardon is noteworthy on account of its being most
effectual. It is described as blotting out. Blotting out is a very thorough way
of settling a thing. If an account has been standing in the ledger a long time,
and the pen is drawn through it, it remains no longer. And then mark the
wonderful expression, ¡§I will not remember thy sins.¡¨ Can God forget?
Forgetting with God cannot be an infirmity, as it is with us. We forget because
our memory fails, but God forgets in the blessed sense that He remembers rather
the merit of His Son than our sins.
II. THE EFFECT OF
THIS PARDON WHEREVER IT COMES WITH POWER TO THE SOUL. Timid persons have
thought that the free pardon of sin would lead men to indulge in it. No doubt
some are base enough to pervert it to that use, but there was never a soul that
did really receive pardon from God who could find in that pardon any excuse for
sin or any licence to continue longer in it; for all God¡¦s people argue thus:
¡§Shall we sin that grace may, abound? God forbid. How shall we that are dead to
sin live any longer therein?¡¨ At first, mercy fills us with surprise; then,
with holy regret. We feel, What, and is this the God I have been standing out
against so long? It next creates in us fervent love. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Subdued by forgiveness
Many years ago in Russia a regiment of troops mutinied. They were
at some distance from the capital, and were so furious that they murdered their
officers, and resolved never resubmit to discipline; but the emperor, who was
an exceedingly wise and sagacious man, no sooner heard of it than, all alone
and unattended, he went into the barracks when the men were drawn up, and
addressing them sternly, he said to them, ¡§Soldiers, you have committed such
offences against the law that every one of you deserves to be put to death.
There is no hope of any mercy for one of you unless you lay down your arms
immediately, and surrender at discretion to me, your emperor.¡¨ And they did it
there and then, though the heads of their officers were lying at their feet.
They threw down their¡¨ arms and surrendered, and he said at once, Men I pardon
you; you be the bravest troops I ever had.¡¨ And they were, too. That is just
what God says to the sinner. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The surprise of God¡¦s mercy
If you have a dog at the table, and you throw him a scrap of meat,
he swallows it directly; but if you were to set the whole joint down on the
floor before him, he would turn away. He would feel that you could not mean to
give a fine joint of meat to a dog. He would not think of touching it; at
least, few dogs would. And it seemed to me as if the Lord could not have meant
all the wonders of His love for such a dog as I was. I was ready to turn away
from it through the greatness of it. But then I recollected that it would not
do for God to be giving little mercy. He was too great a God to spend all His
power in pardoning little sinners and granting little favours; and I came back
to this--that if His grace was not too big for Him to give, I would not be such
a fool as to refuse it because of its greatness. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Put Me in remembrance
¡§Put Me in remembrance¡¨
I.
TAKE
SOME GENERAL NOTICE OF THE COMMAND HERE GIVEN. This command, ¡§Put Me in
remembrance,¡¨ by no means supposes that God is unmindful of any promise, or
ignorant of any case.
1. It is His pleasure to see a sinner reduced so low as to have
nothing to rest upon, nothing to plead but the promise.
2. God will bring the sinner to such a frame as will render the
blessing of pardon sweet when it comes.
3. The expression in the text evidences the strict connection which
there is between the means and the end. It is grace which appears in the
promises, and it is grace which convinces the soul of its need of those
blessings that are contained in them. If you are led to see that these promises
contain all your salvation and all your desire, and that all is dispensed
freely, this will draw out the heart in prayer and supplication. Prayer opens a
communication between God and the soul. ¡§I will pardon¡¨; ¡§I will not remember
thy sin¡¨--that is the promise. ¡§Put Me in remembrance¡¨ is the command. It is
the privilege of a sin-burdened soul to remind God of His covenant engagements,
to lay the promises of His grace before Him, to plead the merit of the
Redeemer¡¦s sacrifice, to set the creature¡¦s misery and God¡¦s mercy in
opposition to each other, to compare our poverty with that fulness of grace
which the Gospel reveals. Instead of waiting for qualifications in order to
obtain mercy, we are to rest the whole weight of our argument upon the grace
which shines in the promise, and which will be greatly honoured in the actual
pardon of our guilty souls.
II. OBSERVE WHAT IT
IS WHICH AN AWAKENED SOUL HATH TO REMIND GOD OF.
1. The soul reminds God of His grace, and argues from the freeness of
it.
2. The firmness of His promises.
3. The concern of God¡¦s glory in the pardon and salvation of sinners.
III. OPEN THE NATURE
OF THE DECLARATION WHICH HE MAKES BEFORE THE THRONE OF MERCY. ¡§Declare thou,
that thou mayest be justified.¡¨ Declaration in law is showing cause why
judgment should not be executed. There must be a declaration of an adequate
righteousness in order to our justification before God. Our guilt would sink us
into the lowest depths of misery if God did not admit our plea through Jesus.
We must also declare our hearty approbation of God¡¦s method of dispensing these
His favours. Inferences--
1. We see the reason why God will have the promises of His grace to
be pleaded before the Throne; it is not to help His memory, but to exercise and
encourage our faith.
2. How greatly are they to be pitied, who can remember any thing but
that which it concerns them above all to attend to.
3. Have any of you pleaded the promises, cried for mercy and grace,
and yet seemed to find no help? Be not discouraged, though the Lord wait, yet
tarry for Him, He waiteth that He may be more abundantly gracious.
4. Consider what glories are reserved for that future world, when all
the promises shall be completely fulfilled. (J. King, B. A.)
A great controversy
These words follow immediately on that beautiful declaration--¡§I,
even I, am He,¡¨ etc. We shall find that our text has great significance when
taken in connection with this most gracious saying.
1. We cannot but remark on the apparent strangeness, that there
should be any appeal to reason or argument, where the matter involved is
undoubtedly the great doctrine of atonement. Though there is no express
statement of this doctrine, no one acquainted with the appointed mode of
salvation, which has been the same in every dispensation, will question that
the work of the Mediator is tacitly under stood whensoever there is a promise
of the forgiveness of sin. If this be implied, how strange that God should no
sooner have referred to the scheme of our redemption than He invites us to
reason with Himself. Undoubtedly the scheme of our redemption is such as could
never have been imagined, and such even as, when revealed, it rather becomes us
reverently to receive than curiously to investigate. But, nevertheless, it is
quite possible to err on the other side--to be as much afraid of allowing
reason to intermeddle with the plan of redemption. There is all the difference
between the being able to discover this plan and the being able, when
discovered, to determine its excellence and fitness.
2. We should hold it to be as great a falsehood as could be alleged
against the Gospel were it to be said, that it does not commend itself to man
as exactly what he needs; so that, if he receive it, he must receive it on the
strength of external testimony, and not at all on his consciousness of its
meeting his necessities.
3. The text, following on a promise that sin shall be blotted out,
may be said to invite us to a debate, and to propose, as the topic of debate,
the salvation of sinners through the atonement made by Christ. It is God
Himself who offers to plead on the other side, if we take that of the
strangeness of the Gospel, its inexplicable character as addressed to beings so
circumstanced as ourselves. How shall the argument be carried on, or by whom
shall the discussion be opened? We will not attempt to give the precise
pleading on both sides, but rather sum up the facts and statements of the
controversy. We suppose man aware of his lost condition by nature, and
penetrated with such a sense of the attributes of God as forbids his expecting
that sin may go unpunished under such a government as the Divine. And if a man
in this state were made acquainted with the Gospel of Christ, he would want
nothing but evidence of the truth of this Gospel; he would find an additional
evidence in the exactness with which it met his ascertained wants. There is
therefore nothing to shrink from in the challenge of the text. A forgiveness,
based on a propitiation, and followed by sanctification, is what God propounds
as His scheme of redemption; and such a scheme He invites us to discuss with
Him in person. What, then, have you to say? You lie under condemnation: how can you be
pardoned when you have punishment to endure? The scheme lays the punishment on
another. You are of a depraved nature, inclined to evil, and therefore unfit
for communion with your maker:
how can such as you enter the kingdom of heaven? The scheme provides for your
thorough regeneration. If all the difficulties which reason can find in the way
of redemption lie either in the necessities of man or the attributes of God,
and if the scheme of redemption through Christ meet the first and yield the
second, so that even reason herself can perceive that it satisfies every human
want and compromises no Divine perfection, why should we not allow that, reason
herself being judge, the Gospel is in every respect precisely such a
communication as is suited to the case?
4. We have hitherto confined our attention to the fact that it is to
an argument, or discussion, that we are invited by God, when He is about to lay
before us, in a most simple but comprehensive form, His great scheme of
delivering us through a propitiation for sin. But the concluding words of our
text--¡§Declare thou, that thou mayest be justified ¡§--seem to allow you, if you
choose, to bring forward any excuse which you may have for not closing with the
gracious proffer of salvation through Christ. We may, however, take another,
and perhaps equally just, view of the controversy, which is indicated, though
not laid open by our text. The verses which follow--¡§Thy first father hath
sinned,¡¨ etc., would seem to imply that the Jews murmured at God¡¦s dealings
with them; for God is evidently vindicating Himself. Come all of you who think
that you are in any way hardly dealt with by God, approach and plead your
cause; it is the Almighty Himself who saith--¡§Declare thou, that thou mayest be
justified.¡¨ You need not therefore hesitate to utter plainly all you think, and
to make statement of your grievances. You urge, it may be, that your lot is one
of trial and affliction; that troubles are multiplied beyond your power of
endurance, temptations beyond your power of resistance; that, born as you are
with corrupt tendencies, placed in a scene where there is everything to incite
you to sin, you are summoned to duties which are manifestly too arduous, and
threatened in the event of failure with punishments which are as manifestly
excessive and severe. Well, keep nothing back; be as minute as you will in
exposing the harshness of God¡¦s dealings, whether individually with yourselves
or generally with mankind; and then, having pleaded your own cause, listen to
what the Almighty will say; it is He Himself who hath invited you into
controversy, and therefore when you have urged all your grievances, be silent
that God may be heard in reply. And I know what you expect to hear: you expect a defence
as elaborate as the charge. But when you are hearkening for the copious apology
and acute contradiction, lo, there is heard nothing but the beautiful
promise--¡§I, even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions for Mine own
sake, and will not remember thy sins.¡¨ If you have anything to say after such a
promise, say it; make what you can of your case. So that the promise is to be
taken as a sufficient answer to all that can be urged. But what has such a
promise to do with the matter? How does it end the controversy? Do ye ask? Or
rather, does not this simple but most gracious announcement of arrangements for
the complete rescue of humankind from all their misery and all their guilt make
you feel ashamed of having urged any complaint, and aware that in place of
murmurs you ought to utter only praises!
5. We wish to impress upon you one great lesson--that it is your
business to obey God¡¦s commands rather than to explain God¡¦s dealings. (H.
Melvill, B. D.)
A loving entreaty
Understand my text, however paradoxical it may seem, as being a
genuine invitation on the part of a gracious God to the most provoking of men.
I. Our text
appears as A HUMBLING CHALLENGE. God had punished Israel on account of sin.
Israel was not penitent, but in self-righteousness judged that the Lord was
harsh and severe. ¡§Come, then,¡¨ says God, ¡§come and plead your suit with Me.
Put Me in remembrance of any virtues on your part which I may be supposed to
have overlooked. If I have misjudged you, if you have not really been
neglectful of My service and worship, let the matter be rectified. If really
you have a righteousness of your own, put Me in remembrance of it.¡¨
1. On looking back we find that the Lord had charged His people with
neglect of prayer. ¡§But thou hast not called upon Me, O Jacob.¡¨ This is the
charge which we are compelled to bring against all unconverted men and women.
Perhaps you offer a form of prayer; but that is nothing if your heart goes not
with the words. This is rather to mock God than truly to call upon Him. But
come now; if there be any mistake in this charge, disprove it!
2. Next, the Lord charged it upon Israel that they had not delighted
in Him. ¡§Thou hast been weary of Me, O Israel.¡¨ Can you deny this? If you can,
you are invited to state your innocence before the Lord.
3. The Lord had also said that these people did not honour Him. ¡§Thou
hast not brought Me the small cattle of thy burnt offerings; neither hast thou
honoured Me with thy sacrifices.¡¨ It may be you have presented no tokens of
love to the Lord at all; or, on the other hand, you may have brought
sacrifices, but you have not honoured God by them. You have given that you
might be known to give, or because others did so, but not with the view of
honouring God. Yet if it be so, if any unconverted man can say that whether he
eats or drinks, or whatsoever he does, he seeks to do all to the glory of God,
this ought to be known. It would be a new thing under the sun. In truth, it
would prove that the man was converted, and had been renewed in the spirit of
his mind by the grace of God. But it is not so.
4. Moreover, the Lord charged Israel that they did not love Him.
¡§Thou hast made Me to serve with thy sins¡¨--thou hast made Me a very slave with
thy waywardness. ¡§Thou hast wearied Me with thine iniquities,¡¨--God¡¦s patience
was tried to the utmost with their wanton wickedness. Is not this charge sadly
true of many? If it be not so, you are now challenged to vindicate your
characters. Do not set up a lying defence, but speak the truth.
6. The challenge before us is occupied not only with the ways of man,
but with the ways of God; for the Lord here asserts of Himself, ¡§I have not
caused thee to serve with an offering, nor wearied thee with incense.¡¨ That is
to say, God is no hard taskmaster. The commandments of God are essential
justice; you could not improve upon them; no law could be more for our benefit
than that which He has given us. If God has treated you like slaves, then say
so, and state your grievance in solemn converse with God. When God forbids us
anything, it is because He knows it would be for our harm; and when God
commands us to do anything, it is because He knows that it is for our soul¡¦s
eternal good.
II. I hope you will
be able to follow me while our penitence suggests AN AMENDED VERSION. Let us
take the text as our consciousness of guilt desires to read it. There are
certain things which God in great love invites us to bring before His memory.
If you cannot take up His challenge, and prove your personal righteousness, let
the charges stand, with your silence as an assent to them; and now plead with
Him, and pat Him in remembrance of matters which may serve your turn, and lead
to your forgiveness.
1. Put the Lord in remembrance of that glorious act of amnesty and
oblivion which in sovereign grace He has proclaimed to the sons of men in the
preceding verse. That done, proceed to put the Lord in remembrance of your
sins. Make an open unreserved acknowledgment unto the Lord. Confess this also,
that you have continued by your sins to go away from Him who invites you to
return, and promises you a welcome reception.
2. When you have done this, if your spirit is much depressed, and
your heart is driven to despair by a sense of your guilt, then put the Lord in
remembrance of the extraordinary reason which He gives for pardoning sin: ¡§I, even I, am He
that blotteth out thy transgressions for Mine own sake.¡¨ Say unto Him thus: ¡§Lord, there is no
reason in me why Thou shouldest spare me, but do it for Thine own sake--for Thy
love¡¦s sake, for Thy mercy¡¦s sake.¡¨
3. When you have gone as far as that in putting God in remembrance, I
would advise you to plead the Lord¡¦s purpose and intent revealed in Isaiah 43:21 : ¡§This people have I formed for Myself; they
shall show forth My praise.¡¨ Say, ¡§Lord, I am Thy poor creature. Thou hast made
me; even my very body is fearfully and wonderfully made; and the mysterious
thing which dwells within me which I call my soul, is also the creature of Thy
power. Hast Thou not made me for Thyself? Wilt Thou not have a desire to the
work of Thine own hands? Lord, come and bless me! Sinner as I am, and utterly
undeserving, yet I am Thy creature; do not fling me upon the dunghill. If Thou
wilt forgive me, Lord, might I not praise Thee?¡¨
4. If that does not ease you, go a little further back in the chapter
till you come to Isaiah 43:19 : ¡§Behold, I will do a new
thing,¡¨ etc. Plead that published declaration! Say, ¡§Lord, Thou hast said ¡¥I
will do a new thing¡¦:
it will indeed be a new thing if I am saved. I am driven to such
self-abhorrence, that if ever I am saved I shall be a leading wonder among Thy
miracles of grace.¡¨ It may be you can say--¡§Lord, I have been sighing and
crying and groaning now by the month together, and I can find no peace. Oh, if
Thou wilt but put a new song into my mouth, the dragons and the owls that saw
me in my gloom shall open their eyes and be astonished, and honour the Lord God
of Israel!¡¨ I know some who might say, ¡§Lord, it will fill all the workshop
with wonder if I shall rejoice in Jesus. All my friends and companions will
wonder that I should become happy and holy through sovereign grace.¡¨
III. Our text
affords us some PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS. If the Lord says, ¡§Put Me in
remembrance,¡¨ then--
1. It is very clear that we ought to remember these things ourselves.
Oh, you that are not saved, remember the years in which you have lived without
prayer l What a wonder that you have been permitted to live at all! Remember,
next, for your humbling, how weary you have been of God. Some I would urge to
remember long years of neglect of God¡¦s service, with all their niggardliness
to the cause of God, all their want of love to God, all the many times in which
they have hardened their hearts, stopped their ears, and refused the warnings
and invitations of their Saviour.
2. It is time that we should now begin our pleading with God. (C.
H.Spurgeon.)
Thy first father hath sinned
Israel¡¦s sin
Its history from the first is a tissue of sins.
¡§Thy first father sinned, and thy mediators have fallen away from Me.¡¨ By the
first father, Hitzig, Knobel, and others understand Adam; but Adam is the
progenitor of mankind, not of Israel specially, and Adam¡¦s guilt is mankind¡¦s
guilt, not Israel¡¦s. Either Abraham is meant (Hofmann, Stier, Hahn, and
others), or Jacob-Israel (Ewald, Cheyne, yon Orelli), who has more to do with
the sinful nature of the nation springing from him than Abraham (cf. Deuteronomy 26:5). The interpreters and
mediators generally (2 Chronicles 32:31; Job 33:23) are the prophets and priests,
standing between Jehovah and Israel, and mediating the intercourse of both in
word and act; even these for the most part have proved unfaithful to God,
falling a prey to ungodly magic and false worship. Thus Israel¡¦s sin was as
ancient as its origin; and the apostasy has broken out even among those who, by
reason of their offices, should be the best and holiest. (F. Delitzsch, D.
D.)
Thy first father
To the unreflecting upon human nature it has not occurred that
mankind might have been introduced to our world by other means than by being
¡§born of a woman.¡¨ Every human being might have been a distinct creation. But
the constitution given to the vegetable and to the animal kingdoms was given
also to man; and as herbs and animals contain the seed of their own kind, and
are propagated of each other, so man was made to be ¡§fruitful, to multiply, and
to replenish the earth.¡¨ Among other reasons for this constitution was the
intention of securing (through the intimate and peculiar relationships it involves)
a powerful influence of man upon man. Judging by the conjugal, paternal, and
filial relationships, it is evident that God intended men to exert a
considerable amount and a high kind of influence upon each other. But while the
domestic bonds are the chief channels through which human influence is
transmitted, there are other sources of power. Extraordinary talent, peculiar
circumstances, great earnestness, and remarkable labours raise men to the
guidance and control of their fellows. The position of the first man was in
many respects singular. All other of the human kind have been born of each
other. Even Eve was made out of man. Adam alone was created. Excepting Eve and
Adam, every other human being has commenced existence an infant, and living, has
passed from infancy through childhood and youth to manhood. And Adam was the
first of human kind. Adam, moreover, according to the constitution given him,
and by the fact of his creation, was the natural father of the human race. We
shall treat the subject by discussing two questions.
I. WAS ADAM TO THE
HUMAN FAMILY MORE THAN THEIR NATURAL PARENT? According to the historical and
doctrinal statements of the Scriptures, Adam did sustain another and a more
important relationship.
II. ADMITTING THAT
ADAM WAS MORE THAN THE FIRST PARENT OF THE HUMAN FAMILY, WHAT WAS HE BESIDE?
AND WHAT DID THIS RELATIONSHIP INVOLVE? As the first parent of the human race,
and according to laws with which we are all familiar, Adam would exert a
serious influence upon his whole posterity. But Adam was more than the first
parent. He is called by the apostle Paul, ¡§the figure of him that was to
come¡¨--literally, the type. Paul declared that Adam in his connection with
mankind was the form, or the ensample, or the pattern of what Jesus Christ was
to be to redeemed men; so that as Jesus Christ is the public representative and
head of the saved of mankind, so Adam was the representative of the human race.
What did the placing of Adam in this position involve?
1. By this arrangement the whole race is tried or proved by one man.
2. It pleased God to suspend upon the trial of one man the life and
the death of the human race. Adam¡¦s guilt must ever be his own--that cannot be
another¡¦s. Adam¡¦s punishment must rest on his own head--that cannot be
transferred to his posterity. But the results of Adam s conduct his posterity
were to share. Awfully responsible was Adam s position! God¡¦s reasons for the
order of things are to us unsearchable. We may consider that the trial of a
race in one man was more simple than the probation of every individual--we may
see how (God foreknowing the apostasy of human nature) this mode of government
admitted the immediate introduction of another and of a remedial
dispensation--still, God¡¦s ways in this dispensation are past finding out. The
fact is declared; and the reason of this arrangement we must resolve into the
sovereignty of God. One serious lesson fail not to learn--the extent of
parental responsibility. Moral and intellectual and physical qualities are doubtless
transmissible. Weakness and disease of body and evil dispositions of soul are
conveyed from parent to child. Sow not, therefore, to the flesh. (S. Martin.)
Therefore I have profaned the princes of the sanctuary
Holy princes
¡§Then I profaned holy princes, and gave up Jacob to the ban, and
Israel to revilings.
¡¨ ¡§Holy princes¡¨ are the hierarchs (1 Chronicles 24:5), the highest
spiritual authorities in distinction from the secular. Their profanation
consisted in their being ruthlessly dragged into a foreign land, where their
official work ceased of necessity. So the heads of religion fared, and the
whole nation, bearing the honourable names of Jacob and Israel, fell victim to
the cursing and revilings of heathen nations. (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n