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Isaiah Chapter
Forty-nine
Isaiah 49
Chapter Contents
The unbelief and rejection of the Jews. (1-6) Gracious
promise to the Gentiles. (7-12) God's love to the church. (13-17) Its increase.
(18-23) And deliverance. (24-26)
Commentary on Isaiah 49:1-6
(Read Isaiah 49:1-6)
The great Author of redemption shows the authority for
his work. The sword of his word slays the lusts of his people, and all at
enmity with them. His sharp arrows wound the conscience; but all these wounds
will be healed, when the sinner prays to him for mercy. But even the Redeemer,
who spake as never man spake in his personal ministry, often seemed to labour
in vain. And if Jacob will not be brought back to God, and Israel will not be
gathered, still Christ will be glorious. This promise is in part fulfilled in
the calling of the Gentiles. Men perish in darkness. But Christ enlightens men,
and so makes them holy and happy.
Commentary on Isaiah 49:7-12
(Read Isaiah 49:7-12)
The Father is the Lord, the Redeemer, and Holy One of
Israel, as sending the Son to be the Redeemer. Man, whom he came to save, put
contempt upon him. To this he submitted for our salvation. He is a pledge for
all the blessings of the covenant; in him God was reconciling the world to
himself. Pardoning mercy is a release from the curse of the law; renewing grace
is a release from the dominion of sin: both are from Christ. He saith to those
in darkness, Show yourselves. Not only see, but be seen, to the glory of God,
and your own comforts. Though there are difficulties in the way to heaven, yet
the grace of God will carry us over them, and make even the mountains a way.
This denotes the free invitations and the encouraging promises of the gospel,
and the outpouring of the Spirit.
Commentary on Isaiah 49:13-17
(Read Isaiah 49:13-17)
Let there be universal joy, for God will have mercy upon
the afflicted, because of his compassion; upon his afflicted, because of his
covenant. We have no more reason to question his promise and grace, than we
have to question his providence and justice. Be assured that God has a tender
affection for his church and people; he would not have them to be discouraged.
Some mothers do neglect their children; but God's compassions to his people,
infinitely exceed those of the tenderest parents toward their children. His
setting them as a mark on his hand, or a seal upon his arm, denotes his being
ever mindful of them. As far as we have scriptural evidence that we belong to
his ransomed flock, we may be sure that he will never forsake us. Let us then
give diligence to make our calling and election sure, and rejoice in the hope
and glory of God.
Commentary on Isaiah 49:18-23
(Read Isaiah 49:18-23)
Zion is addressed as an afflicted widow, bereaved of her
children. Numbers flock to her, and she is assured that they come to be a
comfort to her. There are times when the church is desolate and few in number;
yet its desolations shall not last for ever, and God will repair them. God can
raise up friends for returning Israelites, even among Gentiles. They shall
bring their children, and make them thy children. Let all deal tenderly and
carefully with young converts and beginners in religion. Princes shall protect
the church. It shall appear that God is the sovereign Lord of all. And those
who in the exercise of faith, hope, and patience, wait on God for the
fulfilment of his promises, shall never be confounded.
Commentary on Isaiah 49:24-26
(Read Isaiah 49:24-26)
We were lawful captives to the justice of God, yet
delivered by a price of unspeakable value. Here is an express promise: Even the
prey of the terrible shall be delivered. We may here view Satan deprived of his
prey, bound and cast into the pit; and all the powers that have combined to
enslave, persecute, or corrupt the church, are destroyed; that all the earth may
know that our Saviour and Redeemer is Jehovah, the mighty One of Jacob. And
every effort we make to rescue our fellow-sinners from the bondage of Satan,
is, in some degree, helping forward that great change.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 49
Verse 1
[1]
Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath
called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of
my name.
Listen ¡X
God turns his speech to the Gentiles, and invites them to hearken to those
counsels and doctrines which the Jews would reject.
Me ¡X Unto Christ: Isaiah
speaks these words in the name of Christ.
Verse 2
[2] And he hath made my mouth like a sharp sword; in the shadow of his hand
hath he hid me, and made me a polished shaft; in his quiver hath he hid me;
A sword ¡X As
he made me the great teacher of his church, so he made my word, quick and
powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword.
Hath he hid ¡X He
will protect me from all mine enemies.
Made me ¡X
Like an arrow, whose point is bright and polished; which therefore pierceth
deeper.
Verse 3
[3] And
said unto me, Thou art my servant, O Israel, in whom I will be glorified.
O Israel ¡X As
the name of David is sometimes given to his successors, so here the name of
Israel may not unfitly be given to Christ, not only because he descended from
his loins; but also because he was the true and the great Israel, who, in a
more eminent manner, prevailed with God, as that name signifies, of whom Jacob,
who was first called Israel, was but a type.
Verse 4
[4] Then
I said, I have laboured in vain, I have spent my strength for nought, and in
vain: yet surely my judgment is with the LORD, and my work with my God.
Then said I ¡X
Lord, thou sayest thou wilt be glorified by my ministry; but I find it
otherwise.
In vain ¡X
Without any considerable fruit of my word and works among the Israelites.
My judgment ¡X My
right, the reward which by his promise, and my purchase, is my right.
Verse 5
[5] And now, saith the LORD that formed me from the womb to be his servant, to
bring Jacob again to him, Though Israel be not gathered, yet shall I be
glorious in the eyes of the LORD, and my God shall be my strength.
To bring ¡X To
convert the apostate Israelites to God.
Not gathered ¡X
Not brought home to God by my ministry.
Yet ¡X
God will not despise me for the unsuccessfulness of my labours, but will honour
and glorify me.
My strength ¡X To
support and strengthen me under this and all other discouragements.
Verse 6
[6] And
he said, It is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the
tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give thee
for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of
the earth.
He ¡X The Lord.
It is ¡X
This is but a small favour.
The tribes ¡X
That remnant of them which shall survive all their calamities.
My salvation ¡X
The great instrument and author of that eternal salvation which I will give to
the Gentiles.
Verse 7
[7] Thus
saith the LORD, the Redeemer of Israel, and his Holy One, to him whom man
despiseth, to him whom the nation abhorreth, to a servant of rulers, Kings
shall see and arise, princes also shall worship, because of the LORD that is
faithful, and the Holy One of Israel, and he shall choose thee.
His Holy One ¡X
The Holy One of Israel.
To him ¡X To
Christ, to whom, in the days of his flesh, this description fully agrees: for
men, both Jews and Gentiles among whom he lived, did despise him from their
hearts; and the nation, of which he was a member, abhorred both his person and
his doctrine; and he was so far from being a temporal monarch, that he came in
the form of a servant, and was a servant of rulers, professing subjection and
paying tribute unto Caesar.
Kings ¡X
Though for a time thou shalt be despised, yet after a while thou shalt be
advanced to such glory, that kings shall look upon thee with reverence.
Arise ¡X
From their seats to worship thee.
Faithful ¡X
Because God shall make good his promises to thee.
Chuse thee ¡X
And although thou shalt be rejected by thine own people, yet God will manifest
to the world, that thou, and thou only, art the person whom he hath chosen to
be the Redeemer of mankind.
Verse 8
[8] Thus
saith the LORD, In an acceptable time have I heard thee, and in a day of
salvation have I helped thee: and I will preserve thee, and give thee for a
covenant of the people, to establish the earth, to cause to inherit the
desolate heritages;
The Lord ¡X
God the Father unto Christ.
Heard thee ¡X
Though not so as to deliver thee from death; yet so as to crown thee with glory
and honour.
For a covenant ¡X To
be the Mediator and surety of that covenant, which is made between me and them.
To establish ¡X To
establish truth and righteousness upon earth, and subdue those lusts and
passions, which are the great disturbers of human society.
Desolate heritages ¡X
That desolate places may be repaired and repossessed. That Christ may possess
the Heathen, who were in a spiritual sense in a most desolate condition.
Verse 9
[9] That
thou mayest say to the prisoners, Go forth; to them that are in darkness, Shew
yourselves. They shall feed in the ways, and their pastures shall be in all
high places.
Prisoners ¡X To
the Gentiles who are fast bound by the cords of their sins, and taken captive
by the devil at his will.
Go forth ¡X
Come forth to the light, receive divine illumination.
In high places ¡X
They shall have abundant provision in all places, yea even in those which
commonly are unfruitful, such are both common roads and high grounds.
Verse 11
[11] And
I will make all my mountains a way, and my highways shall be exalted.
A way ¡X I
will remove all hindrances, and prepare the way for them, by levelling high
grounds, and raising low grounds.
Verse 12
[12]
Behold, these shall come from far: and, lo, these from the north and from the
west; and these from the land of Sinim.
These ¡X My
people shall be gathered from the most remote parts of the earth. He speaks
here, and in many other places, of the conversion of the Gentiles, with
allusion to that work of gathering, and bringing back the Jews from all parts
where they were dispersed, into their own land.
Sinim ¡X
Either of the Sinites as they are called, Genesis 10:17, who dwelt about the wilderness.
Or of Sin, a famous city of Egypt, which may be put for all Egypt, and that for
all southern parts.
Verse 14
[14] But
Zion said, The LORD hath forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me.
But ¡X
This is an objection. How can these things be true, when the condition of God's
church is now so desperate?
Verse 16
[16]
Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are
continually before me.
Graven ¡X He
alludes to the common practice of men who put signs upon their hands or fingers
of such things as they would remember.
Verse 18
[18] Lift
up thine eyes round about, and behold: all these gather themselves together,
and come to thee. As I live, saith the LORD, thou shalt surely clothe thee with
them all, as with an ornament, and bind them on thee, as a bride doeth.
These ¡X
Gentiles. Thy church shall not only be restored, but vastly enlarged and
adorned by the accession of the Gentiles.
Verse 19
[19] For
thy waste and thy desolate places, and the land of thy destruction, shall even
now be too narrow by reason of the inhabitants, and they that swallowed thee up
shall be far away.
Thy waste places ¡X
Thy own land, whereof divers parts lie waste for want of people to possess
them.
Land of destruction ¡X
Which before was desolate and destroyed.
Verse 20
[20] The
children which thou shalt have, after thou hast lost the other, shall say again
in thine ears, The place is too strait for me: give place to me that I may
dwell.
The children ¡X
Those Gentiles which shall be begotten by thee, when thou shalt be deprived of
thine own natural children, when the generality of the Jews cut themselves off
from God.
Verse 21
[21] Then
shalt thou say in thine heart, Who hath begotten me these, seeing I have lost
my children, and am desolate, a captive, and removing to and fro? and who hath
brought up these? Behold, I was left alone; these, where had they been?
Who ¡X
Whence have I this numberless issue? Seeing - Seeing I was in a manner left
childless.
Desolate ¡X
Without an husband, being forsaken by God, who formerly owned himself for my
husband.
Verse 22
[22] Thus
saith the Lord GOD, Behold, I will lift up mine hand to the Gentiles, and set
up my standard to the people: and they shall bring thy sons in their arms, and
thy daughters shall be carried upon their shoulders.
Behold ¡X I
will call them to me.
Set my standard ¡X As
generals do to gather their forces together.
Thy sons ¡X
Those who shall be thine by adoption, that shall own God for their father, and
Jerusalem for their mother.
Carried ¡X
With great care and tenderness, as nurses carry young infants.
Carried ¡X As
sick or infirm persons used to be carried.
Verse 23
[23] And
kings shall be thy nursing fathers, and their queens thy nursing mothers: they
shall bow down to thee with their face toward the earth, and lick up the dust
of thy feet; and thou shalt know that I am the LORD: for they shall not be
ashamed that wait for me.
Lick the dust ¡X
They shall highly reverence and honour thee. These expressions are borrowed
from the practice of the eastern people, who bowed so low as to touch the
ground.
Ashamed ¡X
Their expectations shall not be disappointed.
Verse 24
[24]
Shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive delivered?
Shall the prey ¡X
Here is a double impediment to their deliverance, the power of the enemy who
kept them in bondage, and the justice of God which pleads against their
deliverance.
Verse 25
[25] But
thus saith the LORD, Even the captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and
the prey of the terrible shall be delivered: for I will contend with him that
contendeth with thee, and I will save thy children.
For I ¡X I
the almighty God will undertake this work.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
49 Chapter 49
Verse 1
Verses 1-9
Verses 1-6
Listen, O isles, unto Me
A forecast of the
universal religion
In the previous chapters
we find very glorious things spoken of the deliverance of the Jews from
Babylon.
But in this chapter we seem to commence a new departure, to rise to a higher
strain, and to launch out into broader and grander predictions. A larger
audience is invoked--¡§Listen, O isles, unto Me.¡¨ A greater than the prophet is
the speaker--¡§The Lord hath called me from the womb,¡¨ &c. And the calling
of the Gentiles to a share in the blessings of the greater redemption is
clearly indicated. ¡§I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that
thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of the earth.¡¨ (D. Howell, B. D.)
The ideal servant of
Jehovah
Here, not only does the
language describe apparently the acts of an individual person, but the servant
is expressly distinguished from the historic nation; and part of the servant¡¦s
office is to consist in the restoration of the historic nation, and (Isaiah 49:8) the re-allotment of its desolated land. At the same time, the
servant is still in some sense ¡§Israel¡¨; for the term is directly applied to
Him (Isaiah 49:3). . . Israel, from this point of view, is delineated by [the
prophet] as an ideal personality, and projected upon the future as a figure
displaying the most genuine characteristics of the nation, and realising them
in action with an intensity and clearness of aim which the historic Israel had
never even remotely attained. It is a great ideal creation which the prophet
constructs, a transfigured reflection of the historic people, a figure
conscious of the colossal task allotted to it, but impeded by no moral
slackness, or other deficient y, from undertaking it. And so vividly is this
wonderful creation a figure present to his imagination, that it exhibits all
the concrete traits of an individual person. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
The servant of Jehovah
The servant of Jehovah is
the kernel of the kernel of Israel, Israel¡¦s inmost centre, Israel¡¦s highest
head. (F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
The speaker
Who is this that speaks in
the Hebrew tongue, and presumes to address the world as his audience? We had
thought the Jew-speech too exclusive, too conservative, too intolerant of
strangers, to care to make itself heard beyond the limits of Judaism. Whence
this sudden interest in the great family of man? All! these are the words of
the Messiah, the ideal Jew; speaking in the name of the elect race, and
representing its genius, not as warped by human prejudice, but as God intended
it to be. ¡§He said unto me, Thou art My servant; Israel, in whom I will be
glorified.¡¨ There can be no doubt that this is the true way of considering
these noble words. They were expressly referred to Jesus Christ by His greatest
apostle on one of the most memorable occasions in his career Acts 13:47). But, it may be asked, how can words, so evidently addressed to
Israel, be appropriated, with equal truth, to Jesus Christ? It is sufficient to
say that He was the epitome and personification of all that was-noblest and
divinest in Judaism. When, in spite of all that they had suffered in their
exile, they for a second time failed to realise or fulfil their great mission
to the world; when under the reign of Pharisee and Scribe they settled down
into a nation of legalists, casuists, and hair-splitting ritualists--He assumed
the responsibilities which they had evaded, and fulfilled them by the Gospel He
spoke and the Church He formed. In the mission of Jesus, the heart of Judaism
unfolded itself. What He was and did, the whole nation ought to have been and
done. As the white flower on the stalk, He revealed the essential nature of the
root. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
A polished shaft
We are justified in
referring this paragraph to the Lord Jesus, as the ideal Servant of God. And we
may get some useful teaching as to the conditions of the loftiest and best
service which, following His steps, we may render to His Father and our Father.
I. THE
QUALIFICATIONS OF THE IDEAL SERVANT.
1. A holy motherhood. ¡§The Lord hath called me from the womb.¡¨ The
greatest and best of men have confessed their indebtedness to their mothers;
and not a few have, without doubt, enshrined in their character, and wrought
out in their life, inspirations which had thrilled their mothers¡¦ natures from
early girlhood. It is from their mothers that men get their souls. To make a
man, God begins with his mother. Few of us realise the immense importance
attaching to the education of girls.
2. Incisive speech. ¡§He hath made My mouth like a sharp sword.¡¨
Speech is the most God-like faculty in man. Christ did not scruple to be called
the word or speech of God. This regal faculty is God¡¦s chosen organ for
announcing and establishing His kingdom over the earth. Our mouth must be
surrendered to God, that He may implant there the sharp two-edged sword that
proceeds from His own lips (Revelation 1:16).
3. Seclusion. ¡§In the shadow.¡¨ We must all go there sometimes. The
photograph of God¡¦s face can only be fixed in the dark chamber.
4. Freed from rust. ¡§A polished shaft.¡¨ Weapons of war soon
deteriorate. Rust can best be removed by sand-paper or the file. Similarly we
must be kept bright and clean. For this purpose God uses the fret of daily
life, the chafe of small annoyances, the wear and tear of irritating tempers
and vexing circumstances.
II. APPARENT
FAILURE (Isaiah 49:4). This heart-break seems inevitable to God¡¦s most gifted and
useful servants. It is in part the result of nervous overstrain, e.g. Elijah
(1 Kings 19:1-21.). But in part it results from the expanding compassion of the
soul. There are three ¡¥sources of consolation.
1. That failure will not forfeit the bright smile of the Master¡¦s
welcome nor the reward of His judgment-seat. He judges righteously; and
rewards, not according to results, but to faithfulness.
2. The soul leans more heavily upon God. ¡§My God is become My
strength¡¨ (Isaiah 49:5).
3. We turn to prayer. How sweetly God refers to this, saying, ¡§In an
acceptable time have I answered thee, and in a day of salvation have I helped
thee¡¨ (Isaiah 49:8). Thus God deals with us all. He is compelled to take us to the
back side of the desert, where we sit face to face with the wreck of our
fairest hopes. There He teaches us, as He only can, weaning us from
creature-confidence, and taking pride from our hearts.
III. ULTIMATE
SUCCESS. When Jesus died, failure seemed written across His lifework. But that
very Cross, which man deemed His supreme disgrace and dethronement, has become
the stepping-stone of universal dominion. Thus it may be with some. They are passing
through times of barrenness, and disappointment, and suffering. But let them
remember that the Lord is faithful (Isaiah 49:7). He will not suffer one word to fail, one seed to be lost, one
effort to prove abortive, one life to be wasted. (F. B.Meyer, B. A.)
Service; call and
qualifications
I. THE CALL TO THE
SERVICE APPOINTED US OF GOD. ¡§The Lord hath called me from the womb.¡¨
1. To every human life that enters the world there is a special call,
and a distinct sphere of duty. Jeremiah was called from his birth (Jeremiah 1:5), and so was St. Paul (Galatians 1:15). These are types, not exceptions. Their call teaches us that
every human life is a real and distinct entity, a thing complete in itself, as
much so to the eye of God as the grandest object in any sphere of created life.
Behind all secondary causes there is a design and a purpose to each separate
existence, which gives it a dignity, and makes it a necessity in the government
of God. This truth is not one easy to realise. An individual is so
insignificant a thing among the millions inhabiting the surface of this globe,
while the globe itself is only as a grain of sand on the seashore beside
countless other worlds, that it is with no mock modesty we ask, ¡§What is man,
that Thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that Thou so regardest him?¡¨
This is true, but it is none the less true that each individual life has a
meaning and a mission in the plan and purpose of God; and to realise this is no
unimportant element in fitness for service. Two opposite errors there are which
have gone far to ruin countless human lives. One is the overestimating and the
other the underestimating our importance as individuals.
2. The question naturally arises, how is the Divine call to be
discerned? The natural predilections of a man may, to some extent, be taken as
pointing the direction in which his sphere of action lies. There are, besides,
his aptitudes, his special endowments. There is, also, the concurrent direction
of circumstances. Nor should a light stress be laid on the opinions of those
whose experience of life, and unbiassed judgment, qualify them to give sound
advice. Nor again, should the conscious promptings of some power within us,
compelling us to face, perhaps, an unwelcome prospect, be ignored. But at no
crisis in life is humble, submissive, patient, trustful waiting upon God of
greater importance than when we are responding, definitely and finally, to the
call of circumstances, of inclinations, and of qualifications in the choice of
life¡¦s sphere of duty. ¡§Trust in the Lord with all thine heart, and lean not to
thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct
thy paths.¡¨ And when the call comes, it is at our peril that we hesitate to
obey it.
II. THE
QUALIFICATIONS FOR IT (verse 2). This was emphatically true of our Lord Jesus
Christ. When, in the fulness of time, He was revealed to the world, His own
words were, ¡§I came not to bring peace, but a sword.¡¨ Moreover, in the
apocalyptic vision, the description given of His ascended and enthroned Majesty
is that of one ¡§out of whose mouth there went a sharp two-edged sword.¡¨ The
same figure is also applied to the third person of the Holy Trinity, of whom it
is said, that the ¡§sword of the Spirit is the Word of God¡¨--and never should it
be forgotten, that Bible truth, in mind, and heart, and life, and at ready
command for use, is pre-eminently the instrument of power for effective
service. Now the sword is the symbol of authority, as well as of war, and is
intended to vindicate the true as well as to slay the false. For this we need,
not only a sword, but a sharp sword. There are great and vital interests to be
vindicated, the interests of truth, and of humanity. We also need a sword, and
a sharp sword, to cut down errors and abuses. But for effective service we need
not only to be as sharp swords, but also as ¡§polished shafts.¡¨ A polished shaft
is a symbol of cultivated gifts, of trained endowments, and of aggressive power
at its best. The call and the gifts come from God; while the response to that
call, and the due cultivation and employment of the gifts depend upon man, and
if he neglects to do his part, what can his life be but a disastrous failure?
Definiteness of purpose is an essential condition of success in earthly
affairs. Moreover, in all true service there must be the element of
sacrifice--not merely the sacrifice of time, thought, pleasure, profit,
preference,but, above all, of self. One more element in fitness for service
must I mention, viz., that moral chivalry which goes by the name of
disinterestedness. (D. Howell, B. D.)
Verse 2
And He hath made my mouth
like a sharp sword
A sharp sword
1.
God does not undo, in His
relationship to us as Re-creator, the work which He has already performed as
Creator. He does not strip us of our natural faculties, and endow us with
others altogether distinct from these. Our natural faculties are in themselves
neither good nor bad, but in every case are capable of development, either in the
direction of good or of evil. When first the grace of God finds us, the powers
of evil have more or less infected our nature, and most of our faculties (if
not all of them) have exhibited a downward inclination; our members have become
¡§instruments of unrighteousness,¡¨ the weapons which Satan has used to do his
own fell work. It is upon these dishonoured faculties that God lays His hand
when He enters and takes possession of the new-created soul. What He demands on
our part is, that these members should be surrendered to Him, as they formerly
were to the powers of darkness.
2. The prophet here speaks of one important faculty which exercises
an influence for good or evil second to none that affects society--the tongue.
The faculty of speech is one of the noblest endowments of humanity,
distinguishing us, as it does, from all the lower animals, rendering social
life possible, and binding humanity into one. How much of evil originates with
the tongue! And yet what a mighty engine for good language may be! Surely God
has put no small honour on human speech when He permits His own Son to be
described as ¡§the Word¡¨ of God.
3. How many of us have endeavoured to use our tongues in the service
of God, and yet our efforts have been singularly weak and unsuccessful. Let us
not be discouraged, but listen to this word of power: ¡§I have made thy mouth a
sharp sword¡¨--sharp no longer for sarcasm and cutting scorn. The withering
scoff, the poisoned slander, the bitter reproach, are no longer to proceed,
like a sharp two-edged sword, from those consecrated lips of thine; but, if
thou wouldst but believe it, a new power has been communicated, in virtue of
which that very member, which was of old so keen-edged a weapon in the hands of
the destroyer, is now to be equally sharp and pointed in the grasp of its
Divine Master. But have we yet begun to be discontented with our want of
sharpness? Are we ready to be used by God as a sharp sword? Have we counted the
cost? Are we prepared for the consequences? If we are, our weakness matters
not. God can use us. ¡§Fear not, thou worm Jacob; I will make thee a sharp
threshing instrument, having teeth, and thou shalt break in pieces the
mountains.¡¨ How many of our well-meant efforts fail for want of teeth!
4. What is required in order to render us efficient instruments in
the hands of God?
A sharp sword in God¡¦s
hand
Two young men were
educated together in an American university. The one was possessed of very
considerable talents, and subsequently became the popular minister of a large
and fashionable congregation; the other was a man of humble abilities, but
possessed by an ardent desire to win souls, and therefore ready to adapt his
means to the attainment of this end. Years rolled on, and the popular preacher
had occasion to pay a visit to the parish of his old acquaintance. After
witnessing all that was going forward in connection with his friend¡¦s
congregation, he could no longer repress his astonishment. ¡§I cannot understand
how it is,¡¨ he said, ¡§that everything in your district and congregation seems
to flourish. Your church seems full of really converted souls. The number of
your communicants is astonishing, and the amount of work that seems to be going
on all round fills me with amazement. How can it be that I, preaching the same
truth, yet see scarcely any definite result of my labours? I can scarcely point
to any who have been turned from darkness to light as the result of my
ministry.¡¨ After much conversation, his friend requested him to try an
experiment. ¡§Will you,¡¨ he said, ¡§take one of my sermons (which in style and
composition are by no means to be compared to your own), and deliver it to your
own flock? Make it a matter of prayer beforehand that God will make use of it,¡¨
not only for their good, but as a lesson to you in your own ministry, if it is
intended to be so. Then watch the results. He agreed to do so, and on returning
to his flock, delivered with much feeling one of his friend¡¦s fervid
discourses. The effect was evident, and to him astonishing. It was clear that
many in the congregation were deeply stirred by what they had been listening
to. At the conclusion of the service he was sent for by a lady, whom he found
remaining behind in the church, in a state of considerable agitation. ¡§If,¡¨ she
exclaimed, ¡§my dear sir, what I have heard from you to-day is true, then I am
all wrong!¡¨ ¡§My dear madam,¡¨ he replied, with great consternation, ¡§what is the
matter? I hope I have said nothing that has hurt your feelings!¡¨ (W. Hay
Aiken, M. A.)
The Word of God as a sword
1. Because it pierceth the very heart (Acts 2:37; Acts 7:54).
2. Because it separateth between virtue and vice, by teaching what is
good and what is evil.
3. Because it cutteth off sin, by the threats which are therein
contained against sinners, and by the promises which are thereby made to those
who forsake sin.
4. Because it cuts off error and heresy by teaching the truth. (W.
Day, M. A.)
In the shadow of His hand hath He hid Me
Seclusions
These words refer in the
first place to Him who is the central figure of all prophecy, the coming
Messiah. Perhaps they point to His pre-existent state, and denote the
concealment of the Eternal Word before it was made flesh. Or the words may
contain an allusion to certain aspects and experiences of Christ¡¦s earthly
history, and notably the first thirty years of it. What holds good with regard
to the Master, holds good also with regard to the servants. As He was in this
world, so are they. It is not so much the expression of a general and abiding
relationship we have here, as of a special and occasional experience. Every
believer lies locked in the closed hand of God, nor shall any pluck him out of
it. But it is not of a hiding such as this that the text speaks. It is rather
of what is temporary and repeated. What, then, are some of the ideas involved
in the special figure of the text?
I. We have God¡¦s
love brought before us as an influence to PRESERVE AND PROTECT. And it
preserves us in a special way, it protects us through a special process--by
withdrawal. That, of course, is not always God¡¦s plan. He has other ways of
arranging in providence for the safety of His people, than by removing them
from the sphere of their danger. When opposition threatens or temptation
assails, He may keep men face to face with the foes that encompass, and seek to
educate and to strengthen them by the process. At such times as these they are
called to comport themselves as good soldiers of Christ. But at other times it
is not incitement that the Christian needs, nor the strength that enables him
to do and to dare. It is shelter, screening, quiet, and removal. And when such
seasons are needed, they are given. And what a hand it is to retreat to! Think
of all that the Scripture reveals to us of its power.
II. The text leads
us to think of God¡¦s care as a PREPARING influence. It trains, as well as
protects. He quenches not the smoking flax; on the contrary, He fosters and
fans it. And for this end He covers it with the shadow of His arched hand, till
it brightens from a smouldering spark to a clear and steady flame. Sometimes
these seasons of concealment take place at the beginning of a man¡¦s life-work.
Take Paul, the newly-converted. When the due time came, and study and
seclusion, meditation and silence, had accomplished their work, the hand was
unclosed, the shadow was withdrawn. God drew the shaft He had polished from its
quiver, and Paul came forth from his retreat, ready to do and to speak, to
suffer and to dare for the cause of Christ. And what happens at the outset of a
believer¡¦s life, happens often in its course; and many an active Christian life
has been cleft in twain by the silence and the pause it imposes. There is a
special illustration in the history of Luther. The man had attained the very
climax of his immense activities. The nations had wakened from the sleep of
ages at the thunder of his lips. Hither and thither he had been moving; here
attacking, there defending, yonder restraining. And now every nerve was strung
to tenseness by the strain, every faculty wrought to fever in the whirl. And
what does God do with him? He suddenly bears him off out of view, takes him
from pulpit and from councils, hushes and encloses him in the Wartburg, and
leaves him there in imprisonment and isolation for a time. Had God no purpose
in view, in thus plunging His servant into the darkness awhile--apart from the
work that he loved so well? Assuredly He had. The Church of Christ was all the
better of this temporary withdrawal of its one outstanding defender. It was
reminded thereby that the cause was God¡¦s and not man¡¦s. And it was taught that
the cause could go on, though the man who was its agent was removed. Luther himself
was all the better of the discipline too. And when Luther emerged from the
shadow, in God¡¦s good time, to achieve and withstand, to struggle and to
conquer, once more, he did so as a stronger, because a wiser and a calmer man.
And a year¡¦s or a month¡¦s time spent in quiet waiting in the shadow of His
hand, may do more to ripen the soul for its future existence with Himself than
half-a-century of busy labour amidst the outward activities of life. The
believer passes from the sphere of active work to the sphere of quiet waiting,
that the discipline of service may be supplemented by the discipline of
submission, and the God of peace be enabled through the training to sanctify
him wholly. The shadow where the life disappears is only the shadow of the
hand. And when the hand is unclosed on the other side death, the light it has
covered will be found to be all the more steady and brilliant for the
discipline, and shall shine in God¡¦s holy place, as the stars in the firmament,
for ever and for ever.
III. Pass from the
protecting and preparing influences of God¡¦s hand, to its CHASTENING. For you
have the idea here not only of isolation, but of pressure; pressure and pain.
It does not always lie gently round about us, this hand of God. There are times
when it contracts more tightly, darkens more deeply, impinges more closely. And
it does so in many ways--does so even when we are least ready to realise the
source whence the pressure arises. If ever a Christian is tempted to think his
trials come from another source than the wise and tender Fatherhood of God, it
is when they shape themselves in the words and deeds of sinful men. Yet the
shadow which they cast on the life is only the shadow of the hand, and the pain
the experience gives us only its contracting pressure. And of other trials than
these, it is still the same. There are complications of adversity at times so
persistent and perplexing that they almost seem to argue the operation of some
malignant fate. You are in dark places, But it is only the shadow of the hand.
Lie quiet, and bear it as well as you can. And He who at present contracts His
hand will in due time open it, and set you in a large room once more.
IV. The text speaks
of the INDIVIDUALISING influence of God¡¦s care. While I rest in the shadow of
the hand, God of course has the whole of me; but there is another side to the
relationship: I have the whole of God.
V. The text
reminds us of the hand of God in its REMOVING influences. When lover and friend
are put far away from us, and our acquaintance are hid in darkness, they are
only removed by the same loving hand, and covered awhile in its shadow, but
blessed and safe where they rest, awaiting the adoption, to wit, the redemption
of the body. And what of the body itself? (W. A. Gray.)
A polished shaft
A polished shaft
I. The prophet
speaks of the servant of the Lord under the figure of A POLISHED SHAFT. There
are not wanting some who, in their eagerness to deliver their souls, and to be
faithful to their responsibilities, outstep the limits of Christian courtesy.
They have their own blunt way of working for God, and they are disposed to
flatter themselves that it is the best way, because it is most in accordance
with their own natural dispositions; but the Lord seeks polished shafts for His
quiver. No sword was ever so sharpened as were the words of Jesus; and yet how
gentle He was, how considerate! But, you say, we have all our natural
peculiarities, and we must continue to be what nature has made us. Not so, my
dear brother. Thou art to be perfected by grace, not by nature. Cut a rough
stick from a hedge: if it be tolerably straight, and a spike be stuck in the
end of it, it may serve, on an emergency, in the place of an arrow at a short
range. But every little notch, every distinguishing peculiarity, of that rough
stick is an impediment to its flight. We need not fear for the skill of the
Great Archer who keeps His saints in His quiver; but we must remember that when
we assert our natural peculiarities of disposition, instead of surrendering
ourselves to Him to be polished according to His will, the fault is ours, not
His, if we miss the mark. We have no right to be content with doing the Lord¡¦s
work in a ¡§rough and ready,¡¨ bungling, clumsy fashion, effecting perhaps a
little good and a great deal of harm. ¡§He that wins souls is wise¡¨; he that
seeks merely to relieve his own conscience can afford to do things in a
blundering way. What does it matter to him, so long as it is done? But surely
if the work is to produce its proper effect, we need much tact, much delicacy
of feeling, much tenderness of sympathy; we need to learn when to hold our
tongues, and when to speak. It is quite true that God may bless our very
blunders when He sees they are committed with true sincerity of purpose, and
arise rather from ignorance and bad taste than from wilful carelessness; but
that does not warrant us in continuing to blunder, still less in regarding our
blunders as almost meritorious, and reflecting self-complacently that it is
¡§our way of working.¡¨ We shrink from the polishing process; but He who desires
to see us so polished that we shall reflect His own glory, not exhibit our own
peculiarities, will take care that the means for our polishing are forthcoming.
It is by friction that the arrow is polished, and it is by friction that our
idiosyncrasies are to be worn away. This friction is provided in different
ways. Perhaps it will be supplied by failures and disappointments, until, like
Gideon of old, we are ready to say, ¡§If the Lord be with us, why is it thus
with us?¡¨ Perhaps it will be supplied by the violent and bitter antagonism
which our inconsiderate roughness and unwisdom has stirred in the hearts of
those whom we seek to benefit. Sometimes it is provided in our common
intercourse with others, not unfrequently in our intercourse with
fellow-Christians. Possibly He may subject us to the severest discipline of
trial before the work of polishing is complete; but polished in one way or
another the shafts must be which He is to use for His own glory.
II. THE SHAFT IS
POLISHED ONLY TO BE HIDDEN. It might seem that when once the process of
polishing had been completed, the arrow would be a proper object for display,
and here is a peril which even polished shafts are exposed to. There is so much
of the beauty of the Lord impressed upon some of His servants, that men cannot
withhold their admiration. Christians are lavish of their love, and there are
hidden perils concealed under this favourable esteem. Sharpened and polished,
how apt are we to display ourselves, even as the Assyrian axe of old ¡§boasted
against him who hewed there with.¡¨ ¡§But,¡¨ says the great apostle (himself a
polished and sharpened arrow), ¡§we preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the
Lord.¡¨ And so it is that the polished shaft has to be hidden. Your attention is
not directed to the arrow while it is waiting to be used; it is concealed
within the quiver.
The eye is not caught by
it when it is in the hand; it is hidden under the shadow of the hand. Another
moment, it rests on the bow; another moment, and it speeds to the mark. Neither
in the quiver, nor in the hand, nor on the bow, nor in its flight, is the arrow
conspicuous. The more swiftly it flies, the more invisible it is. Thus the
archer wins all the applause, and the arrow is nothing; yet it is by the arrow
that he has done his work. And while man is not attracted to the arrow, the
great Archer Himself is. It is upon it that He bends His eye. It is to it that
He gives the credit of the victory: ¡§Thou art My servant, O Israel, in whom I
will be glorified.¡¨ Yes, there is a special joy in His heart when He can truly
say of us, ¡§Thou art My servant.¡¨ How near we are to His sacred Person when we
are thus hidden in God¡¦s hand, concealed in His quiver! And how much truer and
deeper the joy of such service than the momentary excitement of human applause!
And then the thought that it is possible for God to be glorified in us as the
archer is glorified in the arrow, that the intelligences of heaven shall gaze
down and admire the work that God hath wrought by instruments once so
unpromising, and shall praise Him for it; that men on earth shall be
constrained to admit that this is the finger of God, and to take knowledge of
us that we have been with Jesus; that the devils in hell shall recognise in our
lives the presence of Omnipotence, and tremble as they see the mighty Archer
draw us from the hiding-place within the quiver! ¡§Hidden in God¡¦s hand!¡¨ Hidden
from the grasp of Satan. He fain would snatch us out of God¡¦s keeping; but his
hostile hand can never touch those who are concealed in God¡¦s quiver. Hidden
from the desecrating touch of the world to which we no longer belong. Hidden
above all from ourselves--our morbid self-consciousness, our inflated
self-esteem, our gloomy self-depression. (W. Hay Aitken, M. A.)
The pride that apes
humility
I remember once
overhearing the remark from the lips of one whom long experience and keen
observation had taught more of the subtlety of the human heart than most men
ever discern: ¡§Ah, my dear brother, the truth is that we are all full of self;
only some of us have the good taste not to show it, and some have not.¡¨ The
words may appear almost cynical, but a little reflection will show us how true
they are. (W. HayAiken, M. A.)
A polished arrow
Mark Guy Pearse says that
the crest for the Lord¡¦s worker is ¡§an arrow¡¨ polished and feathered, content
to be in the quiver until the Master uses it; lying on the string for His
unerring fingers to send it forth, then going strong, swift, sure, smiting
through the heart of the King¡¦s enemies, and with this for the motto, ¡§I fly
where I am sent.¡¨
Verse 3-4
And said unto me, Thou art
My servant
The service of man the
manifestation of God¡¦s highest glory
How numerous are God¡¦s
servants! All things in heaven and upon earth, all worlds, all elements, and
all creatures are His servants, which obey His word, and declare His greatness
and glory.
But of all God¡¦s servants in this world man ranks highest, and through his
service God is glorified in a sense that He could not be glorified through the
service of any other creature. Israel was God¡¦s servant in a pre-eminent sense,
whether the word be taken to mean the nation as God¡¦s chosen people or an
individual as God¡¦s messenger to do His will. But the ideal of God¡¦s servant in
this book was realised only in the Lord Jesus Christ. Man appears greatest when
he serves, and there is no way to true greatness but through service. And God
appears greatest when He condescends to serve. The Son of God looks more Divine
on the Cross of His humiliation than on the throne of His glory, for on the
Cross that which was deepest in His nature became visible. And it may be said
that in every good man God becomes incarnate, and takes upon Himself the form
of a servant, and by so doing bestows upon him the highest greatness. God says
to every one of His faithful children, ¡§Thou art My servant, in whom I will be
glorified.¡¨ The way to glorify God is by serving man.
I. WHAT IS MEAT BY
GOD¡¦S GLORY? With glory we associate the ideas of purity, beauty, and
sublimity; and God¡¦s glory is the energetic expression of His holiness in all
His works, in myriad different forms and ways.
II. THE SERVICE OF
MAN AS THE MANIFESTATION OF GOD¡¦S HIGHEST GLORY. Man has been created for the
revelation of the highest glory of the Divine nature, and when he serves God
faithfully, God breaks forth into glory in his character and work. This is the
glory of His moral attributes, the glory of His love, mercy, compassion, and
tenderness, which is infinitely greater than all the glory of the material
universe. You can never learn the character of God from the facts of nature,
any more than you can learn the character of the artist from his paintings, of
the architect from the buildings he has planned, or of the builder from his
work. In every gentle and kind word spoken to the affected, in every look of
compassion, in every tear of sympathy, and in every deed of kindness, God
breaks into glory that would make you tremble and adore if you were spiritual
enough to see it. How the Divine glory shone in the life of the apostle Paul!
In a dark age, when the superstition of the Papacy covered the land, God called
Martin Luther, and said, ¡§Thou art My servant, in whom I will be glorified.¡¨
And in Rowlands, Whitefield, Wesley, and others, God¡¦s glory broke forth in a
similar manner. In the only-begotten Son was revealed the glory of God as the
Eternal Father (John 1:14). Before the same glory shines forth in us we must become
something more than professed Christians, we must become Christ¡¦s. (Z.
Mather.)
God¡¦s servants
Painters, poets, and
musicians are God¡¦s servants, and in their masterly ]productions the Divine
glory bursts forth. Raphael was God¡¦s servant, and m the Transfiguration God¡¦s
glory broke forth. Handel was God¡¦s servant, and in his Messiah God¡¦s
glory broke forth. Milton was God¡¦s servant, and in his Paradise Lost the
Divine glory majestically broke forth. Statesmen, reformers, and
philanthropists are also God¡¦s servants, and He says to each one of them, ¡§Thou
art My servant, in whom I will be glorified.¡¨ But the shining of the Divine
glory is not confined to the highly gifted, but breaks forth in those who
faithfully serve God in obscure spheres of labour, unnoticed by the world. (W.
Hay Aliken, M. A.)
The three-fold experience
of Christ
I. THE
CONSCIOUSNESS OF A HIGH VOCATION. ¡§He said unto Me, Thou art My servant,¡¨
&c. Just as the words, ¡§Out of Egypt have I called My son,¡¨ never found
their full significance until they were applied to God¡¦s greater Son, so the
name ¡§Israel¡¨ was never fulfilled finally in Jacob, who first bore it, nor even
in the nation that has borne it after him, but has found its ultimate
fulfilment in Him who is pre-eminently a ¡§Prince with God,¡¨ and our Prince,
because He is our Saviour. We have, therefore, here a prediction of the
consciousness of a high mission which possessed the Christ, and brought Him to
this world of ours. Some of us will never forget the day when we were conscious
for the first time of the inspiring fact that God had spoken to us, and through
that experience of ours we may be able--as, indeed, the prophet through his
experience was supremely able--tounderstand something of the ecstasy with which
Christ, conscious of His glorious mission, came to this world of ours. It was
that that Christ remembered throughout His life, and it was that which
sustained Him throughout His personal ministry in the face of opposition and
discouragement of every kind. He knew that He was doing His Father¡¦s will, and
it was this consciousness that found expression in the prayer which He uttered
on the eve of His great passion, ¡§I have finished the work which Thou gavest Me
to do.¡¨ It was this assurance, too, that He sought to give to His disciples as
the mainspring of all their heroism. ¡§As the Father hath sent Me, even so send
I you.¡¨ ¡§Israel, in whom I will be glorified.¡¨ Scholars are divided here in
opinion. Some say that this ought to be translated, ¡§In whom I will burst forth
into glory.¡¨ This is a translation that charms me. Jesus was indeed ¡§the
effulgence¡¨ of the Father¡¦s glory--the shining forth of the light which had
ever been the light, but which would have been largely invisible to man apart
from the Incarnation. Then there is the other translation, ¡§In whom I will
beautify¡¨--or ¡§glorify¡¨--¡§Myself.¡¨ In harmony with this Jesus exclaimed near
the close of His life, ¡§Father . . . glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may
glorify Thee.¡¨ Did not the Son glorify the Father by the very outburst of light
which distinguished His life among men?
II. THE
CONSCIOUSNESS OF APPARENT FAILURE. ¡§I have laboured in vain, I have spent my
strength for nought and in vain.¡¨ We trace this consciousness at times even in
the Master in Gospel story. His disappointment in the face of human unbelief,
His sorrow over human sinfulness and ingratitude, the apparent waste of the
Divinest life that was ever lived among men in precept and example--these
weighed heavily upon Him. In this respect, as in many others, He was touched
with the feeling of our infirmity.
III. THE ASSURANCE
OF FINAL VINDICATION. ¡§Yet surely My judgment is with the Lord, and My
recompense with My God.¡¨ In other words, He knows the motives which have
prompted Me, and what led Me on step by step. Whether life be a failure or not,
whether My self-sacrifice appear fruitless or not, He knows what is the root of
all. Yea, I know more than that--I know not only that He will vindicate Me and
the motives which prompted Me; but I also know that My work must find its
reward; that all that is apparent failure is only apparent; that My toil must
bring forth fruit--¡§Surely . . . My work is with My God¡¨ (or, according to the
R.V., ¡§My recompense is with My God¡¨). Here again there is the double meaning,
and therefore a special wealth of significance. The word denotes more than the
¡§work,¡¨ and more than the ¡§recompense.¡¨ It denotes the work and its result; all
that the work meant: the toil of saving men, and the reward of seeing them
saved. Thus the Christ Himself, amidst all the ignominy and anguish of the
Cross and Passion, fell back upon the assurance of the Father¡¦s final
vindication. These, then, being pre-eminently the words of the world¡¦s Redeemer,
are surely an example and an inspiration to us to follow His example. (D.
Davies.)
Verse 4
Then I said, I have
laboured in vain
Christ in prophecy
These prophetic sayings go
to Christ, not outside of and separate from man¡¦s struggle, but in and through
it.
As all true Christians are living over again, in an imperfect way, the details
of Christ¡¦s own experience, so were all true godly men, before His coming, feeling
their way into it, being guided by Christ¡¦s spirit, and having the throb of His
life, which is the life of God, already palpitating in their bosoms. (J.
Ker, D. D.)
The complaint for
frustrated aims
These words bring before
us a feeling that belongs to the human heart in all places and times--the
complaint of man for frustrated aims. It is not easy to say in what distinct
form it is present to the mind of the original speaker here. Sometimes he
appears to express the feeling as his own personal experience--a man among his
fellow-men--and sometimes he seems to personify the nation to which he belongs.
Probably both are struggling together in his heart. The people of his race were
selected by God for a great purpose--to hold up His name and knowledge pure and
unsullied in the midst of the world¡¦s defections. But the purpose is, for the
while, an apparent failure. The world has corrupted those who should have
purified it, and God¡¦s judgment has fallen on their unfaithfulness till they
are scattered among the heathen and ready to perish. It seems as if Israel¡¦s
history were labour in vain. For himself, the prophet thought that he had been
chosen to bring back his people to the way of truth and righteousness. But the
people have erred, the prophet has failed, and he speaks both for himself and
for the best part of the nation, the true Israel of the Covenant. (J. Ker,
D. D.)
Apparent failure
I. SORROW FOR THE
FAILURE OF LABOUR. In thinking of this we may go down to a still lower stage
than that from which these words sprang in the heart of this man of God. The
complaint is made by many who have never sympathised with his high aim or
shared in his Divine work.
1. Take the first of the two great objects that call man to
labour--the gratification of self. How few prizes are drawn for the many
blanks! When some one spoke to Napoleon of his Italian campaign, and asked if
that marvellous part of his career did not give him exquisite pleasure, he
replied: ¡§It did not give me one moment of peace. Life was only incessant strife
and solicitude. The inevitable battle of the morrow might¡¨ annihilate all
memory of the victory of to-day.¡¨ We may call to mind the saying of poor Keats
when dying: ¡§I have written my name in water¡¨; nor would it probably have
comforted him much more at that time to think he had engraved it in marble.
Even affection and sympathy--how often are they not reciprocated, or returned
with ingratitude, or felt to be not of the deep kind the heart had yearned for!
2. The second is God and the good of His world. The higher a man¡¦s
idea of what the condition of the world Should be--of what a reign of
righteousness and happiness there might be if God had His due place--the more
likely is he to be depressed at times by the view of things around him, and the
slow way in which all our effort is bringing us to the goal.
II. SOME OF THE
TEMPTATIONS TO WHICH THIS SORROW FOR THE FAILURE OF LABOUR IS SUBJECT.
1. Take first, again, that class of men who have set before them in
life some personal object, and have been disappointed in it. The great
temptation in such cases is to brood over and magnify their disappointment.
2. Then, as to those who have a higher aim in life than any mere
personal one--who are truly seeking the glory of God and the good of their
fellow-men--they have also their temptations under failure. We are so ready to
judge of the plan of the world by our own little share in it, and to think all
the war is lost when our small detachment suffers a check.
III. THE RESOURCE WE
HAVE IN THE MIDST OF THIS SORROW FOR FAILURE. ¡§Yet surely my judgment is with
the Lord, and my work with my God.¡¨ There are two things this speaker fixes
upon, and they are a powerful stay if we can bring them as clearly and
confidently to God as he did. ¡§My judgment is with the Lord.¡¨ I can appeal to
His decision for the character of my motive. It was, so far as I knew it, pure
and true. ¡§My work is with my God.¡¨ I can cast on His decision the result of my
labour. I do not say that any mere man can do this with a perfect assurance that
all is right with him, and that He who searches the hearts, and tries the
reins, can absolve him as faultless; but I do say that there are men who, by
the grace of God, can appeal to God Himself for the sincerity of their aim. Let
us see how it should influence both the classes we have been considering.
1. Those men who have been seeking some personal object in life, and
have failed in it, may learn much here. Let us take it for granted that there
was nothing sinful in your aim, and that you did not wish for any good,
inconsistent with the rights and the happiness of your fellow-creatures. It
seems very hard to you that you should be denied what many of them enjoy, and
you can scarcely help comparing your lot with theirs, with a sense of
bitterness, at least of regret. Here is a more excellent way of it. Instead of
putting your life beside theirs, refer yourself to God¡¦s judgment. If you can
put the case truly before the Judge and Controller of life, you may find
something in your life to correct, and something also that will give comfort.
May it not be that you have been making the aim of your life too narrow, even
as it concerns your own welfare? You have been thinking, perhaps, of worldly
position and acknowledgment, more than of the building up of your character in
what is true and pure and godlike--more of your outward than of your inward and
real life. These failures may be to teach you to begin again, and to aim at a
wider basement and a higher top-stone--to take into your edifice the soul¡¦s
interests, and to let its front look Godward and heavenward. And you have been
making, perhaps, the aim of your life too narrow as it concerns your
fellow-men. You have made self too exclusive. If you come, after all the
failures of life, in this submissive spirit to God for His judgment, He will
give you not only means of correction, but comfort. Though you may have lost
what you once reckoned the good of life, there is another and higher good still
open to you, not merely hereafter, but here. God can teach you how to build on
the ruins of former hopes--nay, He can show you how you may take the very
stones of them that have fallen and lie scattered around, and may joint them
into a new and most beautiful and enduring structure. You may never in this
world have the keen thrill of joy your heart once panted for, but a conscious
and deep peace will recompense its absence,--more satisfying and more abiding.
2. There is a resource here, also, for that nobler style of men, who
have laboured for the cause of God and their fellow-creatures, and have failed
to find the success they sought. It may seem strange at first sight that there
should be such failures. Yet there are some things which make it not so
strange, if we will but reflect. Are we sure that our motives are always as
high as we ourselves fancy, and may not failure be meant to send us back to
sift and purify them? Our very despondency may arise from our having looked too
much to success and too little to duty. God must have standard-bearers who are
ready to make a shroud of their colours, and how can they be known but in hours
of defeat? And, though our motives are pure, is our work always wise? Are
Christians to expect that carelessness and rashness will succeed, simply
because of good intentions? After all, however, the great resource we have is
to fall back on this appeal ¡§My judgment is with the Lord, and my work with my
God.¡¨ Man judges by success, God by simplicity of heart; and many an unnoticed
effort and inarticulate prayer that never seemed to touch the conflict shall
share in the full triumph of the victory. Those who have failed to find
position or comfort, fame or sympathy in the world, may have One who can bear
His share with you here, who chose this place in life, which you call loss,
that He might be nearer you, and show you that life has greater things than all
you have coveted. Those of you who complain that you have laboured for your
fellow-men and God with small return, have One here who gave up infinitely
higher things, and met from men a more cruel award. Let all be done under the
cover and trusting in the strength of Him who alone ¡§works all our works in
us.¡¨ Let the sinful past come under this shadow to find forgiveness; the narrow
and selfish life, to find a new and lofty aim; and all our fears and griefs and
disappointments, to find comfort and hope in Him who entered the world to
redeem it from fall and loss, and to make every true life succeed at last, even
where it seemed to fail. (J. Ker, D. D.)
The glorification of civic
life
Think of the worth and
greatness of a human life in that elect society and holy city which is the
servant of God. If the corporate consciousness of the city should become a
judgment and recompense with God; if the sense of God and His holy presence
should envelop the whole city in its power, and reach every man in it, even as
the morning light comes into every home; if the city should awake with God; if,
throughout the day, in the mind of the city, the thought of God should have its
dwelling-place, and if in the government of the people the law of God should
have its throne; if some awe of the Divine righteousness should pervade the
business of the city, and some deep sense of Divine blessedness, like a
fountain of life, should well up and abound in the happiness of the city, and
some greatness of the Divine purpose should enlarge all the work of the city,
and make the least faithfulness a service of God; if some peace of the Divine
eternity should rest upon all life¡¦s changes in the city, and the hope of some
Divine event bend over every new-made grave, and the comfort of some Divine
omnipresence fill as with an all-pervasive love every heart in the city that
had been left in loneliness of grief;--if, in one word, a whole city should
become, what Isaiah beheld in the far future, a city of God, a Messianic city,
the elect servant of God,--think you that in that city ¡§Sought out, a city not
forsaken,¡¨ any humanlife could seem to be a life for nought, and its labour in
vain?--a worthless thing to be trodden under foot, or only a moment¡¦s flash of
pleasure?--a life not to be prized and kept as a sacred, immortal trust? Would
not every least life in a city of God, full of the consciousness of God, become
a life of moral worth, a birth into an immortal consciousness, a part in some
universal good, a fellowship with something celestial, an anticipation and a
share in some eternal triumph and joy of life? (N. Smyth, D. D.)
The ineffectiveness of
Christ¡¦s personal ministry, a man-reveallng fact
Assuming that these words
express Christ¡¦s experience, they cannot be taken in an absolute sense. He
laboured in vain, compared with what the kind and amount of agency employed
were suited to effect. We shall look at this fact as revealing certain other
facts in relation to human nature.
I. IT REVEALS
MAN¡¦S FREEDOM OF ACTION. We cannot conceive of a mightier moral energy being
brought to bear upon mind than that which Jesus brought to bear upon the Jewish
mind, and yet it was resisted. The Jews resisted moral omnipotence. He appealed
in the most powerful way to three of the most influential principles in our
nature.
1. Belief. If you want to influence men, you must take your stand
upon their faiths. There were, especially, two faiths which Christ appealed to;
the one instinctive, and the other attained. The former was, that miracles are
the works of God; the latter, that their Scriptures predicted a Messiah. Christ
appealed to these predictions.
2. Conscience. His character, doctrines, and precepts bore directly
on the conscience.
3. Interest. He revealed the judgment-day, unfolded heaven, uncovered
hell. Thus He assailed their souls; and yet they resisted. Do not say that man
has no moral power; he has proved himself, by the comparative ineffectiveness
of our Saviour¡¦s labours, to have power to resist the mightiest moral
influences of God.
II. IT REVEALS
MAN¡¦S PERVERSITY OF CHARACTER. The possession of the capacity to resist the
highest moral influences is the gift of God. It is neither subject for blame
nor praise, but for thankfulness to God. But the using of that capacity to
oppose holy and Divine influences is our guilt and ruin. There were three
perversities in the Jews that led to this resistance. 1: Perversity of
judgment.
2. Perversity of feeling. There were two perverse feelings, especially,
that led them to reject Christ.
3. Perversity of life. Josephus informs us that so corrupt was the
Jewish nation in the time of Christ, that had not the Romans come and destroyed
them, God would have rained fire from heaven, as of old, to consume them. These
perversities of judgment, feeling, and life, have ever been impulses
stimulating man to oppose Christianity.
III. IT REVEALS
MAN¡¦S EXCLUSIVE SUPPORT IN HIS HIGHEST LABOURS. The highest labour is that in
which Christ was engaged. What was His support? Not adequate success; for He
complains of not having it. Here it is, ¡§Surely My judgment is with the Lord,
and My work with My God.¡¨ Two supporting ideas are here involved--
1. That the cause in which we are engaged is the cause of God. ¡§My
work is with my God¡¨
2. That the reward of our efforts is from God. ¡§My judgment¡¨ (reward)
¡§is with the Lord.¡¨ The good will he rewarded, not according to the success of
their labours, but according to the purity of their motives, and the devotion
of their power. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Apparent failure sometimes
the truest success
1. This is just the language which we find at times forcing its way
from the lips of most of those great men who have felt most conscious of having
a mission from God. Those who have most deeply and radically influenced for
good the minds of their generation have been usually distinguished by fits of
profound melancholy; regret that they have ever entered on their heroic course;
weariness at the opposition which they meet with; distrust of their own fitness
for the task; doubts whether God has really commissioned them to act on His
behalf. Why is this? It is because God¡¦s results are for the most part secret.
A man who sets a great example is hardly ever conscious of the effect which his
example produces. If his plans are not carried out precisely in the way and to
the end which he had originally contemplated, he persuades himself that they
have been an utter failure, that no good can have arisen from them; whereas the
truth is, and other persons see it, that the particular plans were from the
outset worthless, in comparison with the exhibition of character by which the
very attempt to execute them was accompanied.
2. The Cross of Christ is the true guide to the nature and value of
real success. What a failure was the life of Christ, if we measure it by
immediate results! No wonder that the Cross was to the Jews a sore
stumbling-block, and to the cultivated Greeks utter foolishness, just as it
would now appear to most of us. For even we, the heirs of eighteen centuries of
faith in the Crucified One, seem hardly yet to have learned the lesson that the
suffering, self-sacrifice, devotion to principles, and heedlessness of
immediate consequences, are the indispensable foundations of all permanent success.
(H. M. Butler, D. D.)
Comfort under
self-depreciation
1. Some persons give themselves much unnecessary pain by underrating
their real service in the world. The question of good-doing is one of great
subtlety. The quiet worker is apt to envy the man who lives before society in a
great breadth of self-demonstration. It is as if the dew should wish to be the
pattering hail, or as if the soft breeze should disquiet itself because it
cannot roar like a storm. We forget that whirlwind and earthquake, fire and
cloud, tempest and silence, have all been God¡¦s messengers; and it would be
foolish of any of them to suppose that it had been of no use to the world.
2. The text shows the true comfort of those who mourn the littleness
and emptiness of their lives. ¡§My judgment is with the Lord,¡¨ &c. God knows
our purposes, our opportunities, and our endeavours, and He will perfect that
which concerneth us. The intention of the heart, which it was impracticable to
realise, will be set down to our favour, as if we had accomplished it all. (Y.
Parker, D. D.)
Discouragement
Each epoch has its special
temptations and trials. For Christians of to-day, one of these maladies is
discouragement.
Discouragement! not in
that acute and passionate form which strikes us in the bitter and despairing
complaints of the prophets and believers of other centuries. We suffer from a
less violent ill, less dangerous in appearance, but dull, slow, and
treacherous.
1. Many causes explain it to us. The human mind, in its progressive
march, passes by turns through phases of assurance and disturbance.
2. In certain circles it is sought to escape from it by excesses of
feverish zeal. The imagination is excited by the prospect of the immediate
realisation of the promises of prophecy. These fictitious but intermittent
flashes only terminate in changing this languor into incredulity. What must be
done then? Build up your life on another foundation than that of your passing
impressions; fix it upon the central, eternal truth which dominates over the fluctuations
of opinions and beliefs; live in Jesus Christ; and upon the heights to which
this communion lifts you, breathe the vivifying air which alone can give you
strength. Then only can you oppose faith to sight, the eternal to the
transitory, and thanksgiving to discouragement.
But this is to tell you
that you must be, must (it may be) become again, Christians. Now this remedy is
not to be reached in a single day.
3. In going to the bottom of things I discover two principal causes
of the discouragement of the Christian. The first is the greatness of the task
which God sets before him; the second is his inability to accomplish it.
Ideal and realisation
Draw near to those giants
of the spiritual order, those workmen of God who in different ages have been
called Elijah, St. Paul, Chrysostom, St. Bernard, Luther, or Whitefield, and
who confound you by the immense work which they have accomplished, you will
hear them groan under the small results of their works. Elijah cries out to
God: ¡§Take away my life; I am not better than my fathers.¡¨ Isaiah pronounces
the words of my text: ¡§I have spent my strength for naught, and in vain.¡¨ St.
Paul trembles in fear of having been a useless labourer; St. Bernard expresses
in his last letters the painful feeling of having accomplished almost nothing.
Calvin, dying, said to those who surrounded him: ¡§All that I have done has been
of no value. The wicked will gladly seize upon this word. But I repeat it, all
that I have done has been of no value, and I am a miserable creature.¡¨ What
must we conclude? That these men did nothing? No, but that, in the presence of
the ideal which God has put in their heart, their work appeared to them almost
lost. (E. Bersier.)
Labour in vain, yet, not
in vain in the Lord
I. A LAMENTABLE
COMPLAINT, wherein our Lord complaineth, that although He came to the house of
Israel, where He published the Divine doctrine, wrought many miracles, and
showed admirable holiness of life, yet for most part He had lost His labour. ¡§I
have laboured in vain,¡¨ &c.
II. A CONSOLATION
of Himself upon this complaint, wherein He reareth up Himself with the
consolations of God in the midst of all those oppositions that were made
against Him, and all His lost labour. ¡§My judgment is with the Lard, and My
work with My God.¡¨
III. A CONFIRMATION
of this consolatory part, by three arguments--
1. From the assurance of His calling. ¡§And now thus saith the Lord
that formed Me from the womb to be His servant.¡¨
2. From His own faithfulness. ¡§Though Israel be not gathered, yet shall
I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord¡¨; I do My duty faithfully.
3. From the faithfulness of God. ¡§My God shall be My strength¡¨: as if
He had said, I know that God called Me to this office, and that I am faithful
in it, and therefore He will assist and stand by Me, and reward Me. (T.
Taylor, D. D.)
Apparent failure
Of Livingstone, on his
last journey, his biographer, Dr. Blaikie, says: ¡§During all past life he had
been sowing his seed weeping, but so far was he from bringing Pack his sheaves
rejoicing, that the longer he lived the more cause there seemed for his tears.
In opening Africa, he had seemed to open it for brutal slave-traders, and, in
the only instance in which he had yet brought to it the feet of men ¡§beautiful¡¨
upon the mountains, publishing peace, disaster had befallen, and an incompetent
leader had broken up the enterprise. After twenty-three years of labour, he
wrote: By the failure of the Universities Mission, my work seems vain. No fruit
likely to come from J. Moffat¡¦s mission either. Have I not laboured in vain?¡¦¡¨
Verses 5-7
And now, saith the Lord
Paradoxes of prophecy
I would weigh with you two
of those larger, and at the same time intense paradoxes of prophecy, which run
throughout the prophetic word, and which Isaiah, in these wonderful words
concentrates in one.
1. That He, who was foretold should Himself be the light and
salvation of those who knew not God unto earth¡¦s utmost bound, yet should fail
as to those to whom He should first come, the prophet¡¦s own nation, the people
among whom alone, before He came, He was looked for, hoped for, believed in.
2. That He, whom to adore should be the glory of kings, before whose
presence they should ¡§arise¡¨ from their thrones and bow down before Him, should
be first ¡§despised of man, abhorred by the¡¨ Jewish ¡§people,¡¨ be in the power of
the rulers of this world, as a slave is in the power of his masters. (E. B.
Pusey, D. D.)
Verse 6
And He said, It is a light
thing that Thou shouldest be My servant
The evangelical prophet:
his wide outlook
In the whole of this
prophetical book there is not a single verse in which the character of the
evangelical prophet is more conspicuous than it is here.
How must he have been transported beyond himself--how far must he have been
raised not merely above the vulgar passions and prejudices, but above the
noblest and purest aspirations of his contemporaries--how deeply must he have
been permitted to enter not only into the secret purpose, but into the heavenly
spirit of the Divine counsels, before he could have given utterance to such
words as these! Try to realise in some measure the import, the power, the charm
of those names--the names of Jacob, of Israel, in the mind of every faithful
Israelite. Think how not only his human affections, but his deepest religious
feelings, were centred in the prosperity of Zion and the peace of Jerusalem.
Think of the grief and the longing, the prayers and the tears of the exiles in
their captivity, when they remembered Zion. What joy could there be to such an
one comparable for a moment to the joy of raising up the tribes of Jacob, and
bringing back the preserved of Israel? And yet he was called upon by the voice
of God to regard this as a light thing, and in comparison with what was it a
light thing! What object was so far to transcend that which must have appeared
in his eyes as the greatest of all? It was that he should be given as a light
to the Gentiles, and that he should be the bearer of God¡¦s salvation unto the
ends of the earth. How doubly strange must such a commission have seemed to the
prophet who received it! Like every child of Abraham, he had been wont to look
down with mingled aversion and contempt on the mightiest and wisest of the
nations. He had directed his bitterest sarcasm against their idols; he would
have held himself defiled by sitting down at the board even of their nobles and
princes. Yet now the honour and welfare of the Gentiles is to be set far above
the deliverance and exaltation of the chosen people. He must break the bands of
prejudice, and learn a new estimate of life. (Bp. Perowne, D. D.)
Missions to She heathen
I. I venture to
say, looking at the diffusion of Divine truth and its attendant blessings which
are shadowed forth in the words of the prophet, EVEN OUR NATIONAL GREATNESS AND
GLORY IS A LIGHT THING. Consider what m the true test and measure of real
glory. I am not now speaking of it as it appears in the sight of Him by whom
the nations are counted as the small dust of the balance, and who taketh up the
isles as a very little thing. I would have you look at it from a human but
still manly and reasonable point of view as it appears in the estimate of
strangers, in the eyes of posterity, in the pages of history, in your own sober
judgment, when applied to other instances where you are not under the bias of
personal feeling or national prejudice. Take the case of an individual. Would
you seriously count it a glorious thing for a man to have amassed great wealth,
to have risen to a high station, to have acquired extensive authority? Or, do
you think it necessary to inquire what use he has made of these advantages,
what traces he has left of his passage through the world? It is not a
sufficient title to glory that our name, our race, our possessions, our power,
our influence have been extended to the end of the earth, and that every
quarter of the globe has yielded its tribute to our arms, our industry, and our
commerce. There still remains the question, What use have we made of all our
gifts and opportunities? What are the things we have carried with us abroad in
exchange for those which we have brought home? What are the tokens and
monuments of our presence in the land where we have settled and borne rule? The
ampler our means, the greater our power, the more commanding our influence, the
greater is our responsibility and the stricter the accounts which we must
render at the bar both of Divine and of human judgment. It is the proper object
of a Christian State to encourage all efforts for the extension of Christ¡¦s
kingdom, to place no obstacles in the way of that extension.
II. But how is it
as regards the Church? There can be no question that THE SENDING FORTH OF THE
GOSPEL BELONGS TO THE PROPER WORK OF THE CHURCH. It may truly be said, in a
certain sense, that all the rest is a light thing in comparison with this. Let
us suppose a Church pure, sound, and flourishing in all other respects. But if
a Church thus favoured puts forth no expansive energies, if she is content
merely with the enjoyment of her internal prosperity, then the fulness of these
blessings only renders the deficiency in its outward action the more glaring and
reprehensible. Whatever appearance there may be of health or vigour in a
motionless Church, all such indications must be hollow and fallacious. Such a
Church deceives herself, like that of Laodicea, saying, ¡§I am rich, and
increased in goods, and have need of nothing¡¨; being, in truth, ¡§wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked.¡¨ And lukewarmness is the cause, at
once, of the misery and the self-delusion. It was such a Church that received
the warning, ¡§I know thy works, that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art
dead.¡¨ Is that too much to say of a Church which, so far as regards those who
are without, is deaf and dumb and blind and palsied?--without an ear for her
Lord¡¦s commission, without a voice to proclaim His message, without an eye for
those whom He came to seek and to save, without hand or foot to stir in His
service--or rather, to speak more plainly, without faith to trust His Word,
without hope to abide His time, without love to spend and to be spent for His
cause. (Bp. Perowne, D. D.)
The missionary enterprise
1. To look at the question, even from a comparatively lower plane, is
there not something elevating in the whole history of missionary enterprise? Is
it not a good thing, an inspiring thing, to have lifted up before our eyes the
noble examples of the men who have gone forth sacrificing their earthly
prospects and encountering privation and suffering and the martyr death that
they might preach among the nations the unsearchable riches of Christ? They
have gained no earthly reward; they have looked for none. They have reformed
men sunk in the lowest depth of degradation, misery, and crime. They have
exhibited the Christian graces of domestic purity and truth and love. They
have, indeed, enriched the world; they have been the pioneers in civilisation.
The splendid heroism of our missionary martyrs has given us a loftier
conception of duty, and made our hearts throb with holier emotions, and put to
shame the weakness, the cowardice, the selfishness of our lives. Surely on this
ground alone we may say that the work of the Church at home is a light thing
compared with the mission work of the Church abroad.
2. This mission work abroad gives us new impulses and new motives,
because it is done in simple obedience to the command of our risen Lord, ¡§Go ye
into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature,¡¨ and a simple
trust in His promise, ¡§Lo, I am with you.¡¨
3. This mission work is a greater work because of the grandeur and
far-reaching compass of its conception, as putting no limits beyond those of
the habitable globe to its aims; greater, because it is not bounded by the
bounds of a parish or Church; greater, because it bears in its bosom the
inspiring truth that the kingdom of God is one, and that all work for Christ is
essentially one in its range, and power, and objects, however manifold it may
be in the forms which it assumes, or in its application to the various phases
of society, and the infinite diversity of the needs which it meets.
4. It is greater because, as all experience shows, it breathes a new
life into all the work at home. It is a sovereign, antidote to that selfishness
which is so often a canker in our work.
5. The missionary work of the Church is a greater work because of its
regenerating power m the revival of the whole Church. No one can question this
who has watched the development of missions and the relation of that
development to the work of the Church at home. It must often have awakened our
surprise that at the great Reformation which shattered the fetters of
superstition and brought out a nation beloved of God into the glorious liberty
of her children, and gave them the Word of life, no attempt was made to carry
the precious treasure to the rest of the world. It may be that the work they
had to do at home was the work to which God had called them, and that it so
absorbed all their thoughts and interest, it left no room for anything else.
There is no more striking instance of the reflex action of missionary efforts
than this, that it has been made in God¡¦s hand the instrument of a mighty
revival in the Church at home. Compare it with that other revival which dates
from Oxford some sixty years ago. The earlier Evangelical revival, striking as
were its results in the awakening of souls, and turning men from darkness to
light, and from the power of Satan unto God, left out of sight the corporate
unity of the Church. Its weakness was there. It was mighty in its spiritual
intensity, but it forgot that Christ came not to convert individuals only, but
to establish a Church. The Oxford Movement on the other hand dwelt too
exclusively on this aspect of the truth. Ritual darkened the spiritual life.
The work of God the Holy Ghost held a subordinate place in its teaching. The
power of the Great Commission has gone forth. The Church is sending forth
missions, and it is the reflex action of missions which is not only winning
fresh victories for Christ abroad, but is breathing a new life into the Church
at home. It does not despise sacraments or ordinances, but it puts them in
their proper place. (Bp. Perowne, D. D.)
Redemption, an eternal
purpose
A capable artist can find
no worthier exercise for the highest order of powers, than in depicting the
scene in the cabinet-council of some earthly monarch, at the moment when it is
determined to risk the hazard of war, in offence or in defence, to unsheathe
the sword, with the consciousness that the earthly fates of many kingdoms may
hang upon the issue, and that the sword may not return to its scabbard until it
be bathed red, and made drunk in the blood of myriads of slain. But in this
august conference, it is not the fate of one or two kingdoms that is at stake,
but of the world in all its extent, and in all its generations, and it may be,
of far more than this world; for it seems probable, that, whilst Christ, in His
coming into this world, laid not hold of the nature of angels to redeem them,
all the intelligent creatures of God have had their condition and destiny
modified by the incarnation, and life, and sufferings, and death, and
resurrection, and ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ. (T. Smith, D. D.)
The Gospel for all
I. THE FIRST
CLAUSE DOES NOT SEEM TO US TO DECIDE, ONE WAY OR ANOTHER, THE QUESTIONS THAT
HAVE BEEN OFTEN PUT AS TO THE FUTURE DESTINY OF THE JEWS. The acceptance of the
Gospel by the Jews as a nation, or by the great body of the people, were
comparatively a small matter, if it were placed instead of the diffusion of the
Gospel all over the world, and the gathering of the elect out of every people.
The two are ever to be viewed as great and important parts of a greater and
more important whole, and they are so joined together by the appointment of
God, that the one could not be effected were the other neglected. The times of
the fulness of the Gentiles are appointed to be the times of Israel¡¦s
gathering.
II. Although it
seems to be represented as if God had made the offer of the Gospel to the
Gentiles conditional upon its rejection by the Jews, this must certainly be
understood as spoken after the manner of men, and NOT AS IF GOD HAD MADE THE
EVANGELISATION OF THE WORLD DEPEND UPON A CONTINGENCY.
III. THE TERMS IN
WHICH CHRIST¡¦S OFFER TO THE GENTILES, AND THE DIFFUSION OF HIS GOSPEL AMONGST
THEM, ARE DESCRIBED. He is to be ¡§a light¡¨ and ¡§salvation¡¨ to them. This
implies their condition without Christ as one--
1. Of darkness.
2. Of perdition.
IV. THE ADAPTATION
OF CHRIST¡¦S GOSPEL TO REMEDY THE EVILS, AND SUPPLY THE WANTS OF THE GENTILE
WORLD. The perfect catholicity of the Christian system is one of the grandest
guarantees of its Divine origin. (T. Smith, D. D.)
God¡¦s salvation a light to
the Gentiles
The subject of this
chapter is ¡§Messiah God¡¦s Light¡¨ to the ends of the earth (John 8:12)., In orderfully to enter into our text, we will illustrate its
meaning by St. Paul s own Acts 26:18). Comparing both these passages, we find the design of God¡¦s
salvation to be that the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs Ephesians 3:6).
I. THE PURPOSE OF
GOD IN THIS SALVATION.
1. To make men to inherit the kingdom of God and home of the
Redeemer.
2. To offer this glory to the Gentiles.
II. THE GROUND ON
WHICH THIS SALVATION IS OFFERED. ¡§My salvation,¡¨ or, as in Acts 26:18, ¡§By faith that is in Me.¡¨
1. The object of this faith. ¡§In Me.¡¨ Jesus Himself.
2. The nature of this faith. Believing in His life and work;
receiving for our own salvation His offer of mercy; trusting Him wholly.
III. THE NATURE OF
THE SALVATION THUS OFFERED.
1. ¡§To turn them from darkness to light,¡¨ i.e conversion.
2. Forgiveness of sins. (H. Linton, M. A.)
Israel God¡¦s conduit-pipe
¡§That thou mayest be My
salvation,¡¨ &c. That thou mayest be the conduit-pipe of My salvation to
convey it to the end of the earth. (W. Day, M. A.)
Verse 7
Thus saith the Lord, the
Redeemer of Israel
The Redeemer of Israel
Israel shall be raised
from the deepest degradation to the highest honour.
The verse is remarkable as anticipating the main idea of Isaiah 52:13-15. (Prof. J. Skinner, D. D.)
Christ¡¦s future reign
I. THE DESCRIPTION
GIVEN OF THE MESSIAH.
1. As despised, rejected, and contemned by men.
2. As abhorred by the Jewish nation.
3. As ¡§a servant of rulers.¡¨ Though He was Ruler of all worlds, He
voluntarily submitted Himself to human power, and yielded obedience to human
rulers--the constituted authorities of His day. He conformed to the
institutions of His country (Matthew 17:27; Matthew 26:52-53). He submitted to an unjust trial and verdict.
II. THE PURPOSE OF
GOD RESPECTING THE MESSIAH¡¦S REIGN.
1. He is chosen of God to accomplish the world¡¦s salvation.
2. All shall bow to His sceptre. Kings shall see the fulfilment of
the Divine promise, by which He is destined to be the Light of the nations, and
they shall rise up with demonstrations of respect and reverence; they shall
render Him honour as their Teacher and Redeemer. They shall do homage to the
great King-Saviour.
3. God, in His faithfulness, will accomplish His gracious purpose.
Conclusion--
1. What a glorious period is approaching!
2. What encouragement have all Christian workers! The success of our
efforts is certain.
3. What is your relation to this great King-Saviour? (A. Tucker.)
Kings rendering homage to
Jesus
Kings, being usually
seated in the presence of others, are described as rising from their thrones;
while princes and nobles, who usually stand in the presence of their
sovereigns, are described as falling prostrate. (Hitzig.)
Verses 8-13
Thus saith the Lord, In an
acceptable time
The world given to Christ
The prophet was looking
forward to the Messiah and His times.
It was customary for some kings to grant to favoured ones whatever they
requested (Psalms 2:8). God¡¦s kingly Son is represented as having asked, and this is
the answer
I. THE PROMISED
UNIVERSAL DIFFUSION OF THE GOSPEL.
1. It was commenced in the apostolic age.
2. It has been continuing through the ages to the present hour.
3. It will be fully accomplished in ¡§the fulness of time.¡¨ What
reasons have we for believing this?
II. THE BLESSEDNESS
OF THOSE WHO SHALL EMBRACE IT (Isaiah 49:9-10). The promise includes--
1. Abundant provisions.
2. Careful protection.
3. Unerring guidance.
III. THE EXULTANT
PRAISE WHICH SUCH GLORIOUS PROSPECTS SHOULD AWAKEN (Isaiah 49:13). We should raise this song--
1. Because of the glory which the fulfilment of this promise will
bring to the triune Jehovah.
2. Because of the blessings the Gospel will bring to humanity.
Conclusion--Has this Gospel come to you in saving power? (A. Tucker.)
I will preserve thee, and give thee for a covenant of the people
Christ the covenant of His
people
I. WHAT THIS
COVENANT TOUCHING MAN¡¦S REDEMPTION IS. A covenant, in the general acceptation
of the word, is an agreement between two parties in any thing, or end, upon
certain articles or conditions, which both freely consent to. ¡§The covenant of
grace,¡¨ or ¡§of redemption,¡¨ is an eternal transaction between the Father and
Christ; a consultation and agreement between these two glorious Persons, how
man should be saved out of the ruins of the fall, in a way becoming God (Zechariah 6:13).
II. SUCH A COVENANT
HATH PASSED BETWEEN THE FATHER AND THE SON BEFORE ALL WORLDS.
1. There were terms made, or work demanded of the Mediator.
2. There were -promises given. Christ thus firmly and freely
consenting, and binding Himself to perform these terms and conditions, the
Father makes promises to Him.
3. There were mutual trusts which the glorious parties reposed in
each other.
III. WHO ARE THE
PEOPLE FOR WHOM CHRIST WAS GIVEN AS A COVENANT.
1. Such as are brought to seek happiness and life purely upon the
footing of this covenant.
2. The messenger of the covenant is their delight (Malachi 3:1).
3. Such as have the Spirit of the covenant in their hearts. Wherever
the Spirit is given, He comes as a Spirit of grace and supplication. He is a
Spirit of liberty. A Spirit of holiness.
IV. WHAT ARE THE
BLESSINGS REDOUNDING TO THE PEOPLE BY THIS COVENANT?
1. Their calling is secured.
2. All grace is treasured up for them.
3. Fellowship and communion with God,
4. Eternal life is given (Titus 1:2).
V. USES BY WAY OF
DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE.
1. Christ and His seed are comprehended in one and the same covenant.
2. That which is a covenant of grace to us, is a covenant of works to
Christ.
3. We learn the meaning of those phrases wherein God is said to make
¡§a covenant¡¨ with man.
4. We see the ground of the salvation of Old Testament saints. They
were justified and saved upon the foot of this covenant.
5. The substance of the covenant was the same, under both testaments;
only the dispensation of it varies. The covenant made with Abraham, Jacob,
David, &c., was a covenant, not of works, but of grace.
6. Why Christ is called the ¡§covenant¡¨ of His people. It is because
He is all in all in this covenant. Practical uses--
Christ in the covenant
We believe that our
Saviour has very much to do with the covenant of eternal salvation. We have
been accustomed to regard Him as the Mediator of the covenant, as the Surety of
the covenant, and as the scope or substance of the covenant. I shall dwell on
Christ as one great and glorious article of the covenant which God has given to
His children.
I. Here is a GREAT
POSSESSION--Jesus Christ by the covenant is the property of every believer.
1. Jesus Christ is ours in all His attributes. He has a double set of
attributes, seeing that there are two natures joined in glorious union in one
person. He has the attributes of very God, and He has the attributes of perfect
man; and whatever these may be, they are each one of them the perpetual
property of every believing child of God.
2. In all His offices. Is He a Prophet? He is thy Prophet. Is He a
Priest? He is thy Priest. Is He a King? He is thy King. Is He a Redeemer? He is
thy Redeemer. Is He an Advocate? He is thy Advocate. Is He a Forerunner? He is
thy Forerunner. Is He a Surety of the covenant? He is thy Surety. In every name
He bears, in every- crown He wears, in every vestment in which He is arrayed,
He is the believer s own.
3. In every one of His works, whether they be works of suffering or
of duty, they are the property of the believer. ¡§Circumcised in Christ.¡¨
¡§Buried with Christ in baptism unto death.¡¨ I die in Christ. I am buried with
Christ. We are ¡§risen together with Christ.¡¨ He hath made us ¡§sit together in
heavenly places.¡¨
4. In the person of Christ ¡§dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead
bodily.¡¨ ¡§And of His fulness have we received, and grace for grace.¡¨ All the
fulness of Christ to restrain thee, to preserve thee; all that fulness of
power, of love, of purity, which is stored up in the person of the Lord Jesus
Christ, is thine.
5. The very life of Christ is the property of the believer. ¡§Because
I live ye shall live also.¡¨ ¡§Ye are dead; and your life¡¨--where is it? It is
¡§hid with Christ in God.¡¨
6. Best of all, the person of Jesus Christ is the property of the
Christian.
II. FOR WHAT
PURPOSE DOES GOD PUT CHRIST IN THE COVENANT?
1. In order to comfort every coming sinner.
2. To confirm the doubting saint.
3. Because there are many things there that would be nought without
Him. His great redemption is in the covenant, but we have no redemption except
through His blood. His righteousness is in the covenant, but I can have no
righteousness apart from that which Christ has wrought out, and which is
imputed to me by God. My eternal perfection is in the covenant, but the elect
are only perfect in Christ. In fact, if you take Christ out of the covenant,
you have just done the same as if you should break the string of a necklace;
all the jewels, or beads, or corals, drop off and separate from each other.
4. Christ is in the covenant to be used.
III. Here is A
PRECEPT, and what shall the precept be? Christ is ours; then be ye Christ¡¦s.
Show the world that you are His in practice. When tempted to sin, reply, ¡§I
cannot do this great wickedness, for I am one of Christ¡¦s¡¨ When wealth is
before thee to be won by sin, touch it not: say that thou art Christ¡¦s. Are you
exposed in the world to difficulties and dangers? Stand fast in the evil day, remembering
that you are one of Christ¡¦s. Are you in a field where much is to be done, and
others are sitting down idly and lazily doing nothing? Go at your work, and
when the sweat stands upon your brow and you are bidden to stay, say, ¡§No, I
cannot stop; I am one of Christ¡¦s.¡¨ When the syren song of pleasure would tempt
thee from the path of right, reply, ¡§Hush your strains, O temptress; I am one
of Christ¡¦s.¡¨ When the cause of God needs thee, give thyself to it, for thou
art Christ¡¦s. And now, I must say one word to those who have never laid hold of
the covenant. I sometimes hear it whispered that there are men who trust to the
uncovenanted mercies of God. Let me solemnly assure you that there is now no
such thing as uncovenanted mercy. Mayhap, poor, convinced sinner, thou darest
not take hold of the covenant to-day. ¡§I dare not come; I am so unworthy,¡¨ you
say. Hear, then: my Master bids you come, and will you be afraid after that? (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 9
That thou mayest say to
the prisoners, go forth
Out of darkness into light
When Jesus comes to the
soul, He delivers us from that direst of all bondages, fetches us out from that
cruellest of all slaveries, the bondage of the spirit, the slavery of the
heart.
Then we are told that, if there are any who are m a worse state than that of
mere captivity, namely, in darkness as well as in bondage, the Lord Jesus
Christ comes to them, and says, ¡§Show yourselves; rise, and come out of the
darkness; hide away no longer, come forth into the light, and enjoy it.¡¨
I. I have to try
to FIND OUT THE CHARACTERS mentioned in the text: ¡§Them that are in darkness.¡¨
1. They were not always in darkness. She was a bright young spirit
once, after a fashion; and he,--I know him very well, seemed to be everything
that mirth could make youth to be. But, on a sudden, there came a cloud in the
sky, both to her and to him. It may be that a death happened in the family, or
sickness came, or if it was neither of these things, at any rate, the mind
suddenly grew strangely quiet, and a stillness came down upon the spirit, and
with that stillness there fell a gloom over the whole being. What were those
thoughts that brought such a sobering influence into the life? I can tell you
about them from my own experience. I thought, ¡§I have not lived as I ought to
have lived. God made me, yet I have never truly served Him. He is my mother¡¦s
God, but I have forgotten Him; my father¡¦s God, yet I have never sought Him.
What shall I do? God must punish me,¡¨ &c. I seemed plastic as wax towards
evil, yet hard as cast-iron or steel towards anything that was good. Then I
grew sad in soul. I read my Bible a great deal, and the more I read it the more
the darkness thickened about me, &c. This is the gateway into a joy that
will be worth your having.
2. Besides this, a sense of sin has settled upon you.
3. The soul I am describing is in the dark, and the darkness settles
down in conviction of sin. You have no hope.
4. You fear future and eternal night. It is to people in such a state
that the Gospel of Christ is sent.
II. I am going to
REPEAT THE EXHORTATION of the text: ¡§Show yourselves.¡¨
1. It means that you are running away from Divine justice, and that
your wisest course will be to go and deliver yourself up. Do you not know that
you are not really hidden? God sees you wherever you are; there is no hiding
away from Him That is the very first thing for you to do; to submit yourself to
God, to lie at His feet pleading for mercy.
2. The next way of showing yourselves is somewhat different: ¡§Say to
them that are in darkness, Show yourselves¡¨; that is, you are very lonely, and
you have been avoiding your best friends. Come out of your retirement. If you
cannot speak to any mortal man, yet speak to the Immortal Man; go and tell out
all your sorrow to the best of friends.
3. This passage may be applied to you who are sick, who are
concealing your disease. I want every man who is troubled about the state of
his heart, and every woman too, to come and show themselves to Christ, just as
they are, in all their sire
4. The next thing you have to do is to show yourselves As healed
ones, bound to confess Him who has cured them.
5. But I am going to carry the text a little farther yet. There are
some young men, perhaps some young women also, who have been saved; they are no
longer in the dark, and God has given them grace, and talents, yet still they
are hiding themselves away. They are chosen ones loth to take their place of
service. If the Lord has saved you, and if He is pleading for you in heaven, it
is time you began to plead for Him on earth.
6. Our text applies also to persecuted ones who shall be owned and
honoured of God. There will come a day when God¡¦s people, who have long been in
the dark through persecution, slander, and misrepresentation, shall hear the
Lord speaking to them out of heaven, and saying, ¡§Gather My saints together
unto Me; those that nave made a covenant with Me by sacrifice.¡¨ ¡§Say to them
that are in darkness, Show yourselves.¡¨ What a change will come for God¡¦s poor
despised people in that day!
7. These words also relate to dead ones called to resurrection. (C.
H.Spurgeon.)
They shall feed in the ways
The returning captives
This is part of the
prophet¡¦s glowing description of the return of the captives, under the figure
of a flock fed by a great shepherd. We have seen a flock of sheep driven along
a road; some of them hastily trying to snatch a mouthful from the dusty grass
by the wayside. Little can they get there; they have to wait until they reach
some green pasture in which they can be folded. This flock shall ¡§feed in the
ways¡¨; as they go they will find nourishment. That is not all; the top of the
mountains is not the place where grass grows. There are bare, savage cliffs,
from which every particle of soil has been washed by furious torrents, or the
scanty vegetation has been burnt up by the fierce ¡§sunbeams like swords.¡¨ There
the wild deer and the ravens live, the sheep feed down in the valleys. But ¡§their
pasture shall be in all high places.¡¨ The literal rendering is even more
emphatic: ¡§Their pasture shall be in all bare heights¡¨ where a sudden verdure
springs to feed them according to their need. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Feeding in the ways
Whilst this prophecy is
originally intended simply to suggest the abundant supplies that were to be
provided for the band of exiles as they came back from Babylon, there lie in it
great and blessed principles which belong to the Christian pilgrimage, and the
flock that follows Christ.
1. They who follow Him shall find in the dusty paths of common life,
and in all the smallnesses and distractions of daily duty, nourishment for
their spirits. Do you remember what Jesus said? ¡§My meat is to do the will of
Him that sent Me, and to finish His work.¡¨ We, too, may have the same meat to
eat which the world knows not of. That is a great promise, and it is a great
duty.
2. Further, my text suggests that for those who follow the Lamb there
shall be greenness and pasture on the bare heights. Strip that part of our text
of its metaphor, and it just comes to the blessed old thought, that the times
of sorrow are the times when a Christian may have the most of the presence and
strength of God. ¡§In the days of famine they shall be satisfied.¡¨ Our prophet
puts the same thought, under a kindred though somewhat different metaphor, in
another place in this book where he says: ¡§I will open rivers in high places.¡¨
That is clean contrary to nature. The rivers do not run on the mountain-tops, but
down in the low ground.
3. May I turn these latter words of our text a somewhat different
way, attaching to them a meaning which does not belong to them, but by way of
accommodation? If Christian people want to have the bread of God abundantly,
they must climb. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Verses 10-26
They shall not hunger nor
thirst
Promise of Christ to His
people
The people of God are
represented as a flock of sheep travelling under the care of their good
shepherd, in the heat of summer, through a barren and dry wilderness, towards a
land of plenty, security, and everlasting rest.
Under such circumstances, what would this flock require? What might they expect
from the hand of a faithful shepherd? There are doubtless three things which
they would want and might look for--provision, protection, and refreshment.
Such are the blessings promised by Christ in the text.
I. PROVISION.
¡§They shall not hunger nor thirst.¡¨ Christ will furnish them with all things
necessary both for life and godliness; that is, with a sufficiency of all
temporal and spiritual blessings.
II. PROTECTION.
¡§Neither shall the heat nor the sun smite them.¡¨ His people are exposed to the
fire of persecution; but by His almighty power, by providential interpositions,
He defeats the purposes, restrains the malice, and wards off the stroke of
their persecutors. They are exposed, also, to the fiery darts of the wicked
one; but here, again, the Lord protects His people.
III. REFRESHMENT.
¡§Even by the springs of water shall He guide them.¡¨ Springs of water would be
peculiarly refreshing in the sultry deserts, both as allaying the thirst of the
flock, and as also furnishing on their banks fresh and verdant pasture, in
which the sheep might repose and renew their wearied strength. Such and similar
is the refreshment which Christ vouchsafes to His people. (E. Cooper.)
The love that will not let
us go
This chapter is strewn
with assurances to the chosen people on the eve of their return from Babylon.
Jehovah¡¦s voice takes on a tone of unusual tenderness, and speaks as He only
can. Let us heed His successive assurances of comfort and compassion.
I. HE WILL LEAD
WITH A SHEPHERD¡¦S CARE.
II. HE WILL MAKE
OBSTACLES SERVE HIS PURPOSE. ¡§I will make all My mountains a way¡¨ (Isaiah 49:11). Mountains are prohibitory. The student of the geography of
Palestine cannot fail to be impressed with the strong barricade of mountains
with which God fenced in the Land of Promise on its southern frontier.
Similarly, the mountains of Switzerland have sheltered liberty and those of
Afghanistan have made conquest difficult to impossibility. There were great
mountains between Israel and home, yet God does not say that He would remove
them; but that they should form a pathway, as though contributing to the ease
and speed of the return. ¡§I will make all My mountains a way.¡¨ We all have
mountains in our lives. There are people and things that threaten to bar our
progress in the Divine life. Patience can only be acquired through just such
trials as now seem unbearable. Submit thyself. Claim to be a par taker in the
patience of Jesus. Meet thy trials in Him. Thus shall the mountains that stand
between thee and thy promised land become thy way to it. Note the
comprehensiveness of this promise. ¡§I will make all My mountains a way.¡¨ The
promise is in the future tense. When we come to the foot of the mountains we
shall find the way.
III. GOD¡¦S LOVE IS
MORE THAN MOTHERHOOD (Isaiah 49:15). Many devout but misguided souls have placed the Virgin Mother
on a level with God, and worship her, because they think that woman is more
tender, more patient, more forgiving than man. ¡§The love of woman¡¨ was David¡¦s
high-water-mark of love. And of woman¡¦s love, none is so pure, so unselfish, so
full of patient brooding pity, as a mother¡¦s. Such love is God¡¦s. Indeed it is
a ray from His heart. Ira mother¡¦s love is but the ray, what must His heart be!
But there is sometimes a failure in motherhood. ¡§They may forget.¡¨ But God can
never so forget.
IV. GOD TREASURES
THE THOUGHT OF HIS OWN (Isaiah 49:16). The Orientals had a custom of tattooing the name of beloved
friends on the hand. That is the reference here. Thou art photographed where
God must ever behold thee, on His hands, on His heart. Not on one hand only,
but on both. Not tattooed or photographed, the marks of which might be
obliterated and obscured; but graven. The graving tool was the spear, the nail,
the cross. Glass will not give up its inscriptions, nor the onyx stone its
seal, nor the cameo its profile; but sooner might they renounce their trust,
than the hands of Christ. Not Zion¡¦s ruins, but Zion¡¦s ¡§walls¡¨ were ever before
Him. Our ideal self; what we are in Jesus; what we long to be in our best
moments; what we will be when grace has perfected its work and we are comely in
the comeliness He shall put upon us--this is the ineffaceable conception of us
that is ever before God. What a contrast between Zion¡¦s wail about being
forsaken and forgotten, and God¡¦s tender regard!
V. GOD¡¦S LOVE IS
STRONG ENOUGH TO CARRY OUT ITS PURPOSE (Isaiah 49:24). Such is the question of despondency, asked by Israel, from the
heart of the mighty empire, in which she was a helpless captive But Jehovah had
well calculated his resources (Isaiah 49:25).
VI. GOD¡¦S LOVE WILL
NOT PUT AWAY (Isaiah 50:1). (F. B.Meyer, B. A.)
Verse 11
And I will make all My
mountains a way
God¡¦s mountains
Since the world was,
mountains have been the obstructors of ways, the natural frontiers between
nations, the barriers that have kept people separate, disunited, and hostile.
And yet even in the natural sphere the fact of the existence of mountains has
ever initiated the stimulus required to surmount them. The physical and moral
strength of the race is possibly invigorated by the very opposition of
mountains, and man, God¡¦s vicegerent in the work of subduing the earth among
all lands and among all peoples, has made the mountains a highway for commerce
and travel and discovery, until at last the inspired utterance comes to be a
motto in man¡¦s re-creation. There is a fascination, a challenge to the
imagination, in mountain scenery, through which He, who is always appealing to
the Divine secret in man, makes His mountains a way to gaze into His face, to
think into His heart, to hope into His promises. Those eternal up-pointing
fingers challenge you against despondency. None but the soulless or the blind
can be amongst the up-pointing fingers of the everlasting hills and not hear
what the mountain saith; for it echoes the voice of the everlasting God, when
to man¡¦s poor heart He repeats His splendid promise, ¡§I will make all My
mountains a way.¡¨ Is there not in this inspired prophecy the Divine solution of
a mystery, and the impregnable assurance of a victory? The greatest moral
mountain in this perplexing world is the existence and permission of evil. The
silence, the awful silence of God, the pitiable failures in the best lives, the
crushing heart-sorrows, the beds of suffering, the new-made graves, the
occasional irresistible questioning whether such a world as this can in truth
be under the control of a Divine and omnipotent Ruler--these are the moral
mountains that hem us in. Against them we hurl ourselves sometimes in vain;
they hide from us the Fatherhood, they separate us from one another. But mark!
God says, ¡§My mountains.¡¨ I care not how black they seem, they are God¡¦s
mountains. It is a splendid step heavenward when you are first able to shake
yourself free from the miserable pagan dualism which, in order to avoid a
difficulty, ascribes half the creation to a good God, and half to some
malignant demiurge whom the good God seems powerless to destroy. It is the
Lord; let Him do as seemeth Him good. The mountain of moral evil cannot be
insurmountable without denial of the truthfulness or obliteration of the
omnipotence of our Father, who is greater than all; and when we tremble at the
hideous misery in the world and the dread possibilities of evil with which we
are only too familiar in our own hearts, it is well to hear the message, ¡§Fear
not, child of earth, only believe.¡¨ I think the very briefest analysis of human
history will prove that what men call evil has ever been a stimulus of social
action, material enterprise, aggressive discovery. Before Copernicus, people
believed that the earth was the centre of the solar system, and they had to
learn that the little speck of star-dust which they thought was the centre of
the universe, was only one of the thousands of worlds going round the sun. People
believed in geocentric motion when they should have believed in heliocentric¡¨
¡§motion. Similarly, conventional religion, sometimes very religious indeed, is
in danger of being autocentric. I am here to save my own soul.¡¨ Well, it has to
be converted into Theocentric. You have to see that God is the centre, that the
purpose and will of God, as it has been revealed through Christ for the whole
race, is that around which your little life is to revolve. (Canon
Wilberforce.)
Verse 12
Behold, these shall come
from far
Gathered from afar
Whatever bearing this
prophecy may have had upon the time of Isaiah, or the time immediately after
him, it has an important bearing on the time of the Messiah, and the course of
His kingdom.
The sentiment is that the redeemed Church of Christ shall come from every part
of the earth. This sentiment is in accordance with--
I. THE GENIUS OF
THE GOSPEL.
II. THE SPIRIT OF
PROPHECY.
III. THE COURSE OF
EVENTS. Conclusion--
1. This subject recognises the brotherhood of man.
2. It imposes a stupendous obligation on the Church. (J.
Rawlinson.)
The land of Sinim
The land of Sinim
As coming after the
reference to the west, it is naturally looked for in the far east, and so has
very generally been understood of the Chinese. The common designation of China
among nations of South Asia outside of China is Tsin, and in the form of Sin
this name had been introduced among the Arabians and Syrians. It is also
observed that the Chinese dynasty of Tsin began to reign about B.C. 255. For
ten centuries before Christ the Chinese had commercial relations with the west.
(J. Macpherson, M. A.)
The land of Sinim
(the Sinites):--The last
word is a hopeless enigma As the only proper name in the verse the writer must
have had some special reason for mentioning it; and the only reason that can be
plausibly imagined is that Sinim lay on the utmost limit of his geographical
horizon. This would exclude two suggested identifications:
Verses 14-16
But Zion said, The Lord
hath forsaken me
The more than parental
love of God
I.
ZION¡¦S BUILDING. ¡§Zion¡¨
here signifies the true Church. Elsewhere she is called Jerusalem; and very
frequently is she spoken of as a city or building.
1. If we inquire who is her builder, we find that there is but one
who can properly be called by this name. The founder of the true Church is He
by whom God made the worlds; therefore she is called ¡§The city of the Lord, the
Zion of the Holy One of Israel¡¨ (Isaiah 60:14). The plan of Zion¡¦sbuilding is older than the world itself. The
Lord buildeth up Zion, and He alone. Whenever He uses any of us as His
under-builders, He first makes us sensible of our own weakness; the excellency
of the power is of Him, and not of us.
2. If we inquire concerning the foundation of the true Church, an
apostle meets us with an answer: ¡§Other foundation can no man lay than that is
laid, which is Jesus Christ.¡¨
3. If we consider the building itself, it consists of lively stones.
4. The ¡§operations¡¨ of the great Master-builder are not uniform, but
marked by ¡§diversity.¡¨ Some stones are separated from their quarry, and brought
off by a preparatory process, in a gradual and gentle manner. Others again, are
shivered from their worldly holds, as by the explosion of rocks. If we closely
inspect the building, we find the lively stones admirable for their unity,
evenness, and mutual conformity.
II. ZION¡¦S
COMPLAINT. We have heard of Zion, the city and dwelling-place of our God: and
that ¡§the Lord loveth the gates of Zion¡¨ (Psalms 87:2). But how faithfully and ardently He loves her, she herself does
not always consider. Why else that complaint which now comes under our notice?
It is acknowledged that circumstances may arise, under which nothing may appear
more just than this complaint of Zion.
III. GOD¡¦S PROMISE.
¡§Can a woman forget,¡¨ &c. (F. W.Krummacher, D. D.)
The complainings of Zion
silenced
I. WHAT THERE IS
IN OURSELVES TO MAKE US FEAR LEST GOD SHOULD FORSAKE US. Our very fears have
often a great show of reason in them; though they may be excessive, they are
not wholly unfounded. As--
1. When we recollect how often we have forgotten and forsaken Him.
2. When the aspect of providence is dark and mysterious.
3. When the mind appears to be bereft of its ordinary supports and
consolations.
4. When a great and prevailing doubt obtains as to the safety of our
state after all.
II. WHAT THERE IS
IN GOD TO CONVINCE HIS CHURCH THAT HE NEVER WILL FORSAKE HER.
1. It is contrary to His nature--as contrary to His nature to forget
and forsake His Church as it is contrary to the nature of a kind and tender
mother to forget and forsake her child. Our Lord teaches us to reason from the
less to the greater. ¡§If ye, being evil, know how to give, how shall not your Father,¡¨
&c.
2. It is contrary to His promise. ¡§Yet will I not forget thee.¡¨
3. It is contrary to the character of His dispensations, for He never
has forsaken His Church.
4. It is contrary to His people¡¦s own sober expectations. For Zion
does not in her heart believe her own prophetic forebodings. She still speaks
of Him, not only as ¡§the Lord¡¨ in one part of the verse, but as ¡§my Lord¡¨ in
the other--which she would never do, as a reasonable person, had she finally
forgotten or forsaken God, or believed that God had finally forgotten and
forsaken her. (S. Thodey.)
The saint¡¦s final
perseverance secured by the love of God
I. THERE ARE MANY
THINGS THAT OFTEN CONDUCE TO SUSPICIONS ON THE PART OF THE CHILDREN OF GOD
CONCERNING THE LORD¡¦S GOODNESS.
1. Times of deep affliction; of dark and mysterious providences; days
in which there is no light.
2. These are seasons oftentimes, in which, through our frailty,
imperfection, sin, and sinfulness, the weakness of our faith and the strength
of unbelief, the believer may be led to form some suspicions concerning the
goodness of God.
3. Besides this, there may be periods of deep spiritual temptation.
4. Some laxity in the walk will oftentimes briny strength to a man¡¦s
suspicions here.
5. He may be in a state of spiritual captivity.
II. THE GREAT
SECURITY THAT IS HERE PLACED BEFORE US. ¡§Can a woman forget her sucking child,¡¨
&c. There cannot be a figure more tender, more comprehensive. It is the
figure of a helpless babe: there is the tenderness of the tie; there is the
helplessness of the child; and there is the very posture of the child; and they
are all full of great and important truth; and yet according to those last
words--¡§they may forget; yet will I not forget thee¡¨--this is not enough. As
though the Lord would say, If My love were not more than this, it would not be
enough to secure thee.
III. GOD DOES GIVE
PROOF THAT THIS TENDER LOVE DOES NOT FORGET. ¡§They may forget; yet will I not
forget thee.¡¨ He does not forget their persons. ¡§Behold, I have graven thee upon
the palms of My hands.¡¨ They are borne upon the heart of the great High Priest.
He forgets not the work of grace that is in them. He forgetteth not the trials
of His saints. He forgetteth not the returns of His people He forgetteth not
the walk of His saints. He forgetteth them not in death. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
A mournful complaint and
satisfactory answer
What a difference is there
between the judgment of God, and the judgment of men! We have a very striking
instance of this in the passage before us.
I. A MOURNFUL
COMPLAINT. ¡§Zion said, The Lord hath forsaken me,¡¨ He exercises no care over
me; ¡§and my Lord hath forgotten me,¡¨ He feels towards me no affection. Let us
look into this. The wicked think too much of the goodness of God; they mistake
the evidences of His general bounty for the evidences of His peculiar
friendship. While they live regardless of His praise, they yet hope in His
mercy, and persuade themselves that He will not be rigorous to mark what they
have done. The very reverse of this is the disposition of all the subjects of
Divine grace. They know that self-deception is tremendous; and therefore they
are afraid of self-deception; and they often carry their solicitudes here
beyond the point of duty, and in reading and in hearing they will apply to
themselves what was intended only for others; for, as an old divine says,
¡§There is no beating the dogs out without making the children cry.¡¨ Let us try
to trace up this complaint to its source; and to see the wretchedness that
conclusion must produce in the minds of all God¡¦s people. There is a
philosophical notion, which is of a semi-infidel character, which supposes that
the providence of God is general, and not particular. He regards the whole, and
therefore must regard the parts; for the whole is always made up of parts; and
He does regard the most minute parts. It is a religious despondency that
affects Christians. It is not the influence of infidelity, but it is the
influence, first, of unbelief, or weakness of faith. It arises also from ignorance.
It springs sometimes from the suspension of Divine manifestation We may also
mention conflicting with the troubles of life. We remark once more, the delay
of God in the accomplishment of prayer. But who can find language properly to
describe the wretchedness that such a conclusion as this, ¡§The Lord hath
forsaken me, and my God hath forgotten me,¡¨ must ever produce in the minds of
the godly? The misery that the child of God feels from such a conclusion, may
be accounted for by three things.
1. That he loves God.
2. He entirely relies upon Him.
3. He has enjoyed Him already. He has tasted that the Lord is
gracious, and therefore prays, Evermore give us this bread.
II. THE
SATISFACTORY ANSWER.
1. The improbability of the fear. This is metaphorically expressed:
¡§Can a woman forget her sucking child,¡¨ &c. There are two supposable cases
here. She may be bereft of reason, or not survive, and so not be able to
remember it. She may be criminally, unnaturally, led to hide herself from her
own flesh.
2. The certainty of the assurance, ¡§Yet will I not forget thee.¡¨
3. The all-sufficiency of the truth established, i.e the
perpetual regard of God towards us.
Conclusion--
1. Distresses and discouragements are not incompatible with religion.
2. How concerned God is, not only for His people¡¦s safety, but for
their comfort also.
3. Let His people fall in with His designs. Let them be humbled, and
mourn over their ignorance, perverseness, impatience, and unbelief; that they
have entertained such hard thoughts of God; that they have so often charged Him
foolishly, and unrighteously, and unkindly.
4. Do not take the comfort belonging to a gracious state, unless you
are the subjects of a gracious character. (W. Jay.)
Unworthy doubts of God
How common is this weakness
of unbelief in man; how natural are these unworthy doubts of God to us. Nor is
it difficult to perceive the sources from which this inability to trust in
God¡¦s goodness springs.
1. There is the guilt of which we are conscious in our own hearts;
the sense of evil desert m ourselves.
2. Then there comes in the undeniable fact of suffering in himself
and all around him, which apparently, at first sight, justifies this attitude
of mind, and certainly confirms it.
3. We thus discover a third source from which distrust in God
springs; the perversions which have been substituted for the pure Gospel by
different branches of the Christian Church (J. N. Bennie, LL. B.)
Verse 15-16
Can a woman forget her
sucking child?
--
Unforgetting love
1. As. Jehovah,, had just been announcing His¡¨ purposes of world-wide
mercy--salvation ¡§to the ends of the earth¡¨--we may take these words, in the
first instance, as the plaint of literal Israel: ¡§The Lord has chosen the
Gentile, and in doing so,
He has forgotten me. The wild olive has been grafted in; will not the natural
olive be rejected?¡¨
2. Or it may be taken as the wail of the Church universal, prompted
in times of rebuke and blasphemy, defection and apostasy, cruelty and
persecution, when blood is flowing and martyr-fires are lighted; or worse, when
faith is weak, and love is waxing cold, and knees are bowing to Baal.
3. Or again, the utterance may be regarded as the exclamation of the
individual soul, amid frowning providences and baffling dispensations. In all
the three cases Jehovah¡¦s reply is the same--the assurance of His inviolable,
unchanging, everlasting love. This He enforces by two arguments.
I. THE MOTHER¡¦S
INSTINCTIVE FONDNESS FOR HER BABE.
II. THE GRAVER¡¦S
ART (Isaiah 49:16). (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
Maternal love and
tenderness
Maternal love and
tenderness is the strongest and most enduring of instincts. It holds potent
sway even in the brute creation, and among the lower tribes of animated being.
We see it exemplified in the timid bird hovering with wailing cry over the
threatened or despoiled nest, and, despite its feebleness and weakness, ready
to give battle to the invader. We see it in the familiar scriptural emblem of
the hen gathering her brood of chickens under her wings in threatening storm,
or in the hour of danger. We see it in the bolder watch the mother of the
eaglets keeps over her young in the eyry on cliff or mountain-side, as she
disputes, with ruffled plumage, the assault of the plunderer. We see it in the
proverbial fierceness of the ¡§bear robbed of her whelps,¡¨ or in the maddened
roar of the lioness bereaved of her cubs, as she lashes her sides with her
tail, and makes mountain and forest ¡§ring with the proclamation of her wrongs.¡¨
But it is the mother and her infant babe (the human parent) in whom this
deep-seated instinct has its highest, truest illustration. (J. R. Macduff, D.
D.)
Maternal affection the
moat appropriate image of Divine benevolence
I. MARK SOME
STRIKING POINTS OF RESEMBLANCE BETWEEN THE COMPASSION OF A MOTHER AND THE
COMPASSION OF GOD.
1. The first distinctive feature in the affection of a mother is,
that it is coeval with the maternal character. It springs at once into
existence, vigorous and perfect, and becomes henceforth a permanent and
essential part of her constitution. Other affections are produced, and
nourished by degrees. Love to parents, gratitude to benefactors, sympathy with
the afflicted, and benevolence to our kind, are all, in a very considerable
degree, the offspring of instruction and of association. But of maternal
tenderness, it may be truly said that it is an instantaneous creation; the stamp
of heaven, impressed upon a mother¡¦s heart, and acting in all its vigour the
moment she hears the cry of helplessness. Just, but fair, representations of
that love of God, which is far above all similitude, as it passes all
understanding! In implanting this affection in a mother¡¦s bosom, He has
furnished the best and most winning image of His own benignity; and by
interweaving it in her constitution, He intends to show that His own love is
not a feeling, adventitious or fluctuating; but an unchangeable attribute of
His being--that predominating principle, of which His other attributes are
nothing more than varied ramifications. A mother, however, is frail and
fallible. She may forget even her sucking child. But God cannot forget to love.
2. The next quality distinctive in the love of a mother is that of
all affections with which we are acquainted it is the purest in its source, and
the most disinterested in its exercise. No created being can, in any way, be
profitable unto God, for He is independent and unchangeable, both in nature and
in happiness. All the life which He communicates; all the means of enjoyment
which He spreads through creation; every faculty and every affection that
ennobles and blesses the rational soul in its highest advances to perfection,
springs from the exhaustless source of unmixed and unbounded benevolence.
3. The last quality I shall remark as peculiarly striking in the love
of a mother is, that its exertions and sacrifices are not only disinterested,
but, beyond every other example, patient and persevering. And as the love of a
mother is not overcome by provocation, neither is it chilled by absence. Such
is the almost unconquerable patience of a mother¡¦s love. Still it may be
conquered; and she may cease to have compassion. But God cannot forget His
children- How beautifully do the temper and conduct of Jesus display the riches
and the perseverance of Divine love! It is said of Him by an evangelist, ¡§that
having loved His own, He loved them to the end¡¨: and the remark is verified by
His whole life.
II. DRAW FROM THE
SUBJECT SOME PRACTICAL CONCLUSIONS. It is impossible not to advert to the
design and uses of this wonderful affection, as indicating, in the most
striking manner, the unbounded wisdom and benignity of Providence. If we had
but this one evidence, it would be sufficient to convince a reflecting mind
that a paternal care is exercised in the government of the world, and that the
tender mercies of God are over all His works. Take away the strong instinctive
feelings of a mother, and what becomes of the living creation? But whilst man,
in common with other animals, owes to this instinctive feeling, the
preservation, growth, and vigour of his body, he owes to it, what is still more
important, the commencement of those moral affections which constitute, in
their progressive development, the strength and the glory of his moral and
social life. It is in the bosom of a mother that these affections are
generated. Accustomed to look to that bosom for nourishment, protection, and
pleasure, it raises thence its infant smiles; it catches answering smiles of
complacency and joy; its heart begins to dilate with instinctive gladness; its
sensations of delight are gradually modified into those of fondness and
gratitude; and as it continues to mark the love of a mother, it learns from her
the art of loving. Reflections--
1. As we owe everything to a mother, we should be as unwearied in
paying the debt, as she was in the acts of tenderness by which it is
contracted.
2. Let us learn to form just conceptions of the Divine nature, and of
the great ends of the Divine government. (J. Lindsay, D. D.)
Better than a mother
Our subject is the
superiority of an ¡§utter¡¨ over an almost¡¨ impossibility.
I. ALMOST AN
IMPOSSIBILITY. If it is not an impossibility for a woman to forget her sucking
child, it is certainly next door to one, and the Lord could not have obtained
any higher earthly illustration of His tenderness and love. In order to show it
you will see the Lord has pressed into His service a variety of words, all
serving to increase the beauty of the simile.
1. ¡§Woman.¡¨ God who made the heart of woman as well as man, knows
that there is a tenderness in her disposition exceeding that of man¡¦s, and
therefore He chooses the highest type to illustrate His sympathy.
2. It is not merely the tenderness of the woman, but the tenderness
of the woman who is a ¡§mother.¡¨ God not only employs the highest type, but the
highest specimen of that type. Mother! What associations of loving tenderness
are in the very name. The word touches a secret spring in the heart, and
conjures back scenes of the past. It brings to view in the dim distance a sweet
face that used to bend over our little cot at eventide, and impress a kiss upon
our brow. It reminds of one who used to smile when we were happy, and weep when
obliged to correct us. It calls to remembrance one who always seemed interested
in our little tales of adventure, and never laughed at our little sorrows that
seemed to us so large. It was her face we gazed last upon when we went away to
school, and it was into her arms we first rushed when the holidays brought us
home. It was thought of her that kept us in the house of business, and held us
back from sin with unseen silken cords; and when those dark locks of hers became
silvered with advancing age, we only thought an extra charm had crowned her
brow. You forget not the love that was strong as death, and escaped from her
dying lips in words you treasure to this day. Her name has still a magic power.
There is one feature in a mother¡¦s love that must be mentioned, as it
constitutes the chiefest beauty of the type. Her love is not love drawn forth
by prosperity or dispelled by adversity. She loves her son not because of what
he has, but because of what he is.
3. There is yet one other delicate touch in the picture which gives
to it the perfection of beauty. The tenderness described is not only that of a
woman, or even that of a mother, but of a mother towards her ¡§sucking child.¡¨
This crowns the description, and should drive away the last remnant of
unbelief. I can imagine a mother sometimes forgetting her grownup son, who has
long since attained the age of manhood, and is himself the head of a family. I
can believe that the daughter, married into some other family and well provided
for, is not always in the thoughts of her mother, but it is almost impossible
to conceive the sucking child for a moment forgotten Its very life is dependent
on the mother¡¦s thoughtfulness, and its utter helplessness becomes its
security. Yea, she could not forget it even if she desired; nature itself would
become a sharp reminder, and her own pain would plead her infant¡¦s cause.
Behold, how God has strengthened His illustration by every possible means. Then
comes the question, ¡§Can she forget?¡¨ There is s moment¡¦s pause, and the answer
is heard, ¡§She may.¡¨ Mothers may forget their sucking children, either
literally, or by acting as if they did.
II. AN UTTER
IMPOSSIBILITY. The true magnitude of an object can only be understood by
comparison, and it is by contrast the mind grasps the reality. ¡§God only knows
the love of God.¡¨ Its height and depth, its length and breadth defy all
measurement. ¡§They may forget.¡¨ ¡§Yet,¡¨ and it is this word that shoots aloft
beyond all human sight, ¡§will I not forget thee.¡¨
1. His nature forbids it. ¡§God is love.¡¨ Not ¡§loving,¡¨ poor mortal
can be that, but love itself.
2. His promises forbid it.
3. The travail of the Redeemer¡¦s soul is alone sufficient argument,
that they for whom it was endured shall be remembered.
4. His honour renders it an utter impossibility. (A. G. Brown.)
God¡¦s love greater than a
mother¡¦s
I. A MOTHER¡¦S LOVE
FOR HER CHILD IS BUT A FRACTION DERIVED FROM GOD¡¦S LOVE FOR MAN.
II. THE STRONGEST
AFFECTION OF A MOTHER IS SUBJECT TO MUTATIONS.
1. The conduct of the mother may cool or even quench this spark
within her. In some cases debauchery, intemperance, and vice have extinguished
this sacred fire, and the parent has become unnatural and cruel to her
offspring.
2. The conduct of the child may cool or even quench this spark within
her. But the affection of the Eternal is subject to no such mutation. ¡§Who,
then, shall separate us from the love of God,¡¨ &c.
III. THE OBJECT OF
THE MOTHER¡¦S LOVE IS NOT SO NEAR TO HER AS THE OBJECT OF THE DIVINE AFFECTION.
1. The mother is not the owner of the child. His limbs, faculties,
being, are not hers. But God is the absolute proprietor of man. ¡§All souls are
His.¡¨
2. The mother is not the life of the child. Her life is distinct from
that of her offspring. But God is the very life of man.
IV. THE FAILURE OF
THE MOTHER¡¦S AFFECTION TOWARDS HER OFFSPRING WOULD NOT BE SO TERRIBLE AS THE
FAILURE OF GOD¡¦S AFFECTION TOWARDS THE GOOD. If God forsakes a man, he is
ruined inevitably, and for ever. (Homilist.)
A mother¡¦s love
The following touching
incident was related by the Rev. Norman Macleod, of Glasgow:--His father was
preaching on the love of God, and to illustrate his subject, referred to a poor
widow in Scotland, who, being distressed for rent, resolved to go, carrying her
helpless babe with her, and borrow of a friend that lived ten miles from her
home. The journey lay across a bleak mountain, and the day was rough and snowy.
Soon after her departure, the neighbours felt it would be impossible for her to
reach her destination, and feared that her very life was endangered by the
snowstorm that was rapidly gaining in violence. Twelve strong men resolved to
go in search; far away on the mountain they found the poor woman lying in the
snow, sleeping the sleep of death. Where was the babe? In a sheltered nook in
the rock, close by, warm and alive, because wrapped in the garments of which
the mother had deprived herself. A mother¡¦s love unchangeable:--As I was
walking down our street the other day, I saw a woman, good and pure, refined
and cultured, walking with a man whose face was red with drink, whose form and
look bore marks of deepest dissipation. I stepped to her side, and said,
¡§Woman, why are you with this man?¡¨ She little heeded me at first, as she
supported his unsteady steps ¡§Woman, why do you not hand him over to the
police?¡¨ She drew herself up, and with a righteously indignant anger, mixed
with pathos, said, ¡§Sir! I am his mother.¡¨ (C. S. Macfarland, Ph. D.)
Verse 16
Behold, I have graven thee
upon the palms of My hands
God¡¦s loving regard for
His people
It is not only the name of
Zion which is engraved on His hands, but her picture.
And it is not her picture as she lies in her present ruin and solitariness, but
her restored and perfect state. ¡§Thy walls are continually before Me.¡¨ (Prof.
G. A. Smith, D. D.)
Reality
This is faith¡¦s answer to
all the ruin and haggard contradiction of outward fact. Reality is not what we
see: reality is what God sees. What a thing is in His sight and to His purpose,
that it really is, and that it shall ultimately appear to men¡¦s eyes. To make
us believe this is the greatest service the Divine can do for the human. It was
the service Christ was always doing, and nothing showed His Divinity more. He
took us men and He called us, unworthy as we were, His brethren, the sons of
God. He took such an one as Simon, shifting and unstable, a quicksand of a man,
and He said, ¡§On this rock I will build My Church.¡¨ A man¡¦s reality is not what
he is in his own feelings, or what he is to the world¡¦s eyes; but what he is to
God¡¦s love, to God¡¦s yearning, and in God¡¦s plan. If he believe that, so in the
end shall he feel it, so in the end shall he show it to the eyes of the world.
(Prof. G. A. Smith, D. D.)
The writing on God¡¦s hands
These words are a
singularly bold metaphor, drawn from the strange and half-savage custom, which
lingers still among sailors and others, of having beloved names or other tokens
of affection and remembrance indelibly inscribed on parts of the body.
Sometimes worshippers had the marks of the god thus set on their flesh; here
God writes on His hands the name of the city of His worshippers.
I. Here we have
set forth for our strength and peace A DIVINE REMEMBRANCE, MORE TENDER THAN A
MOTHER¡¦S (Isaiah 49:15). When Israel came out of Egypt, the Passover was instituted as a
memorial unto all generations, or as the same idea is otherwise expressed, ¡§it
shall be for a sign unto thee upon thine hand.¡¨ Here God represents Himself as
doing for Israel- what He had bid Israel do for Him. They were, as it were, to
write the supreme act of deliverance in the Exodus upon their hands, that it
might never be forgotten. He writes Zion on His hands for the same purpose. The
text does not primarily refer to individuals, but to the community. But the
recognition of that fact is not to be allowed to rob us of the preciousness of
this text in its bearing on the individual. For God remembers the community,
not as an abstraction or a generalised expression, but as the aggregate of all
the individuals composing it. We think of ¡§the Church,¡¨ and do not think of the
thousands of men and women who make it up. We cannot discern the separate stars
in the galaxy. But God¡¦s eye resolves what to us is a nebula, and every single
glittering point of light hangs rounded and separate in the heaven. There is no
jostling nor confusion in the wide space of the heart of God. They that go
before shall not hinder them that come after. That remembrance which each man
may take for himself is infinitely tender, The echo of the music of the
previous words still haunts the verse, and the remembrance promised in it is touched
with more than a mother¡¦s love. ¡§I am poor and needy,¡¨ says the Psalmist, ¡§yet
the Lord thinketh upon me.¡¨ But do not let us forget that it was a very sinful
Zion that God thus remembered.
II. THE DIVINE
REMEMBRANCE GUIDES THE DIVINE ACTION. The palm of the hand is the seat of
strength, of work; and so, if Zion¡¦s name is written there, that means not only
remembrance, but remembrance which is at the helm, as it were, which is
moulding and directing all the work that is done by the hand that bears the name
inscribed upon it. For His Church, as a whole, He does more amidst the affairs
of nations. You remember the grand words of one of the psalms. ¡§He reproved
kings for their sakes, saying, Touch not Mine anointed, and do My prophets no
harm.¡¨ It is no fanatical reading of the history of earthly politics and
kingdoms, if we recognise that one of the most prominent reasons for the Divine
activities in moulding the kingdoms, setting up and casting down, is the
advancement of the Kingdom of heaven and the building of the City of God. ¡§I
have graven thee on the palms of My hands,¡¨ and when the hands go to work, it
is for the Zion whose likeness they bear. But the same thing applies to us
individually. ¡§All things work together¡¨; they would not do so, unless there
was one dominant will which turned the chaos into a cosmos. ¡§All things work
together for my good.¡¨
III. THE DIVINE
REMEMBRANCE WORKS ALL THINGS, TO REALISE A GREAT IDEAL END, AS YET UNREACHED.
¡§Thy walls are continually before Me.¡¨ When this prophecy was uttered, the
Israelites were in captivity, and the city was a wilderness; ¡§the holy and
beautiful house where the fathers praised Thee was burned with fire,¡¨ the walls
were broken down; rubbish and solitude were there. Yet on the palms of God¡¦s
hands were inscribed the walls which were nowhere else! They were ¡§before Him,¡¨
though Jerusalem was a ruin. It means that Divine remembrance sees ¡§things that
are not, as though they were.¡¨ In the midst of the imperfect reality of the
present condition of the Church as a whole, and of us, its actual components,
it sees the ideal, the perfect vision of the perfect future. So, the most
radiant optimism is the only fitting attitude for Christian people in looking
into the future, either of the Church as a whole, or of themselves as
individual members of it. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
God remembering His people
This figure suggests--
I. CONSTANT
REMEMBRANCE. It is impossible not to observe that which is written on the
hands. H writing were on the face, it would not be seen, on the breast it would
not be observed. But the hands are always before us.
II. DEVOTED HELP.
The hands are for work, and the Almighty wishes us to infer that His people are
not only remembered, but helped.
III. PERMANENT
CONSIDERATION. ¡§I have graven thee.¡¨ Writing will wear off. That which is
graven will and must remain.
IV. PAINFUL EFFORT.
To engrave on the hands evidently refers to the process of engraving, which
causes pain. Has God made no sacrifices for His people? Is not every redeemed
soul written in crimson marks in the palm of the hands and the feet of the
crucified Redeemer? (Homlist.)
A precious assurance
God¡¦s promises are not
exhausted by one fulfilment. They are manifold mercies, so that after you have
opened one fold, and found out one signification, you may unfurl them still
more and find another which shall be equally true, and then another, and
another, and another, almost without end. I believe that the text belongs
primarily to the seed of Israel; next, to the whole Church as a body; and then
to every individual member.
I. I intend to
CONSIDER OUR TEXT VERBALLY, pulling it to pieces word by word. Every single
word deserves to be emphasised.
1. We will begin with the word, ¡§Behold.¡¨ ¡§Behold, I have graven thee
upon the palms of My hands.¡¨ ¡§Behold¡¨ is a word of wonder; it is intended to
excite admiration. Wherever you see it hung out in Scripture, it is like an
ancient sign-board, signifying that there are rich wares within, or like the
hands which solid readers have observed in the margin of the older Puritanic
books, drawing attention to something particularly worthy of observation. Here,
indeed, we have a theme for marvelling. ¡§Behold¡¨ in our text is intended to
attract particular attention. There is something here worthy of being studied.
2. We pass on now to the next word, ¡§I.¡¨ The Divine Artist is none
other than God Himself. Here we learn the lesson which Christ afterwards taught
His disciples--¡§Ye have not chosen Me, but I have chosen you.¡¨ No one can write
upon the hand of God but God Himself. Neither our merits, prayers, repentance,
nor faith, can write our names there. Nor did blind chance or mere necessity of
fate inscribe our names; but the living hand of a living Father, unprompted by
anything except the spontaneous love of His own heart. Then, again, if the Lord
hath done it, there is no mistake about it. If some human hand had cut the
memorial, the hieroglyphics might be at fault; but since perfect wisdom has
combined with perfect love to make a memorial of the saints, then no error by
any possibility can have occurred.
3. Take the next word, ¡§have.¡¨ Not ¡§I will,¡¨ nor yet ¡§I am doing it¡¨;
it is a thing of the past, and how far hack in the past! Oh, the antiquity of
this inscription! ¡§From everlasting to everlasting Thou art God¡¨; from
everlasting to everlasting Thou art the same, and Thy people¡¦s names are
written on Thy hands! Yet, methinks, there may be a prophetic reference here to
a later writing of the names, when Jesus Christ submitted His outstretched
palms to those cruel graving-tools, the nails. Then was it surely, when the
executioner with the hammer smote the tender hands of the loving Jesus, that He
engraved our names upon the palms of His hands.
4. But the next word is ¡§graven.¡¨ The Rev. John Anderson, of Helensburgh,
told me that while travelling in the East he has frequently seen persons with
the portraits of their friends upon their hands, so that wherever they went, as
one in this country would carry the portrait of a friend in a brooch or a
watch, they carry these likenesses printed on their palms. I said to him,
¡§Surely they would wash out.¡¨ They might by degrees, he said, but they
frequently had them pricked in with strong indelible ink, so that there, whilst
the palm lasts, there lasts the memorial of the friend. Surely this is what the
text refers to. I have graven thee in; I have not merely printed thee, stamped
thee on the surface, but I have permanently cut thee into My hand with marks
which never can be removed. That word ¡§graven¡¨ sets forth the perpetuity of the
inscription.
5. Shall we take that next word? ¡§Thee.¡¨ It does not say, ¡§thy name.¡¨
¡§Thee.¡¨ See the fulness of this! I have graven thy person, thine image, thy
case, thy circumstances, thy sins, thy temptations, thy weaknesses, thy wants,
thy works; I have graven everything about thee, all that concerns thee; I have
put thee altogether there. It is not an outline sketch, you see; it is a full
picture, as though the man himself were there. Darest thou dream that God
forgets thee?
6. We have hitherto taken every word, but we must now take the next
two or three. We are engraven, where? Upon His ¡§hands.¡¨ We are not graven upon
a seal, for a seal might be slipped from the finger and laid aside, but the
hand itself can never be separated from the living God. It is not engraven on
the huge rock, for a convulsion of nature might rend the rock with earthquake,
or the fretting tooth of time might eat the inscription out; but our record is
on His hand, where it must last, world without end. Not upon the back of His
hands where it might be supposed that in days of strife and warfare the
inscription might suffer damage, but there upon the palms of His hands where it
shall be well protected. The tenderest part shall be made the place of the
inscription; that to which He is most likely to look, that which His fingers of
wisdom enclose, that by which He works His mighty wonders, shall be the
unceasing remembrance, pledging Him never to forget His chosen. It does not
say, ¡§I have graven thee upon the palm of one hand,¡¨ but ¡§I have graven thee
upon the palms of My hands.¡¨ There are two memorials. His saints shall never be
forgotten, for the inscription is put there upon the palm of this hand, the
right hand of blessing, and upon the palm of that hand, the left hand of
justice. I see Him with His right hand beckon me--¡§Come, ye blessed,¡¨ and He
sees me in His hand; and on that side He says, ¡§Depart, ye cursed,¡¨ but not to
me, for He sees me in His hand, and cannot curse me. Oh, my soul, how charming
this is, to know that His left hand is under Thy head, while His right hand
doth embrace thee.
II. CONSIDER THE
TEXT AS A WHOLE.
1. God¡¦s remembrance of His people is constant. The hands, of course,
are constantly in union with the body. In Solomon¡¦s Song we read, ¡§Set me as a
seal upon thine arm.¡¨ Now this is a very close form of remembrance, for the
seal is very seldom laid aside by the Eastern, who not being possessed with
skill in the art of writing his name, requires¡¦ his seal in order to affix his
signature to a document; hence the seal is almost always worn, and in some
cases is never laid aside. A seal, however, might be laid aside, but the hands
never could be. It has been a custom, in the olden days especially, when men
wished to remember a thing, to tie a cord about the hand, or a thread around
the finger, by which memory would be assisted; but then the cord might be
snapped or taken away, and so the matter forgotten, but the hand and that which
is printed into it must be constant and perpetual. Oh, Christian, by night and
by day God is always thinking of you.
2. This recollection on God¡¦s part is practical. We are engraven upon
His heart--this is to show His love; we are put upon His shoulders--this is to
show that His strength is engaged for us; and also upon His hands, to show that
the activity of our Lord will not be spared from us; He will work and show
Himself strong for His people; He brings His omnipotent hands to effect our
redemption. What would be the use of having a friend who would think of us, and
then let his love end in thought? The faithfulness we want is that of one who
will act in our defence. Do you see the drift of it? If He moulds a world
between His palms, and then sends it wheeling in its orbit, it is between those
palms which are stamped with the likeness of His sons and daughters, and so
that new work shall minister to their god. If He divides a nation, it is always
with the hand that bears the remembrance of Zion. Scripture itself tells us,
¡§When He divided the nations, He set the bounds of the people according to the
number of the children of Israel.¡¨ The great wheel of providence, when God
makes it revolve, works for the good of His people.
3. This is an eternal remembrance.
4. This memorial how tender! We have heard of one, an eastern queen,
who so loved her husband that she thought even to build a mausoleum to his
memory was not enough. She had a strange way of proving her affection, for when
her husband¡¦s bones were burned she took the ashes and drank them day by day,
that, as she said, her body might be her husband¡¦s living sepulchre. It was a
strange way of showing love, and there was a marvellous degree of strange,
fanatical fondness in it. But what shall I say of this Divine sympathetic mode
of showing remembrance, by cutting it into the palms she It appeareth to me as
though the King had said, ¡§Shall I carve My people upon precious stones? Shall
I choose the ruby, the emerald, the topaz? No; for these all must melt in the
last general conflagration. What then? Shall I write on tablets of gold or
silver? No, for all these may canker and corrupt, and thieves may break through
and steal. Shall I cut the memorial deep on brass? No, for time would fret it,
and the letters would not long be legible. I will write on Myself, on My own
hand, and then My people will know how tender I am, that I would sooner cut
into My own flesh than forget them.¡¨
5. This memorial is most surprising. Scripture, which is full of
wonders, yet allows a ¡§Behold¡¨ to be put before this verse--¡§Behold!¡¨
6. It is also most consolatory. When God would meet Zion¡¦s great
doubt--¡§God hath forgotten me,¡¨ He cheers her with this--¡§I have graventhee
upon the palms of My hands.¡¨ There is no sorrow to which our text is not an
antidote.
III. And now we come
to EXCITE YOU TO THE DUTY WHICH SUCH A TEXT SUGGESTS.
1. Is it not your duty to leave your cares behind you to-day?
2. If you must not have cares, you should not have those deep sorrows
and despairs.
3. If this text is not yours, how your mouths ought to water after
it. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Neither forsaken nor
forgotten
I. THE FEAR
EXPRESSED, which led to the utterance of our text (Isaiah 49:14).
1. This fear has been felt by very many.
2. It has some times been very plaintively expressed.
3. And some, too, are very obstinate while they are in that
condition, for the passage contains a very unreasonable complaint. Read Isaiah 49:13, ¡§Jehovah hath comforted His people,¡¨ &c. Yet, in the teeth
of that double declaration Zion said, ¡§Jehovah hath forsaken me,¡¨ &c.
4. I suppose Zion came to this conclusion because she was in
banishment.
5. Yet I think that there is some measure of grace mingled with this
fear. Lot me read you this passage straight on: ¡§Jehovah hath comforted His
people, and will have mercy upon His afflicted. But Zion said, Jehovah hath
forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me.¡¨ She did not say that till God had
visited her. There is in your soul a longing after God. This is the work of His
Holy Spirit! Besides, although the text is a word of complaint, it has also in
it a word of faith: ¡§my Lord.¡¨ Did you notice that? Zion calls Jehovah hers
though she dreams that He has forsaken her. I do love to see you keep the grip
of your faith even when it seems to be illogical. Hold on this assurance with a
death-grip. If you cannot hold on with both hands, hold on with one; and if
sometimes you can hold with neither hand, hold on with your teeth.
II. THE COMFORT
BESTOWED. ¡§I have graven thee,¡¨ &c. What is it that makes it so certain
that God cannot forget His people?
1. God remembers His eternal love to His people, and His remembrance
of them is constant because of that love. God¡¦s suffering love secures His
memory of us.
2. By the expression, ¡§I have graven thee upon the palms of My
hands,¡¨ God seems to say, ¡§I have done so much for you that I can never forget
you.¡¨
3. When a memorial is engraven on a man¡¦s hand, then it is connected
with the man¡¦s life.
III. AN INSPECTION
INVITED. ¡§Behold.¡¨
IV. A RETURN
SUGGESTED.
1. Does Christ remember us as I have tried to prove that He dose?
Then let us remember Him. ¡§This do ye in remembrance of Me.¡¨
2. Let us not only remember Him at His table, but let us remember Him
constantly. Let us, as it were, carry His name upon the palms of our hands.
3. Practically. We ought so to wear Christ on our hands that whatever
we touch should be thereby Christianised.
4. Let the name of Christ, and your memory of it, become vital to
you. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Verses 18-23
Lift up thine eyes round
about--
Promises for the Church
I.
THE PROMISED INCREASE OF
THE CHURCH.
1. In number.
2. In honour.
3. In triumph.
II. THE
ENCOURAGEMENT IT AFFORDS US FOR MISSIONARY EXERTIONS.
1. God is able to effect this great thing.
2. He has engaged to effect it.
3. The beginnings are already visible before our eyes. Application--
Verse 20-21
The children which thou
shalt have.
--
The Church a mother
I. THE CHURCH IS A
MOTHER.
1. Because it is her privilege to bring forth into the world the
spiritual children of the Lord Jesus Christ.
2. When these little ones are born, the Church¡¦s business is to feed
them.
3. It is her endeavour to train up her children.
4. She will be always ready to nurse her children when they become
sick.
II. THE CHURCH IS
SOMETIMES BEREAVED.
1. Some of her nominal children she loses by spiritual death. They
are not really her children at all. They looked so much like hers that she
could hardly tell them.
2. She loses many by death temporal
3. Sometimes by a trying providence.
III. THE CHURCH HAS
SOMETIMES TO BE CARRIED AWAY CAPTIVE. How often has this happened to the Church
of God in the olden times! The Church has been carried into foreign countries.
Sometimes she has been cruelly persecuted. Often, too, the Church has been
compelled to seek a refuge in foreign countries. Days of slumber have come over
the Church, and days of heresy too.
IV. THE CHURCH HAS
HAD A MARVELLOUS INCREASE AFTER ALL HER CAPTIVITIES, and all her bereavements
have hitherto always worked for her good. Never has the Church lost her
children without obtaining many more.
1. The first thing which astonishes the Church when she opens her
eyes after her captivity is to notice the number of her children.
2. Also their character--¡§these.¡¦¡¦ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Church increase
I. THERE IS A
DECREASE GOING ON IN THE CHURCH OF GOD ON EARTH. Zion is represented here as
mourning for the children that she had lost. The Jewish Church in the olden
times saw her sons and daughters slain with the sword, or carried away captive.
Afterwards, she saw the great majority of the nation refusing Christ, and
turning away from Him, and thus the Jewish Church was minished and brought very
low. The same thing has happened in many other eases. We must naturally expect
to see, in each separate Church of Jesus Christ, a certain process and measure
of decrease.
1. Some are being drafted from us to supply the choirs of heaven with
fresh minstrelsy.
2. Each separate Church will also have a measure of decrease through
the removal of God¡¦s servants from one place to another.
3. There is another source of decrease over which we must greatly
grieve, and that is the backsliding of many professor.
4. The sifting process by which the chaff is removed from the wheat.
II. THERE IS AN
INCREASE TO BE EXPECTED IN THE CHURCH OF GOD. There are new converts yet to
come in, these children which Zion is to have, after she has lost the others.
1. These new converts are needful No Church can be healthy without
the constant in fusion of fresh blood.
2. Therefore, she ought to have every preparation for their
reception.
3. All who love the Lord should labour earnestly on their behalf.
4. When we are all pleading and labouring for an increase to the
Church, it will come; and when it comes, it is probable that we shall be
astonished at the number of those that come. ¡§The children which thou shalt
have,¡¨ &c.
5. The next thing that was a subject for astonishment to Zion was how
those converts came to be born at all ¡§Who hath begotten me these?¡¨
6. But what Zion wondered at next was, how they had been nurtured,
for she says, ¡§Who hath brought up these?¡¨
7. A further cause of wonder was, the sudden appearance of this great
increase. Zion inquires, ¡§These, where had they been?¡¨ Shall I tell you where
they had been? Some of them had been in godly families with fathers and mothers
praying for them. Some of them had been in the Sunday school, in crosses where
brethren and sisters love their children, and never rest till they bring them
to decision for Christ. They had been under the influence of Christian wives,
Christian children, sometimes Christian brothers and sisters; and so, at last,
the gracious influence took effect upon them, by the power of God¡¦s Spirit, and
out they came. There are great numbers still under those sacred influences, for
they also are sure to come in due time, and say, ¡§We are on the Lord¡¦s side.¡¨
Then there were some others. ¡§Where had they been?¡¨ They had long been
listening to the Gospel, regularly sitting in their pews. But there were others
about whom I might well ask, ¡§These, where had they been?¡¨ On the Lord¡¦s day,
at home in their shirt-sleeves; on week-nights, at the theatre or the
music-hall, finding enjoyment in the lowest form of amusement. ¡§Where had they
been?¡¨ Never troubling church or chapel; but God, in His providence, brought
them for once to hear the Word, and, as one said to me, ¡§I laid hold of
something, and something laid hold of me, and I shall never part with it, for
it will never part with me.¡¨ ¡§These, where had they been?¡¨ I cannot tell you
where they had all been; some had been at death¡¦s dark door, buried in sorrow
and in sin, in poverty and in vice.
III. ALL THINGS
SHOULD ENCOURAGE THE CHURCH TO SEEK LARGER INCREASE.
1. There is the same power to convert ten thousand as there is to
convert one.
2. We ought to be encouraged by the fact that the converts come in
answer to prayer.
3. Further, since the converts come from all sorts of places, let us
carry the Gospel into all sorts of places. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 23
And kings shall be thy
nursing fathers
Princes and rulers should
promote the will of God
I.
PRINCES, OR RULERS, AS
SUCH, ARE THE POSITIVE SERVANTS OF GOD, AND THEREFORE ARE BOUND TO PROMOTE,
ABOVE ALL THINGS, THE INTERESTS OF HIS REVEALED WORD, AND THE HONOUR OF HIS
NAME, IN THE WELFARE OF HIS CHURCH AND PEOPLE. It must be a self-evident
proposition, that all who are entrusted with the ruling authority are bound to
promote the best interests of the people over whom they preside. But the
question is, in what do the best interests of a people consist? Do they consist
in the extension of territory; the multiplicity of resources; the advancement of
the arts and sciences; of wealth and honour; business and trade? We deny the
assertion. As our Lord speaks of a man, so we of a nation, prince, or ruler.
What is either he or they profited if they gain the whole world and lose their
own soul? Or what shall a man, or any number of men, give in exchange for their
soul? The soul, then, in all its vast, interesting, immortal, and eternal
concerns, is the chief business of man.
1. From whence does the kingly office, or ruling authority proceed?
Does it proceed from the people? No. It proceeds from God.
2. We must not omit to notice the manner in which the Lord speaks of
princes and rulers in His Word. They are always spoken of in reference to their
accountability to Him, and as bound to the execution of His will, and the
promotion of His glory.
3. It may be useful here to adduce what is the estimate of our own
Church on this subject.
II. SUCH A
DISCHARGE OR DISREGARD OF THIS OBLIGATION WILL ALWAYS YIELD A SURE TEST OF
THEIR OWN STATE AND THE CHARACTER OF THEIR GOVERNMENT, AND WHERE IT PREVAILS IT
WILL BE VISIBLE, MORE OR LESS, IN ALL THEIR WAYS AND WORKS. We are to judge of
the character and condition of princes and rulers, as such, as we do of private
individuals and professing Christians, as such, and of the character of their
government as we do of the general tenor of a man¡¦s life.
1. There will be deep humiliation before God, coupled with free and
ingenuous confessions both of individual and national guilt (2 Samuel 7:1-29).
2. There will also be a desire to seek the guidance and acknowledge
the hand of God in everything.
3. There will also be a fixed determination to banish all wicked men
from their presence, and to exclude them from their councils.
4. There will be an anxiety to fill all the offices of the Church and
State with men that fear the Lord, love the truth, and who will labour with
heart and hand in the same cause for the advancement of true godliness. If the
foregoing statements are based on the authority of Divine truth, the following
deductions will ensue as some of their most obvious results
They shall not be ashamed that wait for Me
Waiting upon God
I. WAITING UPON
GOD signifies--
1. A patient expectation of the fulfilment of His Word, whether it be
prophecy or promise.
2. A regular attention to the means of grace.
II. THE RESULT OF
WAITING UPON GOD. Not disappointment and humiliation, but prayers answered, and
hopes fulfilled.
1. The penitent.
2. The Christian relying upon the providential help of a
covenant-keeping God.
3. The believer waiting for the accomplishment of God¡¦s purpose in
his sanctification.
4. The Christian waiting for the coming of Christ. (T. Blackley,
M. A.)
¡§Wait¡¨
This is the one word which
the Divine wisdom often seems to utter in rebuke of human impatience. Man is
eager, hurried, impatient, but God is never in haste. The Divine proceedings
are slow--everywhere slow.
I. We see it in
the realms of NATURE AND PROVIDENCE.
1. The history of the earth.
2. The movement of the seasons. The changes of day and night,
&c., how slow, how gradual, how imperceptible!
3. The history of all life and growth.
II. REVEALED
RELIGION includes much in harmony with these facts.
1. The long interval between the promise of a Saviour and His advent.
2. The manner of His coming (Luke 17:20).
3. The history of revealed religion since the advent.
4. The spiritual history of the individual believer.
5. The events which make up the story of a life. With regard to much
in our history, we are expected to wait for the revelations of the world to
come. (R. Vaughan, D. D.)
Verse 24-25
Shall the prey be taken
from the mighty?
--
Deliverance from bondage
and death
I. THE STATE OF
FALLEN MAN IS ONE OF MISERY AND BONDAGE.
1. Misery because he is the prey of a mighty tyrant, the devil.
2. Bondage because he is the slave of a terrible master, death.
II. JESUS CAN SET
US FREE, FOR HE HAS CONQUERED. Jesus has been the Great Emancipator of men. (T.
Bates, M. A.)
¡§Shall the prey be taken
from the mighty?¡¨
I. WHO ARE ¡§THE
MIGHTY,¡¨ AND WHO ARE ¡§THE PREY¡¨? The immortal souls of men are the prey, and
all the combined powers of darkness are¡¨ the mighty.¡¨
II. HOW SHALL ¡§THE
PREY¡¨ BE TAKEN FROM ¡§THE MIGHTY¡¨? Nothing short of the almighty power of God is
calculated to effect this great and important work. But God is almighty, and
God is infinitely able and infinitely willing to rescue the helpless sons of
men. Our Lord Jesus Christ is that great and glorious Being who gave, whilst
here below, signal manifestations of His power to take ¡§the prey¡¨ from ¡§the
mighty.¡¨
III. A MOST
DELIGHTFUL AND ENCOURAGING PROMISE. ¡§I will contend with him who contendeth
with thee, and I will save thy children.¡¨ At all times, in every season of
trial and difficulty. Let the enemies of God learn an important lesson: ¡§Woe to
him that striveth with his Maker!¡¨ He will save His Church under all the trials
and temptations, the dangers and difficulties of human life. Are the immortal
souls of men ¡§the prey¡¨? and are the powers of darkness ¡§the mighty¡¨? What does
the ungodly man think of this? (T. Freeman.)
The adversary and his
defeat
I. THE WEAPONS AND
RESOURCES OF THE ENEMY.
1. Idolatry.
2. Imposture. Mohammedanism.
3. Papal superstition.
4. The despotic governments of the earth.
5. Crime in its varied forms.
6. A more liberal sort of religion which shall keep the opposition in
countenance, and enable them to wield the name and institutions of Christianity
against Christianity, sustained by such as live in pleasure, and will not bow
the knee to Christ.
7. The corruption of the purity of revivals of religion.
8. The sword. Can such varied and mighty resistance to the truth be
overcome? Can the earth be enlightened? Can the nations be disenthralled? Yes!
II. HOW SHALL
EVENTS SO DESIRABLE BE ACCOMPLISHED?
1. By the judgments of heaven.
2. By the universal propagation of the Gospel.
3. By frequent and, at last, general revivals of religion.
4. By the special influence of the Holy Spirit.
5. By a new and unparalleled vigour of Christian enterprise. But what
can be done? There must be in the Church of God--
Churches.
Conclusion--Will any take
side against the cause of Christ? It will be a fearful experiment! (Lyman
Beecher, D. D.)
The prey taken from the
mighty
Apply the text--
I. LITERALLY--to
Israel¡¦s release from Babylon.
II. SPIRITUALLY--to
man¡¦s redemption by Christ.
III. EXPERIMENTALLY--to
the Christian's deliverance from sin.
IV. PROSPECTIVELY--to
the blessed resurrection from the dead promised to the people of God. (S.
Thodey.)
Verse 26
And I will feed them that oppress thee with their own flesh.
Self-destruction
Here is a terrible picture of retributive justice. But the words
represent a general principle, which is universal, in the punishment of sin.
The sinner is his own avenger.
I. TAKE THE
DRUNKARD. He is drinking the poison, but is he not at the same time drinking
his own life, and consuming his own happiness and peace?
II. TAKE THE
SPENDTHRIFT. He spends his money, but at the same time eats and drinks his
existence, his fortune, his home, his happiness.
III. TAKE THE
TYRANT. He who wins his throne with blood shall lose it in blood. No one who
fights can be without foes, and if he has conquered them at first they will
only await their opportunity and in turn conquer him. How few who have raised
themselves by the sword have not died by the sword!
IV. TAKE THE
OPPRESSORS OF THE CHRISTIAN. They think they injure God's people. How does God
avenge His elect? By causing them to feed on their own selves--the bitterness
of conscience, the remorse of evil doing. These are the portion of the
oppressors. (Homilist.)
All flesh shall know that
I, the Lord, am thy Saviour
An all-sufficient Deliverer
I. A WORLD-WIDE
NEED.
II. AN
ALL-SUFFICIENT DELIVERER. (J. Smith, D.D.)
The safety of the Church
1. God is the Protector of the Church, and no weapon formed against
her shall prosper.
2. The Church¡¦s enemies shall be distracted in their counsels, and
left to anarchy and overthrow.
3. The Church shall rise resplendent from all her persecutions, and
shall prosper ultimately, just in proportion to their efforts to destroy it. (A.
Barnes, D.D)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n