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Zechariah
Chapter Nine
Zechariah 9
Chapter Contents
God's defence of his church. (1-8) Christ's coming and
his kingdom. (9-11) Promises to the church. (12-17)
Commentary on Zechariah 9:1-8
(Read Zechariah 9:1-8)
Here are judgements foretold on several nations. While
the Macedonians and Alexander's successors were in warfare in these countries,
the Lord promised to protect his people. God's house lies in the midst of an
enemy's country; his church is as a lily among thorns. God's power and goodness
are seen in her special preservation. The Lord encamps about his church, and while
armies of proud opposers shall pass by and return, his eyes watch over her, so
that they cannot prevail, and shortly the time will come when no exactor shall
pass by her any more.
Commentary on Zechariah 9:9-17
(Read Zechariah 9:9-17)
The prophet breaks forth into a joyful representation of
the coming of the Messiah, of whom the ancient Jews explained this prophecy. He
took the character of their King, when he entered Jerusalem amidst the hosannas
of the multitude. But his kingdom is a spiritual kingdom. It shall not be
advanced by outward force or carnal weapons. His gospel shall be preached to
the world, and be received among the heathen. A sinful state is a state of
bondage; it is a pit, or dungeon, in which there is no water, no comfort; and
we are all by nature prisoners in this pit. Through the precious blood of
Christ, many prisoners of Satan have been set at liberty from the horrible pit
in which they must otherwise have perished, without hope or comfort. While we
admire Him, let us seek that his holiness and truth may be shown in our own
spirits and conduct. These promises have accomplishment in the spiritual
blessings of the gospel which we enjoy by Jesus Christ. As the deliverance of
the Jews was typical of redemption by Christ, so this invitation speaks to all
the language of the gospel call. Sinners are prisoners, but prisoners of hope;
their case is sad, but not desperate; for there is hope in Israel concerning
them. Christ is a Strong-hold, a strong Tower, in whom believers are safe from
the fear of the wrath of God, the curse of the law, and the assaults of
spiritual enemies. To him we must turn with lively faith; to him we must flee,
and trust in his name under all trials and sufferings. It is here promised that
the Lord would deliver his people. This passage also refers to the apostles,
and the preachers of the gospel in the early ages. God was evidently with them;
his words from their lips pierced the hearts and consciences of the hearers.
They were wondrously defended in persecution, and were filled with the
influences of the Holy Spirit. They were saved by the Good Shepherd as his
flock, and honoured as jewels of his crown. The gifts, graces, and consolations
of the Spirit, poured forth on the day of Pentecost, Acts
2 and in succeeding times, are represented. Sharp have been, and
still will be, the conflicts of Zion's sons, but their God will give them success.
The more we are employed, and satisfied with his goodness, the more we shall
admire the beauty revealed in the Redeemer. Whatever gifts God bestows on us,
we must serve him cheerfully with them; and, when refreshed with blessings, we
must say, How great is his goodness!
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Zechariah》
Zechariah 9
Verse 1
[1] The
burden of the word of the LORD in the land of Hadrach, and Damascus shall be
the rest thereof: when the eyes of man, as of all the tribes of Israel, shall be
toward the LORD.
Hadrach —
This is the name of a city in Celosyria, and here signifies the country also.
It was not far from Damascus.
The rest thereof —
This burden shall lie long as well as heavy on Damascus.
Towards the Lord —
For as all men's appeals in cases of wrong are to heaven, so they who have been
wronged by Syrian injustice, look to heaven for right.
Verse 2
[2] And Hamath also shall border thereby; Tyrus, and Zidon, though it be very
wise.
Hamath — A
principal town of Syria.
Shall border — Shall
be so near the storm, that they shall not quite escape.
Very wise —
Each of them are subtle, and think by craft to save themselves, but God derides
their wisdom.
Verse 4
[4]
Behold, the Lord will cast her out, and he will smite her power in the sea; and
she shall be devoured with fire.
Cast her out — Of
her inheritance, as the word properly means.
Verse 5
[5]
Ashkelon shall see it, and fear; Gaza also shall see it, and be very sorrowful,
and Ekron; for her expectation shall be ashamed; and the king shall perish from
Gaza, and Ashkelon shall not be inhabited.
Her expectation —
Her hope that Tyre would break Alexander's power, or hold out against it.
Ashamed —
Turned into shame and confusion.
The king —
The government shall be overthrown.
Shall not be inhabited — For many years.
Verse 6
[6] And a bastard shall dwell in Ashdod, and I will cut off the pride of the
Philistines.
A bastard —
Strangers, who have no right of inheritance.
Verse 7
[7] And
I will take away his blood out of his mouth, and his abominations from between
his teeth: but he that remaineth, even he, shall be for our God, and he shall
be as a governor in Judah, and Ekron as a Jebusite.
Take away his blood —
Though proud and warlike nations have delighted to shed blood, and, as it were,
to eat the blood of their enemies, yet God will overthrow their power, and take
the prey out of their mouth.
Abominations —
Their abominable sacrifices which they offered and feasted on. God will punish
their idolatries, and by destroying the cities of those abominations, will
remove them for ever.
The remnant —
That small select number who escape the sword, shall be the Lord's peculiar
ones.
As a governor —
For the honour which shall be given them.
As a Jebusite —
The city is put for the people, and this one city and people for all the other:
all the remaining Philistines shall be as Jebusites, servants to the people of
God.
Verse 8
[8] And
I will encamp about mine house because of the army, because of him that passeth
by, and because of him that returneth: and no oppressor shall pass through them
any more: for now have I seen with mine eyes.
I will encamp — To
defend it from all its enemies.
Mine house —
This temple, but as it is an emblem of the church.
The army — Of
the Persian and the Grecian army, whose march lay through Judea.
Verse 9
[9]
Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem: behold,
thy King cometh unto thee: he is just, and having salvation; lowly, and riding
upon an ass, and upon a colt the foal of an ass.
Thy king —
The Messiah.
He is just —
The righteous one, who cometh to fulfil all righteousness.
Having salvation — To
bestow on all that believe in him.
Verse 10
[10] And
I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem, and the
battle bow shall be cut off: and he shall speak peace unto the heathen: and his
dominion shall be from sea even to sea, and from the river even to the ends of
the earth.
I will cut off —
When the Messiah comes and sets up his kingdom, he will need no external force.
Neither chariot, bow nor sword, brought salvation to him, neither shall they be
mentioned in the day of his conquest.
The heathen —
The Heathens through him shall be reconciled unto God, and one another, Ephesians 2:17.
From the river —
From Euphrates to the utmost end of Canaan, to the Mediterranean sea; a type of
all the world, which was in due time to be the inheritance of Christ.
Verse 11
[11] As
for thee also, by the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out
of the pit wherein is no water.
As for thee — Oh
Jerusalem; these words are Christ's words to her.
By the blood — By
my blood, in which thy covenant as confirmed; 'tis God's covenant as made by
him, 'tis Zion's covenant as made for her, 'tis Christ's also as made in him.
Sent forth — I
have delivered the Jews out of Babylon: compared to a pit in which no water
was, wherein the Jews must have perished, had not God visited them.
Verse 12
[12] Turn
you to the strong hold, ye prisoners of hope: even to day do I declare that I
will render double unto thee;
Turn ye —
The prophet exhorts the Jews to hasten to Christ, who is the salvation and high
tower of the church.
Prisoners of hope —
Captives, yet not without hope.
Even to-day — In
this day of lowest distress.
Double —
Twice as much good as thou hast suffered evil.
Verse 13
[13] When
I have bent Judah for me, filled the bow with Ephraim, and raised up thy sons,
O Zion, against thy sons, O Greece, and made thee as the sword of a mighty man.
When I have bent Judah — In the day's when Judah shall be in my hand as a strong bow, already
bent.
Ephraim —
Ephraim, the remainder of the ten tribes (which returned with Judah) shall be
for a supply of warriors; as the quiver filled is a supply of arrows to the
bow-man.
O Greece —
Against the Grecians or Ionians, who had oppressed the Jews, and bought them
for slaves, against whom the Jews took arms, under the conduct of the
Maccabees, to whom Christ made good much of this promise.
Verse 14
[14] And
the LORD shall be seen over them, and his arrow shall go forth as the
lightning: and the Lord GOD shall blow the trumpet, and shall go with
whirlwinds of the south.
Shall be seen —
Shall manifestly appear for them.
His arrow —
His judgments, swift, irresistible, and sudden.
As the lightning —
Which breaks forth with violence, and runs from east to west in a moment.
The Lord God —
Their God, the God of Israel, shall give the alarm to them, and sound the call
to bring them together.
Of the south — In
which the mightiest whirlwinds are raised; some think the prophet alludes to
the tempest at the delivery of the law.
Verse 15
[15] The
LORD of hosts shall defend them; and they shall devour, and subdue with sling
stones; and they shall drink, and make a noise as through wine; and they shall
be filled like bowls, and as the corners of the altar.
Devour —
Destroy their enemies.
With sling-stones — As
David did Goliath.
Shall drink — In
their festivals, when they offer sacrifices of thanksgiving for their victories.
Make a noise —
Shout with shouts of triumph, as men do whose hearts are glad with success, and
cheared with wine.
Shall fill —
With the blood of the sacrifices they offer.
Verse 16
[16] And
the LORD their God shall save them in that day as the flock of his people: for
they shall be as the stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign upon his land.
As the flock — As
a shepherd saves his flock.
As the stones of a crown — Precious in my sight.
As an ensign — Or
trophy.
Verse 17
[17] For
how great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty! corn shall make the
young men cheerful, and new wine the maids.
His goodness —
Infinite goodness is the fountain of all the good done for this people.
His beauty —
How wonderful the beauty of Divine Providence in Israel's deliverance and
salvation? Corn - Plentiful harvests shall make the young men chearful in
sowing, reaping, and eating the fruits thereof.
New wine —
There shall be such plenty of wine, that all, young and old, shall be cheared
with it.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Zechariah》
09 Chapter 9
Introduction
Verses 1-3
Verses 1-8
The burden of the Word of the Lord
The dark and bright side of God
’s revelation to mankind
I.
The
dark side of the Divine Word. Notice two things--
1. In this aspect it is here called a “burden.” The word “burden” is
almost invariably used to represent a calamity. Thus we read of the burden of
Babylon, the burden of Moab, the burden of Damascus, the burden of Tyre, the
burden of Egypt, etc.
2. In this aspect it bears upon wicked men. The doomed peoples are
here mentioned. They are in “the land of Hadrach.” Whether Hadrach here means
the land of Syria or the common names of the kings of Syria, it scarcely
matters; the people of the place of which Damascus was the capital were the
doomed ones. Besides these, there are the men of “Hamath,” a country lying to
the north of Damascus and joining the districts of Zobah and Rehub. And still
more, there are “Tyrus” and “Zidon,” places about which we often read in the
Bible, and with whose history most students of the Bible are acquainted.
“Ashkelon,” “Gaza,” and “Ekron,” are also mentioned. These were the chief
cities of the Philistines, and the capitals of different districts. All these
peoples were not only enemies of the chosen tribe, but enemies of the one true
and living God. History tells us how, through the bloody conquests of Alexander
and his successors, this “burden of the Word of the Lord” fell with all its
weight upon these people. Observe--
All the threatenings here against the land of Hadrach, Hamath,
Tyrus, Zidon, Gaza, Ekron, Ashkelon, and the Philistines were fulfilled.
II. The bright side
of the Divine Word. There is a beam of promise here (Zechariah 9:7-8). The following is Dr.
Keil’s translation of these verses: “And I shall take away his blood out of his
mouth, and his abominations from between his teeth, and he will also remain to
our God and will be as a tribe prince in Judah, and Ekron like the Jebusite. I
pitch a tent for My house against military power, against those who go to and
fro, and no oppressor will pass over them any more, for now have I seen with My
eyes.” The promise in these words seems to be twofold--
1. The deprivation of the power of the enemy to injure. The Bible
promises to the good man the subjection of all his foes.
2. Divine protection from all their enemies. The Bible promises
eternal protection to the good. (Homilist.)
Prophetic fulfilments
1. Every fulfilled prophecy is a distinct proof of the truth of the
Bible--of its having been “given by inspiration of God,” Prophecy is a miracle.
We generally apply the word miracle to supernatural manifestations of power;
but it is equally applicable to supernatural manifestations of knowledge.
Knowledge of futurity belongs only to God. Jehovah frequently appeals to such
foreknowledge of the future as one of His distinctive attributes. The
accomplishment of Divine predictions stands out, incontestably, in the records
of ancient history.
2. The true value of the evidences of revelation arises from the
value of what is revealed. Were it of trivial importance, that would be itself
a strong presumptive proof--almost, indeed, a conclusive one--that what
professed to be a revelation had no real title to be so regarded. That which
revelation does make known has in it to us a value beyond the powers of man or
angel to estimate. It “shows unto us the way of salvation.” This is its great
discovery. It is no mere republication of the lessons of nature. It is not a
mere volume of precepts. It does confirm all that nature teaches. It does set
before us a perfect code of morals. But it does more: it addresses us not as
creatures merely, but as sinners. It makes provision for us in this
capacity--for our deliverance from the guilt, condemnation, and punishment of
sin, and our restoration to the favour, the image, the enjoyment of God; and
that for the eternity of our being. It is this that stamps every proof of the
divinity of the Bible with such importance,--every species of evidence, and
every variety of each species. The investigation of the evidence is what every man
in his sane mind should feel to be the most momentous inquiry in which he can
possibly be engaged.
3. The past fulfilment of prophecy should establish our “faith in
God” regarding all that is yet future; and especially our “faith in God” as
still in all His providential administration, having His eye upon the Church.
His entire, extensive, and complicated administration is ever working out the
development of the plan of salvation.
4. The enemies of God and of His people have cause to tremble. He
will not leave either Himself or His people unavenged. He that “toucheth them
toucheth the apple of His eye.” It may at times be difficult to see on which
side lies His favour; in seasons when “the ungodly prosper in the world,” while
“waters of a full cup are wrung out” to the faithful. In such seasons, love
seems to be hidden, and even as inverting the order of its manifestations, and
tempting the Christian to say--“How doth God know? And is there knowledge in
the Most High?” But when the whole comes to be set by God, and seen by men in
the light of the final judgment, all will be clear. The distinction, then,
between His people and His enemies, will be fully, finally, and irreversibly
marked; an everlasting separation made, and the “great gulf, fixed between them.”
(Ralph Wardlaw, D. D.)
National judgments
1. The condition of all men is laid open to the eye of God, and He
will appoint judgment or mercy according to that condition (Zechariah 9:1).
2. Worldly wisdom is at last greatly inferior to that wisdom, the
beginning of which is the fear of the Lord (Zechariah 9:2).
3. However secure nations or men may think themselves in sin, their
sin will be sure to find them out. Never has sin more proudly entrenched
herself than in godless, but magnificent Tyre. Never has every element of
earthly prosperity seemed more completely under control than in her case. And
yet they were all swept like chaff before the whirlwind of the wrath of God,
when the time for the fulfilment of His threatenings had come. Hence though
nations now trample on law and right, and seem long to flourish in their sin,
let not the child of God be impatient. Let him remember that two hundred years
passed away after the utterance of these threatenings against Tyre, and she
seemed stronger than over, and yet when the day of doom had dawned, the galleys
that left her on their stated voyages the peerless queen of the seas, when they
returned found her but a bare and blackened rock, a lonely monument of the
truth, that our God is a consuming fire. If then, God thus executes His
threats, even on a mighty commonwealth, in spite of His delay, let not the fact
that judgment against an evil work is not executed speedily cause the hearts of
the sons of men to be fully set in them to do evil. Let men remember that it is
a falsehood to violate a threatening as much as to violate a promise, and that
God will not make Himself a liar to save man in his sins (Zechariah 9:3-7).
4. Amidst all the tumults of nations, the true people of God are
safe, being guarded by the arm of Almightiness (Zechariah 9:8). (T. V. Moore,
D. D.)
Verses 1-17
Verses 1-8
The burden of the Word of the Lord
The dark and bright side of God
’s revelation to mankind
I.
The
dark side of the Divine Word. Notice two things--
1. In this aspect it is here called a “burden.” The word “burden” is
almost invariably used to represent a calamity. Thus we read of the burden of
Babylon, the burden of Moab, the burden of Damascus, the burden of Tyre, the
burden of Egypt, etc.
2. In this aspect it bears upon wicked men. The doomed peoples are
here mentioned. They are in “the land of Hadrach.” Whether Hadrach here means
the land of Syria or the common names of the kings of Syria, it scarcely
matters; the people of the place of which Damascus was the capital were the
doomed ones. Besides these, there are the men of “Hamath,” a country lying to
the north of Damascus and joining the districts of Zobah and Rehub. And still
more, there are “Tyrus” and “Zidon,” places about which we often read in the
Bible, and with whose history most students of the Bible are acquainted.
“Ashkelon,” “Gaza,” and “Ekron,” are also mentioned. These were the chief cities
of the Philistines, and the capitals of different districts. All these peoples
were not only enemies of the chosen tribe, but enemies of the one true and
living God. History tells us how, through the bloody conquests of Alexander and
his successors, this “burden of the Word of the Lord” fell with all its weight
upon these people. Observe--
All the threatenings here against the land of Hadrach, Hamath,
Tyrus, Zidon, Gaza, Ekron, Ashkelon, and the Philistines were fulfilled.
II. The bright side
of the Divine Word. There is a beam of promise here (Zechariah 9:7-8). The following is Dr.
Keil’s translation of these verses: “And I shall take away his blood out of his
mouth, and his abominations from between his teeth, and he will also remain to
our God and will be as a tribe prince in Judah, and Ekron like the Jebusite. I
pitch a tent for My house against military power, against those who go to and
fro, and no oppressor will pass over them any more, for now have I seen with My
eyes.” The promise in these words seems to be twofold--
1. The deprivation of the power of the enemy to injure. The Bible
promises to the good man the subjection of all his foes.
2. Divine protection from all their enemies. The Bible promises
eternal protection to the good. (Homilist.)
Prophetic fulfilments
1. Every fulfilled prophecy is a distinct proof of the truth of the
Bible--of its having been “given by inspiration of God,” Prophecy is a miracle.
We generally apply the word miracle to supernatural manifestations of power;
but it is equally applicable to supernatural manifestations of knowledge.
Knowledge of futurity belongs only to God. Jehovah frequently appeals to such
foreknowledge of the future as one of His distinctive attributes. The
accomplishment of Divine predictions stands out, incontestably, in the records
of ancient history.
2. The true value of the evidences of revelation arises from the
value of what is revealed. Were it of trivial importance, that would be itself
a strong presumptive proof--almost, indeed, a conclusive one--that what
professed to be a revelation had no real title to be so regarded. That which
revelation does make known has in it to us a value beyond the powers of man or
angel to estimate. It “shows unto us the way of salvation.” This is its great
discovery. It is no mere republication of the lessons of nature. It is not a
mere volume of precepts. It does confirm all that nature teaches. It does set
before us a perfect code of morals. But it does more: it addresses us not as
creatures merely, but as sinners. It makes provision for us in this
capacity--for our deliverance from the guilt, condemnation, and punishment of
sin, and our restoration to the favour, the image, the enjoyment of God; and
that for the eternity of our being. It is this that stamps every proof of the
divinity of the Bible with such importance,--every species of evidence, and
every variety of each species. The investigation of the evidence is what every
man in his sane mind should feel to be the most momentous inquiry in which he
can possibly be engaged.
3. The past fulfilment of prophecy should establish our “faith in
God” regarding all that is yet future; and especially our “faith in God” as
still in all His providential administration, having His eye upon the Church.
His entire, extensive, and complicated administration is ever working out the
development of the plan of salvation.
4. The enemies of God and of His people have cause to tremble. He
will not leave either Himself or His people unavenged. He that “toucheth them
toucheth the apple of His eye.” It may at times be difficult to see on which
side lies His favour; in seasons when “the ungodly prosper in the world,” while
“waters of a full cup are wrung out” to the faithful. In such seasons, love
seems to be hidden, and even as inverting the order of its manifestations, and
tempting the Christian to say--“How doth God know? And is there knowledge in
the Most High?” But when the whole comes to be set by God, and seen by men in
the light of the final judgment, all will be clear. The distinction, then,
between His people and His enemies, will be fully, finally, and irreversibly
marked; an everlasting separation made, and the “great gulf, fixed between
them.” (Ralph Wardlaw, D. D.)
National judgments
1. The condition of all men is laid open to the eye of God, and He
will appoint judgment or mercy according to that condition (Zechariah 9:1).
2. Worldly wisdom is at last greatly inferior to that wisdom, the
beginning of which is the fear of the Lord (Zechariah 9:2).
3. However secure nations or men may think themselves in sin, their
sin will be sure to find them out. Never has sin more proudly entrenched
herself than in godless, but magnificent Tyre. Never has every element of
earthly prosperity seemed more completely under control than in her case. And
yet they were all swept like chaff before the whirlwind of the wrath of God,
when the time for the fulfilment of His threatenings had come. Hence though
nations now trample on law and right, and seem long to flourish in their sin,
let not the child of God be impatient. Let him remember that two hundred years
passed away after the utterance of these threatenings against Tyre, and she
seemed stronger than over, and yet when the day of doom had dawned, the galleys
that left her on their stated voyages the peerless queen of the seas, when they
returned found her but a bare and blackened rock, a lonely monument of the
truth, that our God is a consuming fire. If then, God thus executes His
threats, even on a mighty commonwealth, in spite of His delay, let not the fact
that judgment against an evil work is not executed speedily cause the hearts of
the sons of men to be fully set in them to do evil. Let men remember that it is
a falsehood to violate a threatening as much as to violate a promise, and that
God will not make Himself a liar to save man in his sins (Zechariah 9:3-7).
4. Amidst all the tumults of nations, the true people of God are
safe, being guarded by the arm of Almightiness (Zechariah 9:8). (T. V. Moore,
D. D.)
Verses 9-12
Verse 9-10
Thy King cometh unto thee; He is just and having salvation
Palm Sunday
This prophecy was generally recognised by the Jews as referring to
the Messiah.
First of all, prophecy spoke only of Messiah’s glory. It was not until the era
of the Captivity that we find Christ spoken of as the Man afflicted and
stricken, the Hind pursued by the buffaloes and dogs, the King lowly, and
riding upon an ass. When the prophet declared that Messiah should come riding
upon an ass, it was taken as an indication that He should be a prophet-King. In
the Talmud it is said for this reason that to dream of an ass is to dream of
the coming of salvation. To the Gentiles this, like other features of our
Lord’s work, was a constant subject of mockery. The Persian King, Sapor,
promised the rabbis that when their Messiah came who should ride upon an ass,
he would send Him a horse. It was a common scoff among the Mohammedans that
whereas Mohammed was “the rider upon a camel,” Christ was “that rider upon an
ass.” Christ only entered Jerusalem riding on an ass, to bring before us a
necessary illustration of His character and office.
1. Though He was King of kings, yet He is the Lowly One. The Hebrew
word expresses the condition of a man who has been brought low by affliction
and sorrow, possessing in himself the fruit of this sorrow in lowliness and
submission of mind. In this sense the word is used of Moses, the “meekest of
men.” Messiah is “stricken and afflicted.” Our Lord applies this character to
Himself, “I am meek and lowly in heart.” And this trait must especially
distinguish all who follow Him into His kingdom.
2. Lowliness not only expressed the character of the King, but the
character also of the kingship. The victory of Messiah is to be over the very
things which are esteemed mighty in the world. As in nature, the brute force of
the beast is conquered by the skill of man, and the forces of matter overcome
by the power of mind, so in the kingdom of Christ all powers of body and mind
are subdued to the power of the Spirit which is made perfect in human weakness.
All through the history of Israel, God’s hand had thus been made manifest in
the casting down of strongholds. When, therefore, Jerusalem rejected the
Messiah, she became like the fallen powers which were before her, a power of
this world, aiming at success by the world’s methods, looking forward to the
world’s splendour, and receiving the world’s downfall for her reward. She knew
not the day of her visitation. Let us not indulge only in pity for the fallen
city which opposed itself so madly to the kingdom of Christ. The world--even
the Christian world--is very far from this subjection to the kingdom of Christ.
When we see how faintly Christian principles as yet influence the policies of
nations, our impatient spirit is filled with dismay. We are ready to believe
that Christianity has gained extension at the cost of intension, that men have
been made Christians at the cost of Christianity, and that it had been better
if the conversion of Europe had been slower rather than speedier. If it be so,
what remedy is there so effective and so apposite as the intension of Christian
claims upon ourselves, individually and now, the realisation now of the severe
claim which Christianity makes upon the will and the life of each of us? A
country is conquered by the capitulation of one castle after another; even so
Christ’s kingdom comes by the yielding up of individual hearts. What a glorious
triumph we can make for Christ in our hearts today! With hearts bowed down in
lowliest sense of sin, emptied of all self-trust, filled with the sense of
God’s love and pass on for the world, we shall be ready then to receive the
lowly King, and to be made partakers of the kingly spirit. (H. H. Gower.)
The ideal monarch of the world
I. Here is a
monarch, the advent of whom is a matter for rapturous joy. “Rejoice greatly, O
daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem.” Christ’s advent to the world
was announced by the gladsome music of angelic choirs. “Glory to God in the
highest,” etc. Why rejoice at His advent? Because He will--
1. Promote all the rights of mankind.
2. Remove all the calamities of mankind.
II. Here is a
monarch the dignity of whom is unapproached. “Thy King cometh unto thee.” “Thy
King.” Thou hast never yet had a true king, and there is no other true king for
thee: this is “thy” King.
1. The King who alone has the absolute right to rule thee. Thou art
His, His property. All thy force, vitality, faculty, belong to Him.
2. The King who alone can remove thy evils and promote thy rights.
III. Here is a
monarch the character of whom is unexceptionably good.
1. He is righteous. “He is just.” The little word “just” comprehends
all virtues. He who is just to himself, just to his Maker, just to the
universe, is the perfection of excellence, is all that Heaven requires.
2. He is humble. “Lowly, and riding upon an ass.” Where there is not
genuine humility there is no true greatness; it is essential to true majesty.
Pride is the offspring of littleness, it is the contemptible production of a
contemptible mind.
IV. Here is a
monarch the mission of whom is transcendently beneficent.
1. It is remedial. “Having salvation.” Salvation! What a
comprehensive word, deliverance from all evil, restoration to all good. Any one
can destroy; God alone can restore.
2. It is specific. “And I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim,”
etc. He will put an end to the “chariot,” the “horse,” the “battle bow,” of
war, and “speak peace” to the nations. Peace! This is what the nations have
always wanted. War has been and still is the great curse of the nations.
V. Here is a
monarch the reign of whom is to be universal. The language here employed was
universally understood by the Jews as embracing the whole world. He claims
universal dominion, He deserves it, and will one day have it. Learn--
1. The infinite goodness of God in offering the world such a King.
2. The amazing folly and wickedness of man in not accepting this
Divine offer. (Homilist.)
The personal and official character of Messiah
I. Royal dignity.
“Thy king cometh unto thee.” The designation is emphatic. “Thy king,” as if
they had never had another. That royalty was to pertain to the coming Messiah
might be shown from many predictions. He was to “sit” on the throne of David
forever. His being a king was anything but an objection to the Jews. But the
kind of royalty was not at all to their minds. His kingdom was not to be “of
this world.” Its throne was not to be in this world. He was born of royal
lineage--born a King; though, strictly speaking, His mediatorial reign did not
commence till, having finished His work on earth, the Father said to Him, “Sit
Thou at My right hand, until I make Thy foes Thy footstool.”
II. The
righteousness of his character and administration. “He is just.” The
designation is to be understood as at once personal and official: for, indeed,
were there not the former, there could be little reason to count upon the
latter. This attribute is frequently ascribed to Him, as characterising Himself
and His government. Jehovah calls Him “My righteous servant.” His throne is
founded in the very charter of righteous ness. And His whole administration is
conducted on the principles of the purest and most unbending righteousness.
III. His saving
grace and power. “Having salvation.” Salvation was the very object of His
coming. “The Son of Man is come to save that which was lost.” The very design
of His atonement was to render salvation consistent with the claims of
righteousness: so that Jehovah might be “a just God and a Saviour.” When He had
completed His work, He was to “have salvation,” not only as being Himself
delivered from death, but as possessing for bestowal on mankind all the
blessings of “salvation”--beginning in pardon and ending in” life eternal.”
IV. The humility
and meekness of His character. “Lowly, and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt
the foal of an ass.” This attribute of character distinguished His entire
course; all His intercourse with men--with His friends, and with His enemies.
Even His triumphs were lowly--“riding upon an ass”; and not one that had been
trained for the use of royalty, but, as would appear, a rough unbroken colt.
Although the ass was not the very mean and despised animal there that it is
with us, yet comparatively it was so. The horse was the animal used in war; and
consequently, in the triumphal processions of kings and conquerors; and on such
occasions, arrayed in costly and elegant caparisons.
V. The mode and
means of the extension of the kingdom correspond with its spiritual nature. “I
will cut off,” etc. This, at the coming of the Messiah, was literally true
respecting the civil and military power of the Jewish people. At the very time
when they were looking for a Messiah who was to break the yoke from off their
neck, establish their temporal freedom and power, and lead them on to universal
conquest, their power was finally overthrown and destroyed, their temple and
city laid in ashes, and them selves scattered abroad among all nations. Yet the
kingdom of the Messiah grew and prospered. This itself showed its true nature.
It was not, as the Jews anticipated, to be a Jewish kingdom. It was to have
subjects among all peoples. And these subjects were not to be gained for Him
with the sword of steel, but by the “Sword of the Spirit,” which is the Word of
God. His kingdom consisted of all, wherever His truth spread, whom that truth
made free--spiritually free. All thus made free come under willing and happy
subjection to His gracious sceptre. Force never made one subject of the King of
Zion.
VI. Another
characteristic of His reign--“peace.” “And He shall speak peace to the
heathen.” This is a feature of His reign frequently celebrated. By His gospel
He speaks peace to sinners of mankind. There is no exception.
VII. The extent of
His reign. The language employed here was universally understood by the Jews as
embracing the whole world. In due time, “the kingdom, of this world shall
become the kingdom of our God and of His Christ.” (Ralph Wardlaw, D. D.)
The Saviour King
To us who read this prophecy in the light of its fulfilment in the
advent and work and glory of Christ, all is plain and clear. Not so much by our
Lord’s particular act in riding into Jerusalem on the occasion, and in the
manner described by the evangelists, as by that which, by this act, was
symbolised and indicated, namely, His advent to empire, His coming to get for
Himself a kingdom, His appearing as the Saviour and King of His Church, and His
gathering to Himself a people from among the nations, has this prediction been
fulfilled. He came in poverty and humiliation to lay the foundation of His
kingdom in obedience and sacrifice. It was from the field of sorrow and of
suffering that He ascended to the throne. The crown came after the Cross; the
humiliation preceded the glory. All things have been put under His feet, all
power and authority have been given Him in heaven and on earth, in the universe
He reigns supreme: But it is because He was “obedient unto death” that He has
been thus “highly exalted.” His kingdom rests on His propitiatory work; and it
is in view of this, though then perhaps but dimly seen, that the prophet here
calls upon Zion to behold and hail her King. And now that He hath ascended to
the throne of His glory, the “glad tidings of the kingdom” are to be proclaimed
to all nations and men of every tongue and clime are to be invited to behold
their King, and submit to His righteous and benignant sway. (W. L.
Alexander, D. D.)
The lowly King Messiah
The theocracy, or Church, is called to rejoice because of the
coming of her King. The kingly office of the Messiah, which was conferred upon
Him for the accomplishment of the work of redemption, is often alluded to as
ground for rejoicing. Here is given the character of the King, and the extent
of His kingdom.
1. He is “just.” The righteousness referred to is not His priestly,
but His kingly righteousness, that rigorous justice of His reign in virtue of
which no good should be unrewarded, and no evil unpunished. In the unequal
allotments of the present, when the good so often suffer, and the bad so often
escape, it is surely ground for rejoicing that the King, under whose rule this
dispensation is placed, is just, and will render to every man according to his
work.
2. He is “endowed with salvation.” The word employed is a difficult
one. It is usually taken in a secondary sense, as expressing not simply the
reception of a salvation, but its possession as a gift that was capable of
being bestowed upon others. The meaning then would be, that God was with Him,
in spite of all His lowliness, sustaining Him in the mighty work Be had
undertaken, and that this protection was bestowed upon Him not as an
individual, but as a King, a representative of His people, so that He would not
only enjoy it Himself, but possess the power of bestowing it upon others.
Hence, while His inflexible justice might make us tremble in our sin, the fact
that He was also endowed with a free salvation, and a salvation which He could
bestow as a kingly right, would remove these fears, and enable us to rejoice in
this coming King.
3. He was to be “lowly.” If the usual sense of the Word be given, the
Church would be summoned to rejoice because of the humiliation of her King.
And, however incongruous such a ground of rejoicing may seem to be to men
generally, the heart that is crushed with penitence or grief will comprehend
the reason of this summons. Had this august King been as sorrowless as He was
sinless, had He been a robed seraph, or a crowned monarch, the poor and
suffering could never have approached Him with confidence, for He could not
have sympathised with them in their sorrows. But when He comes to us as One who
can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, we welcome Him with joy,
and understand why we are called to rejoice, because He comes to us as the
lowly King. Surely a suffering child of God can understand how blessed a thing
it is to have a Saviour King who has known Himself what it is to suffer.
4. He was to be externally in poverty, “riding upon an ass, and upon
a foal, the son of the asses.” This is a prediction of poverty, for although in
earlier times kings rode on asses, after the time of Solomon they were never so
used, horses having taken their place. The employment of the horse in war also
made the use of the ass an indication of peace as well as of poverty. The exact
fulfilment of this prophecy in the entrance of Christ into Jerusalem, was
merely a specific illustration of the general prediction, not the entire object
of the prediction itself. Its range was much broader than this single event,
and, indeed, would have been substantially fulfilled had this event never
occurred. The specific fulfilment, however, rivets the prophecy more absolutely
to Christ. (T. V. Moore, D. D.)
How comes the King
The Caesars of the world have come upon strong palfreys,
prancing, snorting; from their nostrils there has come fire, and their bits
have been wet with foam; how comes the King?--“lowly, and riding upon an ass,
and upon a colt the foal of an ass.” The more King for that! Some men need
their own furniture to set them off; some persons would be nothing but for
their entourage: the things that are round about them seem to be so admirable
that surely they must be admirable them selves:--such the loose but most
generous reasoning of some men in some cases. “Lowly”--”I am meek and lowly in
heart.” Why this colt, the foal of an ass? To rebuke the horses of heathenism:--“The
Lord will cut off the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem”: they
are signs of pomp, self-sufficiency, conscious dignity, as who should say, we
made ourselves, and we are the builders of the great Babylons of the earth. The
Lord will not have it so with His Son, with His Church, with His kingdom. Only
meekness has an eternal province. It is so always and everywhere, if you would
but learn it. It is so at school. The boy who is going to do everything with a
wave of his hand will do nothing; the boy who does not care anything about the
examination until the night before it comes off and then gathers himself
together in tremendous impotence, comes back the next night a sadder but a
wiser boy. It is so in business, it is so in the pulpit, it is so along the
whole line of human action: pretence means failure. But there must not be mere
meekness of manner; the tiger is sometimes asleep. There is a spurious
meekness; there are persons that have no voices at all, and when they speak they
are supposed to be so gentle and so modest and so unassuming. Not they! It is
for want of hoof, not want of will; they would crush you if they could. This
meekness is a quality of the soul, this is the very bloom of greatness, this is
the finest expression of power. Meekness is not littleness, insignificance,
incompetency; meekness is the rest that expresses the highest degree of
velocity. “Riding upon an ass, and upon a colt the foal of an ass.” All the
rabbis have allegorised this ass with painful tediousness. They in very deed
have tried to read meanings into the words, but they were so obviously
incongruous that they never got into the words. Take it as a type of your
King’s meekness, take it as an assurance that His kingdom is not of this world.
This world hates all meekness. Mammon never listened to a prayer; Mammon hates
even read prayers; Mammon has a distaste for theological conception; Mammon
never sung a hymn or a psalm; Mammon never bowed his knees in tender, holy
adoration. The eyes of Mammon are greed, the hands of Mammon are felons, the
desire of Mammon is possession, though it may be purchased with blood. This
world, therefore, will not have true meekness, gentleness, pitifulness; the
world will have pomp and show and magnificence and royalty,--one day its heart
will sicken at the sight of its own idols. These are the lines that have sudden
endings. Truth encircles the universe: all lies, however glibly told, suddenly
disappear in the pit. Jesus Christ then comes to set up a kingdom that is moral,
subjective, spiritual; a kingdom that is clement, redeeming, sympathetic; a
kingdom that rests upon unseen but immovable bases. Whatever He touches He
elevates. Take the principle, and do not vex the mind or distract the piety
with worthless detail: the principle is this, that when Jesus Christ comes into
the world He comes as no other king ever came, that He may do a work which no
other king ever dreamed. (Joseph Parker, D. D.)
The coming of the King of Zion
I. Contemplate
Messiah in His title, as a King. There are many senses in which we may
contemplate Christ as a King.
1. He has all the ancestral honours, titles, and high-born
qualifications of a king. He was descended of a stock of heavenly royalty; He
was the first-born of every creature.
2. Christ gave out laws and principles of government as a King. His
sermon on the Mount is a beautiful unfolding of the principles of spiritual
rule, the righteous awards which would characterise His future administration.
Christ then is a King. He defines the terms of our obedience; He lays down the
maxims of the spiritual realm; He declares what worship He will accept, and in
what way alone His presence can be approached.
3. Christ protects, defends, and counsels His subjects as a King. In
the primitive condition of society monarchs were for the most part chosen on
account of their possessing, in the estimation of their subjects, some special
kingly qualities. He who was the first to go forth with their armies, He who
would redeem them from the power of the oppressor, He who was valiant in fight,
prompt in action, prudent in counsel, apt to rule, He by one consent would be
allowed to be advanced to the throne; and in this sense, Christ ever vindicated
His claim to be the King, and “Head over all things to His Church.” And He is
King over all His spiritual subjects today. For all the purposes of guidance,
help, comfort, and protection, He still reigns.
4. And Christ bestows honours, and gifts, and recompenses, as a King.
Christ gives as a King--pardons full and free, grace rich and abounding, crowns
bright and glorious.
II. Contemplate
Messiah in His character--He is just. The word is to be taken in its largest
and highest sense, as comprehensive both of the unblemished sanctity of His
personal character, and the perfect righteousness which would distinguish His
spiritual government. In all His dispensations of grace and goodness, Christ is
ever just.
III. Contemplate
Messiah in His power--having salvation. He has that which is to procure
salvation. His salvation saves from a great danger, it frees from a great
condemnation; it was bought at: a great price; it admits to great and glorious
prerogatives. Note also the mild and gentle manner of Christ’s spiritual
administration. “He is lowly.” (Daniel Moore, M. A.)
The lowly King
I do not intend to expound the whole text at any length, but
simply to dwell upon the lowliness of Jesus. Yet this much I may say: Whenever
God would have His people especially glad it is always in Himself. If it be
written: “Rejoice greatly,” then the reason is, “Behold, thy King cometh unto
thee!” Our chief source of rejoicing is the presence of King Jesus in the midst
of us. Whether it be His first or His second advent, His very shadow is
delight. His footfall is music to our car. That delight springs much from the
fact that He is ours. “Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion . . . Behold, thy
King cometh unto thee.” Whatever He may be to others, He is thy King, and to
whomsoever He may or may not come, He cometh unto thee. He comes for thy
deliverance, thine honour, thy consummated bliss. He keeps thy company; He
makes thy house His palace, thy love His solace, thy nature His home. He who is
thy King by hereditary right, by His choice of thee, by His redemption of thee,
and by thy willing choice of Him, is coming to thee; therefore do thou shout
for joy. The verse goes on to show why the Lord our King is such a source of
gladness: “He is just, and having salvation.” He blends righteousness and
mercy; justice to the ungodly, and favour to His saints. He has worked out the
stern problem--how can God be just, and yet save the sinful? He is just in His
own personal character, just as having borne the penalty of sin, and just as
cleared from the sin which He voluntarily took upon Him. Having endured the terrible
ordeal, He is saved, and His people are saved in Him. He is to be saluted with
hosannas, which signify, “Save, Lord”; for where He comes He brings victory and
consequent salvation with Him. He routs the enemies of His people, breaks for
them the serpent’s head, and leads their captivity captive. We admire the
justice which marks His reign, and the salvation which attends His sway; and in
both respects we cry: “Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord!”
Moreover, it is written of Him that He is lowly, which cannot be said of many
kings and princes of the earth; nor would they care to have it said of them.
Thy King, O daughter of Jerusalem, loves to have His lowliness published by
thee with exceeding joy. His outward state betokens the humility and gentleness
of His character. He appears to be what He really is: He conceals nothing from
His chosen. In the height of His grandeur He is not like the proud monarchs of
earth. The patient ass He prefers to the noble charger; and He is more at home
with the common people than with the great. In His grandest pageant, in His
capital city, He was still consistent with His meek and lowly character, for He
came “riding upon an ass.” He rode through Jerusalem in state; but what
lowliness marked the spectacle! It was an extemporised procession, which owed
nothing to Garner-king-at-arms, but everything to the spontaneous love of
friends. An ass was brought, and its foal, and His disciples sat Him thereon.
Instead of courtiers in their robes, He was surrounded by common peasants and
fishermen, and children of the streets of Jerusalem: the humblest of men and
the youngest of the race shouted His praises. Boughs of trees and garments of
friends strewed the road, instead of choice flowers and costly tapestries; it was
the pomp of spontaneous love, not the stereotyped pageantry which power exacts
of fear. With half an eye everyone can see that this King is of another sort
from common princes, and His dignity of another kind from that which tramples
on the poor. According to the narrative, as well as the prophecy, there would
seem to have been two beasts in the procession. I conceive that our Lord rode
on the foal, for it was essential that He should mount a beast which had never
been used before. God is not a sharer with men; that which is consecrated to
His peculiar service must not have been aforetime devoted to lower uses, Jesus
rides a colt whereon never man sat. But why was the mother there? Did not Jesus
say of both ass and foal, “Loose them and bring them unto Me”? This appears to
me to be a token of His tenderness; He would not needlessly sever the mother
from her foal. I like to see a farmer’s kindness when he allows the foal to
follow when the mare is ploughing or labouring; and I admire the same
thoughtfulness in our Lord. He careth for cattle, yea, even for an ass and her
foal. He would not even cause a poor beast a needless pang by taking away its
young; and so in that procession the beast of the field took its part joyfully,
in token of a better age in which all creatures shall be delivered from
bondage, and shall share the blessings of His unsuffering reign. Our Lord
herein taught His disciples to cultivate delicacy, not only towards each other,
but towards the whole creation. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Palm Sunday lessons
Today is this prophecy fulfilled in your ears. For once the Man of
Sorrows was honoured on the earth, for once the despised and rejected of men
was welcomed as a King, a Deliverer, a Prophet. But what did that procession on
the Mount of Olives really mean? It was a procession of sacrifice. As the
Paschal Lamb was brought out solemnly on the first day of the week, so now the
true Paschal Lamb was brought out to die. He was welcomed by the Jews as the
conqueror of the Romans; they did not understand that He was the conqueror of
sin and death. They greeted Him as King of Jerusalem, they did not know that He
was King of heaven and earth. How soon the feelings of the people changed, how
short-lived were their praises. Let us learn our lesson from the palms. Many
people are willing to receive Jesus as a King and a Deliverer, who reject Him
as the Man of Sorrows. If He were to tell you to sit down on His right hand, to
be proud of your religion, to condemn others, to believe yourselves righteous,
then you would cry, “Hosannah.” But if He tells you to learn of Him for He is
meek, to judge not, to take the lowest seat, that the servant of the Lord must
not strive, that you must forgive your enemies, that blessed are they that
mourn,--then you cry, “Away with Him, crucify Him.” Learn from this to avoid a
form of religion which is only lip service; it is very easy to talk about
sacred things, but pious talk, remember, is not religion. We must show forth
our faith not only with our lips but in our lives. Jesus is leading us, as He
led the people on Palm Sunday, towards Jerusalem, the vision of peace, and none
shall enter there but those who follow Him. (H. J. Wilmot Buxton.)
The coming of the King of Zion
The prophet speaks not of one event merely, but of the whole of our
Lord’s gracious conduct to His people. The children of Zion are called to be
joyful in their King; for He is ever coming to them “just and having
salvation,” and by virtue of the blood of the ever-lasting covenant bringing
the prisoners out of the pit, and leading them all to a city of rest.
I. The character
under which our King is presented to us.
1. He is just. It is not punitive justice that is here intended, but
righteousness.
2. He has salvation.
II. The spiritual
nature of His kingdom. This is strongly indicated by the circumstances
connected with His public and royal entry into Jerusalem. This event was
intended to call off His disciples and us from the vain notion of a civil
monarchy. They thought He was then assuming it; but even then we see Him
rejecting it. There is a tendency in man to look even now, as formerly, for
something more than a spiritual kingdom; a kingdom of visible power, and glory,
and splendour. He entered this to show that He was a King; but He disappointed
their expectation in the very circumstances of this event, in order to show
that His kingdom was not of this world. He rode upon an ass, to denote that He
was a peaceful sovereign. He returned by night to the Mount of Olives, which He
certainly would not have done, had He been about to establish a civil reign.
Children celebrated His praises, not the men. The true glory of Christ’s
kingdom is, that it erects its dominion in the human mind and heart; spreads
its light and power over all the faculties, and principles of our nature;
ordaining the praise of God out of the mouth; so that everyone who is brought
under its influence becomes the instrument of instructing others, and subduing
them to the service of the same Saviour.
III. The extent of
this spiritual dominion of Christ.
1. His dominion is to extend “from sea to sea, and from the river to
the ends of the earth.”
2. The state of mankind, it is true, is deeply affecting. It is a
state of wretchedness and danger. They are “prisoners,” east into a “pit
wherein is no water.” Allusion is to the ancient punishment of criminals, who
were sometimes thrown into a pit, and left to die of thirst; and sometimes,
after enduring the torments of thirst, were brought forth to execution.
3. Then there follows an address to the prisoners. “Turn you to the
stronghold, ye prisoners of hope.” Only a few had returned from Babylon.
Zechariah addresses those who were left behind. In how much higher sense than
the Jews are we prisoners of hope. Let such prisoners think of the blood
of the covenant of deliverance which has been shed. (R. Watson.)
The coming King
“Rejoice, then, O Zion,” city of God, built not of stones, but of
souls of men. “Shout, ye daughters of Jerusalem,” once as the stones of the
desert, but now a spiritual seed of Abraham. From yon sepulchre thy King
cometh, triumphant over death, and sending forth over all the world the message
of reconciliation! Redeemed from bondage, we stand within the city of God, the
visible Church. But how much has still to be done ere the temple of God be fully
built--ere Christ be reflected in His members on earth! How many things have we
each to deplore! The distracting effect of worldly business, want of energy, of
love, of prayer. Hence little work for Him, and little fruit from that work,
and little comfort. Let us dwell on the truth, “Thy King cometh.”
1. In view of the fact commemorated today. His work of redemption was
complete and effectual (2 Corinthians 5:14). He took life unto
the dominion of death. Even while the disciples mourned, He was carrying on a
work of grace (1 Peter 3:19). He died that He might
rise again for our justification.
2. He cometh to each soul, bringing help. In times of darkness or
depression, when trials seem heavy, or our work arduous, He reminds us that
though we see Him not, we are not beyond His care.
3. He cometh to establish His kingdom, to bring perfected salvation
to those who wait for Him. (James F. Montgomery, D. D.)
Joy in the King unrealised
I have read in one of George MacDonald’s novels of a born-blind
lamplighter. He illuminated the city at night; but had no sense of what he was
doing. So has it been with the land of Israel. She has presented the portrait
to the gallery; she has heard the plaudits of the spectators; and she has
refused to join in them. In all history there is nothing so unique. It is the
enemies of this land that have crowned her world-king; it is the Gentiles that
have come to His light. The lamplighter has been blind to the beauty of the
throne she has illumined. Palestine has lit up the scene; she has listened to
the crowd shouting their applause; and she has wondered why. She has been like
a deaf mute in a concert room. She has struck by accident the notes of a harp,
and by accident they have burst into music. The audience has cheered the
performance to the echo; but the performer knows not her triumph (G.
Matheson.)
The Prince of peace
This prediction is of the literal kind, and it was literally and
most exactly fulfilled in Jesus of Nazareth. The prophet doth not coldly inform
Jerusalem that her King should come to her, and that when He did come she ought
to rejoice. Wrapped into future times, he seems to have been present at the
glorious scene. Standing upon Mount Olivet, he hears the hosannahs of the
disciples, and beholds the procession approach towards the gates of Jerusalem.
Religion, then, hath its joys; a prophet calleth us to exult and shout. The
reason assigned why Jerusalem was called upon to rejoice, was the approach of
her King. The prophets had promised her a king who should overcome her
enemies, and triumph gloriously. When the King came, Jerusalem despised His
appearance, and soon nailed a spiritual monarch to a cross. Righteousness,
salvation, and humility distinguish the person and reign of Messiah.
Righteousness leads the way. This is the name whereby He shall be called--“The
Lord our righteousness.” Salvation is the next sign and token whereby to know
the King of Zion. He was to execute that part of the regal office which
consisteth in rescuing a people from their oppressors. And if tidings of
salvation are not tidings of joy, what tidings can be such? What is deliverance
from a temporal adversary compared with the salvation of the whole world from
the oppression of the spiritual enemy, from sin, and sickness, and sorrow, and
pain, and death, and hell? This was the salvation which Jesus undertook to
effect; and His miracles declared Him equal to the mighty task. Different to
other kings the King Messiah was to be in His appearance and demeanour. He is
“lowly.” He appeared, in His first advent, in a state of humiliation. The
nature of His undertaking required it, and their own law and prophets are clear
upon the subject. The types and prophecies are as positive for His humiliation,
as they are for His exaltation: nor could any one person accomplish them all,
without being equally remarkable for lowliness and meekness, glory and honour.
(Bishop Home.)
His dominion shall be from
sea even to sea--
The final triumph of Christianity
I. This triumph is
assured by the promises of the Bible. They leave no room for doubt.
II. The divine
origin and character of Christianity render it certain. Christianity itself is
on trial. If it fails to subjugate the world; if it encounters systems of
error, false philosophies, hostile forces, effete civilisations, which it is
inadequate to transform and vitalise with its Divine life--then it will be
demonstrated that it is not of God, and its high claims are false. A partial
and temporary success will not suffice. Is must conquer every race and clime
and generation and form of evil and opposition in all the world, or be itself
defeated and driven from the field.
III. The measure of
success which it has already achieved is a guarantee of its complete ultimate
triumph. Christianity is not without its witnesses and signal triumphs in human
history. There is nothing comparable with it. It has shown itself, on actual
trial of 1800 years, to be “the wisdom of God and the power of God unto
salvation.” It has subdued kingdoms and changed the face of the world.
Idolatry, superstition, false philosophy, cannot stand before it. It saves “the
chief of sinners.” It elevates the most degraded people. Nothing in the heart
of man, or in society, can withstand its power. It is moving steadily and
rapidly on to final conquests. “Christianity thus stands committed to the
achievement of universal dominion. Its Founder puts it forth into history as
the universal religion, foreordained to universal prevalence.” (J. M.
Sherwood, D. D.)
Universal bloom
As it has been positively demonstrated that the Arctic region was
once a blooming garden and a fruitful field, those regions may change climate
and again be a blooming garden and a fruitful field. Professor Heer, of Zurich,
says the remains of flowers have been found in the Arctic, showing it was like
Mexico for climate; and it is found that the Arctic was the mother region from
which all the flowers descended. Professor Wallace says the remains of all
styles of animal life are found in the Arctic, including those animals that can
live only in warm climates. Now, that Arctic region which has been demonstrated
by flora, and fauna, and geological argument to have been as full of vegetation
and life as our Florida, may be turned back to its original bloom and glory, or
it will be shut up as a museum of crystals for curiosity seekers to visit. But
Arctic and Antarctic in some shape will belong to the Redeemer’s realm.
Verse 11
By the blood of thy covenant i have sent forth thy prisoners out
of the pit wherein is no water
The delivered prisoners
Enlarge on the Gospel promise in immediate connection with the
text.
It calls on the daughter of Zion to rejoice in the coming of the Saviour. It
describes His character; the nature of His kingdom; the means by which it shall
be spread; and the extent of it. The deliverance of the Jews from captivity was
a step towards the coming of Messiah, and the earnest of it. Just as, through
the remembrance of His covenant with Israel by blood, God delivered the Jewish
Church, so through the “blood of the everlasting covenant” does He deliver His
people under the Gospel.
I. The prisoners
and their prison house. “Thy prisoners.” This most aptly describes the state of
those who are convinced by the Spirit of God of their lost and undone
condition, and who are looking only for wrath. The prison house of such is
described as “the pit wherein there is no water”; i.e. no comfort, no
peace. No way of escape is apparent, and if the prisoner remain in it, he dies.
But, though the pit is deep and horrible, yet the prisoner’s voice can be
heard, when he calls for deliverance; and his voice is never unheeded.
Therefore let all prisoners cry mightily unto Him that is able to save.
II. The way of
deliverance. Justice must be satisfied ere the mouth of the pit can be opened.
This is implied in the expression--“the blood of the covenant.” Jesus
covenanting to shed His blood for their ransom--the Father covenanting to
accept this ransom, and to set the prisoners free on account of it. Enlarge on
this covenant as a covenant of promise, the greatness, the freeness, the
sureness. How is this belief, this trust in the promise, brought about? Faith
by hearing, hearing by the Word--the Spirit of God applying. (John D. Lawe,
M. A.)
The blood of the covenant
1. The deeper any of the people of God be in trouble, they lie nearer
His heart and help: and He would have them look on the comforts of the kingdom
of Christ and the covenant, as especially intended for them, therefore doth He
apply the general comforts of Christ’s kingdom to the distressed Jews.
2. As the afflictions of the Lord’s people may be very bitter, and so
ordered aa they may be trials indeed; so there will be special notice taken of
them when their rods become so insupportable that there is no subsisting under
them; for He eyes them, when they are prisoners “in a pit, wherein is no
water,” as some time they may be.
3. God entering in a covenant with His people, condescends to take in
all their outward necessities, and engages to have a care of them in these as
well as in things spiritual; and so all their mercies come by covenant; for it
is by “the covenant that the prisoners are sent forth.”
4. The mercies of the Church are not only rich and refreshful in
themselves, and in their original, that they come through a covenant of love,
but in their purchase, that they are bought, and the covenant concerning them
made sure by the blood of the Son of God. “By the blood of thy covenant I have
sent forth thy prisoners.”
5. The Lord minds His covenant, and through and for Christ makes the
promises of it forthcoming for His people’s good, when they have broken it on
their part; for, though for their perfidiousness they were scattered, yet the
covenant stands to bring them back. (George Hutcheson.)
What Christ has done for, and what He is to His people
Though this passage may refer to many temporal blessings bestowed
upon God’s ancient Church; yet its spiritual significance is immediately
connected with the kingdom of Messiah.
I. The ruined
state of the Church. “Prisoners in a pit wherein is no water.”
1. The degradation of this state.
2. The pollution of this state.
3. The misery of this state.
4. The hopelessness of our state.
II. The means of
accomplishing our salvation.
1. God is the Author of redemption.
2. Redemption was effected by the blood of the covenant.
3. By the covenant blood the circumstances of the Church are altered.
III. The present
state of God’s redeemed people according to their names. “Prisoners of hope.”
1. Until delivered they are actually prisoners--to sin, Satan, the
law; and they are delivered also from the bondage of a corrupt and stubborn
will. Under the Gospel dispensation every vessel of mercy is delivered by the
Lord Jesus Christ, and is brought into a lively hope of eternal glory by faith
of the operation of the Spirit.
2. Then this hope is in Christ.
3. This hope is according to the Word.
4. It is a sure hope of eternal life.
5. It is a present security to the soul.
IV. Christ is a
stronghold to all His people.
1. From error and unbelief.
2. From sin and Satan.
3. To God they turn generally.
4. To God in Christ especially. “I will render unto thee double.”
Verse 12
Turn you to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope
Imprisoned by hope
In Zechariah 9:8 is the assurance that the
Divine blessing specially rests on Israel returned to Jerusalem.
On this assurance is based an earnest plea, addressed to the Jews who were
still remaining in Babylon, unwilling to break up their associations, and share
with their countrymen in restoring the ancient nation. Zechariah pleads with
them to return to the Lord’s land. Jehovah has begun to bless us, come back and
share with us.” The prophet fixes on one of their excuses, which was a serious
self-delusion. He noticed that the hope of returning “some day,” was keeping
them from making a present decision, and responding at once to the claims of
duty. Family ties, increasing wealth, business relations, were making their
return to Jerusalem only a hope--a hope with which they were deceiving
themselves. Not one of these men had refused to return. They intended to
return, and quite hoped to return. But they procrastinated. They believed in
the “unknown morrow,” in what might happen some day. Procrastination includes
hope, and in that lies the subtle slavery of it. But it is a hope that
imprisons: it keeps a man easy-minded while he is neglecting his duty. This is
the infinite sadness of it.
I. As regards the
eternal salvation of our souls, we all have hope. Only in very exceptional
cases, and those usually of disease, is hope quite lost.
1. None of us are without some knowledge of our spiritual state and
condition.
2. None of us are without occasional impressions of the solemnity of
our spiritual condition.
3. Even in calmest moments’ none of us are without an anxious desire
to secure the settlement of our eternal interests.
4. None of us have settled it, that we mean to be among the lost.
None of us expect to perish everlastingly. All have hope.
II. As regards
personal salvation, many of us are imprisoned by our hope. The figure of the
text is taken from the peril of a country when its enemy is either passing
close by it, or marching through it. Conquering Alexander was pushing his way
from Phoenicia to Egypt, and Judaea lay right on his route. The people in the
villages might imprison themselves by the hope that Alexander would not come
their way. And this hope would keep them from seeking the shelter of the stronghold.
All wise people, in such a time of peril, would flee from danger to the
security of the walled city. We are saved by hope, but it must be well-grounded
hope. When the ancient Israelite had accidentally slain a man, it was
imprisoning and imperilling for him to hope that the Avenger of Blood had not
yet heard of it, and was not yet upon his track. There was not one moment to
lose. At once, delayed by no hopes, or possibilities, or excuses, he must be
away, flying to the city of refuge that was nearest at hand. Men do die in
their sins. We hope that we shall not be among them. But unless that hope rests
on some good and sure foundations, we are imprisoning ourselves in our hopes.
Look at some of these imprisoning hopes, and see if any of them can reveal
ourselves to ourselves, and be a gracious means of arousing us out of false
security.
1. An idea very frequently cherished is this--the next world will
provide a milder estimate of our sin than is formed in this world. It is
strange how we let a notion of that kind cling to us. “Things may be better in
the next life. Nobody knows.” It must be an imprisoning hope, for a man’s life,
motives, and conduct must surely look better under the earth shadows than when
they are pushed out into the full sunlight of God. In the light of God, Job
said, “I abhor myself.”
2. Another idea is, that opportunities for repentance, for turning
away from sin, and for seeking the Saviour, will one day be sure to come to us,
though we may miss them now. We think God’s time of mercy for us has not yet
come, and there is nothing for us to do just now but wait for it, as the lame
man in the “Bethesda porch” waited for the moving of the water. Only we never
think of ourselves as helpless. We are quite sure that when the moving of the water
does come, we shall be perfectly able to step down at once and secure our
healing. But what a self-delusion that is! If we do not secure the
opportunities of salvation that come to us now, on what ground do we hope that
we shall seize some opportunity that may come by and by? Does the power of
decision grow with the weakening years? Surely it is an imprisoning hope that
keeps us from responding to the offers of Divine grace now, for “now is the
accepted time, now is the day of salvation.”
III. As regards
personal salvation, there is really no hope until we have given up hope. This
is a fact of actual and repeated experience. There is no hope for us until we
have come, in the sincerity of personal conviction and humiliation, to say,
“Myself I cannot save, myself I cannot help.” The very first thing, and the
all-essential thing is sweeping away those refuges of lies, our false, our
imprisoning, hopes. In various ways God breaks down our self-confidences. There
is no hope in God until hope in self is abandoned.
IV. When false
imprisoning hopes are gone, we may flee at once to the stronghold. Then the
soul is fairly roused and set upon seeking safety at once. Then the intensest
interest is felt in the message of Gospel salvation. Then, we may run at once
into the safe hiding place of God’s salvation, and there find a hope that will
not make us ashamed. Be not then hindered by doubts, or imprisoned by hopes;
there is a duty to be done now. “Flee to the mountain, lest ye be consumed.” (Robert
Tuck, B. A.)
Good news for prisoners of hope
There is a change in the phraseology of the remaining chapters of
this book. Not now the Word of the Lord, but the burden of the Word of the
Lord. By this term we are prepared for tidings of sorrow and disaster, which
are about to fall on the nations addressed. These burdens lay heavily on the
soul of the prophet, who was probably already advanced in years when he
announced them. When Zechariah wrote this prophecy, the early troubles of the
returned remnant in the reconstruction of temple, city, and state were at an
end; but they were hemmed in and pressed by Tyre on the north, and by Ashkelon,
Gaza, and Ekron on the south. It was for their encouragement, therefore, that
he foretold an approaching invasion, before which their strong and hostile
neighbours would be swept away. Though Tyre had built herself a stronghold on
an apparently impregnable island, and heaped up silver as the dust, and fine
gold as the mire of the streets; and though her counsellors were famous for
their wisdom--the Lord would dispossess her, smiting her power in the sea, and
devouring her palaces with fire. And the devastation which would befall
Damascus and Hadrach (a part of Syria), would extend southwards till the worst
fears of Gaza, Ashkelon, and Ekron would be realised in their utter
destruction. Philistia would be as a young lion deprived of its prey, whilst
the chosen city would be defended by unseen angel forces. “I will encamp about
Mine house as a garrison, that none pass through or return; and no oppressor
shall pass through them any more; for now have I seen with Mine eyes.” All
these predictions were literally fulfilled within a few years by the invasion
of the third of the great world conquerors, Alexander the Great. Syria, New
Tyre, and the old seaboard, including the cities of Philistia, fell under his
arms; but both in going and returning, he spared Jerusalem, being much
impressed by a dream, in which he was warned not to approach the city, and by a
solemn procession of priests and Levites, headed by Jaddua, the high priest. In
Eastern lands, liable to long spells of drought, it is customary to hew
cisterns out of the solid rock for the storage of water, that provision may be
made against the failure of the rains. These abound in Palestine. “They hewed
out for themselves cisterns.” It seemed to the prophet as though Israel might
be compared to a terrified peasantry, sheltering in some dark, dry, mountain
cistern, far up from the valleys, dreading every day lest their hiding place
might be discovered, and themselves dragged forth to dye with their blood the
green sward.
I. Thus, in every
age God’s people have been imprisoned. You may have been caught in the snare of
this world’s evil. You have no sympathy with it, yet somehow you have become
involved in the snares and toils of malign combinations. You have no desire for
them--they chafe and try you--but you cannot get off. It seems as though some
evil spirit has lassoed you, not indeed in your soul, but in your home and
circumstances. Or perhaps you have been led captive by the devil at his will.
There is no doubt about your sonship; in your better moments, God’s Spirit
witnesses clearly with yours that you have been born again; and yet, during
long and sad periods of experience, you seem the bound slave of the great enemy
of souls; swept before strong gusts of passion. Or, perhaps, you have fallen
into deep despondency, partly as the result of ill-health, and partly because
you have looked off the face of Christ to the winds and waves. The clear-shining
of His love is obscured, and at times it is difficult to believe in anything
but the pressure of your own dark thoughts.
II. All such are
prisoners, but they are prisoners of hope. There is a sure and certain hope of
their deliverance. The clouds might more easily succeed in imprisoning the sun
than any of these dark conditions permanently hold one of God’s children. They
belong to the light and day; and, though they see it not, Hope, as God’s angel,
is standing near, only waiting His signal to open the prison door. The
prisoner, on whom the sentence of capital punishment has been passed, and who
has no strong, wise friends to interfere on his behalf, may well abandon hope
as be passes within the massive walls of the fortress: But where justice and
truth are on his side, when he has been the victim of craft and guile, if there
be friends to espouse his cause, though he be incarcerated, bound with chains
on the Devil’s Island, and though the weary years pass over him, yet he is a
prisoner of hope, and shall come forth again into the light of day. All God’s
children are prisoners of hope.
III. Their hope
rests on the blood of the covenant. “Because of the blood of thy covenant, I
have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit.” When God entered into covenant
relationship with Abraham, the sacred compact was ratified by the mingled blood
of an heifer of three years old, a she-goat of three years old, a ram of three
years old, a turtle dove, and a young pigeon. And, in after years, when beneath
the beetling cliffs of Sinai, Moses acted as mediator between God and the
children of Israel, he sent young men, because the order of priesthood was not
established, which offered burnt offerings and sacrificed peace offerings of
oxen unto the Lord (Genesis 15:9; Exodus 24:7-8). Similarly, when the new
covenant--the provisions of which are enumerated in Hebrews 8:1-13 --was ratified, it was in
the blood of Jesus. As He took the cup, He said: “This is My blood of the new
covenant, which is shed for many unto the remission of sins.” “And for this
cause He is the Mediator of a new covenant.” The shedding of the blood of the
Lamb of God indicates that God has entered into a covenant relationship with
Him, and all whom He represents, who are, by faith, members of His mystical
body, the Church. On His side, He promises to be a God to us, and to take us to
be His people; on our side, Christ promises, on our behalf, that we shall be a
people for His own possession, zealous of good works. This covenant embraces
all who have believed, shall believe, and do believe in Jesus. It embraces
thee, if thou dost at this moment simply believe in Him as thine, and art
willing to be evermore His.
IV. Because of the
blood of the covenant, God will send forth each of His imprisoned ones out of
the pit. That blood binds Him to interpose on their behalf. That they might
have strong consolation, He has confirmed His Word by an oath. Suppose two men
were bound in the closest, tenderest friendship, not needing to exchange blood
from each other’s veins, as the manner of some is, because heart had already
exchanged with heart; and suppose one of these, travelling in Calabria or
Anatolia, was captured by brigands and carried into some mountain fastness,
threatened with death unless ransomed by an immense sum of money: can you
imagine his friend at home, in the enjoyment of opulence and liberty, settling
down in circumstances of case, and allowing his brother to suffer his miserable
fate, with no effort for his deliverance? It is impossible to imagine such a
thing! With tireless perseverance he would leave no stone unturned, and the
captive might rely on every possible effort being made for his deliverance. So
it is with God. Whatever be the sad combination of disaster which has overtaken
us, He is bound by the Holy Covenant, sealed by the blood of Jesus, to spare no
effort till our soul is escaped as a bird from the snare of the fowler, until
the snare is broken, and we are escaped. So, child of God, if you have made
Jesus your King, He is sure to succour you. Behold thy King cometh, O prisoner
of hope! Is not this the reason why some of us are not delivered? We should be
glad enough to accept deliverance, but are not prepared to pay the price. We
have not observed the Divine order, and crowned Jesus King of our hearts and
lives. We are wishful that He should be our Saviour, but not altogether
prepared to accept Him as King. He is first King of Righteousness, before He is
Priest after the order of Melchizedek: and it is only when we confess with our
mouths Jesus as Lord, that we shall be saved. But do not fear Him. He is lowly,
and rides upon a colt, the foal of an ass. No prancing steed, no banner
flaunting in the breeze, no long train of warriors. O prisoners of hope, lift
up your heads! your salvation is come out of Zion. Turn you to the stronghold!
Take up your abode in the stronghold of God’s care and love, in the fortress of
His righteousness, in the keep of His covenant. (F. B. Meyer, B. A.)
The sinner’s refuge
God’s children have a place of refuge, and the reason why others
have not is, they flee from it instead of fleeing to it.
I. Consider the
relief provided. “A stronghold.” Not any stronghold we may fancy, or prepare
for ourselves, though the imagination of man is very fruitful in inventions of
this kind. When conscience is alarmed, anything is sought to that will afford a
little present ease. The physician of souls is neglected, and physicians of no
value are applied to. Such has been and still is the conduct of sinful men.
Some fly to the absolute and Uncovenanted mercy of God; some to their Church
privileges, and others to their good works and religious performances. What
refuge does Scripture provide? “The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the
righteous runneth into it and is safe.” The perfections of God, His wisdom,
power, and goodness, are all engaged for the protection of His people. The
covenant of grace, with its glorious provisions and extensive promises, is as a
stronghold: here the righteous find safety in a time of danger, and comfort in
a time of trouble. The Lord Jesus Christ especially is the refuge of poor
sinners, and to Him the preceding verse evidently refers. He is both the
foundation on which the believer builds, and the fortress in which he hides.
II. What is implied
in our seeking this relief?
1. It supposes that by nature we are turned another way, having not
only an indifference, but a dislike to the true way of salvation. We choose to
lie under the sentence of condemnation and death, rather than come to Christ
for justification and life. Either we do not seek after salvation, or we do not
seek it in God’s way. Men by nature are without Christ, having no hope, and
without God in the world.
2. It implies a principle of grace implanted in us, by which the mind
is renewed and directed to the Saviour. This removes the darkness of the
understanding, the perverseness of the will, and the carnality of the
affections; so that we are led to form different sentiments, and pursue a
different path from what we trod before. A wounded conscience wants ease and
rest.
3. It implies the total renunciation of all other refuges as
insufficient and vain. The things in which we formerly trusted, and in which we
gloried, are now darkened, withered, and consumed.
4. There is now a joining ourselves to the Lord in an everlasting
covenant never to be forgotten. Being turned to the Saviour, there is a
cleaving unto Him with full purpose of heart. The soul that has fled for
refuge, to lay hold on the hope set before us, will keep his hold, and never
wish to turn back any more. Where there is a real closing with Christ, there
will also be a cleaving unto Him.
III. The characters
addressed. “Prisoners of hope.”
1. They are considered as prisoners. Satan’s prisoners. Enslaved by
their own corruptions and lusts.
2. They are prisoners of hope. All men are so in some sense, while
life continues, and the sentence is not executed upon them. Vessels of wrath,
till they are filled with wrath, may be made vessels of mercy. Let not the
young presume, nor the aged despair. Some are more especially prisoners of hope.
Hope in the prison
I. A command.
“Turn you.” When God calls a sinner to turn, he must turn. Being born again
refers to the first turn, but there are the after-turns in the experience of
the called Christian, and when grace begins a work in the soul, grace never
stops.
II. The thing
commanded. “Turn you to the stronghold.” “The name of the Lord is a strong
tower, the righteous runneth into it and is safe.”
III. The unction of
the gospel. “Ye prisoners of hope.” (J. J. West, M. A.)
Prisoners of hope
There are three classes of prisoners in the moral universe without
hope, and there are three classes of prisoners with hope.
1. The angels which kept not their first estate.
2. Men and women who have lived amid Gospel privileges.
3. The men and women in this city who are just as certain to be
damned as they live and walk on the face of the earth today.
There are prisoners with hope.
1. The men and women of earth who have taken up “their cross to
follow Christ. Prisoners of hope, now hemmed in by the environments of earth,
but soon to be God’s freemen in heaven.
2. The man who says, “God knows my heart, I wish I were a better
man.” There is hope at the Cross for the weakest man in the world. Then do not
be a prisoner without hope, be a prisoner with hope. (Sara. P. Jones.)
Prisoners of hope
This passage unquestionably has to do with our Lord Jesus
Christ and His salvation. If you begin to read at the ninth verse you will see
that we have, from that place on to our text, much prophetic information
concerning our Lord and His kingdom. We read, first, something about His own
manner of triumph,--His way of conducting Himself in His kingdom: “Rejoice
greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of Jerusalem: behold, thy King
cometh unto thee: He is just, and having salvation; lowly, and riding upon an
ass, and upon a colt the foal of an ass.” The King of the kingdom of grace is
not high and lofty, haughty or proud, but condescends to men of low estate. We
have not to set before you a Pharaoh or a Nebuchadnezzar; Jesus of Nazareth is
a King of quite another kind. The next verse goes on to describe the weapons by
which He wins His victories; or rather, it tells us what they are not. Not by
carnal weapons will Christ ever force His way amongst the sons of men, for He
says, “I will cut off the chariot from Ephraim, and the horse from Jerusalem,
and the battle bow shall be cut off.” Mohammed may conquer by the sword, but
Christ conquers by the sword which cometh out of His mouth, that is, the Word
of the Lord. His empire is one of love, not of force and oppression. The same
verse reveals to us more concerning the nature of Christ’s kingdom: “He shall
speak peace unto the heathen: and His dominion shall be from sea even to sea,
and from the river even to the ends of the earth.” There have been universal
monarchies in the past, but there shall never be another till Christ shall come
again. Four times has God foiled those who have attempted to assume the
sovereignty of the world; but in due time there shall come One who shall reign over
all mankind.
I. A Divine
deliverance. This must be a matter of personal experience; and therefore I
should like that everyone whom I am now addressing should say to himself or
herself, “Do I know anything about this Divine deliverance in my own heart and
life? If I do not, I have grave cause to fear as to my condition in the sight
of God; but if I do, let me be full of praise to God for this great mercy, that
I have a share in this Divine deliverance: ‘As for thee also, by the blood of
thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no
water.’” Do all of you know anything about the pit wherein is no water?
1. Regarding it as a state of spiritual distress, do you understand
what it means to be in such a comfortless condition? It was a common custom, in
the East, to put prisoners into deep pits which had been dug in the earth. The
sides were usually steep and perpendicular, and the prisoner who was dropped
down into such a pit must remain there without any hope of escape. According to
our text, there was no water there, and apparently no food of any kind. The
object of the captors was to leave the prisoner there to be forgotten as a dead
man out of mind. Have you ever, in your experience, realised anything like
that? There was a time, with some of us, when we suddenly woke up to find that
all our fancied goodness had vanished, that all our hopes had perished, and
that we ourselves were in the comfortless condition of men in a pit, without
even a single drop of water to mitigate our burning thirst. You need to know
it, for this is the condition into which God usually brings His children before
He reveals Himself to them.
2. The condition of being shut up in a pit wherein is no water is not
only comfortless, but it is also hopeless. How can such a prisoner escape? He
looks up out of the pit, and sees far above him a little circle of light; but
he knows that it is impossible for him to climb up there. Perhaps he attempts
it; but, if so, he falls back and injures himself. He lies fallen as a
helpless, hopeless prisoner.
3. A man, in such a pit as that, is not only comfortless and
hopeless, but he is also in a fatal condition. Without water, at the bottom of
a deep pit, he must die. Many of God’s children have known this experience to
the fullest possible extent; and all of them have been, in some measure,
brought into the pit wherein is no water. But concerning those who have
believed in Jesus, our text is true, and God can say, “I have sent forth thy
prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water.” Are you out of the pit? Then it
is certain that you came out of it not by your own energy and strength, but
because the Lord delivered you. Divine power, and nothing hut Divine power, can
deliver a poor law-condemned conscience from the bondage under which it groans.
There is this further comfort, that if He has set us free we are free indeed.
It is only God who can deliver a bondaged conscience; but when it is delivered
by Him, it need not be afraid of being dragged back to prison any more. But how
has He done this great work? This is one of the principal clauses of our text:
“As for thee also, by the blood of thy covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners
out of the pit wherein is no water.” The people of God are set free from their
bondage by the blood of the covenant. I trust that you will never be weary of
listening to the doctrine of substitution. If you ever are, it will be all the
more necessary that you keep on hearing it until you cease to be weary of it.
That doctrine is the very core and essence of the Gospel. “The Lord hath laid
on Him the iniquity of us all With His stripes we are healed.” Nothing can give
the soul repose when it is about to meet its God, except the knowledge that
Christ was made a curse for us that we might be blessed in Him. No prisoners
are set free except by the blood of Jesus; and, as the blood of the covenant is
Godward, the means of our coming out of the pit wherein is no water, so it is
the knowledge of Christ as suffering in our stead that sets the captive free. I
hope I am not addressing any who will remain for a long time in the pit wherein
is no water. I did so myself, but I blame myself now for having done so.
II. A Divine
invitation given. Do you catch the thought that is intended to be conveyed by
these words? Yon have been taken out of the pit, and there, close beside you,
is the castle of refuge; so, the moment you are drawn up out of the pit, run to
the castle for shelter. The parallel to this experience is to be found in the
40th Psalm, where David says that the Lord had brought him up out of the
horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set his feet upon a rock, and
established his goings; and now that you are delivered from your prison pit,
you are to go and dwell in the fortress, the high tower, which the Lord has so
graciously prepared for you. The promises of God in Christ Jesus are the
stronghold to which all believing men ought to turn in every time of trouble,
and Jesus Christ Himself is still more their Stronghold in every hour of need.
Sheltered in Him, you are indeed surrounded with protecting walls and bulwarks,
for who is he that can successfully assail the man who is shielded and guarded
by the great atoning sacrifice of Christ? Yet you will often feel as if you
were still in danger. When you do so feel, turn to the Stronghold directly. Do
you mourn your slackness in prayer, and does the devil tell you that you cannot
be a Christian, or you would not feel as you do? Then, run to Christ directly.
Has there been, during this day, some slip in language, or has there even been
some sin in overt act? Then, run to Christ directly; turn you to the
Stronghold. So, again, I say to you, never try to combat sin and Satan by
yourselves, but always flee away to Christ. Inside that Stronghold, the most
powerful guns of the enemy will not be able to injure you. They who have gone
the furthest in the Divine life yet do well to walk in Christ just as they
received Him at the first.
III. The Divine
promise. “Even today do I declare that I will render double unto thee.”
1. First, if you, who have been delivered from the pit wherein is no
water, continually turn to Christ, you shall have twice as much joy as ever you
had sorrow. The grief that we had before we found Christ was a very mountain of
sorrow, but how has it been with you since you came to Jesus? Have you not,
after all, had twice as much joy as you have had sorrow? Oh, the unspeakable
delight of the soul that has found peace in Jesus after having been long in
bondage to sin and Satan! I think I have told you before that I heard Dr.
Alexander Fletcher once say, when he was preaching, that on one occasion,
passing down the Old Bailey, he saw two boys, or young men, jumping and leaping
and standing on their heads, and going through all sorts of antics on the
pavement. He said to them, “Whatever are you at?” But they only clapped their
hands, and danced more joyously than before; so he said, “Boys, what has
happened to you that you are so glad?” Then one of them replied, “If you had
been locked up for three months inside that prison, you would jump for joy when
you came out.” “A very natural expression,” said the good old man, and bade
them jump away as long as they liked. Ay, and when a soul has once been
delivered from the pit wherein is no water it has a foretaste of the joy of
heaven. The possession of Christ is, indeed, not only double bliss for all its
sin, but much more than double.
2. More than that, God gives His servants the double of all that they
expect. When we come to our Lord, it is as it was when the queen of Sheba came
to Solomon. She said that the half had not been told her; and if you raise your
expectations to the highest point that you can reach, you who come to Christ
will find them far exceeded in the blessed realisation. He is indeed a precious
Christ to all who believe in Him; but He is a hundred times more precious than
you can ever imagine. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The condition of sinners
“Prisoners of hope.”
I. All sinners are
prisoners. A prisoner implies--
1. Criminality.
2. Deprivation: society, light, etc.
3. Bondage. A sinner is a slave. His soul himself is enslaved, death
cannot free him. Some of the prisoners have--
II. Hope. Some, not
all. None in hell. But some on earth.
1. Provision has been made for their deliverance.
2. The vilest of men have obtained deliverance.
3. Deliverance is freely offered to all. (Homilist.)
The place of hope in the Gospel
Fear and hope have two things in common. They are both
prospective. They regard the future as possible. We neither hope nor fear that
which cannot conceivably affect us. With these two points of resemblance, Hope
and Fear are in all else opposite and contradictory to each other. Fear is the
apprehension of a future possible evil. Hope is the anticipation of a future
possible good. Human life is largely indebted to hope: almost all that redeems
it from gloom and misery is, if you look into it, hope more than happiness.
Hope, not fruition, is the happiness, while we are in the body, of man that
must die. This hope has degrees. One man is full of it. He puts his hand to
nothing without intending, expecting, resolving to succeed. And the hope which
cheers also strengthens. Expectation is success--unless the calculation has
been utterly fanciful, and the sum wrongly added. Certainly the absence of hope
is a bar to success. Depression is always weakness. A man is not entirely
responsible for it; health, temperament, nature, may alone be to blame. More
often there is blame; a man has not braced himself by early discipline: he has
let the fibre of character become loose and feeble; he has admitted into the
memory, into the conscience, into the life, something of that which is utter
weakness--sin. Great things are never done, even small successes are never
achieved, where there is no hope. Not to hope is not to have. The Gospel will
have a place for hope. We are to ask what it is. How does Christ use this
powerful principle? He makes it everything. St. Paul even says, “We are saved
by hope.” Of Christ it is said, “For the joy which was set before Him, He
endured the Cross.” The anticipation of a blessed future, which is the
definition of hope, supported our Lord in working out our redemption. You will
find that every thing ever done bravely and effectively in the strength of
Christ by His people, has been done in the power of hope. Fear may teach
watchfulness. Fear may keep a man to his duty. Fear may constrain a man to
combat a sin, or shake off a bad companion, or to resolve to make his life less
purposeless, and more decided; but fear, if it stood alone, could make no man a
hero, nor a martyr, nor a saint. That is left for hope. We see in education the
stimulus of hope. How largely do we use it in every school system that is worth
the name! But there is a use of hope which is fallacious and mischievous. Hope
is not irrational because it is sanguine. There is no encouragement in man’s
life, or in God’s Word, for that kind of hope which either dreams of reaping
without sowing, or looks for sudden counteractions of influences wantonly
indulged. There are men whose whole life is spent in reckoning upon results to
which they have contributed nothing but hindrance. There are men who may call
themselves waiters upon providence, but whom God would rather describe as
gamblers in chances. It is so in reference to the things of this life; it is so
in reference to a more serious thing--the condition of the soul, and the
destinies of eternity. Gospel hope has for its object Gospel promise. See some
of those future good things which God has promised, and therefore the Christian
hopes for. One of these is growth, progress, at last perfection, in holiness.
To a Christian person the prospect of becoming holy is the most blessed, most
glorious revelation. If it be a revelation, certainly it is a hope. Holiness is
sometimes preached as a duty, not preached as a promise. That is not God’s
method. Scripture sets holiness before us rather as a gift than as a toil. I
have called this one of the objects of a Christian hope, but it is the sum of
all. I knit into one the hope of holiness and the hope of heaven. I know indeed
that many talk of heaven who have no thought for the way to it. Scum hope to
meet there lost friends; some dream pleasantly of the trouble of conflict
ended, and the repose of the everlasting unbroken. But all this is vague and
unsatisfactory: there is nothing of it in the Bible . . . Then love too well
Him who is your hope to count anything too difficult to do, or too precious to
sacrifice for Him! Saved by hope, hope to the end. Where He went before, follow
after! (C. J. Vaughan, D. D.)
Saved by our hope
The years of the history of the Church which have as yet resisted
most successfully the efforts of scientific research are the earliest years.
The first century is the most obscure. With or without a history satisfying to
modern canons, the Church accomplished in that time a spiritual work which, for
present moral effects, for power to attract and subjugate souls of every nation
and degree of culture, for inspiring new motives of action to a languid and
despairing world, has far surpassed any other change known to us in the history
of man. If the question is asked, as it often is, on what does our faith in God
and Christ depend, we ought perhaps to reply, on the fact that Jesus rose from
the dead, and that His resurrection restored Him as a living leader to His
disciples, so that His presence welded them together as one community, zealous
of good works, abhorring sin, sure of eternal life. “Never,” says Ewald, “in
the whole world has a whole community, through a course of many years, lived so
exclusively with all its thoughts in heaven, as that primitive community of
Christianity without a visible Christ did actually live.” With this belief we
must stand or fall. Christian exclusiveness rests upon a belief in the central
doctrine of the resurrection. The firm and sturdy belief that Christ is risen,
and that we are risen, will not be replaced by Leibnitz’s immortality of
unlimited progress, or by the impersonal immortality of Spinoza, which to the
individual soul is hardly more than a promise of nothingness. “The
impossibility of a future life is not yet proved. With modern science
immortality remains still a problem; and if the problem has not yet received a
positive solution, neither has it received a negative one, as is sometimes maintained.”
(Archbishop Thomson.)
Prisoners of hope
The prophet exhorts both those who had returned from Babylon and
those who continued in Babylon to direct their eyes to the Messiah, to shelter
themselves in Him as their stronghold.
I. The characters
described. “Prisoners of hope.” Such is the condition of man in general. Still,
even these are prisoners of hope. They have not yet crossed the portal on which
justice hath graven, “There is no hope.” Still more emphatically are they
“prisoners of hope” who feel their bondage and pant for liberty.
II. The direction
here given. “Turn ye to the stronghold.” The soul is invited to trust in Christ
as the only refute and hope of the guilty.
III. The promise
with which the text closes. I will render double unto thee. This expression is
used in Scripture to describe a blessedness exceeding all that we can ask or
think. Not according to our former sufferings, but double; not according to the
punishment we have deserved for our sins, but double; not even the like blessings
as were enjoyed by saints of old, but double. (Stephen Bridge, M. A.)
Prisoners of hope
I. The image under
which we are addressed. “Prisoners of hope.” Man, in more senses than one, is a
prisoner. This earthly body is, in one sense, his prison. He is also a prisoner
of sin. We are captives of Satan. But we are prisoners of hope. With the
prospect of release and encouragement. Such was the case with Israel’s
captives. In this life we are all prisoners of hope. And those who by Divine
grace have been brought back to God are in a still more distinct and peculiar
manner the prisoners of hope.
II. The admonition
given in the text. The language is that of earnest solicitation. Imminent peril
is threatened. The flying captives who have escaped their prison are in danger
of being seized and retaken by the enemy; and here is an impregnable fortress
opened, into which they are invited to turn. We have no hesitation in applying
this language to Christ. (D. Wilson, M. A.)
Refuge in God
God is not content with merely promising some refuge for stricken
souls, but fascinates our faith with the wealth of imagery by which He declares
it. In this verse He calls, “Turn you to the stronghold.” Fortified places were
provided generally on the top of some steep mountain, or approached only by a
narrow defile where one could withstand a multitude of assailants, and into
which the people ran from the villages and fields when the land was invaded. In
other passages God is represented as a “hiding place,” where evil cannot even
find and attack the soul (Psalms 32:7); a pavilion, where safety is
supplemented with comfort and delight (Psalms 27:5); the shadow of a great rock
in a weary land, the caves and overhanging cliffs (Isaiah 32:2), beneath which travellers
and cattle escape the intense heat. How He assures us that our refuge is not
through human expediencies, but Divine interposition in the “Rock that is
higher than I”! Indeed, our refuge is something better than even a Divine
expediency; it is in God Himself (Psalms 62:7-8 : “My refuge is in God.” Psalms 57:1 : “In the shadow of Thy
wings”). Emphasise the personality of the Divine comfort.
I. The
completeness of this refuge. From the guilt of sin through the Cross--from the
power of sinfulness in us through the Holy Spirit; from fears of all sorts--His
promises so many and so varied between us and anticipated evil, like the many
stones of the fortress facing outward in every direction; from depression, the
cup He gives us “running over”--the spiritual overplus as opposed to the
depressive occasion in the flesh or in the circumstances; from the ennui of
secular pleasures and business, His revelation lifting our minds to the contemplation
of the vast and glorious truths of both His earthly and heavenly kingdom; from
unrest--He will keep in perfect peace the mind that is stayed on Him; from the
weariness of all selfism, imparting the spirit of love and unselfish devotion,
etc.
II. How shall we
find this refuge? It is not far away; need not go to Rome for it (Popish
pilgrims), nor to Jerusalem (Crusaders’ expectation of finding relief at the
Holy Sepulchre): “The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart,”
etc.
1. It is not a mysterious refuge, or one hard to understand. There is
no Esoterism of Christian experience, no favoured few, no especial soul light
in theological refinements; Grotius prayed for the faith of his serving man.
2. It is not difficult to attain. “Knock,” “Ask,” “All things are
ready.” The great heart of the Eternal is close about us; no whispering gallery
so quickly catches sounds as God’s quick intent to bless catches the soul’s
desire. (Homiletic Review.)
Message of grace to sinners
The Gospel of Christ is a true friend to the penitent
sinner. It is a refuge for the destitute, a shelter for the oppressed, and a
defence in all “times of trouble.” It is a “stronghold,” and all that flee into
it are safe. The words of the text apply--
1. To the unawakened sinner. You are a prisoner, though unconscious
of your captivity. You are the prisoner of Satan, and in bondage to sin. But
God, who is a God of mercy, hath provided a great deliverer to interpose in
your behalf. He hath opened the doors of the prison house. At His command the
chains of bondage fall off.
2. To the awakened sinner. When we perceive a concern for the soul in
any one we thank God for His mercies, and pray that the work may be abiding and
prosper.
3. To the weak believer. Unbelief hides from your view and from your
enjoyment the truths and promises of the glorious Gospel, and keeps your soul
still the prisoner of doubt, lest you should not hold out to the end of the
journey, and reach in safety the kingdom of heaven. You need the exercise of a
more lively faith in the free and finished salvation of the Cross, and a more
simple reliance on the redeeming love and power of Christ. Hear, then, the
voice of your Lord and Saviour, “Turn to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope.”
Look more simply to Jesus. He is a complete and almighty Saviour. (C. Davy.)
The Messiah in the character of a Redeemer
I. The persons
whom He comes to redeem. The description is of a mixed nature: it represents a
state in the main bad, yet not so wholly bad as to be past recovery. Though
this “pit” doth not yield any water, yet water may be brought to it. The
description points at those who feel their misery, and earnestly look and long
for deliverance. By “prisoners of hope” we understand all sinners who are
within reach of Divine mercy, and more especially those who are suing for
mercy, under the felt burden of sin and misery. And even they who have obtained
mercy may come under this description. The present condition of believers upon
earth is neither a state of perfect liberty nor of uninterrupted peace. These
are the blessed ingredients which constitute the happiness of the Zion above,
but whilst they sojourn in this strange land they are liable to various and
painful distresses. There are other prisons besides the pit of an unconverted
state; prisons where those who are dear to God may suffer a temporary
confinement. There they are “prisoners of hope.”
II. The advice or
command addressed to them. By the “stronghold” is meant “the blood of the
covenant,” or rather the new covenant itself, ratified and sealed by the blood
of Christ. It is an impregnable defence to all who flee to it for refuge. How
are we to turn to this stronghold?
1. We must turn our back upon everything else, and abandon all other
means of deliverance, as refuges of lies, which will miserably disappoint those
who expect relief from them.
2. That we turn our eyes to this stronghold, and narrowly examine the
security it affords.
3. That we actually flee to it, and improve it for all the purposes
for which it was intended.
III. A gracious and
encouraging promise.
1. The promise itself is most gracious. “I will render double unto
you.”
2. The comfort of this promise is greatly heightened by the manner of
publishing it. “Even today do I declare.” (R. Walker.)
The prisoner of hope
The multitudes in this fallen world need some other place of
refuge than that which they have already discovered. If they had already found
peace and security, there could be no necessity for directing them to “turn” to
any new stronghold or place of defence.
I. The figure
under which the text describes the great mass of mankind.
1. “Prisoners.” Even the real servant of God finds much to remind him
that he has not yet reached the region of perfect liberty. As to the man of the
world, he is altogether a prisoner.
2. They are “prisoners of hope.” All who have fallen from God are to
be considered as “prisoners of hope.” To whom shall we deny the privileges of
hope? While there is life there is hope.
II. The counsel
given in the text.
1. A stronghold is here pointed out to you. By stronghold is meant
every refuge which the mercy of God has provided for His guilty creatures. But
especially the love, the merits, and the righteousness of the Saviour of
sinners, the Son of God, the Redeemer of a lost world.
2. We are directed to turn to the stronghold.
1. What a confirmation do topics such as this lend to the
authenticity of that faith into which we are baptized.
2. If the provision made in the Gospel for the wants and distresses
of human nature be one mark of its Divine origin, let us take care to apply it
to the use for which it is so emphatically designed. (J. W. Cunningham.)
Counsel to prisoners
The text primarily alludes to the Jews in captivity.
I. The prisoners
of hope. We have in our country at the least three kinds of prisoners.
1. Those upon whom sentence is passed, and they are therefore
consigned to further imprisonment, punishment, banishment, or death.
2. Those who are guilty of felony or misdemeanour, but who have not
yet appeared before the judge to have their trial; and--
3. Debtors who, in consequence of adversity or prodigality, have been
brought into distress and prison.
There are also three kinds of prisoners in a moral or spiritual
sense.
1. Those who have died impenitent, and have received sentence of
eternal death. These are not prisoners of hope, their state is eternally fixed.
They must be banished forever from God. Thanks be to God! this is not our
state.
2. All who are living in sin are prisoners. Compare a man shut up in
prison until the assizes when he must appear before the judge, and a sinner
shut up in the prison of sin until death introduces him into the presence of
the Judge of all the earth. The sinner is the bond slave of Satan. A prisoner
is liable at any moment to be brought to justice; and so is a wicked man. He is
yet a prisoner of hope.
3. There are debtors who often, in consequence of carelessness or
prodigality, have brought themselves into sorrow and confinement. This is the
case with backsliders. Their case is pitiable, but not desperate. They are
prisoners of hope.
II. The stronghold
to which these prisoners are exhorted to turn.
1. A stronghold signifies literally a place of safety or defence;
figuratively, it is put for the Church of God, and sometimes for the Lord
Himself.
2. He is a place of safety and defence to His people. They are
shielded from the curse attached to a breach of the holy and righteous law of
God.
3. This stronghold is accessible by all kinds of sinners. As soon as
ever they come to themselves, and are sensible of their situation, they may
find shelter in the love of the Saviour.
III. Enforce the
exhortation. “Turn you to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope.”
1. Confess and forsake all your sins.
2. It is the will of God that you should thus turn from prison to
liberty, from sin to holiness.
3. To return from your prison will be your highest interest, both in
this world and in that which is to come.
4. If you refuse to turn to the strong hold you will be destroyed,
and that without remedy.
5. Turn now! Delays are dangerous! (B. Bailey.)
The double blessing
In these words are to be noticed--
I. The persons.
“Prisoners of hope.” Though all men are prisoners by nature, yet all men are
not “prisoners of hope.” Every natural man is a prisoner to sin and Satan, and
shut up in unbelief; sin has dominion over him, he lies in the arms of the
wicked one. The persons spoken to in the words of the text are the same persons
who are mentioned in the verse which precedes the text. The people addressed
are a people who were sent forth out of the pit wherein is no water, by which a
state of nature doubtless is intended; which is a filthy, dark, wretched, and
uncomfortable state, wherein no refreshment can be had. These are called in the
text “prisoners of hope,” which they are, not only because they possess hope as
a grace of the Spirit in their hearts, but also because it causes its
professors to hope for the enjoyment of those things which are promised to the
people of God in the Word of God, and which they are not yet put in the
possession of. Though these people are sent forth out of the pit of nature, yet
they may be called “prisoners,” because their consciences are not yet acquitted
of guilt. They are prisoners, but prisoners of hope.
II. The
exhortation. “Turn ye to the stronghold.” Christ undoubtedly is intended. It is
by turning to Christ, in a way of believing, that guilty consciences can be
liberated, and joy and peace experienced. Believing in Christ is also called
coming to Him, looking to Him, turning to Him. Those who do this find
themselves screened from the curse of the law; the charge of sin; the
punishment of it; from Satan’s rage; and from every other enemy.
III. The
declaration, “I will render double unto thee.” Either by this the abundance of
grace and mercy in Christ is intended; or by the term “double” is meant the
pardon of their sins, and acceptance of their persons; or it is a promise of
God’s removing guilt from their consciences, and of His restoring peace, which
also is a double blessing. The whole of this passage is a display of God’s love
and care, which He exercises towards all those who are redeemed by the blood of
Christ, in virtue of which it is that God sends them forth out of the pit of
nature, and then directs them as prisoners of hope to burn to the stronghold
(Christ), and promises to render unto them the double blessings above
mentioned. (S. Barnard.)
The prisoners of hope
Turning to the Jews who still remained in Babylon, Zechariah
invites them to quit the land of their captivity and hasten to Jerusalem, “Turn
you to the stronghold, ye prisoners of hope.” They were in captivity,
but that not an interminable captivity; they were prisoners of hope; and were
now invited to a place of refuge and security. This is the primary meaning of
the passage before us, but the language is suitable in the universal Church of
God. The invitation of the Gospel is here addressed to “prisoners.” “Whosoever
committeth sin is the servant (slave) of sin.” Many who would justly spurn at
the thought of being the slaves of any man are yet in bondage to a master of
whose service they have more reason to be ashamed. All men are, by nature,
servants of sin and children of wrath, exposed by their past transgressions of
the law of God, and by the contrariety of their hearts to it, to His just
displeasure I speak to those whose conscience tells them that they have never
yet earnestly sought the deliverance that is provided for them. You are indeed
prisoners, but you are prisoners of hope. To you the door of mercy is still
open. There is an offer of deliverance, an invitation to a refuge, a place of
safety. Are there some of you sensible of the danger of your state before God,
convinced of sin, and tremblingly alive to its fearful consequences? Turn,
then, to the stronghold. Turn to the covenant made by God with believers in
Christ Jesus, the sure promise that He will pardon, justify, and deliver from
condemnation, sanctify, and keep unto eternal life, those who cast themselves
upon His mercy through Jesus Christ as their only hope. Are some of you
desirous of turning to the stronghold, and yet know not how to set about your
return? See the promise in Isaiah 42:16. You who have fled to the
hope set before you in the Gospel may have strong consolation. (M. M.
Preston, M. A.)
The ground of Christian confidence
The words of this text may be considered as justly applicable to
the great Messiah, as highly expressive of the happiness which those shall
enjoy who have recourse to Him for salvation.
I. The character
of those to whom the exhortation is addressed. They are “prisoners.” Enter into
the feelings of the ordinary criminal prisoner. Consider the tumults of soul
which he experiences from the review of his iniquitous deeds. When reviewing
the wretched state of a prisoner of this description the reflection
irresistibly strikes us,--how happy this man might have been had his conduct
been uniformly influenced by the laws of righteousness. All men, by nature, are
prisoners. They have all become obnoxious to those fearful judgments
which this law hath denounced against its transgressors. The situation of the
prisoner is a faint emblem of the wretchedness of the natural man. The prisoner
was confined in a dark dungeon; so do clouds and darkness encompass the soul.
The prisoner is loaded with fetters. Every man, in his natural state, is
shackled by the galling fetters of sin. The prisoner must expect to end his
guilty career by a disgraceful death. But these prisoners are called “prisoners
of hope.” Dangerous is the state of sinful man, but not desperate. The stroke
of death may yet be averted, and they may become heirs of eternal life. Loaded
as men may be with iniquities, Omnipotence can easily release them from the
oppressive burden. By the term “prisoners of hope” may also be meant those who
have felt a deep sense of their misery and danger, who earnestly look for
deliverance from the power and guilt of sin. Men of this description are in a
most hopeful way. Those also may be included in the term who have already
tasted that the Lord is merciful and gracious, but are subject to depression of
mind. In the best of men there remains some portion of natural corruption.
II. The import of
the exhortation. By the stronghold is here meant the blood of the atonement, or
the “blood of the covenant.” Through this blood those spiritual consolations
are imparted to men which are so necessary to their happiness. This stronghold
is a most impregnable defence to all who flee to it for refuge. The covenant of
grace is adequate to all the wants and necessities of sinful men. It is there
is to be found unlimited pardon of sin; through it the Divine acceptance has
been assured; through it grace is communicated to purify the soul from every
stain of corruption; through it that wisdom is conferred which is profitable to
direct in all things, and that power which shall enable man to surmount every
difficulty. The fulness of the Godhead dwelleth in the Mediator of this
covenant, and He becometh to all who believe, “wisdom and righteousness and
sanctification and complete redemption.” What is implied by turning to this
stronghold, the perfect righteousness and complete atonement of the Redeemer?
It means that we renounce every mean or false security. Many are the grounds of
false dependence on which unthinking, ignorant men rely. Let all who have
hitherto relied on these grounds of false dependence henceforth renounce them
forever; and let them betake themselves to the finished work of Jesus, who is
the tried precious cornerstone, the sure foundation which God hath laid in
Zion. (M. Gait, M. A.)
Christ a stronghold
I. In what sense,
or on what account, are mankind represented as prisoners? The prison is of a
spiritual description. It is not so much a place as a state of confinement. All
men, by nature, are under the curse of God, and the power of sin and Satan. The
law, the justice, the truth, the power of God; these are the walls and bolts
and bars that confine you. The evil dispositions and passions of men answer all
the purposes of chains and bolts, to disable their souls from rising towards
heaven, or moving a step in the way of holiness.
II. Why are some
called prisoners of hope, and who are they that may be so called? It implies
that there are some without hope. The devil and his angels are such. Such also
are all those among men who have died without repentance and pardon; and they
are a multitude, we fear, greater than any man can number. Who are prisoners of
hope?
1. All who are alive upon the earth.
2. Those who possess the means of grace are more particularly to be
considered as prisoners of hope.
3. Those who feel religious impressions.
III. What is this
stronghold? It is Christ.
1. He secures us from the wrath of God.
2. From the assaults of sin and Satan.
3. From worldly confusion and calamities.
IV. What is implied
in turning to this stronghold?
1. You must be thoroughly convinced of Christ’s ability to defend
you.
2. You must forsake all other refuges.
3. In order to obtain safety in Christ there must be an actual
acceptance of Him, and a steady reliance upon Him for protection.
V. How do we know
that Christ is such a stronghold?
1. Consider His Divine perfections.
2. His Divine appointment.
Have you turned to this stronghold? Some have. Some are still
secure in Satan’s confinement. Some feel the fetters begin to gall them, and
they are sighing for liberty. Be often looking back to your former
imprisonment. Adore the grace that provided such a stronghold. And beware of
dishonoring this stronghold. This is done when men think it a confinement, and
are uneasy under its restraints. (S. Lavington.)
A stronghold
I. How the Saviour
may be called a Stronghold. A stronghold implies a place of safety or security,
and can only allude to Christ. The Psalmist called Him his castle, his
fortress, his tower of defence, the rock of his might--doubtless impressed with
the security afforded to the weak who can cleave unto Him. Few terms can be
more forcible than the one contained in our text, but we must feel our weakness
to appreciate the force of the term, We must feel the necessity of our having a
stronghold to turn unto.
2. To whom the term “prisoners of hope” may refer. This evidently
applies to the whole world. When Adam sinned he became a prisoner--a slave to
sin and evil passions. This slavery he entailed upon all his children. It is
the evil nature of man that holds him bound--it withers the germ of life; it
destroys all the energies and Divine flowings of the soul; it throws a chain
upon the creature that holds him down, so that he cannot get free. We are
prisoners in the flesh. The heart of stone rests within. But although a
prisoner, still in hope. Prisoners by sin hope in Christ, because Christ gave
Himself a ransom for sinners. The penitent sinner has hope because he is
awakened by a consciousness of his sin, and by the apprehension of his danger.
III. The promise
contained in the text. The exhortation contains a promise of infinite
magnitude: “I will render double unto thee.” You shall receive amends for the
trouble you have endured, for the miseries of this world are not worthy to be
compared to the glory that shall be revealed in us. (G. Thompson, M. A.)
Inspiration of hope
In one of the great battles of history the General of the French
was approached by an excited officer, who cried, “The battle is lost! Yes,” was
the cool reply; “but there is time to win another.” And so it proved, for the
retreating troops rallied, and pressed forward in a still fiercer attack
because of their temporary repulse, and at night all victory rested on the
French banners. No defeat is final, unless you choose to make it so. There is
always time to win a victory. Suppose your temper gets the better of you
instead of your conquering it. Suppose you yield to the temptation you meant to
rout so gloriously. Is that a reason for giving up and throwing down your arms?
Not a bit of it. The end has not come yet. There is still time to win another
battle. Make your next onset all the fiercer because of that temporary defeat.
The hope of gain in dying
There is a bird that mariners call the “frigate bird,” of strange
habits and of stranger power. Men see him in all climes; but never yet has
human eye seen him near the earth. With wings of mighty stretch, high borne, he
sails along. Men of the far north see him at midnight moving on amid auroral
fires, sailing along with set wings amid those awful flames, taking the colour
of the waves of light which swell and heave around him. Men in the tropics see
him at hottest noon, his plumage all incarnadined by the fierce rays that smite
innocuous upon him. Amid their ardent fever he bears along, majestic, tireless.
Never was he known to stoop from his lofty line of flight, never to swerve. To
many he is a myth; to all a mystery. Where is his perch? Where does he rest?
Where was he brooded? None know. They only, know that above the cloud, above
the reach of tempest, above the tumult of transverse currents, this bird of
heaven, so let us call him, on self-supporting wings that disdain to beat the
air on which they rest, moves grandly on. So shall my hope be. At either pole
of life, above the clouds of sorrow, superior to the tempests that beat upon
me, on lofty and tireless wing, scorning the earth, it shall move along. Never
shall it stoop, never swerve from its sublime line of flight. Men shall see it
in the morning of my life; they shall see it in its hot noonday; and when the
shadows fall, my sun having set, the last they shall see of me shall be this
hope of gain in dying, as it sails out on steady wing, and disappears amid the
everlasting light. (W. H. Murray.)
Prisoners of hope
This title is not a fanciful one. To the Jew it had a triple
significance.
1. He was under the yoke of a foreign despot, and longed to regain
his freedom.
2. He was under the yoke of an unfulfilled promise of a coming
Messiah, and yearned for the “day star to arise.”
3. He was under the yoke of the unrealised prophecies concerning the
glory of the Messiah’s kingdom, and the eternal felicity of His followers.
Rightly apprehended, the words of the text are the true designation of every
real Christian. In two senses out of the three, however, they are not
applicable to us. We are not under an alien yoke. The incarnation is not a
hope, but a historic fact. In the third sense only are saints today “prisoners
of hope.”
I. We are
prisoners to an unredeemed body. In St. Paul’s sense, “Even we ourselves groan
within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body”
(Romans 8:23). Observe, then--
1. There is a sense in which the body is already redeemed. Christ by
His contact with human flesh has sanctified it, and separated it from the
service of sin; so that now we are exhorted to “present our bodies a living
sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God.”
2. There is another sense in which our bodies are not redeemed.
3. Hope anticipates the possession of an immortal body--
II. We are
prisoners to a limited and superficial knowledge. “Now I know in part,”--there
is the bondage. “Then shall I know even as I am known,”--there is the freedom.
1. Our knowledge touches not the essence, but only the phenomena of
things. What they really are Omniscience only knows. Names are but disguises by
which we hide our ignorance. The more we learn, the less we seem to know.
“There are two sorts of ignorance. We philosophise to escape ignorance, and the
consummation of our philosophy is ignorance. We start from the one, we repose
in the other.”
2. Our knowledge reaches men, not as they are, only as they appear.
All men are better or worse than they seem to be. The invisible part is the
true man.
3. Even this knowledge is limited by the brevity of life and the
conditions of its existence. The most profound thinker and the most extensive
traveller must lay aside their work at the summons of death.
4. Since human knowledge is so limited, how irrational for human
beings to impugn the Divine economy. As wise for the mole to criticise and
condemn the landscape under which he burrows. Man’s work is to trust and wait.
5. Hope anticipates the solution of the dark enigma of human life.
“Then I shall know even as I am known.” Things will appear as they really are.
6. Even this knowledge is progressive. The finite can never
comprehend the infinite. Progress is heaven’s law as well as earth’s.
III. We are
prisoners to a circumscribed Christian fellowship. The great family of our
Father is sadly dismembered. Whilst one in spirit and faith, our fellowship is
ruptured by--
1. Doctrinal divergence. The Jews of bigoted ritualism still have no
dealings with the Samaritans of a broader faith
2. Suspicion, the offspring of imperfect knowledge, is another cause
of circumscribed fellowship.
3. Social status is a barrier to universal Christian fellowship.
4. Distance and death contribute to the limited measure of fellowship
enjoyed by Christians.
5. Hope anticipates the universal and perfect fellowship of saints.
IV. We are
prisoners to an imperfect vision of Christ. “Now we see through a glass
darkly.” There is the bondage. “Then face to face.” There is the substance of
our hope. Yet note--
1. Christ is really apprehended by faith even here. This faith is a
spiritual sense, akin to the eye of the body. It invests the invisible Saviour
with a real personality.
2. This vision is at best a dim one. A reflected view, as when one
beholds a face in a mirror.
3. Human nature in its present state is not capable of a more open
vision. (Homiletic Magazine.)
Verses 13-17
The Lord of hosts shall defend them
God works amongst the nations in the interests of His people
The double recompense which the Lord will make to His people will
consist in the fact that He not only liberates them out of captivity and
bondage, and makes them into an independent nation, but that He helps them to
victory over the power of the world, so that they will tread it down, i..
completely subdue it. The first thought is not explained more fully because it
is contained implicite in the promise of return to a strong place, the
double only is more distinctly defined, namely, the victory over Javan. The
expression, “I stretch,” etc., implies that the Lord will subdue the enemies by
Judah and Ephraim, and therefore Israel will carry on this conflict in the
power of its God--Keil.
I. That God works
amongst the nations of the earth. God is here represented as raising up Zion
against Greece. “And raised up thy sons, O Zion, against thy sons, O Greece.”
The literal reference, it may be, is to the help which He would render the
Maccabees, as the heroic leaders of the Jews, to overcome the successors of the
Grecian Alexander, Antiochus Epiphanes, and the other Grecian oppressors of Judah.
He works with the Jew and the Greek, or Gentile--the two great divisions of
mankind. He is in their conflicts and their battles.
1. He works universally amongst men. He works with the “sons” of Zion
and the “sons” of Greece. He operates with all, with the remote and the
distant, with the little and the great, with the good and the bad; He is in all
human history. All good He originates, all evil He overrules.
2. He works by human agency amongst men. “When I have bent Judah for
Me, filled the bow with Ephraim.” God carries out His purposes with man by the
agency of man; wicked kings are His tools, obscure saints are His ministers of
state.
3. He works manifestly amongst men. “And the Lord shall be seen over
them”; or, as Keil renders it, “Jehovah shall appear above them.”
4. He works terribly amongst men. “And His arrow shall go forth as
the lightning, and the Lord God shall blow the trumpet, and shall go with
whirlwinds of the south.” “Like lightning will His arrow go forth, and the Lord
Jehovah will blow the trumpets, and will pass along in storms of the
south.”--Keil. He is in the crashings of conflagrating cities, in the booming
thunders of contending armies, in the wild whirlwinds of battling kingdoms;
with Him there is “terrible majesty” as He proceeds on His march in human
history.
II. God works
amongst the nations of the earth in the interests of His people.
1. He works for their defence. “The Lord of hosts shall defend them,”
or shelter them.
2. He works for their victory. “They shall devour and subdue with
sling stones,” etc. “Jehovah of hosts shall protect them, and they shall devour
and tread down the sling-stones, they shall drink, they shall be noisy, as
those who drink wine; they shall be full as the bowl, as the corners of the
altar.”--Henderson. The idea is their complete triumph over their enemies.
Hengstenberg observes that there is not the least indication that a spiritual
conflict is intended. Quite true, but a spiritual conflict it may illustrate,
and its victory too.
3. He works for their salvation. “And the Lord their God shall save
them in that day as the flock of His people.”
4. He works for their glory. “They shall be as the stones of a crown,
lifted up as an ensign upon His land.” Or, as Hengstenberg renders it, “For
crowned jewels shall they be rising up upon His land.” There is true glory
awaiting the good. There is a crown of glory laid up in heaven, etc.
5. He works for their perfection. “For how great is His goodness, and
how great is His beauty! Corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine
the maids.” We accept the rendering of Keil here, which is not only faithful to
the original, but in harmony with the context. The prophet is speaking of the
high privileges of God’s people, and not of the excellences of the Supreme. It
is an exclamation of admiration of the high privileges of the godly. (Homilist.)
Verses 13-17
The Lord of hosts shall defend them
God works amongst the nations in the interests of His people
The double recompense which the Lord will make to His people will
consist in the fact that He not only liberates them out of captivity and
bondage, and makes them into an independent nation, but that He helps them to
victory over the power of the world, so that they will tread it down, i..
completely subdue it. The first thought is not explained more fully because it
is contained implicite in the promise of return to a strong place, the
double only is more distinctly defined, namely, the victory over Javan. The
expression, “I stretch,” etc., implies that the Lord will subdue the enemies by
Judah and Ephraim, and therefore Israel will carry on this conflict in the
power of its God--Keil.
I. That God works
amongst the nations of the earth. God is here represented as raising up Zion
against Greece. “And raised up thy sons, O Zion, against thy sons, O Greece.”
The literal reference, it may be, is to the help which He would render the
Maccabees, as the heroic leaders of the Jews, to overcome the successors of the
Grecian Alexander, Antiochus Epiphanes, and the other Grecian oppressors of
Judah. He works with the Jew and the Greek, or Gentile--the two great divisions
of mankind. He is in their conflicts and their battles.
1. He works universally amongst men. He works with the “sons” of Zion
and the “sons” of Greece. He operates with all, with the remote and the
distant, with the little and the great, with the good and the bad; He is in all
human history. All good He originates, all evil He overrules.
2. He works by human agency amongst men. “When I have bent Judah for
Me, filled the bow with Ephraim.” God carries out His purposes with man by the
agency of man; wicked kings are His tools, obscure saints are His ministers of
state.
3. He works manifestly amongst men. “And the Lord shall be seen over
them”; or, as Keil renders it, “Jehovah shall appear above them.”
4. He works terribly amongst men. “And His arrow shall go forth as
the lightning, and the Lord God shall blow the trumpet, and shall go with
whirlwinds of the south.” “Like lightning will His arrow go forth, and the Lord
Jehovah will blow the trumpets, and will pass along in storms of the
south.”--Keil. He is in the crashings of conflagrating cities, in the booming
thunders of contending armies, in the wild whirlwinds of battling kingdoms;
with Him there is “terrible majesty” as He proceeds on His march in human
history.
II. God works
amongst the nations of the earth in the interests of His people.
1. He works for their defence. “The Lord of hosts shall defend them,”
or shelter them.
2. He works for their victory. “They shall devour and subdue with
sling stones,” etc. “Jehovah of hosts shall protect them, and they shall devour
and tread down the sling-stones, they shall drink, they shall be noisy, as
those who drink wine; they shall be full as the bowl, as the corners of the
altar.”--Henderson. The idea is their complete triumph over their enemies.
Hengstenberg observes that there is not the least indication that a spiritual
conflict is intended. Quite true, but a spiritual conflict it may illustrate,
and its victory too.
3. He works for their salvation. “And the Lord their God shall save
them in that day as the flock of His people.”
4. He works for their glory. “They shall be as the stones of a crown,
lifted up as an ensign upon His land.” Or, as Hengstenberg renders it, “For
crowned jewels shall they be rising up upon His land.” There is true glory
awaiting the good. There is a crown of glory laid up in heaven, etc.
5. He works for their perfection. “For how great is His goodness, and
how great is His beauty! Corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine
the maids.” We accept the rendering of Keil here, which is not only faithful to
the original, but in harmony with the context. The prophet is speaking of the
high privileges of God’s people, and not of the excellences of the Supreme. It
is an exclamation of admiration of the high privileges of the godly. (Homilist.)
Verse 16
They shall be as the stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign
upon his land
The Lord’s people
Here we see--
I.
The
dignity of the lord’s people. They are “stones, precious stones,” set in the
“crown” of the King of kings. God not only spares, but pardons and justifies
them. In His righteousness they are exalted; they are not only saved, but
ennobled. With kings are they upon the throne.
II. Here is also
them exhibition. These stones of a crown are “lifted up.” They are not to be
concealed. Our Saviour compares them to a city set, not in a valley, but on a
hill which cannot be hid; and to a candle, placed, not under a bushel, but on a
candlestick, that it may give light to all that are in the house. Christians
need not be concealed--everything in their religion will bear examination, and
challenges the eyes of all, whether infidels or philosophers or politicians or
moralists. They ought not to be concealed--everything in their religion is
adapted to do good; but for this purpose it must be known. They cannot be
concealed,--their principles must operate; the sun cannot shine without showing
itself.
III. Here is also
their utility,--these stones of a crown are to be lifted up “as an ensign upon
His land.” An oriflamme suspended over the royal tent, and designed to attract
and aggregate followers to the cause in which he is engaged. Their calling, to
hold forth the Word of Life. They are placed and displaced; to reprove, to
convince, to excite and encourage others, to seek and serve God. They are
witnesses for Him; trophies of the power and greatness and riches of His grace.
They proclaim what He is able and willing to do. (William Jay.)
Verse 17
For how great is His goodness, and how great is His beauty!
God’s goodness and beauty
There is no subject of contemplation more delightful to a serious
mind than the goodness of the Lord. The prophet had been, in the preceding
verses, describing the appearance of Christ as King of Zion, as just, and
having salvation. He had been speaking of the blood of the covenant, by which
the prisoners of Divine justice are delivered, and invited to turn to the
stronghold. He had described the salvation which God should work out for His
people by the Messiah, when they should be as the precious stones of a crown,
lifted up on high, and God would save and favour them as His jewels and
peculiar treasure. The prophet’s heart was so affected with the prospect of this
mercy that he breaks out into the joyful acclamation, “How great is His
goodness!” Learn that the Divine goodness in our redemption and salvation
claims our admira tion and our praise. Here too we see the “beauty” of the
Lord. How amicably His perfections shine in the dispensation of the Gospel; so
that all who attend to it with serious minds will see and adore them. Here we
observe mercy and truth meeting together, righteousness and peace greeting each
other. Here, at the Holy Sacrament, we see the King of Zion, the image of the
invisible God, in all His beauty, and He appears fairer than the children of
men, and altogether amiable and lovely. Here also we see the goodness of the
Lord; with what peculiar lustre this perfection of the Divine nature shines in
our redemption by Jesus Christ. That goodness appears great if we consider how
universally it extends: even to all mankind. Jesus is a propitiation for the
sins of the whole world. If we consider the objects of it; mean and
miserable mortals, whose goodness cannot extend to Him. This goodness is to
terminate in perfect and everlasting glory and felicity. The fountain of all
our comforts and hopes is Divine goodness. The streams are plenteous, and
various. They enrich, delight, and satisfy the soul, and they flow forever. (Job
Orton.)
The glory of Christ
This is manifested throughout all the Holy Scriptures. This is
attested both by the Apostles and by our Lord Himself (Acts 10:43; Luke 24:27; John 5:39). In the New Testament He
shines like the sun in an unclouded atmosphere. In the Old, though generally
veiled, He often bursts forth as from behind a cloud with astonishing beauty
and splendour. Nor could the prophet himself forbear exclaiming with wonder and
admiration, “How great is His goodness!” etc.
I. The goodness of
our Lord. In the context He is set forth as the God of providence and of grace.
And in order to behold His goodness we must view Him in both respects.
1. As the God of providence. As all things were created, so are they
upheld and governed by Him. To Him we owe the preservation of our corporeal and
intellectual powers. We are continually fed by His bounty, and protected by His
arm. The meanest creature in the universe has abundant reason to adore Him--His
own people in particular may discern unnumbered instances of His goodness in
His dispensations towards them. His most afflictive as well as His more
pleasing dispensations afford them much occasion for gratitude and thanksgiving
(Psalms 119:75).
2. As a God of grace. Jesus is the one fountain of spiritual
blessings to His Church (Ephesians 1:22). Neither prophets nor
apostles had any grace but from Him (John 1:16). To Him must we ascribe every
good disposition that is in our hearts (Philippians 2:13; Hebrews 12:2). What reason, then, have
His faithful followers to bless His name! With what gratitude should they
acknowledge His continued kindness! Though they have often turned back from
Him, He has not cast them off. Yea, rather, He has “healed their backslidings
and loved them freely.” Surely every blessing they receive and every victory
they gain should fill them with admiring thoughts of His goodness (2 Corinthians 2:14). If we have just
conceptions of His goodness we shall be more able to behold--
II. His beauty. The
world beholds “no beauty nor comeliness in” the face of Jesus. But the saints
of old “saw His glory as the glory of the only-begotten of the Father.” This we
also may see if we survey Him--
1. In this Divine character. “We cannot by searching find out the
Almighty to perfection.” Little do we know of the greatness of His majesty, or
the thunder of His power (Job 26:14). We cannot comprehend His
unsearchable wisdom, His unspotted holiness, His inviolable truth and
faithfulness. His glory is more than the feeble language of mortality can
express.
2. In His human character Here we look at Him, as the Jews at Moses
when his face was veiled. And can contemplate Him more easily because He shines
with a less radiant lustre. But principally must we view Him during the course
of His ministry. What marvellous compassion did He manifest to the souls and
bodies of men! Not one applied to Him for bodily or spiritual health without
obtaining his request. And when many were hardened in their sins He wept over
them (Luke 19:41). His zeal for God was ardent
and unremitted. His meekness, patience, fortitude were altogether invincible.
Whatever was amiable and excellent in man abounded in Him (Psalms 45:2). Nor, though continually
tried in the hottest furnace, was there found in Him the smallest imperfection
or alloy (John 14:30).
3. In His mediatorial character. With what readiness did He become a
surety for sinful man (Psalms 40:7-8). What astonishing
condescension did He manifest in uniting Himself to our nature! How cheerfully
did He go forth to meet the sufferings that were appointed for Him. His
obedience unto death was the fruit of His love and the price of our redemption.
How beautiful is He now in the eyes of those who behold His glory! And how will
He “be admired and glorified by all” in the last day! Satan must have blinded
us, indeed, if we be yet insensible to His charms (2 Corinthians 4:4). If we be true
believers, He cannot but be precious to our souls (1 Peter 2:7). (J. Benson.)
How great is His beauty--
The secret of beauty
The last words of Charles Kingsley were, “How beautiful is
God!” Zechariah was thinking of the glory about to be given to Israel, about
the prosperity soon to abound in the land, and he knows that it is all the good
gift of God, so he cries, “How great is His goodness! How great is His beauty!
Corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine the maids.” Wise men who
have thought about the nature of God have always said that there must be three
perfect things in God. There must be perfect truth, perfect goodness, and
perfect beauty. By remembering this you may always tell the difference between
true and false ideas about God. Every man and every child who worships a God
about whom he has hard, cruel thoughts, although a Christian in name, gives
only heathen worship to the Most High. All through the Bible God has been
teaching men that He is beautiful. The Jews were taught to make their worship
beautiful. At last Christ came. He did not seem to bring beauty down to man at
once. The word “beauty” is never mentioned in the New Testament. But this was
because Christ wanted men to look deeper for beauty than on the face and form.
The beauty which Christ brought was beauty of the soul, of the heart, of the
life, spiritual beauty which will never fade away with age, will never wither
or decay. Here in our flowers today can we not try to see the beauty of God?
They teach that His beauty is perfect in little things as well as in great. The
tiniest flower is as perfect as the large. And the beauty is not for mere show,
but for comfort and use. How often a flower teaches people about God! I have
read of a poor sinful woman pressing a white flower to her heart in an agony of
tears, because it came to her like the voice of God, telling of His wish for
her to be pure and bright. We would like to reveal God to those around us. If
so, let us be God’s flowers. Aim at three things in order that we may
accomplish this our high task.
1. Let us have the beauty of worship.
2. Beauty of worship must lead to beauty of life.
3. All this will grow into beauty of character.
This is the beauty that lasts forever. To get this will take time.
All the best things take time. (H. H. Gowen.)
Beauty
One by one the various traits of Divine excellence came
before the mind of the prophet, and at last he, as it were, generalised them;
and the whole vision struck him as one of extreme beauty. The wisdom of God,
His justice, His purity, His truth, His love,--all of these, in quality, in
quantity, and in harmony, form a symmetric whole, which deserves, if anything
deserves it, the epithet “beautiful,” and meets the highest conception, and
overreaches the highest aspiration which the human heart has for the element of
beauty. Is beauty, then, a reality in the higher spiritual life? Is there in
the inward, invisible, and truly spiritual life that which answers to our idea
of sensuous beauty? Or is it figurative? I hold that beauty is first spiritual,
and afterwards natural and material. I hold that it was Divine; that it inhered
in the nature of God, and the nature of spiritual existence. Examine the
relation of beauty to moral qualities. As God has created the world, beauty is
not a kind of seasoning scattered upon the weightier realities. Men think that
the beauty of this natural world is a kind of decoration. Perfectness and
beauty are identical. Maturity, whether it be of fruit, or flower, or what not,
works by stages towards beauty in the material globe. So that beauty is not an
accident. Still less is it the trimming which God gave to the perfected work.
It is the Divine idea of a mode of creation. As the human mind is cultivated,
it becomes more and more sensitive to this quality. The less culture men have,
the further they are from the admiration of beauty; that is to say, the less
comprehensive is their admiration. When the human mind develops and grows
toward its perfection, it grows toward the sense of beauty. But moral qualities
come under this law, just as much as physical qualities do. Fulness, fineness,
and harmony--there is the formula. In nature it is called quantity, symmetry:
and the equivalent of this in moral elements is fulness, fineness, harmony.
Whatever elements the mind produces when it acts so as to give fulness,
fineness, and harmonious proportions to the product, are beautiful. That is to
say, they produce the sense of beauty in those that look upon them, and tend
universally to do it. Right things are commanded in the Bible, but it is not
enough that we should be just, conscientious, true, amiable, or benevolent.
There is to be fulness in each of these elements, and there is to be harmony
among all of them. And here is the formula fulfilled which goes to make social
and moral affections beautiful. It would seem enough to say to men, “Be kind,
be generous, be benevolent”; but no, Let love be without dissimulation. God
loves a cheerful giver. Give without grudging one to another. These are the
elements that go to make beneficence; that free it from wrinkles; that give it
largeness and generosity. The growth toward ripeness in moral experience is
analogous to development in physical nature,--that is toward beautifulness.
Just in proportion as any one of our better feelings becomes predominant over
the others, men feel that character is growing lovely, attractive, admirable.
And these are only step stone words that bring you to the last one,
“beautiful.” There is nothing so beautiful in this world as beauty of character.
Applications--
1. All the world recognises beauty in the lower grade of qualities.
It is the higher moral experience that men lack a knowledge of Devotion is more
beautiful than passion. The love of God in the soul is far more beautiful than
any love of man can be. The qualities of religion to which we are called are
supreme, not alone in importance, but in art even. They are essentially and
intrinsically more admirable, more noble, more beautiful than all the lower
experiences.
2. How great is the variety of spiritual things in the Christian
life! and how few things are gained! How many persons are there that are
beautiful in temper? How many whose good nature is anything more than the mere
product of good health? How little is the Church beautiful in its grace!
3. The unbeautifulness of Christian life is sadly shown in me popular
impression with regard to religion. Men mostly feel that religion is something
that may be obligatory, but that there is nothing attractive about it. The true
idea is, that a man who goes into a Christian experience, goes into a larger
liberty, and goes into a larger joy.
4. Christians should at least be as sensible to spiritual beauty as
to physical. All men should love beauty in common things.
5. God is bringing all good men toward that realm, and that
indescribable experience which is hinted at in the words of Scripture. The work
which is going on in us, we do not ourselves at all appreciate. (Henry Ward
Beecher.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》