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Daniel Chapter
Three
Daniel 3
Chapter Contents
Nebuchadnezzar's golden image. (1-7) Shadrach and his
companions refuse to worship it. (8-18) They are cast into a furnace, but are
miraculously preserved. (19-27) Nebuchadnezzar gives glory to Jehovah. (28-30)
Commentary on Daniel 3:1-7
(Read Daniel 3:1-7)
In the height of the image, about thirty yards, probably
is included a pedestal, and most likely it was only covered with plates of
gold, not a solid mass of that precious metal. Pride and bigotry cause men to
require their subjects to follow their religion, whether right or wrong, and
when worldly interest allures, and punishment overawes, few refuse. This is
easy to the careless, the sensual, and the infidel, who are the greatest
number; and most will go their ways. There is nothing so bad which the careless
world will not be drawn to by a concert of music, or driven to by a fiery
furnace. By such methods, false worship has been set up and maintained.
Commentary on Daniel 3:8-18
(Read Daniel 3:8-18)
True devotion calms the spirit, quiets and softens it,
but superstition and devotion to false gods inflame men's passions. The matter
is put into a little compass, Turn, or burn. Proud men are still ready to say,
as Nebuchadnezzar, Who is the Lord, that I should fear his power? Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego did not hesitate whether they should comply or not. Life
or death were not to be considered. Those that would avoid sin, must not parley
with temptation when that to which we are allured or affrighted is manifestly
evil. Stand not to pause about it, but say, as Christ did, Get thee behind me,
Satan. They did not contrive an evasive answer, when a direct answer was
expected. Those who make their duty their main care, need not be anxious or
fearful concerning the event. The faithful servants of God find him able to
control and overrule all the powers armed against them. Lord, if thou wilt,
thou canst. If He be for us, we need not fear what man can do unto us. God will
deliver us, either from death or in death. They must obey God rather than man;
they must rather suffer than sin; and must not do evil that good may come.
Therefore none of these things moved them. The saving them from sinful
compliance, was as great a miracle in the kingdom of grace, as the saving them
out of the fiery furnace was in the kingdom of nature. Fear of man and love of
the world, especially want of faith, make men yield to temptation, while a firm
persuasion of the truth will deliver them from denying Christ, or being ashamed
of him. We are to be meek in our replies, but we must be decided that we will
obey God rather than man.
Commentary on Daniel 3:19-27
(Read Daniel 3:19-27)
Let Nebuchadnezzar heat his furnace as hot as he can, a
few minutes will finish the torment of those cast into it; but hell-fire
tortures, and yet does not kill. Those who worshipped the beast and his image,
have no rest, no pause, no moment free from pain, Revelation 14:10,11. Now was fulfilled in the
letter that great promise, Isaiah 43:2, When thou walkest through the fire,
thou shalt not be burned. Leaving it to that God who preserved them in the
fire, to bring them out, they walked up and down in the midst, supported and
encouraged by the presence of the Son of God. Those who suffer for Christ, have
his presence in their sufferings, even in the fiery furnace, and in the valley
of the shadow of death. Nebuchadnezzar owns them for servants of the most high
God; a God able to deliver them out of his hand. It is our God only is the
consuming fire, Hebrews 12:29. Could we but see into the eternal
world, we should behold the persecuted believer safe from the malice of his
foes, while they are exposed to the wrath of God, and tormented in unquenchable
fires.
Commentary on Daniel 3:28-30
(Read Daniel 3:28-30)
What God did for these his servants, would help to keep
the Jews to their religion while in captivity, and to cure them of idolatry.
The miracle brought deep convictions on Nebuchadnezzar. But no abiding change
then took place in his conduct. He who preserved these pious Jews in the fiery
furnace, is able to uphold us in the hour of temptation, and to keep us from
falling into sin.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Daniel¡n
Daniel 3
Verse 1
[1] Nebuchadnezzar the king made an image of gold, whose
height was threescore cubits, and the breadth thereof six cubits: he set it up
in the plain of Dura, in the province of Babylon.
Made an image ¡X Perhaps he did this, that he
might seem no ways inclined to the Jews, or their religion, whereof the
Chaldeans might be jealous, seeing he had owned their God to be greatest, and
had preferred Daniel and his friends to great honours.
Verse 4
[4] Then an herald cried aloud, To you it is commanded, O
people, nations, and languages,
Nations and languages ¡X Proclamation was made
therefore in several languages.
Verse 16
[16] Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, answered and said to
the king, O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter.
We are not careful ¡X Heb. We care not:
there is no need of any answer in this case for it is in vain for us to debate
the matter; the king is resolved to have his will of us, and we are resolved on
the contrary.
Verse 18
[18] But if not, be it known unto thee, O king, that we will
not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.
But if not ¡X It was therefore all one to them,
which way God would honour himself; they were resolved to suffer rather than
sin, and leave the cause to God. Indeed if God be for us, we need not fear what
man can do unto us. Let him do his worst. God will deliver us either from
death, or in death.
Verse 20
[20] And he commanded the most mighty men that were in his
army to bind Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, and to cast them into the burning
fiery furnace.
To bind ¡X What did he think these three men would have refused?
Or that their God would defend them from his power, or that if he had, his
mighty men could have prevailed? None of all this was the case; for God
purposed to shew his power when the king did his worst, and in the thing
wherein he dealt proudly, to be above him.
Verse 23
[23] And these three men, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego,
fell down bound into the midst of the burning fiery furnace.
Fell down ¡X All this is exprest with
emphasis, to make the power of God more glorious in their preservation; for
that shame that slew the executioners, might much more easily have killed them,
even before they fell down.
Verse 25
[25] He answered and said, Lo, I see four men loose, walking
in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and the form of the fourth is
like the Son of God.
No hurt ¡X See how the God of nature can when he pleases control
the powers of nature! The Son of God - Probably he had heard David speak of
him. Jesus Christ, the Angel of the covenant, did sometimes appear before his
incarnation. Those who suffer for Christ, have his gracious presence with them
in their sufferings, even in the fiery furnace, even in the valley of the
shadow of death, and therefore need fear no evil.
Verse 26
[26] Then Nebuchadnezzar came near to the mouth of the
burning fiery furnace, and spake, and said, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, ye
servants of the most high God, come forth, and come hither. Then Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego, came forth of the midst of the fire.
And spake ¡X With a milder tone than before,
God having abated the fire of his fury. Now he could at once acknowledge the
true God to be the most high above all gods, and the three worthies to be his
faithful servants.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Daniel¡n
Faith In The Face Of Fire (3:1-30)
INTRODUCTION
1. In Dan 1, we were introduced to three companions of Daniel:
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-Nego...
a. Like Daniel, they were young men taken from Judah into captivity
and trained to serve before the king - Dan 1:6-7
b. Like Daniel, they were blessed by God and impressed the king
after their period of training - Dan 1:17-20
2. Dan 3 reveals more about the character of these three young men...
a. In recounting an incident that has fascinated many, both young
and old
b. Like Dan 1, it illustrates the power of a strong faith in those
who are young
[This inspiring story, which I like to call "Faith In The Face Of
Fire", begins by describing...]
I. THEIR TRIAL
A. THE EVENTS LEADING UP TO IT...
1. Nebuchadnezzar's image, and his command to worship it - Dan 3:
1-7
2. The accusation against Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego - Dan
3:8-12
3. The king's threat of the fiery furnace - Dan 3:13-15
B. THE NATURE OF THEIR TRIAL...
1. To save their situation
a. They had been promoted over the affairs of Babylon - Dan
3:12
b. They would lose their position as well as their lives
2. To sacrifice their conscience
a. All they needed to do was to conform outwardly
b. Of course, that would have meant disobedience to God - Exo
20:4-5
C. WE MAY FACE SIMILAR TRIALS TODAY...
1. To save our situation, such as:
a. Our popularity at school, by doing things our peers or
teacher do not see wrong
b. Our position at work, by doing that which our boss or
company requires which may be illegal, unethical or immoral
2. To sacrifice our conscience
a. It would be easy to conform outwardly, to "go along with
the crowd"
b. But our conscience would condemn us, and so would God
[Likely we all have been tempted in some way like this. How did we
react? How should we have reacted? How did Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-Nego react? Let's consider...]
II. THEIR TESTIMONY
A. THEY DEMONSTRATED FAITH...
1. In the power of God - Dan 3:16-17
a. That God was able to deliver them from the fiery furnace
b. If it was His will
2. In the will of God - Dan 3:18
a. If it was God's will not to deliver it, so be it!
b. They would still not worship other gods, nor the gold
image!
B. THEY DETERMINED TO SERVE GOD NO MATTER WHAT...
1. Like Job in the midst of his affliction - Job 1:20-21; 13:15
2. Like Habakkuk who would praise God even in suffering - Hab 3:
17-19
3. Like the apostles who rejoiced to suffer in His name - Ac 5:
27-29
4. Like Polycarp who offered this prayer as he was being burned
at the stake:
"O Lord God Almighty, the Father of Thy beloved and blessed
Son Jesus Christ, through whom we have received the knowledge
of Thee, the God of angels and powers and of all creation and
of the whole race of the righteous, who live in Thy presence;
"I bless Thee for that Thou hast granted me this day and hour,
that I might receive a portion amongst the number of martyrs
in the cup of Thy Christ unto resurrection of eternal life,
both of soul and of body, in the incorruptibility of the Holy
Spirit.
"May I be received among these in Thy presence this day, as a
rich and acceptable sacrifice, as Thou didst prepare and
reveal it beforehand, and hast accomplished it, Thou that art
the faithful and true God.
"For this cause, yea and for all things, I praise Thee, I bless
Thee, I glorify Thee, through the eternal and heavenly High
Priest, Jesus Christ, Thy beloved Son, through whom with Him
and the Holy Spirit be glory both now and for the ages to
come. Amen.'
- From The Martyrdom Of Polycarp
[Such examples are truly "Faith In The Face Of Fire"! This is what it
means to have faith, trust, and commitment to the Lord. What about our
own personal trials at school or work? Have we been true to God, no
matter the cost? Finally, consider...]
III. THEIR TRIUMPH
A. THE REST OF THE CHAPTER REVEALS...
1. How they were saved in the fiery furnace - Dan 3:19-25
2. How Nebuchadnezzar was led to bless the true God - Dan 3:26-39
B. CONSIDER WHAT THEIR TRIALS BROUGHT THEM...
1. A new sense of freedom!
a. They entered bound, but were soon seen "loose, walking"
- Dan 3:23-25
b. The very thing presumed to destroy them, enabled them to
walk freely!
c. So our own trials can be used to set us truly free! - Ja 1:
2-4; Ro 5:3-5
2. A new source of fellowship!
a. Note: There was a fourth person in the fire! - Dan 3:25
b. The identity of this fourth person is not certain
1) Some think it was an angel
2) Others believe it was a Christophany (a preincarnate
appearance of Christ)
c. Whichever, it suggested a closer communion and fellowship
with God!
d. So our trials can bring us closer to God
1) As explained by the author of Hebrews - He 12:5-11
2) As promised by Jesus Himself - Re 3:12,21; 7:13-17
3. A new opportunity for service!
a. They were promoted to even higher positions! - Dan 3:30
b. Just as Joseph, who in his trials went:
1) From slave to steward
2) From prisoner to Pharaoh's second hand man!
c. So our faithfulness in trials will lead to greater things!
- Mt 25:21; Re 2:25-27
CONCLUSION
1. What a wonderful example of faith in these three young men!
a. Committed to serving God, no matter the consequence
b. Believing that God can bring deliverance, willing to accept death
if He doesn't
c. Demonstrating that faith in the face of fire can lead to greater
things
2. Let's not overlook perhaps the most important outcome of this
incident: glory to God!
a. Note the praise rendered by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon - Dan
3:28-29
b. So our faith (and works) should be to the praise of God - Mt 5:16
3. What kind of faith do we have? Is it like a....
a. Spare tire, used only in the case of an emergency?
b. Wheelbarrow, easily upset and must be pushed?
c. Bus, ridden only when it goes our way?
May our faith be like that of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-Nego,
committed to serving the Lord and demonstrating "Faith In The Face Of
Fire"!
¡Ð¡Ð¡mExecutable
Outlines¡n
03 Chapter 3
Verses 1-30
Verse 1
Nebuchadnezzar, the king, made an image of gold.
Gigantic Idols
We are not without historical confirmation of the narrative as to
the existence of gigantic idols of gold among the Babylonians. Herodotus writes
that in his day there was at Babylon an idol image of gold twelve cubics high;
and, what is still more remarkable, another authority, obviously speaking of the
same statue, mentions that every stranger was obliged to worship it before he
was allowed to enter the city. Diodorus Siculus mentions an image found in the
temple of Bolus forty feet high, which some think was the same as the golden
image of Nebuchadnezzar. Other images almost parallel in magnitude are
mentioned in history. The Colossus of Nero was one hundred and ten feet high.
The Colossus of Rhodes was seventy cubits high, and was considered one of the
seven wonders of the world. According to classic story, it took thirteen years
to construct this colossus; and on its being thrown down by an earthquake, so
great was its weight, it ploughed up the ground, and buried itself under the
ground. These historical facts show that such images were not unusual, and that
it was not impossible to construct such by ancient art. The Colossus of Nero
and of Rhodes were not, however, of gold; nor do we suppose that the image of
Nebuchadnezzar was of solid gold. It must have been either hollow, or made of
wood and covered with gold. It does not appear that the ancients made any but
small images of solid gold. The proportions of this image are out of order,
unless we understand the height to include the thickness of the pedestal, which
it seems to me we should do. (W. A. Scott, D.D.)
Verse 2
Then Nebuchadnezzar, the king, sent to gather together the
princes, the governors.
Society
Society, the union of the many for the interest of all, seems ever
to have been a principal object of God¡¦s care and protection. His providence,
in the order of nature, is manifestly directed to gather men together, to bind
them to one another by the powerful bonds of mutual responsibility, and by the
ineffaceable sentiments of justice and humanity.
In the revealed or written law God has caused religion and society
to advance together. He has, in a manner, amalgamated them with each other. In
defining our obligations with respect to Himself, He has defined our mutual
engagements towards each other. All the precepts of the decalogue tend to the
general utility of mankind. The object of the Gospel is to make of all the
inhabitants of the world but one single people--of that people but one family;
and to imbue that family with but one single aspiration: ¡§Holy Father, keep
through Thine own name those whom Thou hast given Me, that they may be one as
We are.¡¨ And we may assert of Jesus Christ in reference to Society, what He
asserted of Himself in reference to the ancient law, that He ¡§did not come to
destroy, but to fulfil.¡¨ In fact, the intercourse which we carry on among
ourselves gives birth to four descriptions of duty essential to the happiness
of mankind, and to the tranquility of the social condition. Political duties,
which are the foundations of society; magisterial duties, which are its
security; charitable duties, which are its bonds; conventional duties, which
are its elegancies. Now, it is religion alone that enforces and sanctifies
those duties, and, therefore, it alone really protects the interests of
society. Now, the error of all others prejudicial to society, and nevertheless
an error which is very common, is to imagine that the various conditions
existing in the world are no more than the result of chance or of
necessity--that it is not necessary to refer to Divine wisdom for the
explanation of the fact, that our wants once ascertained, it is perfectly
natural that we should seek in the industry of others for those resources we
cannot discover in ourselves--that this exchange of services has produced that
variety of conditions into which society is divided--and that independently of
Providence, nature has conferred authority upon the father of a family,
strength given rule to kings, adulation created the influence of the great, the
public safety suggested the office of the magistrate, luxury and appetite have
been the parents of all the elegant arts. Would a father (and this is the title
by which He delights to be called) forget his children, and leave their future
prospects uncertain and wavering? No; and, therefore, religion displays to us
His providence directed to abundantly supplying our wants and even luxuries.
And how? Why, by means of that variety of social conditions, of which He alone
is the Author. For what other Being than He, who from the discord of the
elements called forth the harmony of the universe, could bind together and
incorporate so many opposing influences, and direct them towards one only end?
What other Being than He, who by means of a few grains of sand arrests the fury
of the waves, could discipline so many furious passions, and fix the invisible
limits which they cannot pass?
Nevertheless, I cannot deny that there is a specious objection
often urged to this fundamental truth; and that is, the great inequality of
conditions among mankind. ¡§Wherefore,¡¨ it may be said, ¡§wherefore is it that of
the same clay are fashioned vessels of honour and vessels of dishonour? Why
that immense distance that separates one man from another? Why so many
enjoyments and so much liberty on the one hand, and so many privations and so
much bondage on the other? Is God an accepter of persons?¡¨ What do you require
Him to do? That He should establish complete equality amongst us? Let us
suppose that He has done so, and nosy mark the consequences. We are all equally
independent, equally powerful, equally great, equally rich. And now tell us of
what advantage would that independence be to us. Should we be competent to
supply all our own requirements, and should we have no need to apply to others
to assist us in our necessity? Of what advantage would our power be to us? To
what use could we apply it? Of what advantage would our grandeur be to us?
Would it attract towards us one single particle of homage or of respect? Of
what advantage would our riches be to us? how could we employ them? That
complete equality once established even, would it last long? Would our ambition
continue to be satisfied? Would it patiently endure so many equals? Would it
not aspire to domination? And what restraint would be applicable to control it?
We should all be rivals, and continually in a state of civil war. That complete
equality once established, who amongst us would undertake to cultivate the
ground, to supply the most pressing wants, to procure the ordinary necessaries
of life? What law, what authority would there be to compel us to do so? We
should perish in consequence of our greatness and abundance; we should obtain
nothing but worthless superfluities while we were requiring actual food and
shelter. In short, to make men all equally fortunate is but another term for
rendering them all equally wretched. There must be a head of a state, that the
state may escape the infliction of many tyrants; there must be great men,
¡§princes and governors,¡¨ to protect the weak; there must be warriors ¡§and
captains,¡¨ to
defend the country; there must be magistrates, ¡§judges,¡¨ ¡§counsellors, and
sheriffs,¡¨ to prevent injustice, and to punish crime; there must be the rich,
¡§the treasurers,¡¨ to employ labour and to reward it; there must be the poor and
needy, that the inconveniences which poverty entails may serve as a spur to
indolence and a warning to sloth. Society rests upon these different states as
upon buttresses that support it. Now, it would be perfectly superfluous in me
to prove to you that labour is the condition on which society exists--that in
certain respects even political commotions themselves are less dangerous than
apathy and sloth--that happiness consists in the mutual understanding which
should exist between various classes, who, acting in concert, and depending
upon each other for an interchange of good offices, meet together by different
roads which converge towards the same centre. Well, it is religion alone which
imparts a true impetus to that activity, by the peculiar stress it lays upon
the conscientious discharge of the various social duties--duties so peculiar to
each separate condition, that every individual is required personally to fulfil
them--so essential, that they will hold the foremost place in the examination,
which at the last great day the Sovereign Judge will institute--so
indispensable, that their absence implies an absence of piety as well,since
¡§without holiness no man shall see the Lord.¡¨ Does human policy watch as
carefully over the interests of society? Does it rise up to protest with equal
sternness against those indifferent spectators who reap abundantly in the field
wherein they have not sown? Of the vast multitude of men of whom society is
composed, how few serve it from other motives than ambition or emolument! The
love of glory urges on the former, the thirst of riches influences the latter.
Fortunately nature condemns from their very birth the greater number to
struggle and to toil. And now observe the distinguishing glory of our holy
faith. Not content with enjoining the fulfilment of the various social duties,
it sets forth as well the manner in which those duties should be fulfilled. Is
it no service to society that religion enjoins that the duties of the state be
discharged with intelligence?¡¨ Abound in knowledge and in all diligence.¡¨ And
who can fail to feel how fatal to the interests of society would be the
influence of those in power if destitute of the necessary knowledge? If they be
warriors, in spite of their valour and intrepidity, to what dangers would they
not expose their country? Or is it no service to society that religion enjoins
that the duties of the state be discharged with decorum? ¡§Study to be quiet,
and to do your own business, and to work with your own hands, that ye may walk
honestly towards them that are without.¡¨ Or does religion confer no benefit on
society when it enjoins, that the motive of action when we are serving our
fellow-men should be a desire to please God--¡§not slothful in business, fervent
in spirit, serving the Lord?¡¨ No other motive would be pure enough nor noble
enough to elevate us above human considerations and our own self-interest. Were
Christianity universally practised even there only where it is professed--were
all mankind to regulate their conduct by the maxims of the Gospel, and careful
to be guided by heavenly motives only; with God over all disposing everything
according to His wisdom, regulating everything by His will, animating
everything by His Spirit, enriching everything by His liberality, sanctifying
everything by His grace, sustaining everything by His power--at the sight of a
state of society like this, who would not be tempted to exclaim with Balaam, as
he contemplated the camp of Israel, ¡§How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob, and thy
tabernacles, O Israel?¡¨ (J. Jessopp, M.A.)
Verse 4-5
To you it is commanded, O people.
The Importance of the Imperative
We cannot do without this word ¡§command¡¨ in our religious
education. It is a Divine word. It would be instructive to trace the history of
that term, and to study its meaning in the various relations which it assumes.
The Bible is full of commandments; in Genesis the Lord commands, in the
Apocalypse there is a commanding voice; and Jesus, gracious, meek, patient,
tender Jesus, commands--He says, ¡§A new commandment give I unto you.¡¨ How,
then, can Jesus give commands? Because of what He is. God can give commands
because He is God; and not only so, but being God, He knows human nature, and
can address it in its own terms, and according to the line of its own instincts
and necessities. When He thunders down His commands there is nothing that
offends the mental or moral constitution on which the commanding voice falls
with ineffable authority. The command awakens something that is already
slumbering in the nature. We must have our duties in the first instance in the
form of commands, but only God can tell what commands are not arbitrary, but
are natural, and operate in the line of instinct and Divine intention. What is
a commandment to one man is an easy task to another. Some hard and all but
impenetrable natures require to be commanded, stirred, roused; and others hear
the word of the Lord and spring to it in obedience that seems to understand it
all ere it be fully spoken. Many have sweetened the bitterness of their lot by
an ample and proper use of the promises who have forgotten that every promise
has behind it or near it a corresponding command. The imperative mood has never
been allowed to fall into disuse in the Bible; it is, ¡§Son, give me thine
heart¡¨; it is, ¡§Love one another¡¨; it is, ¡§Hear my words and do them.¡¨ We draw
the line, then, as between human authority and Divine sovereignty, as between
an arbitrary decree and a command that is in harmony with the wisdom and love
of God, and in harmony with the peculiarity of human constitution and capacity.
(Joseph Parker, D.D.)
Verse 5
The sound of the cornet, flute, harp.
Eastern Musical Instruments
The instruments enumerated here are mostly still in use in the
present time, but some of them have become obsolete. The cornet is a brass
trumpet manufactured in the country, and used in martial music. There are
several kinds of flute, both single and double. The harp is no longer in use,
nor the ¡§psaltery,¡¨ which is a similar instrument of the same kind; they have
been replaced by the ood, which gives a richer sound, and is more portable. The
¡§sackbut¡¨ is a tamboora, a sort of guitar, of various shapes and sizes; in its
most complete and perfect form it is three feet nine inches long, has ten
strings of fine wire, and forty-seven steps. It is played with a plectrum, and
is often inlaid with mother-of-pearl and valuable woods. It is often, however,
of smaller size and less costly materials. The ¡§dulcimer¡¨ is a kanoon, or
sander. The ¡§kanoon¡¨ is the original of our piano, both being probably derived
from the lyre and the harp, whence the piano was first called a harpsichord.
This instrument consists of a box two inches in depth, and of an irregular
form, its greatest length being thirty-nine inches, and its width sixteen.
There are only twenty-four notes, and, like the piano, each note has three
strings, which are tuned with a key. The sounding-board lies under the strings,
and is perforated, and covered with fish-skin where the bridge rests. The
performer lays the instrument on his knees, and strikes the chords with the
forefinger of each hand, to which is fastened a plectrum of horn. Another form
of this instrument, called ¡§santur,¡¨ is a double kanoon, and comes still nearer
to our piano; the strings are of wire, and only double; they are struck with
wooden hammers held in the hand. When used in a procession, this instrument is
suspended from the neck by means of a cord. (H. J. Van Lennep,
D.D.)
The Religion of Ceremonial
Are all the coloured garments so many visions of beauty? Is there
some strain religious in the blare of brazen trumpets and the throb of military
drums? Most of the people that we see gathered together around great sights
would gladly be at home, listening to the voice of child, or friend, or bird.
Do external images fill the soul? is it enough to have a painted God? What
wonder if we begin by worshipping things that are seen? That course would seem
to be natural, and would seem to be able to justify itself by sound reasoning
of a preliminary kind. Who could not in ignorance of other deity worship the
sun? Sometimes he seems to be almost God! How multitudinous are his phases, how
manifold the apocalypse within which he shows his uncounted riches; now so
pale, as if he were weary, an eye half closed in sleep long needed, long
delayed; and then in full pomp, every beam, so to say, alive, and the whole
heaven amazed and delighted at this vision of glory, as if hidden within that
fount of flame and heat there lay ten thousand times ten thousand summers, and
ten thousand times ten thousand purple autumns, with all their largesses of
fruit and flowers and benison, for the sustenance and the nutrition of men;
then lost among the clouds, where, indeed, he seems to be disporting himself in
painting a thousand academies by one look of his eyes; see how he fills the
clouds and seems to shape them, or fall into their shape, making them burn and
sparkle and glitter, and invests them with unimagined and untransferable
colours; a marvellous, glorious sight! Who could not uncover his head in
presence of such glory, and say, Surely this is the gate at least that opens
upon the palaces of God. To worship nature would seem in certain stages of
development to be right. God made it; God made the green grass and the blushing
flower; the great hills, stairways to heights which man never scaled; God made
the valleys and the mountains; and what are these fountains saying to the
hearing ear? Only the true listener can tell; the vulgar man hears nothing in
that splash of water, but the refined soul hears in it melody and song, music
religious, and hint of other music that might please the ear of God. As we grow
in wisdom, in capacity, in understanding, in sympathy, we close our eyes upon
the universe, and say it is no more to us an image that should be sought unto
for purposes of worship; but we see within, by a Divinely directed
introspection, the true altar, the true sanctuary, the true centre of
acceptable worship. Thus we grow from the natural to the spiritual, and when we
have obtained the measure of our growth we say, ¡§God is a Spirit¡¨; if we still
preserve the image, it is as we should preserve a symbol, that was helpful to
us before we saw the thing signified. If our religion is in colour, form,
aesthetic attitude and motion, our religion will surely come to nought; but if
our piety live in eternity, if it feed itself upon the almightiness and the
grace of God, as shown in the Cross of Christ, then it will abide for ever. (Joseph
Parker, D.D.)
O king, live for ever.
The Golden Image Set Up
These last words, ¡§O king, live for ever,¡¨ were designed by those
who uttered them as the expression of the most gross and servile adulation, and
they were doubtless regarded by the monarch to whom they were addressed as the
spontaneous effusion of a reverential and devoted loyally.
I. First, then, THE WORDS OF THIS SALUTATION,
¡§O king, live for ever,¡¨ were, in the mouth of the Chaldeans, manifestly
uttered with a twofold purpose; to dissemble the malignity of the courtiers,
and to flatter the conceit, if not to impose on the credulity of the king. Now,
we do not take upon ourselves to determine whether these Chaldeans had any
notion at all of a state of existence after death, or if so, what those notions
were; but we can hardly conceive that those who believed the Godhead to be of
the substance of silver and of gold could have any reasonable conception of the
spiritual essence, the immaterial, intellectual part of man. Judging from this,
they could have hoped for nothing more, and could have looked for nothing
better after death, than to be resolved into their primal element of dust, and
become even as the brutes that perish. Their salutation, therefore, must have
been the climax of absurdity, because it bare on the face of it what was to
them a perfect impossibility--the violation of a fundamental and universal law
of our being. They knew that the king could not, in the course of nature, ¡§live
for ever¡¨; they knew, that as the ancient monarchs of the nations lay down
every one in his own house, so Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s ample territory must ere long
contract itself to the narrow coffin. But they flattered the proud, in order to
betray the innocent; they deified a bloodstained and capricious tyrant, that
they might doom to death three unoffending strangers and captives, whom they
hated. Now, this is a true portraiture of the world in every age. It exalts the
oppressor, and tramples on the innocent. We may look upon Nebuchadnezzar, then,
in this stage of his career, as a consummate specimen of the favourite of this
world, the courted, the envied, the admired, the adored. The universe lay
prostrate at his feet. This, then, is a specimen and a sample of the world¡¦s
lie. It promises the ungodly what it never can bestow, and threatens the
servants of the Lord with the loss of that which it cannot take away; so that
while it deludes Nebuchadnezzar into the infatuation of believing that he,
because he was a monarch over men, might become a manufacturer of gods, it
binds the servants of the one true and living God hand and foot, and casts them
into the devouring flame, because they fear not those who can only kill the
body, but rather fear Him who is the arbiter of life and death, and who, after
He hath killed, hath power to cast into hell.
II. And now let us
turn from the humbled king of Babylon, TO TRACE THE PRACTICAL BEARING OF THE SUBJECT UPON
OURSELVES. True it is, that in our own age and country
persecution for religion¡¦s sake hath ceased, and with it the miracles that of
old wrought strange deliverance, and the spiritual consolations and supports
that suspended the laws of nature, and sustained the confessor beneath the
scourge and the martyr amidst the flames: but there is no change in the enmity
of the flesh against the Spirit, or in the barrel of the world to God. True it
is, that the oppressor hath no longer at command the burning fiery furnace, nor
the lions¡¦ fearful den; but the evil one still does what he can, though he can
no longer do what he would. If the weapon of the world is no longer cruelty, it
is contumely; if it is no longer torture, it is ridicule. ¡§Live for ever,¡¨
these words are a memorial of our own immortality, and they should call upon
every one to consider, on the principles laid down in Holy Writ, whether he who
is born for eternity is also living for it. Now we, like these intrepid and
devoted children of the faithful Abraham, cannot at one and the same time bow
down before the golden idol and adore the living God; we must be equally
decided in our service with them. ¡§Examine yourselves,¡¨ then, ¡§whether ye be in
the faith; prove your own selves.¡¨ (T. Dale, M.A.)
They serve not thy gods,
nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.
The Golden Image
In last chapter we read of
an image which Nebuchadnezzar saw in vision. In this chapter our attention is
directed to an actual image which that monarch erected in honour of his gods.
This image was made of gold. We cannot suppose the whole structure to have
consisted entirely of that metal. Rich as Nebuchadnezzar was, neither he nor
any other prince possessed so much disposable wealth as would have been
required in order to construct a figure of solid gold of equal dimensions with
that mentioned in this passage. We should suppose that the structure consisted
of a pedestal or shaft surmounted by an image, that the image properly so
called was made of gold, that the pedestal was formed of some baser material,
and that the height refers solely to the elevation of the image from the
ground, and not to its size. This image ¡§was set up in the plain of Dura in the
province of Babylon.¡¨ Some suppose that Dura was the name of an extensive plain
in the neighbourhood of the capital. Others, of high authority in Scriptural
geography, are of opinion that it was some enclosure within the city adjacent
to the temple of Bolus. From the passage itself we would be disposed to infer
that it must have been without the city and at some distance, for if it was
within the walls of Babylon there was no need of stating, as is here done, that
it was ¡§in the province of Babylon.¡¨ Various opinions have been entertained
respecting the end that Nebuchadnezzar had in view in the erection of this
image. Some are of opinion that he wished to claim for himself a place among
the gods, and that the image was erected as the outward symbol of his
deification. Nebuchadnezzar was evidently an aspiring man. We see no reason to suppose
that Nebuchadnezzar intended by this image, publicly, avowedly, and formally,
to claim Divine honours for himself. If such had been his intention, it would,
doubtless, have been distinctly announced in the proclamation by which his
subjects were enjoined to give it worship. The refusal of the three children to
worship the image is spoken of by their accusers as a refusal to worship the
king¡¦s gods. It is thus apparent from the testimony of all the parties
concerned in this matter, that the image was erected in honour of the king¡¦s
gods. In all ages, and in all lands, whose political history is known to us,
religion has been degraded into an engine of state and an instrument of
tyranny. Hence professed atheists have affirmed that religion is a mere invention
of rulers to hold mankind in subjection. This assertion is self-destructive The
fact that rulers made use of religion as a means of upholding and strengthening
their government, evidently implies that religion had a previous existence, and
that they had recourse to it as an instrument of policy on account of the great
influence which they had perceived it to possess over the minds of men.
National uniformity in matters of religion has ever been the idol of
politicians. Conformity to the established religion has been one of the most
common tests of loyalty. There can be little doubt that in setting up this
image Nebuchadnezzar had a similar end in view. It was not erected simply as a
mark of reverence to his idols, but also, we may conceive, as a political
expedient to strengthen and consolidate his government, by promoting uniformity
of religion among his subjects. To him it would probably appear that this step
was not only warranted by the ordinary reasons in behalf of uniformity, but
demanded by the peculiar state of the Babylonian empire. A great part of that
empire had been newly acquired. It was composed of many nations, Jews,
Egyptians, Moabites, Ammonites, Syrians, Edomites. Posts under his government
and places in his army would be held by persons from all these countries. To
unite a kingdom so variously composed, and obtain the permanent ascendancy over
countries so newly acquired, nothing would appear more likely than to bring all
his subjects to be of one religion. The religion, whether of an individual or a
nation, is the most permanent link of connection between the present and the
past. Religion exerts a powerful influence in the formation of character; so
long, therefore, as these varied nations retained a diversity of opinions, they
would never be thoroughly amalgamated into one empire. The image being erected,
Nebuchadnezzar commanded all in authority under him, princes, governors,
captains, judges, treasurers, sheriffs, and all the rulers of the provinces, to
come to his dedication. Being convened, ¡§An herald cried aloud, To you it is
commanded, O people, nations, and languages, that at what time ye hear the
sound of the cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of
music, ye fall down and worship the golden image that Nebuchadnezzar the king
hath set up: and whoso falleth not down and worshippeth shall the same hour be
cast into the midst of a burning fiery furnace.¡¨ In this proclamation there are
two things: First, The command to fall down and worship the image; which
extended to all persons specified, without exception. Secondly, The penalty
denounced against such as refused. Viewed in the light of the Divine law, this
proclamation was most tyrannical. It was a violent outrage on the most sacred
rights of human beings. But by this proclamation, Nebuchadnezzar constituted
himself supreme dictator in religion to his whole realm; thereby he usurped the
prerogatives of the Godhead, by interposing his authority between the
conscience of the creature and the will of his Creator. To command his subjects
to fall down and worship the image, was to convert law, the bulwark of liberty,
into an engine of oppression. But how much more odious and detestable does his
conduct appear when we think of the dreadful penalty annexed to the
proclamation! In this case, penal laws are always criminal, in the sight of
God. It is always wrong to attempt to propagate religion by force. It is
contrary to the nature of religion. It is contrary to the nature of man. It is
most foolish and inexpedient in point of policy. To attempt to propagate
religion by force is to make might the standard of right, which is opposed to
man¡¦s nature as a reasonable being, and to the worship of God as a reasonable
service. And what could be more foolish? It is attempting an impossibility.
Force cannot reach the mind. Force may make cowards, it may make dissemblers,
it may make hypocrites and apostates, but it never did, and never can make a
convert. What, therefore, can be more inexpedient in a government than to persecute
men for adhering to their religion? Is not the success of such a measure the
memorial of a nation¡¦s ignominy? For, when persons are thus induced to fall
down and worship what they believe to be wrong, do they not proclaim that they
are sacrificing their integrity, that they are violating their consciences,
that they are time-servers and apostates, and that they are men in whose
principles no dependence can be placed, when interest and duty are disjoined.
The law enacted by Nebuchadnezzar was most tyrannical, most unreasonable in
itself, and most inexpedient in point of policy. The command of Nebuchadnezzar
met with the most prompt compliance. What a lamentable spectacle was this, to
see the rulers of a great nation bending before tyranny--to see rational and
immortal beings doing homage to a figure formed of inanimate materials--to see
the creatures of God worshipping a creation of man! And yet, with three
exceptions, the whole assembled mass fall down and worship it as one man. The
thrre exceptions were the excellent companions of Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abed-nego. Unawed by the presence of the king, unseduced by the terrors of
the burning fiery furnace, they refused to fall down and worship the golden
image which Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up. This act was warranted and
demanded by the moral law. In the second commandment it is written, ¡§Thou shalt
not make unto thee any graven image,¡¨ etc. In the bustle of that
extensive scene, the king of Babylon saw not their neglect. But despotical
kings are always encompassed by minions, who, in such a case, are forward to
act the part of spies and informers. ¡§Then certain Chaldeans came near and
accused the Jews.¡¨ Incapable of accounting for their conduct on any known
principle of court politics, they endeavoured by artful insinuations to
represent their conduct to the king in the most odious light, Nebuchadnezzar
probably felt proud of the fine spectacle which the plains of Dura that day
presented. His spirit, we may conceive, rose within him with the swell of the
music and the plaudits of the worshippers. His pride would be flattered by the
reflection that he was the lord of this assembly of rulers. This information,
therefore, came upon him like a thunderbolt out of a cloudless sky. And how did
these Jews act when their God is thus insulted, and the alternative imposed
upon themselves of bowing to the image or burning in the furnace? They quitted
themselves like men. Many valuable lessons may be deduced from this passage,
particularly in regard to the manner in which we should adopt, and the spirit
in which we should adhere to a profession of religion. There are few things in
which men act with greater frivolity than in regard to the solemn matter of
making a profession of religion. There are many who fall in with whatever is
most popular. Others adhere to whatever is most fashionable among the upper
classes of society, and would rather walk on the broad path of destruction with
fashionable men than on the narrow way of life without them. How often have human
laws enjoined what the Divine law prohibits? How often have God¡¦s people been
persecuted because they were unwilling to render unto Caesar the things which
are God¡¦s? There are seasons when it is no easy matter to obey God rather than
man. It may bring ruin on our fortunes and reproach upon our names. It may
expose us to a violent and untimely death. But even in these cases we ought to
surrender our lives rather than part with our conscientious convictions. In
such an emergency natural courage will ¡§faint and fail.¡¨ The formalist will
become a coward; the hypocrite will become an apostate; and no man can stand
securely but he who has confidence in the Divine character, and on the ground
of this confidence is able to resign himself implicitly to the Divine
management. (William White.)
Pious Youth
First we have a state
religion persecuting the people for their religious opinions, and threatening
them with death if they do not comply with its decrees. The second thing that
strikes us is the measures taken to popularise the king¡¦s religion, and
persuade the people to embrace it. These measures were two-fold. They were
seductive and minatory. They were directed to the sensual tastes and natural
fears of man. If the voluptuous swells of music from all kinds of instruments
could not cause the people to fail down and worship Bel, why then the furnace
was to do its work. And have we nothing like this in our times? The king
desired these young men to conform to his decree, but did not prove to them the
truth of his religion. There were many flattering arguments which these young
men might have urged against the conviction of their earlier education, and in
favour of complying with the king¡¦s command, which they did not urge, nor even
seem to have allowed to have so much as a moment¡¦s consideration. They might
have said--but they did not so say--that it was their duty to obey the king,
and worship the image, for thiswas the established religion of the empire. They
chose to obey God rather than man, God alone is Lord of the conscience. These
young men might have urged also--but they did not do so--that it was most
expedient to bow down and worship the image. Mark their situation. They were
captives in the hands of an absolute Oriental monarch, who could take off their
heads at any minute, and no one ever ask why or wherefore. They were, moreover,
advanced to places of power, where they were able, perhaps, to do many kind
things for their suffering countrymen. They remembered their old Hebrew
Catechism, which had taught them that God had said to them, ¡§Thou shalt not bow
down to any idol gods, nor worship them.¡¨ It is plainly taught in God¡¦s Holy
Word that right is always true expediency. It may not seem to be so; but it
will always be found so in the end. Nor did these three Hebrew youths urge that
they were compelled to obey the king¡¦s commandment because they were under
great personal obligations to him. He had shown them much kindness, and heaped
honours upon them; but their duty to God was stronger than gratitude to the king.
Employers, parents, teachers, and benefactors may lay you under great personal
obligations; but you must follow your conscience in the matter of religion. ¡§He
that loveth father or mother more than me cannot be my disciple.¡¨ Nor did they
urge that they would be out of fashion, and marked for their singularity, if
they did not worship this golden image. Singularity assumed for the sake of
being singular or famous is contemptible, and indicates a weak mind; but to be
singular as a necessary result of not sinning as others do, is worthy of a
Christian. When duty requires us to be singular, then we must not hesitate. Do
not mind that the multitude are against you, if God be with you. ¡§If sinners
entice thee,¡¨ God says, ¡§consent not.¡¨ ¡§Follow not the multitude to do evil.¡¨
Nor did these young men urge the terrible penalty to which they were exposed by
disobeying the king¡¦s commandment. Is there any young man here who is saying to
himself, ¡§I would become a Christian; I wish to save my soul; but if I do, I must
give up such and such pleasures; I must shut up my shop on Sunday, and quit my
lake rides on the Lord¡¦s day?¡¨ And what if it does cost you all these pleasures
to save your soul? Would it not be better to be thrown into the fiery furnace
than to have both body and soul cast into hell for ever? ¡§What shall it profit
a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?¡¨ Your privileges are
greater than those of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. The Gospel has unfolded
to you its grace, glory, and riches. How then can you escape if you neglect so
great salvation? But why, think you, did these young men refuse to obey the
royal decree?
1. They could not obey it because of the force of their religious
impressions.
2. Consistency of character and of profession forbade them to worship
idols. They were Hebrews. They had avowed Jehovah to be their God. They could
not obey the king without denying the God of their fathers. What satisfaction
would it have been, think you, to their pious parents, who in their homes at
Jerusalem had taken so much pains to instruct them in the law and in the
worship of the true God, could they have seen how firmly their sons adhered to
the principles they had implanted with so many fears, and tears, and prayers?
Never allow yourselves to imbibe any creed or do anything inconsistent with
your mirth, education, privileges, and destiny.
3. These Hebrew youths refused, because they were sustained by the
hope of deliverance. ¡§When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee;
and through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee. When thou walkest through
the fire thou shalt not be burned, neither shall the flames kindle upon thee.¡¨
They believed that God would make all things work together for their good. The
special lessons from the fiery furnace of Dura to the young men of the
nineteenth century are:
I. IN THE COURTEOUS BUT FIRM REFUSAL OF
THESE HEBREW
YOUTHS, WE HAVE A
MODEL FOR THEM IN LESS PAINFUL CIRCUMSTANCES. When God¡¦s
providence calls for martyrs, then He will give grace sufficient for the
crisis. The principle, however, must be well settled, that if the day comes
when you are required to give up your liberty or religious freedom, or perish
in the field of battle or at the stake, you would firmly prefer the latter. The
prior point, in our times of freedom from persecution, is to become the true
followers of Christ. There are not wanting authors and public teachers who
argue that these young men should have complied with the wishes of the king,
because the religion of Bel was the established religion of the empire. As
loyal subjects, they should have embraced the same religion that was professed
by their king. This is the old worm-eaten effete doctrine, that the government
or the king is the head of the church, and the keeper of the consciences of the
people. Such is not the teaching of the Bible. The Kingdom of Jesus Christ is
not of this world; nor has He given to any human power the authority of
enacting laws for Him. The Scriptures are the only rule of faith. Mormonism prevails
in Utah; if I go to the Salt Lake, must I turn Mormon? Brahminism is the
established religion of certain parts of India and China, must the English and
Americans that go thither become Hindoos? If you live in Constantinople, must
you, therefore, become a Mohammedan? If you live in Paris, is it right for you
to become an Infidel, Papist, or Socialist; or if in Germany, a Pantheist or a
Protestant, simply because any one of these may be the established or
prevailing creed around you? It is monstrous to suppose that a man¡¦s duty to
his Creator is to be decided by any such standard as this. The only authority
binding on the conscience is the authority of God. It is the most potent
element of social or individual life. It may be tossed upon the billows of popular
fury, or east into the seven-fold heated furnace of persecution, or be trampled
to the dust by the iron heel of despotism; but it is absolutely imperishable.
¡§Hers are the eternal years of God.¡¨ Nor can those die who fall in her great
cause.
II. AS CHRISTIAN YOUNG MEN YOU HAVE,
THEREFORE, THE GREAT CONSOLATION OF KNOWING THAT
THE GREATEST EFFORTS OF THE MIGHTIEST MEN ARE UTTERLY UNAVAILING AGAINST THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST. All the power of
earth and hell cannot burn out one single truth from God¡¦s word; nor can all
the popes and assemblies, cabinets, and armies on the globe add one single
doctrine or precept to the Bible necessary to salvation.
III. Learn then,
and though this lesson has been taught before, I must repeat it, that true
expediency is true principle. ¡§The path of duty is the path of safety.¡¨
¡§Honesty is the best policy.¡¨ It was so with Joseph. It was so with Daniel and
his three friends. It has always been so with the great and the good. Whatever
God calls you to do or to suffer, fear not to obey. He will be with you in
whatever He calls you to. If He calls you to enter the fiery furnace, hesitate
not one moment. He will be with you, and either sustain you or deliver you, or
make it conducive to your higher and future good. (W. A.
Scott, D.D.)
Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s Golden
Image
In the second chapter,
which immediately precedes the history of the golden idol, we have an account
of a prophetic vision granted to Nebuchadnezzar, and in which were foreshadowed
the destinies of the four great secular empires whose foundation succeeded the
foundation of the kingdom of Israel, and preceded the foundation of
Christianity. Now in this vision it is to be remarked that these empires were
exhibited to the king under the guise of a great statue or image. And explaining
the meaning of this strange and tremendous apparition, Daniel addresses the
king thus: ¡§Thou art this head of gold.¡¨ Now there is a circumstance in the
description of the golden idol set up in the plain of Dura in the next chapter
which has greatly puzzled commentators, and has been used by some critics to
throw discredit on the whole narrative. This circumstance is the utter
disproportion of the idol. Assuming it to have been a human figure, how can we
imagine a statue representing a human figure sixty cubits high and only six
cubits broad? a statue, the height of which is exactly ten times its breadth?
Now to me, this monstrous disproportion seems at once to hint at a different
conception of what the idol was. I believe it to have been a representation of
the image the king had shortly before beheld in his prophetic dream. But, mark
you, not of the whole of that image. The other parts of the terrible apparition
had been explained by Daniel as denoting other kingdoms less exalted by nature,
less glorious in appearance than that of the Babylonian monarch. He was ¡§the
head of gold.¡¨ Accordingly the image he set up in the plain of Dura was, I
conceive, a representation not of the whole image of the vision, but simply of
the head of gold, elevated on a pedestal of the same metal, tall enough to
exhibit it completely to the whole multitude convened to worship it. The image
of the plain of Dura was, in other words, the image of the prophetic dream, so
far as it concerned Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s self; it was the representation of himself
as the mightiest sovereign the world had ever seen, or ever was to see; and the
adoration he demanded for it was a deification of mere worldly power and
grandeur in his own person. This hypothesis will appear less startling when we
recollect that Oriental kings were often--indeed, generally--considered as
emanations from the Deity, incarnations of His attributes; and were approached
with exactly the same forms of adoration as were used to the Deity they
represented or embodied. And in this case, the representation of the king¡¦s
superhuman power and grandeur might actually seem to be authorised by the
prophetic vision from which Nebuchadnezzar had adopted it. Viewed in this
light, we can at once perceive why all the great officials of the empire, the
princes, captains, judges, sheriffs and all the rulers of the provinces were
assembled to its dedication--of the people at large nothing is said--and why
such an extraordinary and terrific punishment was denounced on those who might
refuse to prostrate themselves before it. The official who would not adore the
consecrated representation of his own monarch¡¦s power and place in the history
of the world might justly, according to Oriental notions, be regarded as a
traitor. Nothing but disloyalty could refuse the worship demanded. Why should
he not display to all his officers of state the disclosures made to him by the
Divinity and explained by the master of the magicians? Why not require Divine
honours to be paid to the Divinely revealed representation of his own great
place In the destinies of the world--in the history of the human race? Assuming
this conception of the connection between the vision of the second chapter and
the idol of the third chapter to be correct, how significant a hint does it not
give us of the propensity of the human heart to turn even God¡¦s benefits into
poison! Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, like Pharaoh of Egypt, had been made the
recipient of superhuman knowledge, though on a far grander scale than Pharaoh.
He had been favoured with a disclosure of the destinies not of one single
kingdom, but of all secular power whatever, previous to the advent of the
Christ. But, instead of giving heed to the impressive warning, instead of a
salutary lesson of humility, a conviction of the nothingness of all mere
worldly power, he had been so puffed up with being told that he was the first
and the greatest of those temporal powers that were so soon to be destroyed by
the great spiritual Power, as to convert the very emblem of warning into an emblem
of daring and blasphemous impiety. God interposes by miracle, not in every case
where such interposition might seem desirable, but only in cases peculiar and
critical--cases which mark epochs and decide great destinies. Now such an one
was pre-eminently the case of the three youths in the burning fiery furnace.
God¡¦s people had been completely subjugated by the mighty autocrat of Babylon.
Had the three Jews perished in the furnace destined to annihilate all who would
not pay Divine honour to the embodiment of human power, the cause of God might,
perhaps, have been lost; His people might have been so discouraged that not a
remnant would have maintained the truth. Here, then, was a worthy case for
Divine interposition.
1. Individually we learn from the behaviour of the three Jews before
the terrible King of Babylon, that we have nothing to do with expediency when
principle is at stake. How plausibly might they not have reasoned themselves
into compliance had expediency been consulted! They were no politicians. They
simply asked, Hath God forbidden His people to bow down and worship idols, or
hath He not? If He hath, no reasoning can make that right which He hath said is
wrong. And as the command was plain and direct, they felt their obedience to it
must be plain and direct. Let this magnificent example of heroic steadfastness
in the path of duty teach us that simple but difficult lesson how to say NO when we are tempted
or threatened in order to make us do what we are aware is wrong. The man who
has learned that lesson can go through the fiery furnace of this world
unscorched, unharmed, without even the smell of its flame passing on him; for
One shall walk beside him who has also overcome temptation--One whose form
shall be indeed ¡§the form of the Son of God!¡¨
2. The same considerations apply with added force and on a grander
scale to the case of Christ¡¦s Church on earth and every part thereof. The
history of that church is one of the strangest and saddest ever written by
human passion and human error on the course of time. How the very consolations
of God, the sweet ordinances of the Gospel, have, by the cunning of God¡¦s
adversary and the fierce narrowmindedness of man, been transformed into whips
of scorpions, with which loveless zeal and arrogant pride have scourged
generation after generation, they know too well who know anything of the story
of Christianity. (C. P. Reichel, D. D.)
Is it True
If you would become
followers of the Lord Jesus Christ it will be well for you to count the cost.
It was our Lord¡¦s custom to bid men consider what his service might involve.
His frequent declaration was, ¡§He that taketh not his cross, and followeth
after me, is not worthy of me.¡¨ If we count upon ease in this warfare we shall
be grievously disappointed; we must fight if we would reign. One reason of this
is that the world, like Nebuchadnezzar, expects us all to follow its fashions
and to obey its rules. The god of this world is the devil, and he claims
implicit obedience. Sin in some form or other is the image which Satan sets up
and requires us to serve. The tyranny of the world is fierce and cruel, and
those who will not worship its image will find that the burning fiery furnace
has not yet cooled. The world¡¦s flute, harp, sackbut, and psaltery must sound
for you in vain. A nobler music must charm your ears and make you bid defiance
to the world¡¦s threatenings. The true believer¡¦s stand must be taken, and he
must determine that he will obey God rather than man. The love of the world and
the love of God will no more mix than oil and water. To attempt a fusion of
these two is to bring confusion into your heart and life. As Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abednego said to Nebuchadnezzar, so will true believers say to the world:
¡§We will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set
up.¡¨ Now, if you can refuse to sin, if you can refuse even to parley with
iniquity, it is well with you. If you stand out for truth and righteousness,
your conscience will approve your position, and this in itself is no small comfort.
It will be an ennobling thing for your manhood to have proved its strength, and
it will tend to make it stronger. Peradventure some of you may say, ¡§We will
not bow before the gods of the world, but we will worship God only; we will
follow Christ, and none beside.¡¨ This is a brave resolve; you will never regret
it if you stand to it even to the end. We are glad to hear you speak thus; but
is it true? ¡§Is it true?¡¨ It is very well to profess, but ¡§Is it true?¡¨
I. Follower of
Christ, be ready for the question ¡§Is it true?¡¨
1. Do not reckon to live unnoticed, for a fierce light beats about
every Christian. You will be sure to meet with some one or other whom you
respect or fear, who will demand of you, ¡§Is it true?¡¨ Nebuchadnezzar was a
great personage to these three holy men; he was their despotic lord, their
employer, their influential friend. In his hands rested their liberties and
their lives. He was, moreover, their benefactor, for he had set them in high
office in his empire. Many young Christians are tried with this temptation.
Many worldly advantages may be gained by currying favour with certain ungodly
men who are like little Nebuchadnezzars; and this is a great peril. They are
bidden to do wrong by one who is their superior, their employer, their patron.
Now comes the test. Will they endure the trial hour? They say that they can
endure it, but is it true? Nebuchadnezzar spoke in peremptory tones, as if he
could not believe that any mortal upon the earth could have the presumption to
dispute his will. He cannot conceive that one employed under his patronage will
dare to resist his bidding; he demands indignantly, ¡§Is it true?¡¨ He will not
believe it! He must have been misinformed! You will meet with persons so
accustomed to be obeyed that they think it hard that you do not hasten to carry
out their wishes. The infidel father says to his boy, ¡§John, is it true that
you go to a place of worship against my wishes? How dare you set up to be
better than your father and mother?¡¨ Often ungodly men profess that they do not
believe in the conversion of their fellow workmen. Is it true, John, that you
have become religious? A pretty fellow! Is it true? They insinuate that you are
off your head, that your wits have gone wool-gathering, and that you are the
dupe of fanatics. You will not be able to go through life without being
discovered; a lighted candle cannot be hid. There is a feeling among some good
people that it will be wise to be very reticent, and hide their light under a
bushel. They intend to lie low all the war time, and come out when the palms
are being distributed. They hope to travel to Heaven by the back lanes, and
skulk into glory in disguise. How was it Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego came
up to the front when the king¡¦s command was given? They could not consistently
keep back. They were public men, set over provinces, and it was needful that
they should set an example. Rest assured, my fellow Christians, that at some
period or other, in the most quiet lives, there will come a moment for open decision.
Days will come when we must speak out or prove traitors to our Lord and to His
truth.
2. To be fully prepared to answer the enquiry of opposers, act upon
sound reasons. Be ready to give a reason for the hope that is in you with
meekness and fear. Be able to show why you are a believer in God, why you
worship the Lord Jesus Christ, why you trust in His atoning sacrifice, and why
you make Him the regulator of your life. Ask the Lord to help you to go to work
with Bible reasons at your fingers¡¦ ends; for those are the best of reasons,
and bear a high authority about them; so that when the question is put to you,
¡§Is it true?¡¨ you may be able to say, ¡§Yes, it is true, and this is why it is
true. At such a time God revealed Himself to me in His grace, and opened my
blind eyes to see things in a true light.¡¨ When the mind is established, the
heart is more likely to be firm. Know your duty and the arguments for it, and
you are the more likely to be steadfast in the hour of temptation.
3. Next, take care that you always proceed with deep sincerity.
Superficial profession soon ends in thorough apostasy. Only heart-work will
stand the fire. We need a religion which we can die with.
4. This being done, accustom yourself to act with solemn
determination before God on every matter which concerns morals and religion.
Many very decent people are not self-contained, but are dependent upon the
assistance of others. They are like the houses which our London builders run up
so quickly in long rows; if they did not help to keep each other up they would
all ramble clown at once, for no one of them could stand alone. How much there
is of joint-stock-company religion, wherein hypocrites and formalists keep each
other in countenance. Where things are not quite so bad as this, yet there is
too little personal establishment in the faith. So many people have a ¡§lean-to¡¨
religion. If their minister, or some other leading person were taken away,
their back wall would be gone, and they would come to the ground. We have need
nowadays to set our face as a flint against sin and error. We must purpose in
our own heart what we will do, and then stand to our purpose. Happy he who
dares to be in the right with two or three. Happier still is he who will stand
in the right, even if the choice two or three should quit it. He who can stand
alone is a man indeed; every man of God should be such.
5. Once more, when your determination is formed act in the light of
eternity. Do not judge the situation by the king¡¦s threat and by the heat of
the burning fiery furnace, but by the everlasting God and the eternal life
which awaits you. Let not flute, harp, and sackbut fascinate you, but hearken
to the music of the glorified. Men frown at you, but you can see God smiling on
you, and so you are not moved. It may be that you all be discharged from your
situation unless you can wink at wrong and be the instrument of injustice. Be
content to lose place rather than to lose peace. Now I am sure that these good
men believed in immortality, or they would never have dared the violence of the
flames. These brave men dared the rage of an infuriated tyrant because they saw
Him who is invisible, and bad respect unto the recompense of the reward. You
also must come to live a great deal in the future, or else you will miss the
chief fountain of holy strength. God make us champions of His holy cause!
Heroism can only be wrought in us by the Holy Ghost. Humbly yielding your whole
nature to the power of the Divine Sanctifier, you will be true to your Lord
even to the end.
II. But now,
secondly, IF YOU CANNOT SAY
THAT IT IS TRUE, WHAT
THEN? If, standing before the heart-searching God at this time,
you cannot say, ¡§It is true,¡¨ how should you act? If you cannot say that you
take Christ¡¦s cross, and are willing to follow Him at all hazards, then hearken
to me and learn the truth.
1. Do not make a profession at all. If it be not true that you
renounce the world¡¦s idols, do not profess that it is so. It is unnecessary
that a man should profess to be what he is not; it is a sin of supererogation,
a superfluity of naughtiness.
2. If you have made a profession, and yet it is not true, be honest
enough to quit it; for it can never be right to keep up a fraud. A false
profession is a crime, and to persevere in it is a presumptuous sin. Will you,
then, go back to your old ways?
3. I am sure you will if you cannot answer the question of my text;
but remember, that in so doing you will have to belie your consciences. Many of
you who are not firm in your resolves yet know the right. You will never be
able to get that light out of your eyes which has shone into them from
God¡¦s word. You can never
again sin so cheaply as others; it will be wilfulness and obstinacy in your
case.
4. Remember also that by yielding to the fear of man you are demeaning
yourself. There shall come a day when the man that was ashamed of Christ will
himself be ashamed; he will wonder where he can hide his guilty head.
5. If your avowal of faith in Jesus and opposition to sin is not true
you had better withdraw it and be silent; for by a groundless pretence you will
dishonour the cause of God, and cause the enemy to take up a reproach against
His people. If Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego had stood before Nebuchadnezzar
and had made a compromise, it would have dishonoured the name of the Lord.
Suppose they had said, ¡§O king, we believe in Jehovah, but we hardly know what
to do in our peculiar circumstances. We desire to please thee, and we also
dread the thought of the burning fiery furnace, and therefore we must yield,
though it greatly grieves us.¡¨ Why, they would have cast shame upon the name of
Israel. O, do not talk about principle, and then pocket your principles because
they are unfashionable, or will cost you loss and disrepute. If you do this you
will be the enemies of the King of kings.
6. I want you to remember also that if you renounce Christ, if you
quit Him in obedience to the world¡¦s commands, you are renouncing eternal life
and everlasting bliss. You may think little of that to-night, because of your present
madness; but you will think differently before long. Soon you may lie on a sick
bed gazing into eternity, and then your estimate of most things will undergo a
great change.
III. But now,
thirdly, let us consider what follows IF IT BE TRUE. I hope that many here can lay
their hands upon their hearts, and quietly say, ¡§Yes, it is true; we are
determined not to bow before sin, come what may.¡¨
1. Well, then, if it is true, I have this much to say to you: state
this when it is demanded of you. Declare your resolve. This will strengthen it
in yourself and be the means of supporting it in others. Is it true?
2. Then joyfully accept the trial which comes of it. Shrink not from
the flames. Settle it in your minds that, by Divine grace, no loss, nor cross,
nor shame, nor suffering, shall make you play the coward. Say, like the holy
children, ¡§We are not careful to answer thee in this matter.¡¨ They did not
cringe before the king, and cry, ¡§We beseech thee, de not throw us into the
fiery furnace. Let us have a consultation with thee, O king, that we may
arrange terms. There may be some method by which we can please thee, and yet
keep our religion.¡¨ No; they said, ¡§We are not careful to answer thee in this
matter.¡¨ You may lose a great deal for Christ, but you will never lose anything
by Christ. You may lose for time, but you will gain for eternity; the loss is
transient, but the gain is everlasting.
3. If it be true that you are willing thus to follow Christ, reckon
upon deliverance. Nebuchadnezzar may put you into the fire, but he cannot keep
you there, nor can he make the fire burn you. The enemy casts you in bound, but
the fire will loosen your bonds, and you will walk at liberty amid the glowing
coals. You shall gain by your losses, you shall rise by your down-castings.
Many prosperous men owe their present position to the fact that they were
faithful when they were in humble employments. Do right for Christ¡¦s sake,
without considering any consequences, and the consequences will be right
enough. If you take care of God¡¦s cause, God will take care for you.
4. If you will stand up for Jesus, and the right, and the true, and
the pure, and the temperate, and the good, not only will you be delivered, but
you will do great good. This Nebuchadnezzar was a poor piece of goods; yet he
was compelled to acknowledge the power of these three decided and holy men. The
man who can hide his principles, and conceal his beliefs, and do a little
wrong, is a nobody. He is a chip in the porridge; he will flavour nothing. But
he who does what he believes to be right; and cannot be driven from it--that is
the man. You cannot shake the world if you let the world shake you; but when
the world finds that you have grit in you, they will let you alone.
Nebuchadnezzar was obliged to feel the influence of these men. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The Hebrew Youths
I. THE SINGULAR CONDUCT OF THESE YOUTHS.
There stand three men upright--when all are bowing--who dare to disobey the
king¡¦s command--who know a higher authority than that of any earthly potentate
. . . Well for us if we have learnt to judge our actions otherwise than by the
popular voice and popular example. If our inquiry is, not what saith the
multitude, but what saith the Lord.
II. THE SINGULAR TRIAL OF THESE HEBREW
YOUTHS. The punishment which Nebuchadnezzar pronounced against
those who should disobey his decree was that they should be cast into a burning
fiery furnace. This form of punishment seems to have been common in Babylon.
Jeremiah speaks of ¡§Zedekiah and Ahab whom the King of Babylon roasted in the
fire.¡¨ That it was so, is moreover evident from the fact that the furnace was
to be heated ¡§seven times more than it was wont to be heated.¡¨ It was in the
face, then, of such a terrible doom that these youths determined to stand true
to their God--that they refused to conform to the idolatry with which they were
surrounded. What a trial of their faith; and what strong faith must theirs have
been which enabled them in the face of all this to remain ¡§stedfast and
unmoveable.¡¨ ¡§Though he slay them, yet will they trust in Him.¡¨ Nebuchadnezzar,
unfortunately, is not the only one who has presumed to dictate a religion to
his fellows, and sought to enforce his command by the stern logic of the
flames. Not long ago we visited the old city of St. Andrews, and saw where
Patrick Hamilton and George Wishart suffered amid the fires ¡§for the Word of
God and the testimony of Jesus Christ--the reek from the faggots infecting as
many as it did blow upon.¡¨ And, as we east our eyes over the continent of
Europe, many similar spectacles rise to view. Now in France it is a Shuch, in
Bohemia a Huss; and has not Spain of late been but reaping the harvest which it
sowed when kings and nobles gathered themselves together and looked with
unpitying eye upon the followers of Christ suffering amid the blazing piles?
III. THE SINGULAR DELIVERANCE OF THESE
HEBREW YOUTHS (W. R. Inglis.)
The Fiery Trial
Not unwisely did an old
Scottish matron once remark, that ¡§It is easy to utter the fourth petition of
the Lord¡¦s Prayer, when there is plenty of bread in the house.¡¨ If, however,
one has no supply, and is without the means of procuring a morsel, strong faith
is required to present the supplication aright. Similarly, it may be averred
that it is easy to confess Christ when no pains and penalties are attached to
the avowal of belief in Him. Most probably the self-confident and boastful
would fail in such a testing time; while the meek and retiring would be borne
through, because constrained by felt weakness to lean on the Almighty arm. It
has been often and truly said, that dying grace is not given till the dying
hour; neither is the grace of humble boldness in the cause of the Lord fully
conferred, till there arise an occasion demanding its exercise. Twenty-three
years appear by this time to have passed since Daniel was elevated to the
position of ruler over the whole province of Babylon, and his three special
friends made governors of subordinate districts. Meanwhile, much prosperity had
been experienced by the empire in all departments. Nebuchadnezzar, it is
believed, had during these years overcome not a few kingdoms bordering on his
own. Egypt had fallen under his sway, exactly as Jeremiah had prophesied; and
to the west or the south of Chaldea there were none strong enough to dispute
the sovereignty of the king of Babylon. Forgetting the lesson that had been
taught him by his dream regarding the compound image, he began to fancy that to
his idol-god Bel, or Baal, his great success was wholly due. Evidently without
asking advice from Daniel, he proposed to force all who were under his
government to do homage to this idol. As many various nations had been
compelled to submit to himself, he was resolved that they should also worship
his god. Where was Daniel at this period? Possibly he had already told his
master that he must be excused from attending at the dedication of the image;
and as the king could not run the risk of losing his services, his absence was
permitted. Possibly he may have been in attendance of the monarch during the
worship of the idol, and refused to bow down before it; but his great influence
prevented anyone from daring to accuse him. But much more probable is it that
he was absent from the capital, and engaged at a distance in connection with
some pressing business of the State. He may have been even sent away purposely
by the king, and thus have had no opportunity of taking part with his brethren
in their protest against idolatry. Had he been present, we may well judge that
he would either have stood beside them, as being guilty like themselves, or, if
unaccused himself, would have used his utmost efforts with Nebuchadnezzar on
their behalf. The monarch was much excited. He caused Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego to be instantly brought before him. Plainly did he repeat his
command, that bow they must to his idol, or die.
I. WE SHOULD PREFER SUFFERING TO SIN.
To have bowed the knee to the golden image on the plain of Dura would have been
an aggravated transgression on the part of any of the sons of Jacob. They knew
well that there was no other God but the God of Israel, and the first and
second commandments of the moral law strictly forbade such an act. Better to
run the risk of the threatened punishment than, by yielding, to dishonour their
Creator, and cast away their souls. Marvellously were these confessors of
Jehovah rescued from the devouring fire; for the Lord, whom they honoured, had
great purposes to serve by their preservation. Suppose, however, they had been
burned to ashes, would they have been losers by their fidelity? Assuredly not!
Only the sooner had they reached the rest that remaineth to the people of God.
An early confessor of the Lord Jesus was summoned to the presence of the
Emperor of Rome, and threatened with banishment, if be dared to remain a
Christian. ¡§Me thou canst not banish,¡¨ was the noble answer, ¡§for the world is
my Father¡¦s house.¡¨ ¡§But I will take thy life,¡¨ said the Emperor. ¡§Nay, but
thou canst not, sire, for my life is hid with Christ in God.¡¨ a I will deprive
thee of thy treasures,¡¨ continued the Emperor. ¡§I have no treasures that thou
canst seize,¡¨ was the response, ¡§for my treasure is in heaven, and my heart is
there.¡¨ ¡§But I will drive thee away from man, and thou shalt have no friend
left,¡¨ ¡§Nay, that thou canst not,¡¨ replied the bold and faithful witness, ¡§for
I have a Friend in heaven, from whom thou canst not separate me. I defy thee.
There is nothing thou canst do to hurt me.¡¨ Where the risk of loss is greatly
less than in the case in which we have just referred, it is always far better
to suffer than to sin. The draper lad in the north of Ireland, who would not
assist his employer to cheat a customer, and was turned adrift in consequence,
was no loser by his integrity. Through this very circumstance he became a
minister of the gospel, and afterwards rose to an eminent position in his
profession. There is little likelihood that any of us will be exposed to such a
fiery ordeal as the three Jews in Babylon. We may, however, have to meet with
much petty persecution, if we faithfully follow the Lamb, and show by our lives
that we are His.
II. LET US TAKE CARE THAT WE FOLLOW NOT
DOWN BEFORE THE GOLDEN IMAGE ERECTED AMONGST OURSELVES. Not in
Britain only, but in every land under the sun, does this idol lift up its head.
Those who worship at its shrine probably embrace by far the largest number of
every kindred, and tribe, and nation. ¡§Thou shalt have no other gods before
me,¡¨ says Jehovah. Yet in the very temple of God is this idol set up by its
votaries, and crowds of worshippers devotedly bend the knee. No sweet music of
sackbut, or psaltery, or harp, is needed to induce men to adore. This idolatry
is even considered respectable. In America this idol is irreverently known by
the name of ¡§The Almighty Dollar¡¨; with us it is simply called wealth or money.
A mercantile man, who had an extensive acquaintance with various classes of the
community, used to state it as his serious opinion that the love of money ruins
perhaps more souls than even strong drink. Like other sins, this mammon-worship
never dwells alone. In due time it becomes the fruitful parent of many vile
things, which will, ultimately, develope into scorpions, to torment the soul
that nourished them. How comforting it is to know that imperishable and
unalienable wealth can be had simply for the accepting. ¡§The GIFT of God is eternal
life, and this life is in His Son.¡¨ (Original Secession Magazine.)
The Fiery Furnace
How long after the events
recorded in the last chapter the setting up of this great image took place, it
is impossible to tell. The presumption is, however, that several years had
elapsed. The building of this huge image to the favourite god of
Nebuchadnezzar, probably the god of battles, was most likely to celebrate and
commemorate, with suitable splendour, the final triumph of his arms over all
the nations of the earth (v. 4). The profound impression made upon his mind by
the recalling and interpretation of his awful dream by Daniel seems to have
faded away, since we find him setting up an image of gold and requiring all his
subjects to worship it. This was a tyrannical act of uniformity, intended to
consolidate the religion as well as the politics of the empire. We do not know
where Daniel, Ezekiel, and other eminent Israelites were at this time, or how
far the mass of captive Jews complied with this decree; but it seems that the
three young princes, who with Daniel had been faithful in refusing to eat the
king¡¦s meat, and who had been subsequently elevated to high political office in
the province of Babylon, refused, or at least failed, to do homage to the idol.
I. THE RAGE OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR.
Nebuchadnezzar was at the summit of his power; he had introduced a great
statue, in the form of an image of his god of battle, to celebrate his
universal sovereigns; his decree of universal obedience to his god, which was
also an act of homage to himself, seems to have been generally obeyed. The
defection of these princes from obedience seems to have reminded him that,
after all, there were those who looked beyond him and higher than his fancied
god for a true king. There were but two courses open to him. He must either at
once recognise the right of the Hebrews to their religious liberty or he must
suppress them. To do the former would be to unsay and undo all that was involved
in the great celebration now going on; whereas, by summarily enforcing the
decree of uniformity, especially upon the persons of the high officers of
state, he thought he might increase his power, and by one stroke of severity
bring all his subjects unto submission. There are several points of evidence
that his conscience was aroused as well as his anger. When we refuse to obey
conscience, we are always apt to fly into a rage and do the thing forbidden by
conscience with ten times more violence. This king of Babylon is only the type
of all the world-powers that have succeeded him, who have been enraged against
the faith of God¡¦s elect, and have sought to destroy that faith by Violence.
1. The arrest of the three princes. ¡§Then they brought these men
before the king.¡¨ How often since have the children of faith been accused and
brought before kings and their magistrates, to give an account of their faith
and answer for their disobedience to some ungodly and tyrannical decree uttered
for the purpose of destroying the ¡§faith once delivered to the saints.¡¨ The
very means of which heathen kings make use to suppress the faith, is made the
instrument of God for its universal spread.
2. The fearful alternative. The king seems, after all, to have
greatly respected these princes, and secretly desired to find a way of escape
for them. The sight of them and the remembrance of their faithful service and
of the peculiar marks of Divine favour which had been bestowed upon them for a
moment cooled down his rage.
3. The vain boast of the king. ¡§And who is that God that shall
deliver you out of my hands?¡¨ This bit of vain boasting reminds us of the
speech of Pharaoh to Moses: ¡§Who is Jehovah that I should obey his voice to let
Israel go? I know not Jehovah, neither will I let Israel go.¡¨ (Exodus 5:2.) Also of the defiant proclamation of Sennacherib to Hezekiah and
Jerusalem: ¡§Who are they among all the gods of the countries that have
delivered their country out of mine hand, that the Lord should deliver
Jerusalem out of mine hand?¡¨ (2 Kings 18:35.) And yet God destroyed Pharaoh, and put a hook in Sennacherib¡¦s
nose by which He led him in ignominy back to his own city, to perish miserably
at the hands of his sons. How empty the boasts, how unbounded the folly of men
who challenge Jehovah to conflict!
II. THE DEFENCE OF THE PRINCES.
1. Not careful to answer. ¡§O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to
answer thee in this matter.¡¨ Had the Holy Spirit already whispered in their
hearts the instruction which Jesus afterward gave His disciples? ¡§When they
deliver you up, take no thought how or what ye shall speak, for it shall be
given you, in that same hour, what ye shall speak.¡¨ (Matthew 10:19.) How calmly these young men stood there before the king! God
will answer for us when the emergency comes. Argument will not avail against
your arbitrary power over us, or against the injustice of your tyrannical
decree.
2. Their confession of faith. ¡§Our God whom we serve.¡¨ In making
their answer, they distinctly announced that they believed in the one only and
true God, and Him they served. This was their, justification for not bowing
down to the idol which the king had set up, nor worshipping any of his gods.
Their faith was not speculative, but real. It dominated their lives, and
secured their glad service. The full power of faith does not always manifest
itself until the time of need comes, but, when once the emergency arises, faith
springs to the fore and asserts itself.
3. Their confidence in God. ¡§If it be so, our God is able to deliver
us from the burning fiery furnace, and He will deliver us out of thine hand, O
king.¡¨ Notice this, that though their faith was absolute as to God himself and
their relation to Him, yet it was not absolute as to their deliverance out of
the fiery furnace, only as to God¡¦s ability to deliver them.
4. Ready to die. If the worst came to the worst, they were quite
ready to die.
III. IN THE FURNACE AND OUT AGAIN.
God does not promise His saints immunity from suffering in this world; on the
other hand, He tells us that He has chosen us in a furnace of affliction.
1. The princes are cast into the furnace.
2. An awful warning. Now a strange thing happened. As the three men
who bore these princes to the furnace approached the open door to cast down
their helpless victims, a sudden draught of air sent out a volume of flame
which slew them on the spot. God seemed to give warning then and there that it
was a dangerous thing to touch His saints or do them harm.
3. The
astonishment of the king. A while ago he was in a furious rage; now we see him
trembling with astonished fear. Not only did the swift death that overtook his
three mighty men startle him, but as he looked into the raging flames he saw a
wondrous sight. Here was a fact on which he had not counted. By some mysterious
power the young men ¡§had quenched the violence of the fire¡¨ (Hebrews 11:34), and they were accompanied by the presence of another man, who
seemed to have them under his protection. It is not necessary for us to attempt
any discussion of this marvellous miracle of deliverance. Whether there was an
actual and objective fourth man in the furnace with the three princes, and
whether that fourth one was the very Son of God come down in a temporary bodily
form, as perhaps the angel of the Lord, or whether the king saw a vision, is of
no material importance. That there was a miracle is clear from the fact of the
safety of the princes in the flame. There is nothing antecedently impossible in
the literal truth of the whole matter. ¡§For the eyes of the Lord are over the
righteous, and His ears are open unto their prayers, but the face of the Lord
is against them that do evil. And who is he that will harm you if ye be
followers of that which is good?¡¨ (I. Peter 3:12, 13.) (G. F.
Pentecost, D.D.)
I. THE UNHOLY OBJECT THAT WAS OFFENSIVE
TO THEIR CONSCIENCES It was like a proud, arrogant, Eastern
despot, with an ever victorious army, to signalise a great triumph, by setting
up some great colossal image. It was more than a memorial, it was a deification
of himself. These Babylonian monarchs were not content with being kings or even
priests, they must be gods, the object of their people¡¦s veneration. It helped
them to keep their iron heel upon the necks of their subjects, and feed their
own vanity.
Three Noncomformists
II. THE NATURAL HATRED OF THEIR ENEMIES.
This was their chance. They had been watching and waiting for this. It is no
wonder that they seized upon it with avidity. There is no love among the
children of darkness for the sons of light. The saved of the cross have ever
their cross to carry. There are shopmates and associates who are never slow to
make you the butt of all their spleen, and to pour out all the malice of their
soul upon you. The high offices which these youths held in the State exposed
them to the greater vehemence of persecution. It is the way of the world to
foster hostility against those above them, and to seek an opportunity to
overthrow such. There are men who will sneak into power over your heads, if there
be no other way. Yet it is better to endure with Christ than to go alone
without Him.
III. THE REFUSED DOOR OF ESCAPE.
When their accusers had laid the charge before the king, there seems reason to
believe that the king¡¦s first flush of anger was at the sense of his possible
loss--he could not endure to think that three of his most capable rulers had
been so foolish as to expose themselves to death. He could afford to lose a
whole host of such accusers better than lose one Hebrew youth. Possibly, also,
the shrewd king saw through their too thinly veiled jealousy. Anyhow, the king
offered them a way of escape. His words in effect suggest what we pleasantly
call diplomacy, ¡§Just say you blundered, you did not properly understand the
meaning of my edict, and I will have the whole ceremony gone through again for
your sakes, then you can bow down and save yourselves.¡¨ Many of us would have
fallen into that trap; it was so ingenious a compromise. It needed great
decision of character to answer that aright. One day the officer came to Bunyan
in his prison, on Bedford Bridge, and said, ¡§Now, Bunyan, if you like to go
free, you can; there is only one trifling condition imposed,, and that is that
you abstain from preaching.¡¨ ¡§If that is it,¡¨ answered Bunyan, ¡§then I cannot
go out free, for as sure as I reach yonder field, I shall stand up and preach
Christ.¡¨ That one condition was the impossible condition. You have your battles
to fight, perhaps the issues are not so clear as in the cases before us, yet I
pray that you may be quick to discern the right from the wrong, and swift to do
the right.
IV. Now a great
moral courage like this must be born of GREAT CONVICTIONS. With Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abed-nego, convictions were worth having, and worth dying for. To these youths,
God was greater, higher than the king. God was first, the king second. Their
first consideration was not their prospects, but their duty. He has not the
martyr spirit who acts indifferently. When you do not bow to the world¡¦s edict,
expect not to be credited with conscientious convictions, it will be put down
to obstinacy. When John Bunyan refused to keep silent, he was obstinate. When
these Hebrews refused to worship idols, they were obstinate. So their
persecutors say, but posterity has accorded them justice, and declared it an
act of conscience; a spirit of fidelity to God.
V. THREE THINGS THAT CREATED THEIR NOBLE
CONDUCT.
1. They made religion a personal thing. It was not a matter of the
state or community, but of realised individuality; and personal responsibility
to God. No other but a personal religion is worth the name. No other will save
your soul.
2. They had repented towards God, and put their trust in Him. They
had turned from evil with mind and heart, and set themselves to seek righteousness.
3. They put eternal things before temporal. They saw the world in its
true light, and took it at its true estimate. The eternal endures, the temporal
passes away. (F. James.)
Devotion to Principle
I. THEY HAD CONVICTIONS.
They were not merely Israelites in name; they believed in Israel¡¦s God¡¦. It
would not be surprising if, so far from home and under such adverse conditions,
the memory of their ancestral religion had gradually ceased and their devotion
faded out. But their piety was more, apparently, than an inheritance; it had,
before their transportation, been ingrained m heart and conscience and life. If
religion be a mere matter of form, it may be changed as readily as one changes
his coat; but when it takes possession of the soul it keeps company with a man
for ever. Hence the importance of convictions. They believed in God, in the
truths which He had revealed to them, in the moral responsibilities which He
had imposed upon them. The word ¡§belief¡¨ is, by some, derived from the Saxon by-lifian,
that is, the thing we live by.
II. THEY WERE LOYAL TO THEIR CONVICTIONS.
They were called on to pass through a most trying ordeal. The day of the
dedication of the golden image was at hand. What should they do?
1. They might avoid all trouble by joining in the acclamations of the
multitude and prostrating themselves before the golden image.
2. They might prostrate themselves as a mere matter of form, saying,
¡§After all, religion is of the heart; and God will know that inwardly we are
devoted to Him.¡¨ But compromise, in a question of right or wrong, is the
subterfuge of the weak and unworthy.
3. The only alternative was to stay indoors that day. Why not? Then
must they have said to one another, ¡§We are three cowards.¡¨, God wanted them to
go out into the plain of Dura and preach a sermon on heroic piety.
III. GOD TOOK CARE OF THEM.
He always takes care of His own. Here is a sure word of promise, ¡§I will never
leave thee nor forsake thee.¡¨ (D. J. Burrell, D.D.)
On the Conduct of
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego
Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego were three very young men, worshippers of the true God in a heathen
land. They were exposed to much persecution and distress on account of their
religion, yet they were enabled to act with faithfulness and prudence ¡§in the
midst of a crooked and perverse generation.¡¨ The true Christian will be obliged
to stem the surrounding stream; there will, there must, be opposition; if he
were of the world, the world would love its own; but because he is not of the
world, but is chosen out of the world, therefore the world will hate him. Now
let us imagine a person, and especially a young person, such as were the three
individuals mentioned in the text, in such circumstances. How difficult
oftentimes and painful the line of duty! How much need is there of some
animating example, or affectionate and faithful advice, to keep such a person
from offending against conscience, and forgetting his obligations to his
Redeemer! To be faithful where ethers are unfaithful--to worship God truly in a
family, a parish, a neighbourhood, In which almost all around us conspire to
forget Him. It can be performed only by the aid of Him who is at once a
Comforter and a Sanctifier. It appears from the narrative, that Nebuchadnezzar
the king set up a golden image, and commanded all his subjects to fall down and
worship it. In like manner, in the present clay, is sin in its various shapes
an idol which the world delight to serve. By nature we are its slaves and
votaries; and it is not till we have learned, like those three young men, to
come out from the world and to worship the true God, that we begin to feel the
burden of this service. New idols are constantly presented to confirm the
sinner in his slavery, and to tempt the true Christian from his allegiance to
God. Babylon surely abounded with idols enough; yet a new one must be set up
for the occasion; and thus the world is always varying its temptations.
Whatever be the last evil custom, the last new mode of sinning, men are
expected to follow it. Thus, no sooner was the command given, than ¡§princes,
judges, governors, captains, treasurers, sheriffs, counsellors, and rulers,¡¨
with the people at large, all with one accord eagerly flocked to the idolatrous
rite. These three persons only are mentioned as not complying with the order--a
proof that even the most youthful Christian ought not to be ashamed of
religion, or to reject it; namely, because there may be but few around him who
think as seriously as himself. Should all the rich, the wise of this world, the
gay, the splendid, be against serious religion; should a thousand new baits and
allurements be added to seduce us from it; should unsuspected dangers and
persecutions, spring up every moment around our path; yet we may learn from the
example before us a lesson of faith, and constancy, and reliance upon God.
These three young men, we find, did not court martyrdom or persecution; they
did not break out into violent invectives against other persons; they gave no
willing offence--thus teaching another most useful and important lesson. The
Christian is not to affect anything that may justly draw down the opposition of
the world. He ought, as much as in him lies, to live peaceably with all
men--but where this is impossible, and the offence arises entirely from the side
of the world who dislike his earnest piety, without being able to impeach his
character or conduct, he may learn from the example before us how to act so as
at once to glorify God and to preserve his own peace of mind. Behold, then,
this illustrious example! Firm and decided for Jehovah, these three martyrs
approached the eventful spot. Life or death was the alternative. No human way
of escape was open before them. Thus tempted to waver, on the one hand, by
dread of torments and death, they might also be allured, on the other, by hopes
of reward. They might even be ready to plead that the sacrifice was but small.
These and various other reasonings might naturally enter their minds; and, had
not Faith been powerfully in exercise, would, doubtless, have overcome their
resolution. But this Divine grace was able, amidst all, to preserve them. Were
this Divine grace existing in full vigour in our minds, even the youngest and
most timid Christian would be able to withstand all the artifices of the world,
the flesh, and the devil; and to say with Joshua of old, ¡§Choose ye this day
whom ye will serve; but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.¡¨
Instead of being ashamed or afraid of confessing the name of a crucified
Redeemer, and of living as becomes His faithful disciples, we should use the
decided language before us; and, placing our whole trust and confidence in the
supporting arm of an all gracious Father, should learn to do everything, and
bear everything, rather than forsake the cause of our Redeemer. There are four
things which are often powerful obstacles in the path of the youthful
Christian; namely, the allurements of pleasure, the commands of authority, the
dread of persecution, and the specious solicitations of friendship and
kindness. All these occurred in the case before us; and to a far greater degree
than usually, or indeed ever, takes place in the present age.
1. They overcame, in the first place, the allurements of pleasure.
What a festive scene was before them! The ¡§cornet, flute, harp, sackbut,
psaltery, dulcimer, and all kinds of music,¡¨ united their persuasive notes to
tempt them to sin. Pleasure assumed all its most winning and seductive shapes
to court their compliance. Yet, though in the midst of health and youth, they
steadily refused to join the multitude to do evil; they accounted the reproach
of Christ better than all the poisoned baits of the world. They were,
doubtless, considered by those around them as gloomy and precise persons, who
railed at what others thought innocent pleasures--but they knew the side they
had taken; they knew also the power and love of their heavenly Parent, and they
feared not the result.
2. Neither, again, could the commands of authority tempt them to
commit this sin. They were strangers and captives in a foreign land; the hand
of power was over them; they were represented as factious persons, as enemies
at once to the government and the religion of the country; Nebuchadnezzar, a
despotic monarch, was infuriated against them--yet they stood firm. They knew
that the first authority to be obeyed is God.
3. The dread of persecution, we have already seen, they also manfully
overcame; nor did they less resist the specious solicitations of kindness and
friendship. Many a young Christian, who could have braved all the terrors of
open persecution, has given way to this temptation, and has for ever ruined his
soul, for the sake of that friendship with the world which is enmity against
God. Not so these illustrious sufferers. Though they had received innumerable kindnesses
from Nebuchadnezzar, and were in the way of receiving many more; though
nourished by his bounty, and loaded with his favours; yet when religion was to
be the sacrifice, they would not, they durst not make it. The result is well
known; God wrought a miracle in their favour; His presence was with them in the
fire; while their persecutors were consumed in the very act of casting them
into the flames--an awful proof of the danger of opposing the cause or the
people of God. Not even the garments of these triumphant confessors were
singed; nothing was consumed in the furnace except their bonds. They became
more free than they were before they were thrown into the flame; and in like
manner the Christian, in the present day, who resolutely bears the cross of his
Redeemer, often finds that the more he is persecuted for righteousness¡¦ sake,
the more he enjoys freedom and happiness in his own mind. His shackles are
consumed in the fire, and he is frequently rendered more bold and persevering
in the cause of God, by the very efforts which are made to overcome his
constancy. (Christian Observer.)
The Three Witnesses on the
Plains of Dura
I. The lessons
taught by the narrative of the Holy children.
I. As to the
reality of faith.
2. As to the reward of faith. In their hopes they were not
disappointed; for they had the presence of God which saved them. (Isaiah 43:2; Isaiah 63:9.)
II. Application of
the narrative to our own times. The plain of Dura is a picture of the world;
Nebuchadnezzar and his image pourtray the mammon-worship to which mankind is
called by common consent and by every device. But the true servants of God
refuse; they cannot serve God and mammon.
1. The choice requires a deep and abiding faith, which
The Refusal to Worship the
Golden Image
It has sometimes and
justly been remarked, that truth is far more wonderful than fiction. Events
certainly have transpired in the history of individual men which no fictitious
narrative can approach.
I. In the first
place, observe, THE MANDATE OF
IMPERIAL POWER WHICH HAD BEEN ISSUED. The person from whom the
mandate now referred to had emanated, was Nebuchadnezzar, the monarch of the
vast and gorgeous empire of Babylon. New in the mandate before us there was
heinous and presumptuous sin; and we shall endeavour to notice the elements of
which that heinous and presumptuous sin consisted. And we remark
1. That it was a tyrannical encroachment beyond the just limits of
civil authority. The monarch of Babylon had not, nor has any other monarch or
person invested with worldly station or worldly power, the right of anywise
controlling or attempting to influence the religious professions and religious
deportment of his subjects. Human governments were created by Divine
arrangement, in order that monarchs might order things aright in their secular
or political capacity; and their legitimate power of interference extends only
to overt acts which are socially beneficial, on the one hand, or which are
socially pernicious and injurious, on the other. Obedience to reasonable
commands in this respect is an obligation; but obedience to commands attempting
to control opinion and conscience is no obligation at all.
2. Again, you will observe of this mandate, that it was a daring
impiety against the majesty and claims of the only true God. You doubtless
remember at once the law which that Creator had promulgated in early times, in
direct denunciation of the apostacy referred to, pronounced by His own voice
and written by His own finger--¡§Thou shalt not have any gods before Me.¡¨ ¡§Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image,¡¨ etc.
3. Again, you will observe of this mandate, that it was a cruel
outrage on the impulses of benevolence and of humanity. To threaten men that if
they did not fall down and worship a golden image they should be cast into a
furnace of fire there to endure the very worst and most excruciating agonies
which the human frame can undergo, was, indeed, beyond expression savage. And
here we cannot but observe an illustration of the keenness of despotic power in
all periods of time.
II. THE MANNER IN WHICH THIS IMPERIAL
MANDATE WAS TREATED.
1. And first, you will observe that there was firmness. Let us be
¡§valiant for the truth upon the earth¡¨; and let it be our constant aim, that
being ¡§followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises,¡¨
we may indulge the glowing hope of being ultimately united in their glory.
2. And again, you will observe, that besides firmness there was also
meekness. There was no ebullition of self-sufficiency or of anger; there was
respect for regal dignity and station--there was forbearance, there was
quietness, there was readiness to suffer; they resisted the wrong, but they did
not rebel against the penalty. It is always important, in advocating the rights
of conscience and of religious truth, that in the same manner mildness should
be blended with courage, and gentleness with resolution. The want of this
spirit among those who have pleaded the right of conscience and of truth has
often inflicted deep injury upon the best and the holiest of causes. There has
been the indulgence of a rugged dogmatism and vehemence; there has been not
seldom a resort to the use of force, the fighting of battles, and an endeavour
after retaliation; and even when revenge would have struck deep injury upon
both liberty and religion, and would have mournfully retarded and held back the
time of their progress and the era of final freedom,
III. THE PRINCIPLES UPON WHICH THE
TREATMENT OF THAT MANDATE WAS FOUNDED, AND UPON WHICH IT WAS JUSTIFIED. You will
observe, in the analysis of the narrative, that they were principles worthy of
the occasion, and amply vindicating the course which was pursued.
1. Observe, there was conviction of their duty and responsibility to
God. Their language is--¡§our God whom we serve.¡¨ They were endued with
reverence and with love to Him, and these principles, associated with the relationship
they embodied, prevented by moral necessity that they could be guilty of the
glaring impiety of adoring publicly, in the presence of immense masses, a thing
graven by art and man¡¦s device, created by man¡¦s base passions for man¡¦s base
and bad designs. In the principle in this manner enunciated, you will observe,
they took the highest ground under the highest influences--religion, imparted
and preserved by the Spirit of
God. And this is alone
worthy of the occasion when the rights of conscience and of truth are to be
vindicated.
2. Again, you will observe also, there was confidence in the power
and readiness of God to deliver. We have seen that the monarch of Babylon
uttered this challenge--¡§Who is that God that shall deliver you out of my hand?¡¨
And then they replied--¡§We are not careful to answer thee in this matter. If it
be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery
furnace, and He will deliver us out of thine hand, O king.¡¨ Let us cherish the
confidence now. Let us cherish it for ourselves, and know that ¡§nothing shall
separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus the Lord.¡¨ Let us
cherish it in behalf of the cause which is to us dear as our immortal
spirits--the cause of the Redeemer¡¦s glory in the salvation of man and the
conversion of the world; and let us never be guilty even of dreaming of such an
era as when the church shall be in danger. False systems, which have usurped
the name, may be in danger, but the true church never. Can the throne of the
eternal Father be in danger?
IV. THE RESULTS IN WHICH THE TREATMENT
THUS VINDICATED AND JUSTIFIED WAS MADE TO ISSUE. You will observe
here what a singular combination of circumstances claims from the narrative our
regard. The immediate result was the infliction of the punishment. ¡§Then was
Nebuchadnezzar full of fury, and the form of his visage was changed against
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego: therefore he spake, and commanded that they
should heat the furnace one seven times more than it was wont to be heated.¡¨
Observe the method in which that deliverance was accomplished. Lastly, you must
observe the characteristics by which this deliverance was distinguished. It was
accomplished by the agency of the Son of God; and its characteristics require
to be noticed. It was, you will observe, indisputably attested. There was
nothing equivocal in the mode by which the deliverance was known. And this only
indicates a general principle in the Divine interpositions--that when God
interposes for the welfare and deliverance of His people, there is nothing
uncertain; there is not such an intermingling of secondary instrumentalities
that we are unable to separate or to discern the interference of the power of
the great First Cause; there is always something in every event by which a
devout and enlightened mind is able to pronounce ¡§God is here; here is the work
of God.¡¨ And it is a delightful fact in the history of the church now, as it
will be in the annals of the church in time to come, that wherever God
interferes for the welfare of His people He accomplishes His work thoroughly.
We observe again, that the deliverance produced a vast public impression. The
impression, as it was immediately produced, is noticed in the last verses of
the chapter: ¡§Nebuchadnezzar spake, and said, Blessed be the God of Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abed-nego, who hath sent His angel, and delivered His servants
that trusted in Him, and have changed the king¡¦s word, and yielded their
bodies, that they might not serve nor worship any god except their own Cod.
Therefore I make a decree, that every people, nation, and language, which speak
anything amiss against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, shall be
cut in pieces, and their houses shall be made a dunghill; because there is no
other God that can deliver after this sort. Then the king promoted Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abed-nego, in the province of Babylon.¡¨ The decree manifested a
mighty impression on the mind of the monarch. Some more especial lessons.
1. And, in the first place, we learn from the narrative before us the
value of early piety.
2. Again, we learn also the immense importance of decision for God
under the most difficult of circumstances. If the example of these Hebrew
youths at this crisis had been wanting, even had their personal piety remained
intact, how evil would have been the consequence! Had they with some mental
weakness bowed, or had they been absent far away under some plausible pretence
or excuse--how different would have been the result! Not a voice to be raised for
God amidst that vast assembly, and the honour of God deeply and painfully
compromised in that nation and other nations for ages!
3. And then, finally, we learn the folly of opposition to the people
and to the cause of God. It cannot be hindered by the blandishments or by the
opposition of the world; it stands aloft amidst the wreck of empires, and it
suffers not amidst the fury of contending nations; it rides upon the whirlwind
and directs the storm, and never shall cease its manifestation until it shall establish
an empire bounded only by the limits of the universe, and terminating only with
the destruction of the world. See to it that you oppose not that, individually,
or by combination, which is indestructible. ¡§He that sitteth in the heavens
shall laugh, and the Lord shall have you in derision¡¨; and so shall it be,
until you shall ¡§perish from the way when His wrath is kindled but a little.¡¨ (J.
Parsons.)
The Three Jews in Babylon
It is truly a sad and
awful spectacle--to behold a great monarch, and the personages representing the
population of a great empire, with perhaps a numerous throng of the common
people, assembled for such a purpose. Consider what man should be on earth!
Reflect, that the right
state would have been, that all mankind should be intelligent and solemn
worshippers of the true God, of Him alone; the merely right state, below which,
the scene becomes a spectacle of horror and misery, for the vital principle of
all good is wanting. Think, then, of that great empire, that prodigious multitude
of human spirits (and nearly all the rest of mankind being sunk equally low)
ready to prostrate themselves in adoration of a figure of metal, from the hands
of the artificers. Look at them in such prostrations, all over the world, and
say, that man is not fallen! Between that state, and the simply, merely, right
state, how awful the difference! In the incalculable human mass of a whole
idolatrous world, we are shown here and there an individual, or a diminutive
combination of individuals, little shining particles, specimens of what the
right state of the world would have been. But if they were specimens of no more
than what was right--then, what power of thought can estimate, what language
describe--that condition of the general substance, from which they shine out in
contrast! The right state of the sun is to be one full orb of radiance; that
though there be some small spots and dimmer points, it should be in effect a
complete and glorious luminary. Imagine, then, if you can, this effulgence
extinguished, and turned to blackness, over all its glorious face, excepting
here and there a most diminutive point, emitting one bright ray like a small
star. What a ghastly phenomenon! and if it continued so, the utter ruin of the
system. But such, in the history before us, we behold the condition of the
human race--of which that empire was so large a province. We behold three men
true and faithful in the grand essential principle, among the innumerable host
that were sunk, debased, and lost, as to that which is the supremely essential
matter to man. In other pagan lands, however, in the same age, there was not
one such. In Babylon, a few. Observe, it is quite in the nature of things that
prevailing evil should be ambitious to prevail entirely. And here it was to be
brought to the trial, whether any would dare to refuse to be idolaters, in
conformity to the whole great assemblage.. The history of the design on the
part of the monarch would be curious if we could know it. How he should
conceive such a project. Were there not gods enough in his city and empire for
all the worship and offerings for which the people could spare time and cost?
The thing least strange in the case, was perhaps (for he was man), that he
should forget what he had learned by experience of the God of Daniel, though,
by his own confession at the time, ¡§a God of gods,¡¨ and superior to all known
in his empire or in the world. But, then, was the new god to excel both all
them and that God too? If not, what need? and what just claim? and what was to make
him thus excel? It is a surmise of some learned men (Grotius) that it might be
designed as the act of deifying, on rather of expressing and proclaiming the
deification of, his deceased father. At any rate, a very leading prompter in
the affair was the monarch¡¦s own self-importance. It was for him to show
himself lord of even the religion of his subjects. It was for him to constitute
a god for them, if he pleased. Then there was the process; an examination of
the public, or rather the royal treasures--the gold collected and computed--the
consultation and employment of artificers--operations of the smithery--frequent
statements or inspections of the progress--perhaps reports circulated through
the empire of the grand business that was going on. It is most likely that the
imperial mandate to the great man of all the provinces had been despatched some
while before, appointing the time; and that the idol was erected but just
immediately against the specified day. This grand assembly was summoned for the
act of dedication. The great men had been summoned as a kind of representatives
of all the people of the empire. Perhaps not one of them failed to be there
from any principle of conscience against idolatry. And as to the willingly
compliant conduct of the assembly, one is a little disposed to wonder at the
king¡¦s having made ready such an expedient of persuasion, as that which he
points at, to enforce his command--that is, the furnace, which was prepared and
conspicuous near the station of the monarch and the idol. He certainly had not
been accustomed to experience any disobedience to his commands. Why, then, such
an argument of persuasion at hand? This might be for mere despotic pomp--to
impress terror of the very thought of such a thing as disobedience. But it may
be suspected that this was possibly done at the instigation of the haters of
Daniel and his three friends. Their faith was warned of another Monarch, and
also of another fire! a proper fear of whom, and of which, will overcome all
other fear. ¡§Fear not them who can kill the body, but after that have no more
that they can do; but fear Him who is able to destroy both body and soul in
hell.¡¨ They were certain to be at the place, without any force used by their
enemies. They were assured that, in the present case, there must not be allowed
a grand triumphant day to idolatry and the impious pride of power--undisturbed
by at least a protest in the name of the Almighty. Was it for them, when their
eternal Lord was to be dishonoured, to slink away into a base impunity? And,
besides, were they to give to their own people, in captivity there, the lesson
and example of betraying, even negatively, their religion, the only true one on
earth? They knew their duty, and addressed themselves to perform it. It would
seem that this duty devolved on them alone. A question might arise concerning
the numerous other Jews then in Babylon--what became of them? Were they placed
out of account on this grand occasion? It has been conjectured, in answer,
that, as this was to be the solemn, primary act of sanctioning, authorizing,
establishing, the new worship, the common people might, in this first instance,
be left out of the account as being held of no weight; that it was the chief
men only of the empire that were wanted, or held of any value for this purpose.
There were, then, three men come on the ground under the fearful vocation to
brave the authority, and power, and wrath, of a lofty potentate--the
indignation of all his mighty lords, and the rage of a devouring fire. We
admire heroic self-devotement in all other situations--we are elated at the
view, for instance, of Leonidas and his small band calmly taking their station
in Thermopylae in the face of countless legions. But here was a still nobler
position taken, by men who were fit to take it, because they were sure not to
desert it. We may suppose the utmost calmness--the most unostentatious manner
in these three men; that belongs to real invincible fortitude. And they had no
occasion to begin with parade--to make a flourish of premature zeal! Exhibition
enough was to come erewhile! They were ¡§to be made a spectacle to God, and to
angels, and to men.¡¨ There was nothing they could need to say; it was past the
time for consulting, questioning, or mutual exhortation. They were in the wrong
place, if anything remained to be yet decided. But think of the brief interval
of suspense and silence between the conclusion of the herald¡¦s proclamation and
the first note of the signal-music! What would be their sensations in waiting
for it to strike? Think of the intensity of listening! How much the soul may be
said to live during such moments, when not amazed and stupified! And at whose
dictate--under what conviction--were they thus submissively performing, in
appearance at least, the most solemn act that human, that created beings can?
The mere dictate of a creature, that was one day to become dust. Thus this
proud, and numerous, and lordly assembly acknowledged that neither their bodies
nor their souls were their own. But so acknowledged, too, the three men that
remained standing upright. Their bodies and souls were not theirs to surrender,
to a monarch or to an idol. They belonged to another Power; and to Him their
bodies, if He should so appoint, were to be offered in sacrifice on that altar which
was flaming full in their view. It were going, perhaps, quite to the extreme of
possibility, if we should suppose in them such perfect self-possession that
they could look around with regret and compassion on this wide field of
prostrate and degraded humanity. But they had not long to look; there were
vigilant eyes on them, though it seems not those of the king himself. His
devotions were interrupted, and turned into surprise and indignation, by
accusers of these three men. These accusers well understood their profession.
And then, with the true address of sycophant courtiers, they put the alleged
impiety in the form of disloyalty. It was as against him that the offence was
committed, more than against the god. ¡§They have not regarded thee, O king!¡¨ And
this very effective art has never been forgotten by the haters and persecutors
of the protestors in behalf of true religion. The three recusants of Babylon
were instantly ordered into the royal presence. And the potentate, powerless
over the ¡§rage and fury¡¨ which agitated him, did yet display some remainder of
a reasonable disposition. The truth of the accusation was not to be doubted;
but he expressed his amazement at their conduct, as what he could hardly
believe against them. He had not long to wait for their decision. ¡§We are not
careful to answer thee in this matter¡¨; meaning, ¡§we have no thought or
deliberation to give to the alternative; no question or hesitation remains to
us; we seek no evasion or delay; our decision is absolute, because our duty is
plain.¡¨ Some learned critics have given, as more exactly expressive of the
sense of the original, an altered construction of the two verses together,
thus, ¡§Whether our God, who is able to deliver us, shall deliver us or not, be
it known unto thee,¡¨ etc.; thus taking away the apparent expression of
their assurance that He would deliver them. We cannot know in what degree they
did expect any extraordinary Divine interposition, but this construction of
their reply exhibits them in a still higher, completer, character of
magnanimity and devotement. In the utmost extremity of fury, he ordered the
fire to be augmented to a corresponding intensity. ¡§Seven times hotter¡¨--a
phrase not of strict numerical import, but meaning the utmost intensity
possible, by means of the most effectual fuel that could in haste be supplied.
Our martyr, Ridley, slowly consuming at the stake, earnestly entreated, ¡§Give
me more fire--more fire!¡¨ The binding of these three men was a very superfluous
act. But it had a certain judicial appearance; and it exposed them more
formally in the character of criminals and victims. And now the consummation,
the crowning sanction, would seem to be added to the establishment and
authority of the new divinity and worship by a human sacrifice. But the matter
was not so to end. It might so have ended without impeachment of the Divine
Governor of the world, with respect to these His faithful servants; for He has
a right to demand an absolute martyrdom--an actual surrender of life for His
cause, and often has required it. But,in this instance, if it had so ended, it
would have appeared to the whole empire like a complete triumph and sanction
gained to idolatry. There would be, among the great men of the assembly, much
self-congratulation that they were no such insane and desperate fanatics. The
personal enemies of these three men (and many such they must have had, who
hated them for their incorruptible public virtue)--these, too, had now their
moment of lively gratification. But the idolatrous chiefs and lords had not all
the delight to themselves, that there was at that moment, on that field--the
most animated exultation of all, was glowing amidst the flames of the furnace!
It is beyond our faculties to conceive the first sensations of men, suddenly
plunged into the midst of a vast mass of fire, of the most raging intensity, in
their living, susceptible bodies, which even a spark would have hurt, and yet
feeling no pain, no terror. We may imagine a momentary amazement, but quickly
changed into a full consciousness of exquisite delight. It is beyond our power,
however, to bring such a fact to our comprehension. Consider, it is according
to natural laws and relations that pleasure is produced, that is, the
constituted condition of human pleasure. But when, in a rare instance, by the
Divine will and agency, pleasure is to arise from a perfect and stupendous
reversal of those natural laws, we are thrown off from any power and means for
estimating that pleasure. The attention of Nebuchadnezzar seems to have continued
fixed on the fiery receptacle, perhaps with some relenting for what he had
done; possibly with some degree of doubt, or suspense of expectation,
respecting the consequence. He seems to have been the first to perceive that
his fury, and the doom he had awarded, were frustrated. And with that prompt
kind of honesty which appears conspicuous in his character, he was the first to
proclaim it. Nebuchadnezzar loudly called them to come forth. Had he any
authority to do so? He might have left it to the discretion of their splendid
visitant and associate to lead them forth when He should judge it the proper
time. This once, they were clearly beyond the monarch¡¦s jurisdiction. As to the
monarch, that space of fire was as a tract of another world. And besides, they could
have no wish to come forth. It was the sublimest, most delightful region they
had ever dwelt in yet. At length the three men came out from the fire--their
celestial companion being left to depart, like Manoah¡¦s angel, who ascended in
the flame. They were looked upon by the amazed and humiliated assembly of
grandees; and the effect of fire had not passed on their very garments or their
hair. (J. Foster.)
The Fiery Furnace; or,
True Principle Exemplified
Man is a worshipper. If
there were no God before whose shrine he could bend his knees, he would make
himself an object of worship. We have a remarkable instance of this in the
narrative before us. What was the design of the Babylonian despot in the
erection of this colossal image? Two different answers might be given to this
question. It was intended either as an expression of his gratitude to the deity
who he imagined had so greatly prospered him on the battle-field, or as a
representation of himself under the title of the long-expected ¡§Divine Son,¡¨ or
universal sovereign of the world. The fact that he summoned all the great
officers of the empire to be present at its inauguration is a clear proof that
this was not an ordinary idol. It is not probable that he would thus have
ordered all the officers from their labours and posts of duty merely to add to
the magnificence and splendour of an ordinary scene. The proud monarch had
something of far greater importance in view; he wished to secure for himself
the homage of his chief officers, and through them that of his numerous
subjects. Then, the terrible punishment threatened upon disobedience to the
royal mandate is a further proof of the great importance the Babylonian despot
attached to this ceremony. This threat was in perfect keeping with the
despotism of Chaldea, and the spirit of that benighted age. But in spite of the
severity of the threat, the three Hebrews were found true to their principles,
and dared to oppose the king¡¦s impiety. How could they pay homage to an idol?
Every principle of their religion, every feeling of their heart, revolted
against the very thought. The honour due to their God they will not lavish on
their monarch.
I. TRUE PRINCIPLES SEVERELY TESTED.
Every principle will sooner or later be tried. There is a fiery furnace that
will test the principles and motives of every heart. The test in the case of
the young Hebrews was peculiarly severe.
1. They had to oppose the will of a powerful benefactor.
2. They had to incur the odium of an excited public.
3. They had to forfeit the honours and emoluments of office.
4. They had to meet death in one of its most terrible forms.
II. TRUE PRINCIPLE NOBLY MAINTAINED.
1. Their calm demeanour. True godliness possesses sweet sustaining
power.
2. Their strong faith. Their language was the language of faith; the
language of a pious heart firmly confiding in the faithfulness of Heaven. Their
faith took hold of two things. The power of God: ¡§Our God is able to deliver us
from the burning fiery furnace.¡¨ And also His willingness: ¡§And He will deliver
us out of thine hand, O king.¡¨ These two elements form the basis of true faith.
You confide in that person because you believe him to be both able and willing
to befriend you.
3. Their inflexible determination. ¡§But if not, we will not serve thy
gods, nor worship the golden image.¡¨
III. TRUE PRINCIPLE ULTIMATELY TRIUMPHANT.
Several very important points were gained by this glorious triumph of true
principle.
1. The impious ambition of the monarch was checked.
2. The living personality of the ¡§ Divine Son¡¨ was established. The
deities of the Gentiles were the creations of their own fancy. Nebuchadnezzar
had probably no faith in them. But the person whom he saw in the ¡§fiery
furnace¡¨ was not a myth, but a real living person. The God of Shadrach and his companions
was a living person, not an imaginary object we worship not an idea, but a God
who has a heart to love us, and an arm to save us.
3. The faith of the weak and the wavering was confirmed. Had their
bitter affliction almost driven the poor Hebrew captives into despair? The
occurrence on the plain of Dura would revive their hope, and fill them with
wonder and gratitude. Many a disconsolate exile would be greatly encouraged,
his faith strengthened, and the expiring embers of his religious love fanned
into a flame.
4. The welfare of the captive Jews was effectually promoted. Their
treatment of the exiles would be more humane and generous; and they would
naturally infer that the people whose God would thus interpose on their behalf
were not to be despised.
5. The honour of the true God was greatly enhanced. How valuable is
vital godliness! It possesses a sustaining power. It brings down upon the soul
the richest blessing of God. Be faithful to it. Let its living principles be
exemplified in your life. (J. H. Hughes.)
Three Heroes
Babylonia, whither the
Jews were led captive by Nebuchadnezzar, was a pagan, idolatrous country, a
circumstance which must have been very distressing to God¡¦s faithful people,
and added very much of bitterness to the anguish of their enslaved condition.
It was a trial heavy enough for the peculiar people to have seen their
beautiful city of Jerusalem destroyed--their country turned into a waste
howling wilderness--and themselves dragged away from their beloved fatherland
into a strange, unfriendly clime. It would have been some relief for them,
however, if, in the land of their exile, they had found a people whose
religious sympathies and practices had been in harmony with their own--or even
if their lot had been cast on some desert, uninhabited isle, where, like John
in Patmos, they might have worshipped their God without let or hindrance. But
how terribly annoying it must have been--at least, to the thoughtful and devout
among them--to be dwelling amidst a people wholly given to idolatry! What was
the moral effect of the prevailing idolatries of the Chaldeans upon the Jewish
exiles, generally, does not appear--probably it was unfavourable. Still, it is
very gratifying to learn that there were some men in Babylonia who defiled not
their garments, but kept themselves unspotted from surrounding corruption.
I. We learn that EMINENT PIETY MAY BE MAINTAINED
AMIDST TRIALS THE MOST SEVERE. We are sometimes tempted to
believe that man is the creature of external circumstances--that his character
is formed for him--not by him; and that, consequently, he cannot be virtuous,
as he is notresponsible. The narrative before us is calculated to show the
erroneousness of this notion, and to establish the important fact that the
freedom of the human mind is not destroyed, nor the moral agency of man set
aside, by any circumstances in which he may be placed, save and except such as
involve the loss of reason, or the eclipse of the intellect. It is true,
indeed, that we are frequently influenced by circumstances--our habits too
often reflect the form and colour of those circumstances by which we are from
time to time surrounded. It is well when such circumstances as favour the
growth of piety and godliness are permitted to shed their hallowing influence
upon our character. But, to the force of evil circumstances--those
circumstances which in themselves tend to foster the development of ungodliness
and sin--we need not, we ought not, by any means, to yield. We are responsible
for our character. We must, every one of us, give an account of himself to God.
Never let us forget that our God has made us free, accountable agents; that
most reasonably He holds us bound to do our every duty constantly and
unflinchingly; and at the last day will admit no plea whatever for the
infidelity of which we have been guilty in this life. ¡§Many men are lamenting
their misfortunes, and wishing that their place was changed, that they might
the more easily live Christianly. If a man cannot be a Christian in the place
where he is, he cannot be a Christian anywhere.¡¨ The Christian life ever has
been, and must be, a self-denying, cross-bearing life; and the future glorious
eternal reward of Heaven is for them, and them only, who, through good report
and evil report, have followed the Lamb whithersoever He goeth. The three pious
Hebrews--Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego--were placed amidst sorest trials--as
few are in our day--yet they proved faithful to their God. To be dutiful to
their God they had to resist the most powerful temptations--to brave most
formidable dangers.
1. They had to rebel against royal authority. ¡§King Nebuchadnezzar
was what would be called a man of large ideas and vast undertakings. The great
empire he had won and consolidated comprised many different nations, with
different gods and different forms of religions service. Seeing that all these
nations obeyed him as a king, and were subject to his absolute sway, it seemed
to him but reasonable that his god should share his triumph, and that, as there
was but one civil, so there should be but one religious obedience. He,
therefore, determined to set up a vast golden image of his god in the plain of
Dura, and that, at a signal given by bands of music, all the persons assembled
together in the vast plain at the time of dedication should fall down and
worship this image.¡¨ The religion of Heaven is by no means adverse, but most
thoroughly favourable, to civil obedience. Good men have ever been the truest
subjects and the best citizens; and the prevalence of godliness among a people
is the best guarantee for the stability of the throne that is based on
righteousness, and the surest security for the effective carrying out of all
such laws as are just and good. But as the sphere of the civil ruler is
limited, so are the obligations of the subject The moral sense cannot be bound
by Acts of Parliament; the will cannot be coerced by the magistrate¡¦s sword. It
was a saying of Napoleon Bonaparte--¡§My rule ends where that of conscience
begins.¡¨ It would have beenwell if all civil rulers had recognised this
principle. Much bloodshed would have been spared. When the laws of men
harmonise with the laws of God there can be no difficulty felt by the good man
as to duty in respect to them. But if it is attempted to compel obedience to laws
diametrically opposed to the laws of God, then there can remain no doubt as to
how the good man must act. We must obey God rather than man. Noble men! no
reckless revolutionists, no fanatical politicians were they; but men who
understood to what extent they were bound to honour man; and who well
understood and deeply felt that there was no consideration which could, by any
possibility, free them from their obligation to serve God alone.
2. They had to act in
defiance of the popular custom. Grand moral spectacle! Truest heroism this!
Here is none of your pitiful time-servers who dare not to differ from the
multitude by doing right--here is none of your compromising religious duty by
an unhallowed seeming to conform to the world. They did not follow bad customs, lest they should be
thought singular. They despised the fashionable religion, and were great and
good enough, though Jews, to stand true to their fathers¡¦ God in the face of a
nation of idolaters. Was not that a brave deed? Warriors never did such a noble
thing. Earth¡¦s proudest heroes never won such laurels, never deserved such
fame! If you would be great in the highest and best sense, dare to be good. If
there is one spectacle more contemptible than another, it is that mean-spirited
soul whom you see timidly, cowardly crouching down to a popular custom which in
his conscience he knows to be wrong, and ignobly following a multitude to do
evil. It requires little moral courage, publicly and faithfully to stick to
duty when it is popular to do so. It is a comparatively easy thing to wear the
Christian name and attend to Christian ordinances when and where it is
fashionable to do so. But to dare to be singular, to take sides with ¡§the
peculiar people,¡¨ to endure the world¡¦s scorn, to do what few only have heart
and conscience to do--that demands sterling piety, no common-place devotedness,
more than lukewarm love to God and His cause. In the present day the
temptations to renounce and ignore religion altogether are not such as martyrs
knew. Our danger comes from another quarter. Our perils lie hid beneath such
religious pretensions as find general favour. It is fashionable, nowadays, to
be religious. Only infidels and ¡§our city arabs¡¨ are irreligious now. It is a
disgrace not to belong to some church or another. The demand is for something
more genuine--a counterfeit religion is too wide spread. The form of godliness
is abundant. The power of it is rare indeed. Men will be religious; but they
are far more eager to gain the world than to save their souls. While they are
serving God after a fashion, their hearts are going forth after covetousness.
Custom is, as it has ever been, the stern, unyielding foe of all earnest,
spiritual, thorough-going Christianity. Men generally have little sympathy with
the heartfelt, life-purifying religion of Jesus Christ. ¡§Business is business¡¨
with them, and religion has no right to show its face in the warehouse or
workshop, in the counting-house or the exchange. Strict morality will not pay;
they cannot afford to do right. Their neighbours resort to the ¡§tricks of
trade,¡¨ and cheat, and tell lies, and deceive; and so must they, or they may as
well give up business at once. It is all nonsense to talk to them about
applying Christian rules to secular callings. It would be perfectly ruinous!
And then, as to social usages and domestic habits, what has religion to do with
these things? It is all very well to sing and pray, and go to church, too. But
you would never think of turning Puritans, and make religion to bear upon
dress--upon our homes, and our amusements! ¡§Style¡¨ has to be kept up.
Appearances must be preserved. We must not be thought mean, etc. Thus
thousands talk, and apologise for the most thorough-going conformity to the
giddy, regardless world. I repeat it, he who will be true to his God in these
days, must dare to break through unhallowed customs--must be brave enough to
differ from others. He who stops to ask himself, What do others do? or, What
are the religious opinions and practices of others? cannot be a true disciple
of the Lord Jesus Christ. Your Saviour demands of you thorough-going,
uncompromising fidelity to truth and equity. He requires you to take His will
to be your own rule; and so completely will He have you in subjection to His
authority, that, whatever you do, whether you eat or drink, you must do all to
His glory!
3. They had to resist the
demands of self-interest. It was at a severe cost, an immense sacrifice, that
they were prepared to fulfil their obligations to the true and living God (v.
6). By this it would appear that death by burning alive was a very ancient
punishment for ¡§heresy.¡¨ It was a customary punishment among the Babylonians.
Jeremiah, in denouncing the false prophets, Ahab and Zedekiah, predicted that
they should be put to death by the King of Babylon, ¡§And of these shall be
taken up a curse by all the captivity of Judah which are in Babylon, saying,
The Lord make thee like Zedekiah and like Ahab, whom the king of Babylon
roasted in the fire.¡¨ See, then, how terrific the threat by which Nebuchadnezzar
sought to promote the worship of his god. What a severe trial of the godly
steadfastness of these three pious Jews (v. 13, 15). Would you have wondered
if, in such circumstances, they had trembled and proposed to themselves some
temporising mode of escape from so dreadful a punishment? Ah, threats cannot
intimidate them. This noble answer reminds us of what Augustine relates of
Cyprian, that when courtiers persuaded him to preserve his life--for it was
with great reluctance that the Emperor devoted him to death--when flatterers on
all sides urged him to redeem his life by the denial of Christianity, he
answered, ¡§There can be no deliberation in a matter so sacred.¡¨ So our three
heroes declare that they are in nowise concerned to vindicate their conduct, or
to deliberate upon the expediency of the step they were taking. ¡§Our
consciences are bound to serve the God of heaven alone, and Him only will we
worship, despite all consequences.¡¨ But many can, Peter-like, boast grandly of
how bravely they will act. Nothing shall move them from their Christian
steadfastness till the crisis comes--till the hour arrives for self-sacrifice,
for prompt and self-denying action--then they faint and fall away. Not so the
three pious Hebrews. They were none of your talking heroes. Their deeds were as
glorious as their words. Are we not too much given to time-serving? Are we not deterred oftentimes from
faithfully acting out our convictions by the fear of losing someone¡¦s
friendship, or of incurring someone¡¦s frown? by the fear of suffering the loss
of certain worldly emoluments, or of missing certain social advantages? Is our
devotedness to Christ characterised by all that manly energy--that indomitable
courage that breaks through every barrier, and that conquers every difficulty?
II. We learn what
are THE SOURCES AND
ENCOURAGEMENTS OF TRUE MORAL HEROISM.
1. All things are possible to them who believe. There is the secret
of their heroism. It was not natural animal courage--it was not stoical
insensibility--it was not indifference to life--it was not the love of
distinction, or ambition for fame--it was faith in God.
2. God is ever present with his faithful people (v. 21-25). We have
no reason for supposing that Nebuchadnezzar thought that the fourth person was
Jesus Christ, the Son of God; of him he must have known nothing. ¡§A single
angel,¡¨ says Calvin, ¡§was sent to these three men; Nebuchadnezzar calls him a
Son of God, not because he thought him to be Christ, but according to the
common opinion among all people that angels are sons of God, since a certain
divinity is resplendent in them, and hence they call angels generally sons of
God. According to this usual custom Nebuchadnezzar says, the fourth man is like
the son of a god.¡¨ No doubt Nebuchadnezzar recognised the Divine interposition
in what appeared to him an angel; God was wont by the ministry of angels and
otherwise visibly to interpose on behalf of His people, and in a most
extraordinary way to effect deliverances for them; and, doubtless, it was God
who appeared in human form with the three Hebrews in the fiery furnace, to
comfort, support, and deliver them, and to convince their enemies that they
were under the protection of. Heaven, and, therefore, in safe keeping. We do
not look for any palpable manifestations of the Divine presence to attend us in
our trials. We look for no miraculous deliverance from the hands of our
enemies. Nevertheless, God has promised to be with us to help and succour us,
so that we may triumphantly exclaim, ¡§If God be with us, who shall be against
us?¡¨ ¡§A man in the right with God on his side is in the majority, though he be
alone, for God is multitudinous above all populations of the earth.¡¨ So that
you may boldly say, ¡§God is our refuge,¡¨ ¡§I can do all things through Christ
which strengtheneth me.¡¨
3. The social influence of uncompromising fidelity to duty on the
part of God¡¦s people is mighty (v. 28, 29). We see here the natural working of
a truly consistent life. ¡§Ye are the salt of the earth,¡¨ etc. (Matthew 5:13-16); ¡§The holy seed is the stock of the land¡¨ (Isaiah 6:13). ¡§A man ought to carry himself in the world as an orange-tree would
if it could walk up and down in the garden--swinging perfume from every little
censer it holds up in the air.¡¨ Ah, how many of us do this? How many of us
commend to the world the religion we possess by an unbending, consistent life?
4. Distinguished honours shall crown the fidelity of God¡¦s people (v.
30). (John Williams.)
The Power of Youthful
Piety
The history of these three
young men teach us the following lessons.
1. The children of respectable parents may be reduced to humble
circumstances.
2. Children deprived of the protection of parents sometimes rise in
the world and prosper.
3. Religion is the best preservative of youth when separated from
their parents and friends.
4. The effects of early religious education is generally good. These
young men¡¦s piety was very vigorous. Consider the power of the piety of these
young men.
I. ITS PRINCIPLE. It was
attachment to the true God.
1. Their attachment to God was natural, and, therefore, strong. Man
was made for God. What is unnatural is weak. Unnatural conformation of body is
attended by weakness and pain. The body deprived of the natural means of
support soon becomes feeble. Unnatural exercise of social affections wastes
them. It is so with the moral powers. Idolatry is not natural to man. It is weakness.
It cannot reason; it cannot distinguish between matter and mind. It holds no
communion with spiritual worlds; it sinks the spirit; it robs God of His right,
and man of happiness. God is to man all that his nature wants.
2. Their attachment was individual.
3. Their attachment was uniform.
II. ITS MANIFESTATIONS. Is
wonderful, if we consider.
1. Their destitution of religious means. Without public worship,
parental protection exposed to the bigotry, example, society of idolaters.
2. The strength of their temptation.
3. The tenderness of their age. They were little more than twenty.
4. Their number was small. There were only three. But were one in
life, death.
III. ITS IMPRESSIONS on those
who witnessed it.
1. The king admired their character.
2. Called attention to it.
3. Blessed God.
4. Promoted them. (Caleb Morris.)
The Martyr Spirit
This episode of the three
Jews in Babylon is a revelation of the martyr-spirit, and so, centuries after,
the Christian writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews included them in his great
muster-roll of the heroes of faith, as those who ¡§quenched the violence of
fire.¡¨ They were champions of a cause which has often been contested since in
the history of nations, and in none perhaps more sharply than our own. It was
the rights of conscience they asserted, as they stood calm and confident before
the furious king. They showed what men can do under the dominance of a lofty
principle. Life, that was in its prime--dignities of office and sweets of
power, that bad been tasted--these they were ready to lay down for conscience
sake. No sophistries blinded them to the real point at issue; they could not
bow to that heathen idol--not even for the king. They faced the ordeal, and
came forth from it victorious; they would have been equally victorious had
their bodies been charred in the furnace. Theirs was the dauntless spirit which
has been manifested by the martyrs or ¡§witnesses¡¨ of all ages. The answer they
made to the king of Babylon has found many an echo at the stake or the block.
Such, as one instance, were the words spoken by the young Scottish martyr on
the scaffold (Hugh M¡¦Kail, 1666). ¡§Although I be judged and condemned as a
rebel amongst men, yet I hope, even in order to this action, to be accepted as
loyal before God.¡¨ (P.
H. Hunter.)
The Three Hebrew Youths
For the difficult task of
acting upon fixed religious principle, example is more helpful than precept.
I. THESE YOUTHS WOULD NOT, TO SAVE THEIR LIVES, COMMIT EVEN ONE SINGLE ACT OF
IDOLATRY (v. 12) Had they not been true servants of God they
would easily have quieted their consciences with excuses such as these.
1. All are obeying the command.
2. After all, it was a political rather than a religious act.
3. If they failed to comply with the royal mandate, their conduct
might be misconstrued. But men of religious principle do not ask if they will
be misunderstood, but what is their duty to God.
II. THEY REFUSED TO PARLEY ABOUT THE
COURSE OF DUTY (v. 16). Our declining even to discuss the course
of duty, when it is plainly and instinctively recognised by the conscience, is
a proof of religious firmness and constancy.
III. THEY TRUSTED IMPLICITLY IN GOD¡¦S SPECIAL PROVIDENCE OF HIS PEOPLE (v. 17). When
our hold upon Divine truth is lessening or weak, we trust to the arm of flesh
and useless expediences. Examples: Asa and the physicians (2 Chronicles 16:12); Israel and the chariots of Egypt Isaiah 31:1). Those whose hearts are fixed, and who prove true in the fiery
ordeal of trial, fall back upon their inner lines of retrenchment. They realise
the fact that the Lord reigns, and personally superintends the order of events,
so that the wrath of man is restrained, and also that God watches with jealous
care His own people.
IV. THEY DID NOT CONSIDER THE CONSEQUENCES
OF THEIR CONSTANCY (v. 18). God has not pledged Himself always to
work a miracle or to doanything uncommon to deliver His people. As a rule we
must not expect such interpositions. If we were perfectly certain of such help,
where would be the worth of our holding out for the truth? It was as much a
miracle of grace for the three youths to remain constant as it was a miracle of
providence that they were kept safely in the fiery furnace. To determine our
conduct, altogether irrespective of the consequences which may follow, shows
the value of our religious life.
V. THEY HONOURED GOD BEFORE THE WORLD AND GOD ESPECIALLY HONOURED THEM.
As unholy compromises and cowardly denials conduct to shame and confusion, so
unflinching courage, and acting upon religious principles, leads to happiness
and honour. Such is illustrated in the present case.
1. They are safely protected from the slightest harm in the fiery
furnace. The very elements are made to respect them (v. 24, 25, 27).
2. The Son of God blesses them with His company (v. 25; Isaiah 43:2;Proverbs 18:10).
3. Their
persecuter, Nebuchadnezzar, bestows greater honour upon them (v. 30; Proverbs 16:7). Is our religion one of fashion, form, education, or one of
reality and principle? If the former, then in times of trial we shall fall
away; if the latter, we shall by God¡¦s grace be kept steadfast. Christians
should be prepared to face a fiery ordeal of temptation at some period of their
career. This will strengthen and purify their faith. (C. Neil, M.A.)
The Nonconformists of
Babylon
Hero worship is the one
form of religion, if you will allow me to call it so, that binds the whole
world. Dare great things, look at them in the face, and at once you are secure
of the crown of laurel. What the world has to decide is the highest kind of
courage. Some types of hero at once rise to your mind. There is the soldier
type, for instance. He will dash through a storm of grape, and stand first upon
the enemy¡¦s breastwork, covered with wounds. Or here is another, there is the
fireman. He will rush through suffocating smoke and scorching heat, and come
forth presently with the life he has rescued from the flames. Or here is the coast-guardsman.
He will swim through the boiling surf, with a rope in his teeth, to the ship
that has been stranded. Noble types of courage all of them--heroes worthy of
crosses and of honours. But there is one thing to be said with regard to all
these, they have all one strong inducement to heroism--the onlooking and the
applause of the spectators. But if you wish to know who the true heroes of men
are, ask who are those who dare to do right, simply because it is right, secure
of no applause from the world, certain only of disapproval--standing alone. To
be honest when honesty is the best policy, to be right when broad lines of
right and wrong are marked down and acknowledged by all men, that is good; but
to dare to be honest, and good, and true when it is not the best policy, when
it is not popular--commend me to the man of this sort for the highest hero. And
it was of such heroism that the men in our text are an example. The golden
image. No figure emerges from the mist of ancient times more clearly defined than
Nebuchadnezzar. He occupies a large space in Scripture, and the disinterred
libraries of the East are filled with the records of his glory. While yet only
crown prince he had swept in triumph through Syria and Palestine, and inflicted
a severe defeat on Egypt. Greater than his victories abroad was his conquest of
the magnificent city of Babylon, with its colossal walls and temples, which may
justly be called his creation. To a certain magnificence and generosity of
character he united vast arrogance, an ungovernable temper, and vindictive
cruelty; yet he was so religious that all the records of his deeds are
ascription to his god. What is the meaning of this decree? Doubtless, in the
first place, it was largely political--a method, not unwise, of uniting the
many different elements of his scattered empire, and securing his own
supremacy. But it is not difficult to see that Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s god was, after
all, only a deification of Nebuchadnezzar himself. The true man comes out in
such phrases as these: ¡§Is not this the great Babylon which I have built? . . .
Who is that God, who is able to deliver you out of my hands?¡¨ Yes, the image,
overlaid with gold, flashing in the sun there, is an image erected to success
and human glory. It is the worldly power triumphant. Men and women, the image
of Dura is with us still. It is no longer embodied in outward form of idol or
king. It is the world spirit, the spirit of earthly glory, wealth, success; and
a right lordly spirit it is, towering, like Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s image, aloft, and
decked out, too, like it, with flashing gold. It has allurement still; it
gathers to it still all music, art, and refinement,--everything that delights
the senses, and makes the homage of its worshippers easy; but it is arbitrary
and capricious as ever. No religion or morality may control it. Its first
commandment is, ¡§Thou shalt have no other gods before me¡¨; and for all its
beauty and refinement, it is cruel--oh, deadly cruel. Resist it, and it is
swelling with rage. Resist still, and it opens the furnace, no longer the
furnace of wood or pitch. We have changed all that. The times are refined, but
it has still its deadly enmity, as sharp in the teeth as ever. If it is no
longer a furnace, it has sneering and scorning and social ostracism. The image
flashes, the music sounds, the king is looking on, and in a moment the vast
assembly is prostrate as a field of corn before a sudden tempest. Scythian
purple, fine white linen, all kiss the dust. Just so, just so. Always where the
world-spirit is upreared the world-power is down with one consent. Character,
religion, these matter nothing. Wealth, show, rank, glory, these are your gods,
O Israel. What kind of man is he that you ask us to worship? They say that he
has broken hiswife¡¦s heart; never mind, ¡§bow your heads¡¨; and at once the whole
multitude make their universal salaam. Here another splendid equipage comes
along. Hats off! It is said, Who is he? What has he done? He has made his
fortune. They say he has taken his millions out of the gutter. What does that
matter? He is a rich man. Bow your heads; and again there is an universal
acknowledgment of the old image of Dura. Our god is Success. This is his great
Babylon that he has built. And so, when the music sounds the scene of Dura is
repeated in every age, and the golden image is still worshipped by all. Not by
all! Thank God, there are heroes still. Let us consider what they had to do.
Young men they were, we are told, standing on the very threshold of life. Aye,
and when is life ever so sweet? When is the grass so green, and the sun so
bright, and that light upon land and sea so pleasant? When is it so difficult
to turn one¡¦s back upon it, and leave it all? And not only life was before
them, but, look you, such a life full of advantage. Would they not say, ¡§God,
pardon for once. We find the noise of the multitude, and the wrath of the
king, and the allurements of music too much. God pardon us?¡¨ They had a very
good precedent for it. You remember that when Naaman the Syrian was cured, he
said to the prophet, taking the prophet¡¦s God to be his in this thing, ¡§The
Lord pardon thy servant, that when my master goeth into the house of Rimmon to
worship there, and he leaneth on my hand, and I bow myself in the house of
Rimmon; when I bow down myself in the house of Rimmon, the Lord pardon thy
servant in this thing.¡¨ And the prophet said, ¡§Go in peace.¡¨ And was there no
prophet to say to these men that their sin was very small, and they might go in
peace? There was higher than the king there that day. ¡§They endured as seeing
Him who is invisible.¡¨ But we have not yet touched the full height of their
heroism. Let us follow the narrative. The tongue of envy is at once set ageing.
You will see that the envious tongue is the tongue of the Chaldeans, and you need
not wonder at that when you find in the chapter before we have a record of a
victory over the Chaldeans at the hands of Jehovah. They cannot bear to be thus
humbled, prostrate themselves. You can hear cutting words like these:
¡§Straight-laced!¡¨ ¡§Who are they that they should be setting themselves up,
indeed!¡¨ ¡§Holier than all the rest!¡¨ Just so, just so. Do you worship with me?
No; you dare to be different. How dare you? Who are you that you should set
yourself up that I am wrong and you are right? And so the king heard of it, and
was swelling with rage. Don¡¦t you wonder at the king? But a little while ago he
had said of a truth, ¡§your God is a God of gods and a Lord of lords.¡¨ And yet
it suited him to forget. The former interference of the God of gods had been
quite in a line with his policy¡¦. ¡§And if the God of gods and the Lord of lords
will interpret my dreams to me, and give me satisfaction, why, I have no
objection to His being God of gods; but if He interferes with my lordship, if
He sets me down from my pedestal and my golden image, erected to my glory, ah!
then who is that God who will deliver out of my hand?¡¨ That is the morality of
the world, the world¡¦s god. They knew God. Well, they had their answer. ¡§Oh,
Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this matter. If it be so
our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and
He will deliver us out of thy hand, O king. But if not, be it known unto thee,
O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which
thou hast set up.¡¨ ¡§But if not.¡¨ Men and women, I wonder if you see the amazing
heroism of these three words. What does it mean? Ah! here is what it means.
Religion pays. Honesty is the best policy. If you do not get on in this world
you will in the next. If you are good, there is Heaven; if you are bad, there
is hell. It is best to be good. But if all that arrangement of yours for the
reward of good and the punishment of evil were to-night upset, where would your
morality be? It is convenient for you to be an honest fellow. You have the
repute of your fellows. But that hope beyond--but if not, if there should be no
reward for your goodness, if there is noHeaven to keep you up, if there is no
hell to terrify you, nothing but right--that is right, whether it is reward or
not. I wonder if you would be boldenough to say, ¡§If not, be it known unto
thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image
which thou hast set up.¡¨ But marvellous things happen. With startling dramatic
power it is put before us in this narrative. ¡§Then Nebuchadnezzar was
astonished, rose up and said, ¡§Lo! I see four men loose, walking in the midst
of the fire, and the form of the fourth is like the Son of God.¡¨ Ah, whatever
interpretation you make of that verse, on the whole doctrine the story is true
for all time. Truth lives in the furnace. It was a great thing these men had
looked forward to when they said, ¡§Our God is able to deliver us from the
furnace, and He will deliver us.¡¨ That was great, but who of men ever thought
of this greater thing by far--¡§Our God is able to deliver us in the furnace.¡¨
These men went free; nothing was burned but the bonds which their fellows had
laid upon them. The lesson of it all is this, that truth--nay, let me say this,
to speak in New Testament language--the truth, us it is in Jesus, devotion to
Christ, is a thing marked off from the world by as sharp a line as it was in
the days of Nebuchadnezzar--and to young men--yes, and old men--there comes the
same choice on the one side, the lordly bringing to itself all worldly
advantage, surrounding itself still with cornet, flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery
and dulcimer, and all kinds of music, with the furnace not far off, is claiming
your allegiance; and by the side is your Lord and Master, asking you to witness
and be faithful to Him, to His Person, to His atonement, to His resurrection,
to all that He is and all that He has given us; and He has asked of you, ¡§What
will you do to-day?¡¨ Ah! the world says, ¡§No need to be so sharp; let us have
airy notions and ill-defined beliefs; let us have a large margin, wherein it
may be lawful now to bow to the golden image, and now to bow to Jehovah.¡¨ No,
no. Keen--keen is the dividing line still--the worship there, Christ here; the
music there, the furnace here--and for your choice. God help you in that day
when the two forces strive for your allegiance! I say, God help you to say, ¡§We
are not careful to answer thee in this matter. If it be so the God whom we
serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and He will deliver
us. But if not, we will not serve thy gods nor worship the golden image thou
hast set up.¡¨ (W. J. Macdonald.)
The Trial of Fire
The world crowns with the
heroic wreath those who have been distinguished for valour in the field of
carnal strife, ¡§but there is something which has tried the souls of men more
than the muzzle of a gun ready to pour its contents into the unshielded breast
of a soldier.¡¨ So there have been heroes who never set a squadron in the field,
or bared their breast to an enemy¡¦s steel flattery and frowns, blandishments
and dungeons, and cross and the stake, have had no power to turn them from the
right.
I. THE ACCUSATION. No man
may expect to escape from calumny. But happy is the man who can be assailed
only because of his virtues--his adherence to religious principles. And such is
the base passion of envy, that it withers at another¡¦s joy, and hates the
excellence it cannot reach,¡¨ and will, therefore, seek to elevate itself by
detracting from the reputation of another.
II. THE TRIAL. The trial of
these young men was one of the most extraordinary to which men were ever
subjected. It was so as by fire. Now, truth and virtue are on trial. What will
be the issue? Come, ye angels that excel in strength; come, all the world that
hang in hope upon the truth of religion, and await the result. ¡§But if not, be
it known unto thee, O king! that we will not serve thy gods nor worship the
golden image which thou hast set up.¡¨ The answer illustrates:
1. The duty of pleasing God rather than men. ¡§We are not careful to
answer thee in this matter.¡¨ But just here the text is found at which so many
fail. Men are careful to answer to their fellow-men, rather than to God, for
their conduct. Public opinion is the great golden image before which they fall
down in worship. Fashion also sets up its great golden image, and commands all
to bow down and worship it. It has passed into an aphorism: ¡§You had as well go
out of the world as out of the fashion.¡¨ God says: ¡§Be not conformed to this
world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.¡¨ There is also a great
golden image set up in the form of prevailing social customs, by which persons
are tried whether they will do right or conform to the example of the company
they are in.
2. The confidence that God would take care of them if they honoured
Him. ¡§Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery¡¨
furnace, and He will deliver us out of thy hand.¡¨ And their knowledge of the
character of God assured them that no real harm could come to them in the way
of their duty to Him. But their answer went further; if it had not, it would
have lacked in one great element of force, which we shall see presently. They
said: ¡§But if God does not deliver us, we will not serve thy gods.¡¨ If this had
not been added, it might have been said: ¡§No wonder they are so heroic, having
the assurance that God would save them from the threatened punishment; in other
words, they were willing to serve God as long as they were exempt from
suffering; as long as it went well with them in this world.¡¨ That was the kind
of religion that the neighbours of Job thought he had--a mercenary religion.
3. We have in this answer an exhibition of true principle as the
foundation of a religious life. Their were governed by principle. ¡§True
religion,¡¨ says Albert Barnes, ¡§is a determined purpose to do right, whatever
may be the consequences. Come wealth or poverty, honour or dishonour, life or
death, the mind is firmly fixed on doing right.¡¨ A man who loves what is right,
and is determined to do what is right because he has deep down in his soul a
recognition of the everlasting blessedness of virtue, is not the one who will
want to bring weak excuses for worldly conformity; for doing what he has
misgivings in his own mind is not right. He who is in earnest about saving his
soul will not frame weak excuses for yielding to temptation. In fine,
principle, and not impulse, will be the mainspring of his religious activity.
True religion is a determined purpose to live for God, come what may.
III. WE COME NOW TO THE CONDEMNATION AND
DELIVERANCE OF THESE YOUNG MEN AS THE FINAL GENERAL PROPOSITION OF OUR SUBJECT.
They were thrown into the burning fiery furnace. Though they had been so
faithful to God, yet He permitted them to be brought into this dreadful place.
Now may Nebuchadnezzar utter his infidel sneer: ¡§Who is that God that shall
deliver you out of my hands?¡¨ Even faith itself may be so tried as to say: ¡§It
is vain to serve God; He is so indifferent to our efforts to please Hire, or He
is powerless against the world.¡¨ But do not be in haste to judge. God did not
save them from the furnace, but He went with them into it and protected them
there. So His people may not be exempt from trials, but they have the presence
of Jesus in these trials. ¡§In the world ye shall have tribulation,¡¨ and through
great tribulation ye shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. But if He sees
that it is necessary that we go into those trials, He will give us blessed compensations.
And then, if He sees fit to put us in the furnace in order to purify, and
sanctify, and fit us for glory, it is because He knows there is something in us
worth the trial. Men do not put dross in the crucible--a thing of no value--and
sit there watching over it. Then, if you are in the furnace, there is something
in you which God values, and by this process He will develop it. ¡§They walked
in the midst of the fire and had no hurt.¡¨ How true to the history of God¡¦s
people in all ages of the world-walking in the midst of the fire and not
burned. From this we learn that it is not the outward circumstances of an
individual that can harm him. His welfare depends upon the inward state of the
heart. Hence a Christian has a source of consolation which no earthly
influences can turn aside or obstruct. But the same fire which was harmless to
God¡¦s servants destroyed their enemies. And thus it is that those trials under
which Christians are happy are overwhelming to those who have no faith in God.
I cannot leave this subject without one more thought. These men were called up
out of the furnace. And that was not all; they were promoted in the kingdom.
From the fires of trial to which God subjects us, always comes a higher state
of life. But this higher state is produced by those experiences which seem so
hard to us. We rise upon the wreck of the earthly to the Heavenly. After they
were well tried the king came and called these young men out of the trial--out
of the furnace. Then the king promoted them in the province of Babylon. And
thus will God, when He has seen that we have been suffciently tried, and are
fitted for the better world, call us out of the furnace and promote us to the
kingdom of everlasting blessedness. (J. T. Murray.)
Three Names High on the
Muster-roll
Have you not seen in your
time men seriously impressed? But after a while they forgot it all, and became
at length the most bitter opponents of the truth before which they seemed once
to bow. We know, then, what to expect; that some who seem like fish almost
landed, will, nevertheless, slip back into the stream. This great king of
Babylon was an absolute monarch. His will was law; no man ever dared to dispute
with him. Who would differ from a gentleman who could back up his arguments
with a fiery, furnace, or with a threat to cut you in pieces, and to make your
house a dunghill?
I. First of all,
as we think of these three brave Jews, let us consider THE EXCUSES THEY MIGHT HAVE MADE. They were
accused by the Chaldeans, who had so recently been saved from death by Daniel
and his three friends. The surest way to be hated by some people is to place
them under an obligation. But in this case the wrath of man was to praise God.
They might have said to themselves, ¡§It is perfectly useless to resist. We cannot
contend against this man. If we submit, we do it unwillingly; and surely, being
coerced into it, we shall be but little blamed.¡¨ It is a bad excuse, but it is
one that I have often heard made. ¡§Oh,¡¨ says a man, ¡§we must live, you
know; we must live.¡¨ I really do not see any necessity for it. Again, they
might have said, ¡§We are in a strange land, and is it not written by one of our
wise men, ¡¥When you are in Babylon, you must do as Babylon does¡¦? Of course, if
we were at home, in Judaea, we would not think of such a thing.¡¨ Is God the God
of this island, and not the God of the Continent? Has He ever given us
permission to do abroad we may not do at home? It is a vile excuse, but
commonly enough made. They might also have said, ¡§We are in office¡¨; and seeing
they were set over the affairs of the province of Babylon, they might have
found some difficulty in detaching their private religion from their public
duty. A man gets elected to a parish vestry, or a council, or a board, and when
he once gets to sit on that board, he seems to have left his honesty at home. I
say not that it is so always, but I am sorry to say that it has often been so.
The official has no sooner put on his robes of office than his conscience has
vanished. But, then, they were prosperous men. They were getting on in the
world, and I believe that God sent this trial to Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego, because they were prospering. They might have said, ¡§We must not
throw away our chances.¡¨ Among the dangers to Christian men, the greatest, perhaps,
is accumulating wealth--the danger of prosperity. May God grant that we may
never turn His mercies into an excuse for sinning against Him! You who are rich
have no more liberty to sin than if you were poor. Again, further, they might
have excused themselves thus. The putting up of this image was not altogether a
religious act. It was symbolical. The image was intended to represent the power
of Nebuchadnezzar, and bowing before it was, therefore, doing political homage
to the great king. Might they not safely do this? They might have said, ¡§We are
pollitically bound.¡¨ Oh, how often we hear this brought up! You are told to
regard the difference between right and wrong everywhere, except when you get
into politics; then stick to your party through thick and thin. Right and wrong
vanish at once. Loyalty to your leader--that is the point. A very soothing
salve for their conscience might have been found in the absence of any command
to renounce their own religion. They might have encouraged each other to submit,
by saying, ¡§We are not called upon to abjure our God.¡¨ They need not believe
the idol to be Divine, nor confess the least faith in it; in their hearts they
might make a mental reservation as they bowed, and they might have whispered to
one another, and said that it was a devil, and no God. They might have excused
themselves to their own conscience by saying that they prostrated themselves to
the music, and not to the idol, or that they made obeisance to the king
rather than to his image. Anything, in fact, will serve for an excuse, when the
heart is ¡¥bent on compromise; and, especially in these half-hearted days, it is
very easy to find a specious reason for a false action, if some temporal
benefit is attached to it. Modern charity manufactures a multitude of excuses
to cover sins withal. A stronger argument, however, might have been secured
from the fact of the universal submission to the decree. ¡§Everybody else is
doing it,¡¨ they might have said. Though millions bowed, what had that to do
with them? I ask you to cultivate a brave personality. In the service of God,
things cannot go by the counting of heads. They might have said, ¡§It is only
for once, and not for long. Ten minutes or so, once in a lifetime, to please
the king; such a trivial act cannot make any difference; at any rate, it is not
enough to brave the fiery furnace for. Let us treat the whole thing as a huge
jest. It would be ridiculous to throw away our lives for such a trifle.¡¨ Not
even for a few minutes in a lifetime would these three brave men deny their
God. May their stubborn faith be ours! Another excuse that they might have made
was, ¡§We can do more good by living than we can by being cast into than
furnace. It is true, if we are burnt alive, we bear a rapid testimony to the
faith of God; but if we live, how much more we might accomplish! You see we
three are Jews, and we are put in high office, and there are many poor Jews who
are captives. We can help them. We have always seen justice done to God¡¦s
people, our fellow-country-men, and we feel that we are raised to our high
office on purpose to do good. Now, you see, if you make us bigots, and wilt not
let us yield, you cut short our opportunities of usefulness.¡¨ If an act of sin
would increase my usefulness tenfold, I have no right to do it; and if an act
of righteousness would appear likely to destroy my my apparent usefulness, I am
yet to do it. But they might also have said, ¡§Real!y, this is more than can be
expected of us.¡¨ Remember what Jesus said to the multitudes who went with him,
¡§If any man come to me and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and
children,. and brethren; and sister, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be
my disciple. And whosoever doth not bear his cross, and come after me, cannot
be my disciple.¡¨
II. In the second
place, let us assure our own hearts by admiring THE CONFIDENCE WHICH THEY POSSESSED. They
expressed it very emphatically and clearly. They had a definite, solid,
foursquare faith.
1. First, they said, ¡§O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer
thee in this matter.¡¨ The word ¡§careful¡¨ there, does not give you the meaning.
Read it, ¡§We are not full of care as to how to answer thee.¡¨ They did answer
very carefully; but they were not anxious about the answer. They did not
deliberate. They did not hesitate. They said, ¡§Nebuchadnezzar, we can answer
you at once on that point.¡¨
2. In the second place, they did not judge it theirs to answer at
all. I find that it may read, as in the Revised Version, ¡§O Nebuchadnezzar, we
have no need to answer thee in this matter,¡¨ meaning, ¡§We will not answer you.
It is not for us to answer you. You have brought another Person into the
quarrel¡¨ Then notice what they say. ¡§Our God whom we serve is able to deliver
us from the burning fiery furnace.¡¨
3. They avowed their faith in the Omnipotent God, knowing that, if He
chose, no mighty man of Babylon could ever throw them into that furnace. What
is more, they add, ¡§And He will deliver us out of thine hand, O king.¡¨
Whether they burned in the fire or not, they were sure they would be delivered.
If any of you are in great difficulty and trouble, tempted, to do wrong, nay,
pressed to do it, and if you do what is right, it looks as if you will be great
losers and great sufferers; believe this: God can deliver you. He can prevent
your having to suffer what you suppose you may; and if He does not prevent
that, He can help you to bear it, and, in a short time, He can turn all your
losses into gains, all your sufferings into happiness. The Lord has helped us
in the past, He is helping us in the present, and we believe that He will help
us all the way through.
III. But here is
the point that I want to make most prominent--the third one--THE DETERMINATION AT WHICH THEY HAD
ARRIVED. ¡§I not,¡¨ if God does not deliver us at all, ¡§be it known
unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden
image which thou hast set up.¡¨ Grand language! Noble resolve!
1. They did not pivot their loyalty to God upon their deliverance.
They did not say, as some do, ¡§I will serve God if it pays me to do so. I will
serve God if He helps me at such and such a time.¡¨ No, they would serve Him for
nothing; theirs was not cupboard love.
2. They resolved that they would obey God at all costs. Let us walk
in this heroic path. But some will say, ¡§It is too hard. You cannot expect men
to love God well enough to die for Him.¡¨ No, but there was One who loved us
well enough to die for us, and to die a thousand deaths in one, that He might
save us. If Christ so loved us, we ought so to love Him. ¡§Well,¡¨ says one, ¡§I
think it is impossible. I could not bear pain.¡¨ It is possible, for many have
endured it. You may never be called to such a trial as that; but still, if you
cannot bear the small trials, how would you bear the great ones? To enable us
to get the spirit of these three holy men, we must get, first, a clear sense of
the Divine presence. It a man feels that God is seeing him, he will not bow his
knee to an idol; neither will he do evil; for God¡¦s eye is upon him. We must,
next, have a deep sense of the Divine law. I have already reminded you of the
law. ¡§Thou shalt have no other gods before me,¡¨ etc. Above all, to keep
us right, we must have a mighty sense of the Divine love. We shall never obey
God till by His grace we have new hearts, and those hearts are full of love to
Him through Jesus Christ. ¡§But what did these three men do?¡¨ says one; ¡§they
simply did not bow their heads, and they were cast into the fiery furnace. What
did they do?¡¨ They influenced their age, their people, and all time. These
three men influenced the city of Babylon, and the whole Babylonian empire, They
certainly influenced King Nebuchadnezzar. These three men command the
admiration of Heaven and earth. A fool would have pointed at them and said,
¡§There go three fools--gentlemen high in office, with large incomes, and wives
and families. They have only to take their cap off, and they may live in their
wealth; but if they do not do it, they are to be burnt alive; and they will not
do it. They will be burnt alive. They are fools.¡¨ Yes, but the Son of God did
not think so. When He in Heaven heard them speak thus to King Nebuchadnezzar,
He said, ¡§Brave, brave men! I will leave the throne of God in Heaven to go and
stand by their side¡¨; and invisibly He descended, till where the fires were
glowing like one vast ruby, where the fierce flame had slain the men that threw
the three confessors into the burning fiery furnace, He came and stood. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
The True Way of Treating
Sin, and what comes of it
The true way of treating
sin is by a religion of principle. And that sort of religion is splendidly
displayed in Scripture. Out on the plain of Dura is to be lifted a golden image
ninety feet in height. It is plated, not solid--and are not all idols plated?
Every object of worship, save only God, is hollow and deceiving. Well, the
pageant is accomplished. The image stands resplendent. The king is gorgeous on
his throne. The highest officers of the kingdom crowd the plain. The music
bursts and swells. And all the plain at once is full of prostrate worshippers.
Except that three men still stand. They have not fallen. They do not worship.
Who are they? They are Hebrew captives from Jerusalem. They have heard the
command higher than the king¡¦s--¡§Thou shalt have no other gods before me; thou
shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor worship them.¡¨ They will obey this
loftier mandate. And there they stand amid the kneeling host, erect, alone;
with firmness on their faces, with faith in their hearts, with God above them,
with all the world beneath their feet. Here, surely, is a religion of
principle. Not a transient enthusiasm; not simply a decorous, fair-weather
profession; not a weak and swaying sentimentality, but a deep, inward,
immovable, resistent principle of life, holding the possessors of it to
straight and definite courses, and clothing them with heroism. Consider the
foundation of such religion of principle. Right doctrine is one of its
foundations. Doctrine is something taught. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego had
been taught the truth that Jehovah is supreme. There is an immense importance
in right doctrine. Right religion is right theology applied; right practice is
right doctrine carried out; right life is right creed lived. You must learn the
will of God before you can unfalteringiy do that will. Right resolve is another
of the foundations of a religion of principle. Not only must the right doctrine
be received, but along with that must go the resolve to practise it at all
hazards. The doctrine must not be a seed, carefully wrapped and laid in some
secret drawer; it must be a seed planted, and helped upward into growth and
bloom and fruitage by all the breezes, and all the showers, and all the
sunlight. Right doctrine must, through holy resolution, compel the deed into coincidence
with itself. Consider the tests of this religion of principle. It is prompt.
Oh, the waste of life, in debating duty! Oh, the weakness of argument and
counter argument! Oh, the trouble of the spirit stunned with the noises of
disputation with itself. Oh, the clearness and straightness and strength of the
life which, looking to Christ for truth, just bravely does the truth at once.
Mark the grand promptness of these three Hebrews. ¡§We are determined and
decided; wears not careful to answer thee in this matter, O king.¡¨ This
religion of principle is conscientious about small matters. (Wayland Hoyt, D.D.)
Religious Intolerance
I. WE HAVE HERE AN INSTANCE OF RELIGIOUS
INTOLERANCE. The scene of the text is laid in an Eastern land. It
would seem that the will of the monarch was supreme. His word was law; he must
be obeyed. And this authority was not confined simply to affairs of state; it
seems to have entered into the region of religion too. This is always
dangerous. It matters but little when it happens; trouble is almost sure to
arise unless freedom of thought and liberty of conscience are entirely
surrendered. It was this arrogant claim which kept many states of Europe in the
chains of ignorance and superstition far too long. It was this which fired the
soul of Luther, and led him to be a reformer. We state with emphasis that in
our judgment no man has a right to come between God and the soul.
1. Every man should be at liberty to worship God according to his own
conscience and lights.
2. The law should protect every man in the enjoyment of this liberty,
providing always that he does not interfere with the enjoyment of the same
rights and liberties by others. My freedom of action is to be limited by the
rights and liberties of others. The king had a perfect right to set up his
image. But when he sought to compel others to do as he did he interfered with
their liberties, which should have been the measure of his own. The law should
protect us all alike in our religion, if we do not interfere with the rights of
our neighbours.
3. No man should suffer civil disability because of his religious
belief.
4. No man should have preference in civil matters because of his
religious profession.
II. WE HAVE AN EXAMPLE OF RELIGIOUS
FAITHFULNESS.
1. We must be true to our God, even if we have to stand alone. Living
as we do in times when religion is popular, and to attend public worship is
respectable, we cannot fully realise all it means to stand alone for God.
2. We must be true to our God,, even if it makes us seem untrue to
men. These men had received, much in this kingdom. They were the sons of
conquered people, men of an alien and foreign race, the children of captivity,
and prisoners of war. Royal favour had spared, and saved them. Sad and painful
as it may be to appear ungrateful to those to whom we are under obligation, we
must not dishonour our God. It is better to lose the friendship of man than the
favour of God.
3. We must be true to God, even if it brings loss upon us. A religion
which costs nothing is worth only what it costs. Did Moses consider what he
would gain if he made common cause with his own people, whom God meant him to
deliver? It may well be doubted if anyone ever suffers much in the long run
through faithfulness to God. (C. Leach, D.D.)
The Martyrs
Men of this strain are of
native right the captains of the great host of God. They are the men sent to
lead it when formed, to rally it when broken, and to inspire it by their own
conduct in the field. The men who can say, Whether I succeed or fail, as the
world counts success or failure, whether I suffer or triumph, whether I die or
live, one thing I do, the will of God as far as it is made known to me; and one
thing I will not do, the will of the world, the flesh, and the devil, form that
living core of strength and valour in Christ¡¦s army. The presence of these
Jewish youths at the Chaldean court is a conspicuous instance of the visible
interposition of a Divine hand in the government of the world. The Jew was the
living witness of the care of God for the political welfare of men. We are
prone to underrate the influence of the Jew on the world of his time. We see
him narrow, selfish, and exclusive, and we easily overlook the remarkable
influence which he exerted at critical moments on the surrounding peoples.
Joseph¡¦s work in Egypt is really but a specimen of the work which that people,
willingly or unwillingly, were compelled to accomplish for mankind. In Daniel
probably the influence culminated, until the whole commission was read out by
St. Paul. The crisis which Daniel records is one of the chief pivots of
universal history.
I. Let us study THE MARTYR SPIRIT AS HERE REVEALED.
1. These men had attained to the condition in which conviction had
passed beyond the reach of perturbation or question. The everlasting hills were
not so firmly rooted as the belief in the God of Heaven, and the essential
blessedness of serving Him, was rooted in those young hearts. The rending in
pieces of the whole world system around them would have shattered none of their
dearest beliefs and hopes (Psalms 46:1-5). Their God made the world, and could make new worlds at His
pleasure; but He was the same, from everlasting to everlasting, and His word
must stand, whatever else in the universe might fall.
2. They were themselves of that temper, and had come to that strength
and unity of character, that they could declare, There are things which we
cannot say, there are things which we cannot do, whatever be the cost; it is
blankly impossible; here strand we; we can do no other, God help us. I say they
were of that temper, and they had come to that strength and unity of character.
There must be both to make such martyrs, such witnesses for the God of Heaven
as these. If this must be, it must be. God help us; it must be. We cannot
speak, we cannot do, this awful lie. ¡§Be it known unto thee, O king, that we
will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.¡¨
3. There must abide in all martyr spirits an unwavering faith in the
omnipotent hand of God. ¡§Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us.¡¨ His
power to rule is clear to us as sunlight. He may choose to help us now, and
signally deliver. He may choose to let us suffer, but nothing can shake our
belief in His Power to save. We are sure that His will must be done; His cause
must triumph; His servants, His soldiers, must be crowned. It may be here; it
may be there; we do not question Him; times are in His hand. But here or there it
will be, as surely as He reigns. A man may say with unconquerable firmness, I
cannot do this thing, I will rather die, even when he believes that death is
annihilation. But this faith is essential to the joyous spirit of Christian
martyrdom; the exultation in prospect of a death of pain and shame which broke
forth in the words, ¡§I am ready to be offered up, and the time of my departure
is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept
the faith: henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which
the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me at that day.¡¨ To die thus, one
must believe that that for which he dies will reign, and he with it, in
eternity.
II. We shall
better understand the temper of these men WHEN WE COMPARE IT WITH A RECORD WHICH DESCRIBES VERY
FAITHFULLY THE QUALITY OF MUCH THAT GOES BY THE NAME OF THE RELIGIOUS LIFE Genesis 28:16-22). ¡§Bless me, prosper my journey, bring me home again, and I will
serve thee,¡¨ were the terms of Jacob¡¦s covenant in Bethel. But if the cross be
heavy, the self-denial hard, the battle long and stern, the cry is, Why hast
thou brought me forth? ¡§Is not this that¡¨ we said unto thee, Let us alone that
we may serve the Egyptians?¡¨ How grandly beside these terms of bargain rings
out the clear defiance of the text. Many a man enters on the pilgrim path in
the belief that God will make his way smooth, pleasant, prosperous, and ends by
being so wedded to truth and righteousness that he would say quite calmly with
these men, ¡§Be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor
worship the golden image which thou hast set up.¡¨ Do not be disheartened if you
find faith waver in the hour of trial. At the opening of a battle, when the
first bullets begin to patter, the boldest soldier draws himself together. When
his blood is warm, he thinks of them no more than of summer rain-drops. Pray to
the Master that thy faith fail not.
III. Let us look at
THE SCHOOL IN WHICH MEN ARE
TRAINED TO SUCH GOD-:LIKE VIGOUR AND COURAGE which it was God¡¦s
will that they should practise in great things. They were as resolute against
little compliances as against great ones. It is a grand mistake to think that
men can leap in one moment of high excitement to such a glorious height of
strength and courage. Nothing but trained Christian manhood can endure such
strain. Idols! the world is full of them. Golden idols, too, and daily throngs
bow down their souls to worship. Are you trained to say, That I cannot do, that
trick I cannot practise, that lie I cannot tell, that lust I will not indulge,
that worldly success I will not clutch at, though life were hanging on it. I
cannot do it; God help me! (J. B. Brown, B.A.)
Courage and Fidelity
I. THE IMPIETY OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR IN
ERECTING THIS IDOL, and using means to compel all people,
especially his captives, to fall down and worship it..
II. The exemplary
courage and fidelity of these men, in withstanding the impetuous passion of the
king, and suffering all the effects of his rage and fury, rather than yield to
the impiety of worshipping his idol
III. The happy
issue of their constancy, and triumph of their faith in this conflict.
I. As to the idol
itself, though the sacred text says nothing of the shape of it, yet I think it
is not doubted but that it was made in the figure of a man; some think it was
intended for Bolus, the founder of the Babylonian royal family; others, for
Nabopollasser, this king¡¦s father; but a third opinion is that it was a model
of that image which Nebuchadnezzar had seen in his dream, in the foregoing
chapter, which he might take to be the genius of his kingdom, and which,
therefore, he might hope to render propitious to him and his affairs, by dedicating
to him this magnificent statue, and through it offering to him Divine honours
and adorations. This, indeed, was agreeable enough to the theology of the
ancient Gentiles, who thus venerated their peculiar and tutelar deities. But it
was more unpardonable in this king than in others, by reason of the long
commerce which he had with the Jews, which makes it impossible to conceive that
he could be ignorant of this first and greatest article of their religion, that
there was but one God, and that He was to be worshipped in a spiritual way,
without any material resemblance. He was well acquainted with Daniel and these
three men, whom he had appointed to be bred up in his court, and to be fitted
for the high offices of his kingdom, to which he quickly preferred them. I will
not now stand to enquire how far it may be lawful to enforce the profession
even of true religion by temporal penalties. There is a zeal for God, which His
own word approves of in magistrates and ministers; and there is a zeal without
knowledge, which runs out into a criminal persecution, for which St. Paul says
that he obtained mercy, because he acted ignorantly (1. Timothy 1:13). But
surely Nebuchadnezzar could not plead this excuse. He must be well acquainted
with the religion of these men; he had the greatest obligations to their God,
and was bound to them by the laws of hospitality, and by the faithful service
which we may justly suppose they rendered him in their respective stations.
II. Let us now
turn to the contemplation of THE
EXEMPLARY COURAGE AND FIDELITY OF THESE MEN, who withstood the
impetuous passion of the king, and chose to suffer all the effects of his rage
and fury rather than yield to the impiety of worshipping his idol. This is a
plain argument that their hopes were extended beyond this life; for had they
thought the fiery furnace could have put an end to their being, and that there
should nothing have remained of them for God to reward or punish in another
state, I am of opinion they would have bowed to this image rather than have
burned for it. For, however some affirm, that truth is so much more beautiful
and con-natural to the soul of man than falsehood, that a wise man would prefer
it even for its own sake, though nothing was to be expected after this life;
yet if it were to be vindicated with the utter extinction of the whole man, and
that on the contrary his receding from it would prolong his existence and his
happiness, I am apt to think that it would in such case become an allowed rule
of wisdom, to recede from the truth when it could not be held without suffering
the loss of soul and body for the sake of it. And this was certainty the
motive, why these martyrs of the true God did so cheerfully surrender their
bodies to the flames, submitting themselves to Him, to live or die, as He saw
most conducive to His own glory; firmly believing that if the fire dissolved
their bodies, their souls should pass into His more immediate presence, and be
made partakers of His immortal felicities. I believe I need not say much to persuade
those who have a competent knowledge of the sufferings of holy martyrs, that
many of them have given the best evidence that the consolations of God have far
exceeded the torments of men in their greatest extremities.
III. THE HAPPY ISSUE OF THESE MEN¡¦S CONSTANCY, and the
triumph of their faith in this conflict. The enraged king had power to throw
them into the fire, but he had no power to make the fire burn them. The king,
when he called to his counsellors upon this occasion, told them that the form of
the fourth man was like the Son of God. By this he might mean that he appeared
to be a very august, majestic person; a god-like man, as we would say. This is
as much as the expression sometimes imports. But because he could not think
that a man of flesh and blood could enter there, and preserve the sufferers in
such a miraculous manner, he must rather mean that it was some Divine Being
sent from Heaven for this purpose. To this it will be objected that it is not
credible Nebuchadnezzar knew anything of this Son of God, so as to be able to
say that this person was like him. And we may readily allow that he did not;
and yet this objection does not at all overthrow our hypothesis. For the king
might mean in general that he seemed to be some Divine person; and this person
might be the particular and only Son of God, who in all probability appeared
upon the earth in human shape upon some occasion long before His incarnation. (W.
Reading M. A.)
I. CONSIDER THE TRIAL OF THEIR OBEDIENCE.
It must be allowed that things good in themselves are heightened in value by
circumstances. Why was the liberality of the widow commended, whole file rich
cast into the treasury? We are told that they cast in of their abundance; but
she of her penury cast in all that she had. The man who is not puffed up in the
time of prosperity, is the humble man; he who is not cast down when in danger,
and when all other men¡¦s strength fails, this is the courageous man.
1. They could plead authority. It was their sovereign who commanded
them to fall down and worship the image, and good men must be loyal subjects.
Yes, but here is a distinction to be made: we must distinguish between civil
and religious concerns, and must obey God rather than man. But this conduct has
often given to the servants of God a character for insubordination. Thus Jesus
was charged with sedition, and Paul with being tumultuous.
2. They could plead obligation. Nebuchadnezzar had taken these
captives from among the Hebrews, and had raised them to offices of trust and
emolument. Nothing pleads so powerfully as kindness; favours attach the heart,
and good men are sensible of obligations. There is no greater trial than to be
unable to oblige a friend. ¡§He that loveth father and mother more than me, is
not worthy of me¡¨--this is the trial.
3. They could plead the universality of the example. All around them
yielded; and why should they be singular? Singularity, for its own sake, always
shows a vain mind, and singularity in little things discovers a weak mind.
Decency requires that we should not stand out in little things; but in things
important, where a soul is to be lost, and God dishonoured--there we must be
¡§separate, and touch not the unclean thing.¡¨ A dead fish will swim with
the stream; it is a live one only that can swim against it. It was thus that
Enoch walked with God alone, and amidst opposition. Thus, Noah was a preacher
of righteousness in a sinful world, and Moses refused to be called the son of
Pharaoh¡¦s daughter. You are not afraid to be singular in most things; you are
not afraid to be singularly wise--singularly rich--singularly happy! The best
wisdom is that ¡§which is from above,¡¨ and the best happiness is that which is
eternal. When you are called on to do good, never ask what others are doing, or
what will be said of you.
4. Remark the dreadfulness of the penalty. You sometimes complain
that your trials are too much for your virtue. ¡§Oh,¡¨ you say, ¡§if we follow on
in this particular course, we shall¡¨--but let us hear your trials--¡§we shall be
exposed to the burning stake--cast into the lion¡¦s den.¡¨ No, nothing like it. ¡§
Shall be deprived of liberty¡¨; nothing like it. ¡§Be reduced to want¡¨; nothing
like it. ¡§No; but in order to attend to closet and family devotions,¡¨ I hear
you say, ¡§we must rise a little earlier. Oh! but, if we don¡¦t profane the
Sabbath, and open our shops on the Sunday, we shall lose some of our customers.
If we don¡¦t conform to the world, we shall be scoffed at.¡¨ Eternal God! these
are the martyrs of thy religion in our day!
II. THE PRINCIPLE OF THEIR OBEDIENCE.
A conduct so tried, and yet so triumphant, must have had principle to support
it. A man under the influence of principle will not be under the control of
circumstances, nor under the influence of momentary impulse; if a good man
errs, he acts from principle. But what armed them? Can we find a principle
equal to the effect produced? The servants of God have done great things, and
have suffered great trials; and the very thing which has enabled them to suffer
is that which some are afraid of, viz., faith. Faith does not lead to
licentiousness. It is by faith alone that we can do good works. But faith must
have something to lay hold on, and act and work upon. In the faith of these
three young men there were three things to act upon.
1. The power of God. ¡§Our God,¡¨ said they, ¡§is able to deliver us.¡¨
¡§He is the Maker of heaven and earth; He has suspended the laws of nature, made
iron to swim, and raised the dead; and He is able to do exceeding abundantly
above all that we can ask or think.¡¨ It was here that the Jews failed; they
asked¡¦, ¡§Can God furnish a table in the wilderness? Can He give flesh also?¡¨
All nature may change; but His word cannot fail: ¡§He can turn the shadow of
death into the morning.¡¨
2. It regarded the disposition of God. ¡§He will deliver us out of
thine hand, O king!¡¨ Perhaps they thought it probable that God would work a
miracle in their favour; perhaps they had some inward presentiment of it in
their minds; perhaps they concluded this from Scripture. They had doubtless read
in the book of Psalms, ¡§I will deliver him and honour him, and I will shew him
my salvation.¡¨ He has engaged to deliver His people in the day of trouble, and
He will do it, either here partially or hereafter completely.
3. It regarded a future indemnification in another world. What! did
they still persist in their determination--though a painful death was to be the
consequence? Yes; but they could not have regaled it as annihilation. If there
had been no other world, it would not have become them to have sacrificed life;
their martyrdom would, in this case, have been madness. They must, then, have
believed in a state of future recompense. Unless we bring the prospect of a
future and eternal life to bear upon our conduct, we shall yield to temptation;
and it is for want of this that the world leads us astray. When we think of
another world, how infinitely superior does it appear to the present life!
III. Notice THE EFFECT OF THEIR OBEDIENCE.
How did it end? In promoting the glory of the Master whom they served, and the
interests of the religion which they professed. When the people of God suffer
in the discharge of their duty, they glorify God, and show how He can deliver
those who trust in Him. It resulted in their own honour and advantage. They
staid not long in the furnace; but those were golden moments. O what peace and
joy in God did they feel! and what holy resolutions did they form while in the
furnace? To conclude:
1. Let us be thankful for the biography of the Scriptures--let us be
grateful that we have the example of so many good men set before us, who,
through faith and patience, do now inherit the promises.
2. If you are the servants of God, His grace is necessary for you. It
is happy for us that we live under a paternal government, and are not exposed
to the fury and caprice of tyrants.
3. While infidels ridicule you, and the enemies of Christ
misrepresent your conduct, there is something in the religion of Christ which
will support you; there is a reality in it which can be found in nothing else.
(W. Jay.)
The Three Hebrew Youths
The Church of God has
suffered much persecution. This, though in itself an evil, has been productive
of good. By persecution the sincerity of religious professors has been tried,
the hypocrisy of deceivers has been detected, the graces of good men have been
exercised and improved.
I. The CIRCUMSTANCES which
occasioned the address. Babylon the renowned capital of the ancient Chaldean
empire; a place not less remarkable for its magnificence than its idolatry.
Nebuchadnezzar was a heathen; the royal patron of idolatrous practices; a very
powerful and ambitious monarch. And was the object of this imperious prince
attained? Did he secure universal compliance? No; these three youths, mentioned
in the text, dared to refuse. ¡§Then Nebuchadnezzar, in his rage and fury¡¨--very
unfit companions for a king! How little qualified was this man to rule mighty
nations, who had no rule over his own spirit! This worm of the earth sets
himself in competition with Jehovah! He challenges the Most High, the King of
Heaven! He defies the power of Omnipotence! It is the sentiment of an infidel,
bloated with pride, and burning with passion.
II. The TEMPER OF MIND discovered
in the address. It possesses uncommon beauty, and is highly instructive.
1. Dignified composure. ¡§We are not careful to answer thee in this
matter.¡¨ There was nothing in the least disrespectful in this sentence; they
were not indifferent to their situation, or inattentive to their language and
behaviour; it intimates rather that they were not perplexed about the answer
they should give. The king was exceedingly agitated, but we see nothing of
agitation in these young men; they were perfectly collected and composed. They
did not begin to declaim against the idols of Babylon, or against the iniquity
of this sanguinary edict. We notice here the influence of genuine religion; it
is the same in all ages, and in all countries. So far as it is possessed, it
quiets the mind; it preserves it unruffled; it subdues those angry passions which
disturb the breast of many when their will is thwarted, when their inclination
is crossed. Do you complain of the want of self-possession, and of command of
temper in the presence of those who revile and persecute you?
2. Decided piety. In the presence of an imperious monarch, who was
addicted to the practice of idolatry, and determined on reducing all about him
to the same way, these youths explicitly avow ¡§the God whom we serve.¡¨ Yes, the
man who loves God in his heart is not ashamed of his attachment, nor is he
afraid to declare it on every proper occasion. Decided piety is productive of
Christian courage; and this does not consist in rudeness; it does not oblige a
man to intrude religious talk into every company, and at every turn; yet, when
his principles are violently attacked, when the honour of God and of the Gospel
is insulted, the true Christian will not be cowardly, but decided and firm. Beg
of God to strengthen this heavenly principle in you, to fortify your hearts and
minds, to preserve you from sinful shame, to make you decided and valiant for
the truth as it is in Jesus.
3. Believing confidence is remarkably evident. ¡§If it be so, our God
whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace; and He will
deliver us out of thine hand, O king.¡¨ They seem to have had a secret
expectation that, should Nebuchadnezzar be suffered to carry his threats into
execution, their God, by some means, would rescue them. Whether they had any
intimation of this given them from Heaven, we are not certain. They trusted in
the living God, and by faith ¡§endured, as seeing Him that is invisible! ¡§Ask
yourselves, what is the nature, and what are the grounds of your confidence? Is
your hope in God?¡¨ Does it rest on His truth, and on the certainty that He will
secure His own glory? Alas! the confidence of most is easily shaken, and faith
wavers with every wind of trial.
4. Steady resolution, at all events, to obey God rather than man, A
variety of considerations might have shaken their constancy, and led them to a
compliance. Let us advert here, to the disposition of many professors of
religion in the present day. Could not you have got over this difficulty
without hazarding your life? Would you not have temporised a little? Would you
not have yielded, and then, by some expedient, have settled matters with your
conscience? Yes, some have settled much more difficult points.
III. The remarkable
EFFECTS which the
address produced. On Nebuchadnezzar they were effects of more violent anger; it
stirred up all his malignant rage, which appeared in the distortion of his
countenance; he was ¡§full of fury, and the form of his visage was changed.¡¨
Henry remarks: ¡§Would men in a passion but look at their faces in a glass, they
would blush at their own folly, and turn their displeasure against themselves.¡¨
But the day is coming when proud tyrants will be called to account, not only
for the cruelties which they have themselves practised, but also for those
which they have instigated others to commit; and an awful reckoning it will
be.¡¨ This subject suggests a few words:
1. To young persons. The case of these Hebrew youths conveys
instruction to you with peculiar energy, and demonstrates the great necessity
of steady religious principle. It is true you live not in the court of Babylon;
but you live in a sinful world, surrounded with the enemies of God, and of your
souls. An image of gold is not set up which you are commanded to worship; but
there are other snares, a variety of other trials, which will put your
sincerity to the test, and determine whom you serve. And you, parents, we
wonder not that young persons, in the present day, are so yielding to vanity
and vice; so content to swim with the stream, and to follow the corrupt
fashions of the age; for what should hinder? What should induce them to resist?
Their minds are not principled;they are not furnished with religious knowledge;
and for want of this, their consciences have little sense of evil, their hearts
are not inclined to good, they are left without any effectual restraint.
2. To undecided professors. There are many such; and many do not
suspect themselves till they are tried. It is an easy thing to follow religion
while the world smiles; but when it frowns, when it threatens, when it reviles
and persecutes, then is the secret iniquity of multitudes discovered; their
principles are abandoned, and their props give way. Remember, if religion
demands anything, it demands the heart. You must be decided, or you are
nothing. Is it so, that you are led away by the fascinations of the world? You
know nothing of the Gospel as you ought to know.
3. Afflicted, persecuted believers are addressed. To you this subject
speaks peculiar encouragement. Never was there a more striking illustration, or
a more exact fulfilment of the promise, ¡§When thou walkest through the fire,
thou shalt not be burnt; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee.¡¨ And to you
Jehovah speaks, as well as to believers in all ages: ¡§I will be with thee¡¨--¡§I
will deliver thee.¡¨
4. Are there any
persecutors here? This subject speaks closely to you. And let me remind you of
the dreadful end of such characters. See it in the death of Herod, who was
eaten up with worms; see it in the doom of Pharaoh, who, with his host, sunk
like lead in the mighty waters; and see it in the degraded condition of this
haughty Chaldean monarch. Many a man is an oppressor, a persecutor, in his own
house. His influence, possibly, does not reach much farther; or he may have
that regard to his reputation, and to his worldly interest, which binds him to
restrain his passion in his general intercourse with men. But see him in his
own domestic circle;observe his temper in his own family; how often rage and
fury boil in his breast,
anger distorts his countenance, and even Nebuchadnezzar could scarcely be more
unreasonable in some of his requirements. (T. Kidd.)
Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego
Let us consider the heroic
constancy and fidelity of those devoted servants of God, and endeavour to
derive therefrom matter for our instruction and encouragement. Now, I can
scarcely conceive a harder trial of faith than what these men were called upon
to undergo, or any circumstances fitted to put the truth and reality of their
principles to a severer test. Had they been the objects of unrelenting persecution
for some time previously, their ease would have been vastly different. Their
minds would have been, in some measure, prepared for the fearful crisis which
awaited them. For it is well known how a long series of afflictions and trials
loosens all the ties which bind us to life, and takes away the bitterness of
death. But such was not the condition of the bold and holy confessors we are
now considering. Their condition, their outward estate, was happy. They might
have been called the children of fortune.. Worldly prosperity had brightened
their path--they had been promoted to offices of dignity and trust. It is but
keeping within the strictest limits of reason and probability to suppose they
had as much to attach them to life. This was a dreadful alternative And here we
may pause, and ask, Oh! how would hypocrisy, how would empty profession have
shrunk from it?--how would the mere formalist have turned his back?--I had
almost said, how would the weak and timid believer have proved himself unequal
to the trial? But God¡¦s grace was magnified in these men. The fire which
consumes the dross only purifies the gold. The holy purpose was fixed. There
must be no compromise, no concession; conscience told them the act was wrong.
Its voice was paramount. There are those who sneer at those holy records of
martyrdoms for the truth, and who would set them down to the score of wild
fanaticism, or to the ambition of getting a name. But could it be so in the
case before us? What motive could actuate them arising from secular
considerations? There were no honours to be obtained by them as dying
martyrs--there were the interests of no party to be upheld. They had not the
power of the example of others before them to stimulate them to seek a martyr¡¦s
glorious name. Oh, I should like to see how wild fanaticism, or heated
enthusiasm, or the fire of false excitement, could stand such a trial!--how
they would demean themselves under such circumstances. No, we must trace the
inflexible courage and constancy of these men to a higher and nobler source.
And now was the hour of breathless suspense; now it was expected the screams of
agony would issue from the fiery furnace. But, no; all was silent as the grave.
It could not be that death had done its work so soon. When, lo, the mysterious
marvel!--What signet is this that breaks upon the monarch¡¦s view? ¡§Were there
not three men cast into the fiery furnace?¡¨--but, lo, he sees four men,
walking; and the fourth is like the Son of God! Now, it is delightful to see
God thus openly putting honour upon the faithfulness of His servants. But this,
as well as all other Scriptures, was written for our instruction; and we are
not living in an age when the lesson which it is fitted to teach us is no
longer needful. It is not because the flames of martyrdom are quenched, or its
sword sheathed, that, therefore, the spirit, the uncompromising spirit of the
martyrs is no longer needed. No, in every period of the church there is truth
to be maintained with uncompromising fidelity; error to be opposed with
unhesitating boldness. There is ever a demand for that singleness of purpose,
that simplicity of aim, which turns not to the right hand nor to the left,
where the interests of truth are concerned. These are times when the principles
which were so distinguished in these holy men are as much needed as ever. It is
well known how much of latitudinarian sentiments are now abroad. We know well
with what plausible arguments opinions may be maintained which are as much
opposed to truth as light is to darkness. And it is no ordinary trial of
sincerity which awaits the young, especially--when they are thrown into the
society of men who are infinitely their superiors in intelligence, and literary
attainments, and skill in argument--to maintain their principles with meekness,
but with boldness. The Christian is certainly called upon to act a consistent
and decided part; to show plainly to whom he belongs; to come out and be
separate; to be ¡§a living epistle, known and read of all men.¡¨ A love of God¡¦s
truth is his distinguishing character; and a compromise of God¡¦s truth, or
anything that tends to lessen or to obliterate the boundary marks between truth
and error, shall have his unqualified reprobation. The truth of God is what he
loves better than the life itself; and that truth is simple and one. It would
be well to ask ourselves, occasionally, ¡§What sacrifices do we make in defence
of the truth? What do we do and suffer in our Divine Master¡¦s cause?¡¨ No one
can tell how much the interests of true religion may be advanced by the
Christian ¡§showing, out of a good conversation, his faith with meekness of
wisdom.¡¨ The believer is bound to advance the cause of his Master, to the
utmost of his ability, means, and opportunity. The silent lessons of a holy
example are ever powerful. You may be faithful ¡§in the midst of a perverse and
crooked generation.¡¨ The offence of the cross is not yet ceased; and the
Christian is called to bear a cross. And it would be well that we should, at
times, examine ourselves upon the subject of our trials and exercises for
Christ¡¦s sake. If we have none, let us examine and search diligently into the
cause; take care that our exemption be not owing to compromise or faulty
concession--to bowing before the golden image of expediency. (D. Kelly, B.
A.)
The Nonconformists of
Babylon
We have here:
1. A specimen of religious intolerance. God alone is ¡§Lord of the
conscience.¡¨ A man¡¦s faith and worship are things which lie between himself and
his Creater. This liberty is my birthright as a man.
2. How religious intolerance may be met. These three young men simply
refused to do what Nebuchadnezzar commanded; or, in modern phrase, they met his
injunction with ¡§passive resistance.¡¨ They would not tolerate any excuses, any
casuistry. With similar firmness and humility we should meet intolerance yet.
3. An illustration of the support which Jesus gives to His followers,
when they are called to suffer for His sake. These young men were entirely
delivered, even as Peter was taken out of prison at a later day. God¡¦s servants
are not always taken out of tribulations, but they are always supported through
them.
4. In the matter
of religious intolerance, as well as in some other things, the opposite of
wrong is not always right. Nebuchadnezzar gave up the attempt to coerce these
young men. That was well; but he issued an edict in reference to Jehovah which
had in it elements not less objectionable than his command to worship the
image. He had no more right to out men to pieces for speaking evil of Jehovah
than he had to put Shadrach into the dames for not worshipping his image. Both
edicts were alike unjustifiable. (W. M. Taylor, D.D.)
The Three Witnesses on the
Plains of Dura
We may be, and often are,
put to trials similar in kind, though perhaps not in degree. If, however, faith
and constancy were triumphant in so signal an instance as this, and in
circumstances under which frail human nature may have been expected to give
way, there is much more reason why they should not give way under less vehement
assaults, and with greater advantages on their side. Let us pray to God that
our strength may prove equal to our day. In company with idolatry we see
tyranny and oppression; these hateful things are always found in union.
Observe, too, the zeal with which men who are led by the deceits of Satan
propagate their errors. And the cause of truth and godliness ought to be
supported by the lawful influence, the fervent prayers; the holy examples, of
all in every station, whether high or low . . . What are the temptations by
which we are usually induced to break God¡¦s commandments? Some present pleasure
that might well be foregone; some convenience that might be easily dispensed
with; some gain of money that becomes a loss when obtained; some compliance
with the humour of those whom we are wont to look up to with respect, but whose
smile is dearly purchased by the sacrifice of principle, and the forfeiture of
the favour of God. Inquire lute the principles which actuated these champions
for the truth. It was that principle of faith which is so much pressed upon us
in the Holy Scriptures. It was that fear of God which is the beginning of
wisdom. ¡§They endured as seeing Him who is invisible.¡¨. . . We have, in this
narrative, a most vivid exhibition of the practical working of faith. Many persons
cannot understand why such stress should be laid upon faith. We behold in the
case of these faithful servants of God what faith can do. It lifts us above the
world, and bears us up against sorrow and adversity. (H. J. Hastings, M.A.)
The Importance of a True
Creed
Why is it that men like
these Jews under the Old Testament dispensation, and Christians now and at all
times, are ready to give up life and everything for God? It is because a true
religion is the sole thing which enlightens the conscience, and so trains and
strengthens it as to invest it with real power in the guidance of our lives.
When men have felt their will enlightened by Divine knowledge, and sanctified
by the Holy Spirit¡¦s indwelling, they then choose God¡¦s service so firmly and joyfully
that no earthly terrors can shake or move them from their sure foundation.
This, then, is what religion does for us. It clothes us with power. Under false
religions the conscience remains in a rudimentary state, and though it does
approve or condemn, and say this is right and that wrong, it acts but weakly
and ignorantly, and is a very feeble monitor. And with so little help men¡¦s
lives sink down into mean baseness. But a true faith and the Holy Spirit aid to
build up the conscience, and give it, first, light, whereby it distinguishes
right and wrong clearly; and, secondly, power, so that it speaks to the will
with all authority, and says, ¡§This thou shalt do, and this thou shalt leave
undone.¡¨ Conscience had long ago decided, for Shadrach and his companions what
their lives were to be. And under its influence they could not abandon the
faith which had enlightened the conscience and given it this power; nor could
they be false to that God who had been their peace and happiness, and whom they
knew to be the sole Almighty Governor both in Heaven and in earth below. (Dean
Payne-Smith, D.D.)
The Duty of Religious
Profession
At first Oliver Cromwell¡¦s
Ironsides were dressed anyhow and everyhow; but in the melee with the
cavaliers, it sometimes happened that an Ironside was struck down by mistake by
the sword of one of his own brethren, and so the general said: ¡§You wear red
coats, all of you.¡¨ What Cromwell said he meant, and they had to go in their
red coats, for it is found essential in warfare that men should be known by
some kind of regimental. Now, you that are Christ¡¦s, do not go about as if you
were ashamed of your Master¡¦s service. Put on your red coats; I mean, come out
as acknowledged Christians. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christians Unconquerable
The rose of Jericho
flourishes amidst surroundings which lack all things wherein plants delight--in
the hot desert, in the rocky crevices, by the dusty wayside, and in the rubbish
heap. Even more, the fierce sirocco tears it from its place and flings it far
out upon the ocean, and there, driven by the storms and tossed by the salt
waves, it still lives and grows. So should the Christian grow in any and all
circumstances where he may be cast--in sorrow, in hardship, in misfortune, in
suffering. A deathless life is in him, and he should be unconquerable. (Signal.)
Verse 17-18
If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the
burning fiery furnace.
Our Sure Defence
These souls were under the strongest possible temptation to do
that which would have been an act of utter unfaithfulness to God, and which
would have cost them their own self-respect. Had they yielded to the royal
threat, they would have done that for which theft never could have forgiven
themselves. It would have been a deed of recreancy and of shame. It is not only
for great occasions that we should be prepared. Again and again will occur to
us the opportunity for courageous constancy, the temptation to ¡§unworthy
concession or to the submission that would end in shame. Where shall we find
our defence?
I. IN ABSOLUTE CONVICTION.
¡§The God whom we serve is able to deliver us,¡¨ said these dissenting Jews.
There was no doubt about that. They remembered what Jehovah had done in the
past, what deliverances He had wrought; and in answer to the king¡¦s
incredulity, they replied with the absolute conviction of the Divine power to
save. It is almost everything to us to have a deep sense of some great
spiritual certainties. When evils hang over our head, when our prospects are
threatened, when health, or liberty, or life is at stake, it is much indeed to
stand upon the rook of some solid certitudes. God is near to us; He is
observing us, and is awaiting our constancy with Divine interest and
acceptance; He will reward fidelity with His loving favour; He will not allow
the worst to happen, except it be right
and well that it should happen; Christ will sympathise with us if
we suffer, and go down with us into the deepest waters into which we may
descend. If God be for us, we can afford to have the world against us (Mt Romans 8:31). It is a strong rampart in
the day of assault to have some impregnable convictions such as these within
our souls.
II. A STRONG HOPE. ¡§And He
will deliver us out of thine hand . . . but if not¡¨; in other words, we have a
prevailing hope that our God will exert His power on our behalf. Their state of
mind was this: they knew that God was with them, and was for them, that He was
mindful of their prayer and of their trust; that was certain. They could not be
sure whether He would justify their faith by a miraculous intervention on their
behalf, or by imparting Divine grace to enable them to bear martyr-witness to
the truth. Their strong hope was that He would thus deliver them. It is open to
us to act and to feel thus. We are in serious danger of financial disaster, or
of being attacked by disease, or of losing reputation, or of severe
bereavement, or of grievous disappointment, or of social or professional
failure. We ask for deliverance. It is not for us to prescribe to the Lord of
our life how He shall interpose for us. We may say to ourselves, ¡§God will give
us our desire, but if not¡¨--we may cherish not a presumptuous confidence, but a
sustaining hope.
III. AN UNWAVERING RESOLVE:
¡§We will not serve thy gods,¡¨ etc. Even if their hope of bodily
deliverance was not granted, they would retire to the spiritual certainties on
which they built, they would fixedly determine not to belie their convictions,
not to offend their God, not to desert the truth, not to fail their
fellow-countrymen and their coreligionists in the hour of trial. To the proud
threat of the imperious and all-confident monarch they opposed the immovable
resolution of upright souls that believed in God; their resolution was
unqualified, unenfeebled by the shadow of a doubt, invincible. Let the young go
forth to the conflict of life in this devout, this heroic spirit, and to them
also shall come the victory and the crown. (W. Clarkson, B.A.)
Faith Victorious over the Fear of Man
Examples of the victory of faith over the terrors of the world are
useful to believers in their militant state. The victory of faith related in
our text will appear brilliant when we call to mind the number of the
combatants, the situation in which they stood, the manner in which they were
assailed, and the strength and terror of the opposition with which they
contended.
I. WE WILL GIVE A SHORT ACCOUNT OF THE
ILLUSTRIOUS MEN, WHOSE
NAMES ARE IN THE TEXT, and their praise in the church. With
respect to number, they were only three; a small number to appear for the Lord
God of Israel in opposition to the idolatry of the king, and the court, and the
empire of Babylon. By nation and profession they were Israelites, who had been
carried to Babylon in the captivity of their country. They were of the tribe of
Judah, and are commonly believed to have been of the king¡¦s seed, or royal
family. They were in places of power and trust in Babylon.
II. ¡§WE SHALL GIVE SOME ACCOUNT OF THE
TESTIMONY WHICH THESE IT ILLUSTROUS MEN HELD, AND THROUGH WHICH THEY OVERCAME.
It was not a testimony of their own framing. The Lord God of Israel framed and
wrote it, and commanded it to be observed. ¡§He established a testimony in
Jacob, and appointed a law in Israel, which he commanded our fathers that they
should make them known to their children.¡¨ That branch of the testimony for
which these princely witnesses appeared, had not only been written on tables of
stone by the finger of God; but, according to His promise, was written in their
hearts. It had been put into the ark of His testimony which was now lost; but
it was also put into their minds by His Holy Spirit, out of which it could not
be erased. ¡§Ye are my witnesses saith the Lord, and my servants whom I have
chosen, that ye may know and believe me, and understand that I am he: before me
there was no God formed, neither shall there be after Me.¡¨ ¡§Fear ye not,
neither be afraid--ye are even my witnesses. Is there a god beside me? yea
there is no god, I know not any.¡¨ ¡§I am the First, and I am the Last, and
beside Me there is no God.¡¨ The reason inserted in the law satisfied the
conscience of every pious Israelite: ¡§For I the Lord thy God am a jealous God.¡¨
Encouraged and awed with the sovereign reason in it, the princely witnesses
entered the plain in the boldness of faith, stood before a haughty monarch
without meditating terror, and spake with the dignity of men who feared Him
that would not give His glory to another, nor His praise to an image of gold in
the plain of Dura. With the Psalms of David and the prophecies of Isaiah they
were doubtless acquainted. In the Psalms of David are these passages: ¡§The Lord
is great and greatly to be praised, he is to be feared above all gods: For all
the gods of the nations are idols, but the Lord made the heavens.¡¨ ¡§Confounded
be all they that serve graven images, that boast themselves of idols.¡¨
¡§Wherefore should the heathen say, where is now their God? But our God is in
the heavens, he hath done whatsoever he hath pleased. Their idols are silver
and gold, the work of men¡¦s hands. They have mouths, but they speak not; eyes
have they, but they see not. They have ears, but they hear not; noses have
they, but they smell not. They have hands, but they handle not; feet have they,
but they walk not, neither speak they through their throat. They that make them
are like unto them; so is every one that trusteth in them.¡¨ In the prophecies
of Isaiah, we find these and several other passages of the same import. ¡§They
have no knowledge that set up the wood of their graven image, and pray unto a
god that cannot save.¡¨ ¡§They lavish gold out of the bag, and weigh silver in
the balance; and hire a goldsmith, and he maketh it a god; they fall down, yea
they worship. They bear him upon the shoulder, they carry him and set him in
his place, and he standeth; from his place shall he not remove; yea, one shall
cry unto him, yet can he not answer, nor save him out of his trouble. Remember
this and shew yourselves men, bring it again to mind, O ye transgressors. I am
the Lord, and there is none else, there is no god beside Me.¡¨ Under that
dispensation, in Babylon, as in Jerusalem, believers lived by the word.
III. We shall
attempt TO GIVE SOME ACCOUNT OF
THEIR MANNER OF MAINTAINING THE ESTABLISHED TESTIMONY, which they
received, believed, and held fast. The witnesses, in maintaining their
testimony for the honour of the God of Israel, conducted themselves:
1. With discretion. Nebuchadnezzar, in his haughtiness and bigotry,
added rudeness and insolence to idolatry, and impiously challenged the might of
the God of Israel--¡§Who is that God that shall deliver you out of my hands?¡¨
The witnesses, however, neither call him tyrant, nor idolater, nor oppressor,
though, in fact, he was all three. On the contrary, they express themselves
discreetly and mildly: ¡§O Nebuchadnezzar!¡¨ ¡§O king!¡¨ In their language they
give no occasion to irritation, nor to any court, or to accuse them of
despising dominion.
2. With composure and presence of mind. Neither anger nor fear
disturbed them. The peace of God, which passeth all understanding, ruled in
their hearts. The cause in which they appeared needed not the wrath of man to
support it; and the fear of God, which is a sedate and composed principle,
fortified their minds against the fear of man.
3. With confidence in the living Cool, as God and their God. Far from
being ashamed of Him, and the testimony which He had established in Israel,
they acknowledge His propriety in them, and their interest in Him, before a
numerous and splendid convocation of His enemies. If their acknowledgment be
boasting, it is boasting in the Lord, which is an exercise of faith.
4. With steadfastness. This was standing fast in the faith, and
quitting themselves like men.
5. With uprightness. Nothing crooked, nor perverse, nor deceitful,
appears in their conduct. Had they consulted flesh and blood, reasons might
have been suggested to palliate some deviation from integrity. But flesh and
blood were not consulted. The witnesses were Israelites indeed, in whose
conduct there was no guile.
Lessons:
1. The mean and unkindly behaviour of the mighty potentate, who
projected and authorised the criminal solemnities of that memorable day.
Vengeance sparkled in his eyes, with a fierceness resembling the dame of his
furnace. This was unmanly, unwise, unkingly, ungodly--¡§Cease ye from man, whose
breath is in his nostrils.¡¨
2. Observe the violence of superstition armed with power. Nothing
will satisfy it but either the consciences or the lives of upright and holy
men. One would have thought that the king and court of Babylon might have been
satisfied with the obeisance of that great assembly, without prosecuting three
dissenters of a different nation, and a different religion.
3. Observe the distressing alternatives to which faithful witnesses
for God have been reduced.
4. Observe the goodness of God in supporting His witnesses in such
extremities. What were these three witnesses? In themselves they were weak and
timorous as other men. How were they preserved from fainting, and from
dishonouring, by unworthy compliances, the testimony for which they appeared?
The Lord stood by them, and said, ¡§Fear ye not, for I am with you; be not
dismayed, for I am your God: I will strengthen you, yea I will help you, yea I
will uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness.¡¨ ¡§Strengthened with
all might according to His glorious power, by His Spirit in the inner man,¡¨
they stood firm, repelled the wrath of the king and the terror of his furnace,
and obtained a glorious victory, ¡§The people that do know their God shall be
strong and do exploits.¡¨
5. Observe the wisdom of counting, before temptations and trials
assail our faith, the expense of holding fast our profession unto the end.
6. Observe the nature and efficacy of faith in God:
Absolute Confidence in God
One case is presented here as to which there might be an
alternative, and another case is presented as to which there could be no
alternative. ¡§If not.¡¨ There is that which may happen, and there is that which
may not happen. Whether or not our God shall deliver us--and of this there is a
doubt--¡§we will not serve thy gods, O king,¡¨ of that there is no doubt. The
confidence of the just in God is never misplaced. But this confidence of the
just must be absolute, in no way distinguishing. It must be in God himself, not
in God doing for them this or that.¡¨ They must demand of Him nothing; they must
trust Him simply. This is the word which comes to us from the story of the
fiery furnace. Death by burning was a Babylonish punishment. The martyrs of God
are sometimes left to suffer. Faith in God--not in God¡¦s deliverance, but in
God himself--reaches beyond all earthly destiny; it reaches up to Him. If we
can onlysee the form of the ¡§Fourth,¡¨ no furnace that we may ever have to pass
through will go on keeping its heat. Near to us, if we strive to be true to our
Father and His love, we may see the very Son of God. There was one who said, and
said it to all His true servants, whatever their condition may be, and in
whatever age of time they may live, ¡§I am with you alway, even unto the end of
the world.¡¨ If the knowledge of Him who said that shall only be, by the mercy
of God, vouchsafed to us; if we are empowered to grasp the fact of Christ and
His salvation; not with the shadow of a fancy, but with a strong and real hold;
then the plain of Dura, or the fiery furnace, the quiet pastures of life, or
the rugged broken ground, the walking loose unhurt, or the consuming of the
flames--there will be a reach in our souls beyond them. Knowing God, we shall
absolutely trust Him. And then, as to the changes and contortions of this
mysterious life--in which we must all take, certainly our chequered, perhaps
our grievous part--we shall have outgrown either anxious hope or enervating
fear. As to the afflictions of life, in the words of hope we may say, ¡§He shall
deliver us; but if not.¡¨ Inevitably the point is open, and the trust of faith
assumes, and¡¦ accepts the doubt, and passes beyond it; but as to death, and the
conditions beyond death, there is to the humble, truehearted believer in Christ
no alternative to be admitted. What did he say, that noblest of all Christian
men, when he came to the borders of this valley, and looked forth upon its
darkness, knowing that he must pass immediately into it--what did he say? ¡§I am
now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. Henceforth
there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous
Judge, shall give me at that day.¡¨ St. Paul speaks quite positively here. He
admits of no second case being possible. There is no room here for ¡§but, if
not.¡¨ That may suit the life of our mortality. The believer in God is here sure
of God, but he is not sure of what God shall do with him. God hath pledged
himself to no earthly thing, except His love over all. God makes us all like
unto St. Paul in this; and life may be buoyant and cheerful with us, or even
tempered and calm, but if not--at least when ¡§I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death I will fear no evil, for thou art with me.¡¨ The form of the
Fourth will be there, and He is not (as the King of Babylon said) ¡§like unto
the Son of God,¡¨ He is the Son of God. (M.Wright, M.A.)
Firmness in the Hour of Trial
These Jews were placed in a perfect dilemma. Life and death are
now presented for their choice--life with all its blessings if they would
conform--death in all its terrors if they should refuse compliance. If they had
consulted with flesh and blood, in forming their determination or in framing
their reply, what a multitude of cogent and plausible arguments might have been
found to justify their compliance. They were not required to renounce the God
to whom they had been hitherto devoted-to adjure His name, to abandon His
worship, and to profess the god of Nebuchadnezzar as the only living and true
God. No such profession was required; all that was necessary was an outward act
of homage, which might have been done with a secret disavowal of the image as a
god, and a mental protestation in the sight of Heaven that they still owned
none save the God of their fathers, and worshipped none else but the invisible
Jehovah. But these men, by a previous refusal, had already lifted up their
testimony against the idolatry of which they had been the witnesses; and their
obedience now, after such a testimony, could be regarded in no other light than
as an involuntary constrained act, in which their feeling of constraint
destroyed their guilt. A multitude of considerations must naturally have
suggested themselves in palliation of the crime. But no token of retraction was
given, no sign of irresolution appeared. They addressed the king in calm, but
uncompromising terms. The principle which actuated these youths was a
scrupulous regard to the will of God, and a deep-seated confidence in His power
and promises. Idolatry was a sin prohibited and denounced by God as a
derogation from the honour that was due unto His name. In defiance of the punishment
which threatened them, they resolved to adhere to the plain line of duty,
disdaining the subterfuges which carnality would suggest. The application of
this history is far from being a remote one. There is little likelihood,
indeed, that any of you should ever be placed in circumstances so critical. But
you may be the subjects of tyrannical dictation from another quarter, even from
that world in which you dwell, and from those masters which dwell within
you--your lusts, your appetites, your passions. Temptation may often be
presented to make you swerve from the path of rectitude. You may meet with many
who will ridicule your faith, and more who will ridicule your practice, if that
be in strict conformity to the faith you profess. But we need not so much to
warn you against others as to warn you against yourselves. There are tyrants
within who would constrain you to do them reverence. Money, sensual pleasures,
vanities, etc., all have something within you to which they make appeal.
(J. Glason.)
Courage in the Best of Causes
This is one of the most admirable instances of fortitude and
magnanimity. The deportment of these men was at one respectful and unshrinking,
free from anything approaching to a railing or resentful expression, but at the
same time wholly unmixed with fear. How admirably does their response harmonize
with the instructions of our Lord to his disciples, ¡§When ye are brought before
kings and rulers . . . it shall be given you in the same hour wilt ye ought to
speak.¡¨ How many and how glorious have been the triumphs which this Divine
principle of a realising faith in the grace and providence of God have, in all
times and countries, enabled His people, however weak in themselves, to
achieve. In the example before us, it inspired the Jewish youths with a freedom
from anxiety perfectly sublime. How does their magnanimous reply put to blush
that lukewarm, pusillanimous profession of religion with which so many of us
are contented, which refuses the most trivial sacrifice or self-denial in God¡¦s
service, and shrinks affrighted even from the shadow of danger! We are in no
danger of being called upon to resist unto blood, striving against sin. Our
present peril lies in the opposite direction--of being altogether overpowered
by the ease and effeminacy of modern refinement--in the risk of our being
swallowed up in spiritual sloth and self-indulgence. Our danger arises chiefly
from within, from that covetousness which is idolatry. It is when called to
undergo fiery trials that the upright Christian may, with the most unhesitating
confidence, look for his Lord¡¦s special protection and support. In every
temptation, however fierce or terrible, He will open a door of escape, or give
us grace to bear the trial. No fire so intense as to overcome His love. (W.
F. Vance, M. A.)
Conscientiousness
In what a trying position these three young men were placed! They
did not trifle with their consciences. Compare their behaviour with the
accommodating spirit shown by Naaman the Syrian. Persons who are thus only
half-conscientious are very apt to show this accommodating spirit whenever they
are associated with those who are altogether irreligious. In the various
matters of daily life, the conscientious, the half-conscientious, and the
unconscientious, are often obliged to have dealings with each other. It is
contrary to common-sense, as well as to all Christian modesty, that the
Christian should thrust forward at times and in places whore he is not called
for the difference in principle between himself and some other who is only a
Christian in name; but it does seem to be the duty of all Christians, when
mixed up in this world¡¦s business with the ungodly, to be ready to bear witness
to the truth, whenever circumstances call for such a witness. An accommodating
spirit may be sinful. If we had more reverence for conscience, considering it
as no less than God himself speaking to us, we should not be anxiously seeking
how far we might go without sin, in making conscience give way to our
convenience. (W. H. Nanken, M.A.)
The Fiery Furnace
The three young men, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah, whom the king
of Babylon named Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, did not go to the fiery
furnace with a prophecy that they would be preserved, as David did when he
moved forward against Goliath. David declared, ¡§This day will the Lord deliver
thee into mine hand.¡¨ The three Hebrews in Babylon had no such prospect
vouchsafed them. They went to the fiery furnace without assurance of any
deliverance. Their courage of faith was greater than that of David in the case
alluded to. The faith of these three is brought out into full relief when we
thus consider that the fiery furnace was a reality in prospect for them. Had
God revealed to them that they should not be touched by the flames, their faith
would have rested on His word of deliverance; but now it rested on His
character of wisdom, truth and love. It was a higher, grander faith than mere
faith in a special deliverance promised. It was a full, implicit confidence
that God would do what was best, and would never abandon His own servants. It
is not, therefore, in the miracle that we find our lesson to-day. Such a
miracle may never again be wrought. Men as true and as holy as Shadrach,
Meshach and Abed-nego have not been miraculously saved from physical torture
and death, and no saint of God has any right to expect such intervention. Our
lesson lies deeper than this. The exclamation of the three was not ¡§The Lord
will deliver us from the force of the fire,¡¨ but, ¡§The Lord is able to deliver
us from the fire.¡¨ And herein is a vast difference. Here is implied a spiritual
knowledge of the character of God as the God of His people, for the implied
sentence is, ¡§And He who is thus able will do for us what is best¡¦; and that
this is the implied sentence we know from what follows: ¡§and He will deliver us
out of thy hand, O king.¡¨ They are assured that God will give them deliverance
from the king¡¦s wrath, though it may be by taking them out of the body. There
is a grand, eternal deliverance before them. The lesson, then, which we are to
learn legitimately from these heroes of the faith is to be unconcerned
regarding the Nebuchadnezzars and fiery furnaces that are in our path, and that
not because they will be removed, but because the Omnipotent God, our God, is
directing all, and will give us the grand deliverance. In our low views of
things we are tempted to say, ¡§Why, this is very unsatisfactory; there is no
encouragement here. It would be far better if the promise would come to us that
the fire should not burn us, that we should suffer no pain or hardship, and
have all easy before us. Why cannot God do this?¡¨ Well, He certainly could, as
far as ability goes, but what would become of His love then, for it is
certainly true that whom the Father loveth He chasteneth?
1. The first point, then, in our lesson from the three Hebrews is to
have faith in God as our God There is a strange misapprehension of faith,
Christian faith, in some minds. They seem to consider it a blind confidence
that certain things will take place. Only put your mind on an event, and be
perfectly sure it will come, and it will come. There is not a grain of
Christian faith in such presumption, but the very enemy and hindrance of faith.
Christian faith is faith in God, His character, His will, His promises, as
revealed in Jesus Christ His Son. Christian faith has God as its object and
security. It holds all things subject to His most holy will, and knows that all
things are directed by that will for the soul¡¦s good. It does not attempt to
mark out God¡¦s course of dealing, but it is satisfied with that course,
whatever it may be. It asks God for special gifts, but it desires God¡¦s
infinite wisdom to decide concerning the giving, for a true faith humbly
recognises human short-sightedness and knows well that the human wish might be
very injurious if granted. Herein is the radical difference between the
believer and the world. He is in communion with God, and the grace of God is
his comfort and defence, while the world resists the grace and has no Divine
promise and no Heavenly experience to rest upon.
2. The second point in our lesson from the three Hebrews is that
faith implies service. ¡§Our God whom we serve is able to deliver us,¡¨ is the
exclamation of the three heroes. This completely sets aside a speculative
faith, which is the common faith of so many who are called Christians.
Orthodoxy in opinion is not faith. There must be an action corresponding to the
creed. As there can be no true faith without active service, so, of course,
there can be no assurance of faith. The Christian who lazily looks after
nothing but his present earthly comfort will never look at fiery furnaces with
composure. Now, the service of the Lord is the use of the Divine means of grace
for ourselves and for others. His grace is working in our earth for His great
purpose of salvation, and He chooses us to be His co-workers. The field is the
human heart--our hearts and the hearts of others. As servants of God we will
take hold of this assigned work earnestly. It is in this way our faith will
grow into the proportions of overcoming power that will fear no Nebuchadnezzar
or his fiery furnace. Without such service we can express no such growth.
Salvation is not from without and by magic. It is by a life that has faith as
its motor. The three Hebrews were simply acting out their life of faith when
they refused to bow to the king¡¦s idol It was the natural operation of a godly
life. They served the Lord. That was their soul¡¦s position. They lived in
accordance with that service. ¡§The thing is perfectly plain. Our whole lives
direct us. We shall not worship thine idol, and the burning fiery furnace is no
argument.¡¨ That is the way a soul in the Lord¡¦s service will always reply to an
invitation to sin, even when a threat accompanies it. The reason why so many
Christians yield is because they do not serve God. They wear Christ¡¦s name and
serve self and the world. They have no courage because they have no faith.
3. The third point in our lesson from the three Hebrews is that God¡¦s
service runs counter to the world¡¦s requirements. Hence there must be a
collision. A man who will serve God will clash with the world. Nebuchadnezzar
was but a specimen of the world. The world will insist upon some form of
idolatry of every one, and will threaten the fiery furnace for disobedience.
The world hates God, and will not recognise His exclusive demands. Political,
commercial and social customs will bring a tyrannical pressure upon the soul,
and the Christian in the name of his God will have to resist. The fiery furnace
has different forms. The more resolute he is, the more wrath the world has and
the hotter will it make the fire. Then is the opportunity for the Christian to
triumph in his faith and to taste the glory of his position as with God.
Deceit, Sabbath-breaking, impurity, fraud, lying, intrigue, to which the
customs of the age allure the Christian, are all forms of idolatry, for they
are revolts from God after the gods of covetousness, ambition, or carnality.
Now, there is no other treatment of these by the godly but positive, open,
uncompromising resistance, at any cost. The only position, then, of the
Christian who would be at peace with God and with himself is the position of
the three Hebrews--the position of faith. There he is afflicted with no doubts,
anxieties, or remorse. He knows that God will be with him, even if it be a
valley of death-shadow that he is to traverse. He will find the inexpressible
comfort of the Divine presence, and feel at every step the strong upholding
hand of his God. He will not miss earthly friends in such exalted
companionship. In contrast with this steady believer is the one who fears the
world¡¦s opposition, and endeavours to soothe and subdue it. This is always done
by giving up God for the world. This Christian is of all men most miserable. He
gets worse than the fiery furnace in the tortures of his conscience, in his
failure to make anything satisfactory out of the world, in his own
self-contempt and his dreary, blank prospect. (H. Crosby.)
The Fiery Furnace
It was in the eighteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar, according to the
Septuagint, that he set up this image of gold in the plain of Dura. If that
date be correct (and there appears no reason to discredit it), it was done to
celebrate the recent destruction of Jerusalem, and the subjection of various
enemies of Babylon from India to Ethiopia.
I. THE SECRET OF LOYALTY is
a simple and undisturbed trust in God. Of course, there can be no loyalty
without faith; none to man, none to God. That which impresses us in the case of
these Hebrew youths is that their trust was so serene. And now, when the stress
of the king¡¦s command is put upon them, they are not taken off their guard;
they are not overwhelmed with surprise or dismay. They trust in God. They
believe His word. But the arm on which they leaned was omnipotent. The wisdom
to which they confided their way was unlimited. Jehovah cared for them. He had
kept them; He would keep them in the time to come. The truest courage is the
calmest. Peter and John looked into the faces of the Sanhedrim, and put the
question simply back to them, ¡§Whether it be right to hearken unto you more
than unto God, judge ye.¡¨ Paul, arraigned before Roman kings and Hebrew
governors, turns from his own defence on a technical complaint, to deliver the
message with which his master had charged him. A loyalty thus based is ready
for any emergency. It is not a strain; it is only a confidence. It does not go
into heroics; it is unconscious that it is heroic. During the time of the civil
war, much was said about the extraordinary bravery of Admiral Farragut in
having himself lashed to the mast while passing the forts under fire at Mobile.
In answer to an inquirer about it afterwards, he said, ¡§I cannot understand why
they make so much of my going up into the maintop. It was nothing special that
I did at Mobile, and I was not lashed there at all. When going into action, or
in any time of danger, I always went up there, because I felt it my duty to be
where I could overlook everything in person, and be seen by all of the men, and
set them an example of sharing their risks.¡¨ True courage does not promise, nor
posture, nor explain. It goes on quietly and acts. It does not care to answer.
II. THE TESTING OF LOYALTY is
permitted of God. Nor is it any contradiction to the constancy of His care for
His people that it is so. The Lord can do better for His own than to shield
them from all hardship. Even their spiritual gifts and graces deserve something
better at His hands than sheltering. They ask for cultivation, for the opportunity
of development, for the privilege of growth. Protection from evil ceases beyond
a certain point to be a kindness. It is more to be strengthened than to be
sheltered. The trees which grow always in the forest, protected from the
sharpness of the winds, never compelled to battle with the storm, grow up
toward the light, but do not spread their branches above ground or their roots
below. If the barrier by which one of them has been shielded from the winds
were taken suddenly away, the first blast of the tempest would lay it low. It
is not braced against it. It stands, not because it is strong, but because it
is supported. But on the mountainside the oak grows, or the cedar. From a
sapling the breezes have played with it, and it has bonded but held on. And,
equally, what power of discipline, what opportunity of courage, what
development of strength would the church and Christian of the present day be
deprived of, if, by more delicate but no less searching tests, its loyalty were
not continually put to the proof.
III. THE SUPPORT OF LOYALTY is
promised and assured. ¡§As thy days, so shall thy strength be.¡¨ ¡§My strength
shall be sufficient for thee.¡¨ ¡§Certninly I will be with thee.¡¨
IV. THE VINDICATION OF LOYALITY IS CERTAIN.
(Monday Club Sermons.)
The Burning Fiery Furnace and its Lesson
Stars are visible in the dark, and heroes are seen in persecution
and trouble. Had these men always remained amid the peace and quietness of
Canaan, they might have perished without leaving even their names upon the
pages of history. This is no singular and isolated case.. All history, whether
secular or sacred, is full of them. The antediluvian darkness caused Noah to
shine. The Egyptian bondage caused Moses to shine. Roman Catholicism caused
Luther to shine. The national darkness of England caused Cromwell to shine. The
chief glory of man is obedience to God. Every reader finds a charm in the
Babylonian captivity. There is something that captivates and delights the soul
of man, and has a powerful influence over his life. The wisdom, wealth,
authority, slavery, and idolatry that crowd upon each other in the narrative
with their light and shadow, may all be stript from the page, yet the power
remains that moves the breast of man. Take that one secret, and all the august
and dazzling things are bereft of their charm and power. We are part with the
wisdom of the magician and the wealth of the king; but we hold with a tenacious
grip the unfaltering trust of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego. We pass by
everything else and cling to this, because it is the chief glory of man, and
his most lasting good. The imposing art of the magician, the foresight of the
astrologer, the easy saying of the soothsayer, may be grand; but that power
these three captives possess, which enables them to defy the king and live for
God, is more glorious by far. The wealth of the king only enriched the body,
and left the soul as poor as before; would last but a few years, and then
vanish for over. But the faith of the captives enriched ¡§the inner man¡¨ with a
life and blessedness that would endure throughout the hidden ages of eternity.
The chief glory of man is not outward grandeur, but a strong trust in God;
because it is a power to help amid the cares of life, amid the experience of
death, and the unknown possibilities of the future. This has been verified by
all history and experience. Pharaoh¡¦s palace yonder is adorned with all the
arts and magnificence of the land. Sheep and oxen, corn and wine, power and
plenty are on every side. Everything for which one can crave to make life
joyous and gay is near. Servants and soldiers without number wait to do his
bidding. But we yearn for none of those things; we pass by them all as
valueless. We crave for the spirit and faith of the slave Joseph. Because the
humble obedience of the slave, and not the outward grandeur of the king, is the
chief glory of man.
1. The value of this faith is seen in that it gave the captives
boldness to express their convictions.
2. The value of this faith is seen in that it prepared the captives
for adversity and suffering.
3. The value of this faith is seen in that it secured the captives a
noble victory. God stood by His servants, baffled their opponents, and gave
them a glorious victory. God¡¦s enemies might appear to conquer at first, but
Jehovah only delayed the victory of His people that, when it did come, it might
be more marked and distinguished. To fight against God, and against
God¡¦s people, always means defeat and ruin in the end. Pharaoh and
his army were buried in a watery grave as they pursued the Israelites. (J.
Hubbard.)
The Fiery Furnace
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego were men of integrity,
against whom no one could bring an accusation, except in the matters of their
God. But solely on account of their adherence to the Divine cause, they were
cast into the burning fiery furnace.
1. By this we may he reminded, of what it is important at all tinges
to keep in view, that for adherence unto God we may be exposed to great
difficulties and dangers. At the beginning it was foretold that there ¡§would be
enmity between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman,¡¨ and no
prediction has ever been more strikingly fulfilled. Those that are born after
the flesh have always persecuted them that are born after the Spirit. What injuries
have thereby been done unto the church!
2. Though these young men were menaced with danger, though all that
was dear to them was in peril, yet they openly adhered unto God. They did not
feign an excuse for absenting themselves from the dedication. They did not
content themselves with adhering to God in their heart, while they bowed down
to the idol with their bodies. When accused, they had not recourse to any
specious disguise or subtle ambiguity. And, though everything like ostentation
is to be avoided as a sin, we ought openly to hear our testimony for God,
whatever difficulties we may have to encounter. It is not enough that we wish
well to the cause of God in our hearts--it is not enough that we desire and
pray for its triumph--it is not enough that we give it secret aid, while we
remain openly among its enemies. When any acknowledge a cause to be good, and
stand hack from avowing their attachment, because of the odium which they may
incur, or the danger to which they may be exposed, this is unequivocal evidence
that the fear and the favour of man have more effect upon their minds than the
fear and the favour of God. Christ was not ashamed to own us publicly. God and
angels, men and devils, saw Him publicly die for us upon the cross. And shall
we ever be ashamed to confess Him before men!
3. Their adherence unto God was not only open, it was also resolute.
Nothing like hesitation, or suspense, appears in their conduct. Their minds
seem as resolute as if all inducements had boon upon the side of duty--as
resolute as if adherence unto God had been the way of advancement, instead of
leading, as it did, to a fiery ¡§Be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not
serve thy gods nor worship the golden image which thou hast set up.¡¨ We must
beware of everything like halting, hesitating, and wavering. A halting,
wavering, undecided frame of mind, is spoken of in Scripture in the language of
contempt. Why halt ye between two opinions? if Jehovah be God, then choose ye
Him, but if Baal be God, then choose ye him.
4. The adherence of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego unto God was
steadfast. Many are bold when danger is at a distance, who faint when the hour
of trial draws nigh. But these young men were steadfast and immovable. They not
only declared their resolution to suffer everything, they actually submitted to
be cast into the furnace when it was heated seven-fold. ¡§Be thou faithful unto
death, and I will give thee a crown of life.¡¨ Much depends on the steadfastness
of soldiers in the day of battle--the issue of the conflict, and the fate of
their country. Openly, decidedly, and steadfastly to adhere to the cause of
God¡¦s glory, in despite of all trials and difficulties, is no easy matter. They
who are called to such work would do well to count the cost, and consider their
abilities. It is God alone who can teach the hands for this war, and the
fingers for this fight. And He has promised to do so. Has He not said, ¡§Fear
not, for I am with thee; be not dismayed, for I am thy God. I will strengthen
thee, yea, I will help thee, yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my
righteousness. My grace is sufficient for thee, and my strength shall be
perfected in thy weakness.¡¨ These promises were made good, in the case of His
three witnesses, on the plains of Dura. When He called them to more than
ordinary work, He furnished them with more than ordinary strength. God not only
supported His three servants under the trial to which they were exposed; He, in
due time, delivered them. This deliverance was in many respects miraculous,
and, in so far as this was the case, we are not warranted to expect that any
such interposition will be made in our behalf. But the manner of their
deliverance was in most respects similar to God¡¦s ordinary method of
interposing for His church and people.
The Three Hebrews in the Furnace
¡§I am no hypocrite. I make no profession of religion¡¨--that is to
say, you boast of your open and consistent enmity to God. This is not the
worst. This impiety of conversation, which we every day hear, if it means
anything, insinuates, of course, that a profession of religion can never be
sincerely made--that there is no such thing as true piety; and proves the
people who talk thus to be, not only sinners in their lives, but infidels in
their hearts. I only wish these cynics would, study the narrative mow before
us. It is said that no one can eater the presence of that matchless statue, the
Apollo Belvidere, without instinctively standing erect, without feeling his own
form at once dilate and become taller and nobler; and the man is to be pitied
who can contemplate the moral grandeur of these youthful heroes without being
conscious of I know not what elevation of heart and purpose. A true soul will
turn from the record of such undaunted loyalty to God and conscience with a
fresh outfit of faith and hope.
I. In unfolding
the lessons of the text, let us begin with THE NARRATIVE, let us analyse this passage in
the history of our race. And, first, who can look at the scene here portrayed
without blushing for the degeneracy and corruption of our race? The spectacle
presents a brilliant panorama. The morning is bright, and the eastern sun is
kindling a blaze all over the plains of Dura, us its beams are reflected from
silver and gold and diamonds, in which princes, satraps, peers, the whole
jewelled aristocracy of that magnificent court, are arrayed. High on a throne
of royal state, gorgeous with barbaric pomp and splendour, sits the Chaldean
monarch. And from the centre of this Oriental and most imposing pageant, soars
aloft, glittering and dazzling, the colossal image, the cynosure of every
eye--attracting the admiration and homage of that uncounted multitude. The
spectacle is grand; but what an exhibition of human nature! On every side I
behold the earth carpeted with the softest green, enamelled with a flushing
luxuriance of variegated and fragrant flowers. Cool fountains gush up in the
groves, and transparent streams murmur through the valley. I breathe delicious
odours. I am refreshed by the balmiest zephyrs. Heaven and earth are rejoicing
in their loveliness. From nature I turn to man, and what do I find? Recollect,
here is no mob of the ignorant and brutal, but the monarch and his
patricians--all the gathered wisdom, refinement, honour, of the empire. What do
we see openly and superciliously displayed in them all? Idolatry, hostility to
God, selfishness, cruelty, the most vindictive malice. In this countless host
what a diversity of talent and taste and character; but those detestable
passions reign in every bosom. And this depravity flows from an inexhaustible
fountain in the human heart. In all this multitude here are only three men who
worship the true God, and what have they done? whom have they injured? It is
simple mockery to speak of liberty if the mind and conscience be not free. The
persons, the property, the lives of his subjects are at the absolute disposal
of the Chaldean autocrat. This, however, is not enough. His imperial mandate
shall control their religion, shall fetter their souls. The ends of government
are temporal, not spiritual. The Saviour possessed omnipotence, but He did not
use it to enforce His religion by measures having no relation to the truth of
His doctrine. He said, ¡§All power in heaven and in earth is given unto me, go
teach all nations.¡¨
II. THE CONDUCT OF THESE HEBREWS,
and the example which God here proposes of that constancy and decision of
character, without which we can neither be true to truth, to Jesus, nor to
ourselves. Decision of character must never be confounded with obstinacy. Firmness
tempered with gentleness, this is what we need, if we are to be real
Christians. The more you study the conduct of the Redeemer the more will you
admire the peerless combination of these virtues in Him. It is not at all
uncommon to meet people who pique themselves on firmness and decision; when in
fact it is mere, sheer, downright stubbornness they betray--a perverse,
selfwilled pertinacity--in which there is no more moral force than there is in
the dead weight which fixes a heavy, inert mass of rock to the earth. The other
quality, gentleness, is more amiable, but it is scarcely ever united with the
highest energy. There is softness, tenderness, sweetness of disposition; but
the character is effeminate. Firmness tempered with gentleness--this is true
decision of character; not the rigid, inexorable, iron hardness of the dead
tree, which cannot bend without breaking; nor the weakness of the osier which
bends and remains bent; but the innate, elastic vigour of the young oak, which
only becomes more erect, and strikes its roots more deeply into the earth, by
yielding to every breeze and complying with every pressure. What is the first
element in true decision of character? It is an inflexible and controlling
adherence to the will of God in all things and at all times. What is the next
element in true decision of character? It is a spirit armed and intrepid in
facing danger, in meeting the responsibilities of our station. How prone are we
to shrink from duty. These Jews were men of a different spirit. At first,
indeed, we are tempted to ask, Why did they come on the ground at all? But--not
to remark that cowardice could have availed them nothing--it never can avail
anything in the cause of God--was it for men like them to be afraid? Was this a
time for the servants of the Most High to be craven? Here is no small matter; a
great soul will never concern itself about small matter. God and His glory are
about to be outraged. The third element in decision of character grows out of
those just indicated. It is a brave disregard of consequences. The moment we
begin to think of expediency--to inquire tremulously, What, if we are faithful,
will be the effect on our interest or position or reputation? that moment we
are gone, we have fallen. And all this strenuousness of purpose is perfectly
calm, as real strength always is calm. Men and brethren, a simple trust in God
is the most essential ingredient in moral sublimity of character. It elevates a
man high above all the earth, and equips him to bear anything, and to brave
everything. If God be for him, who can be against him? How indispensable energy
and courage are to the Christian, you need not be told. Would you be useful?
you must be decided; piety is not enough; you must have a reputation for piety.
Would you not dishonour your profession? you must be decided. But, now, how can
this firmness and fortitude be inwrought and sustained in beings so feeble and
inconstant? I answer, By faith, and faith only; hence the exhortation, ¡§Add to
your faith virtue,¡¨ that is, courage. Faith is the source from which this
commanding grace must spring, and by which it must be fed; and with what
invincible courage, what undaunted contempt of danger and death, does not a
simple trust in God inspire these young heroes? Observe the noble singularity
of the Hebrews. Nor was this any transient enthusiasm, one of those sudden
impulses which may hurry a generous spirit to make heroic sacrifices, of which
it may afterwards repent. For space is given them to reconsider their
determination, the king expostulates with them; but they are immovable.
III. THE RESULT OF THIS FIERY ORDEAL;
and impress upon you the great lesson it teaches. The expression, ¡§than it was
wont to be,¡¨ shows that this furnace was the place of punishment for criminals;
and it is probable that its floor was now a bed of the horrible ashes left by
former executions. It is God¡¦s method¡¦ ever to cause the malice of those who
persecute his people to recoil upon themselves. ¡§The wicked is snared in the
work of his own hands.¡¨ And what is all this but the type of a Christian, when
called to pass through the fire--trembling, perhaps, in view of the
furnace--but afterwards, with adoring wonder and gratitude, exclaiming, ¡§My God
how good it is for me that I was afflicted?¡¨ This is not all. Not only is this
furnace a sort of heaven to these noble youths, but see how they glorify God in
this day of their visitation. Witnesses who testify from eternity. For the
place in which they stand belongs not to this earth. Witnesses who look with
sublime contempt upon the king and all the pomp and equipage of his power.
Witnesses who take no praise to themselves. A Christian never does arrogate any
strength or merit; he ascribes all his salvation, from first to last, to
sovereign grace. Lastly, witnesses whose testimony is at once and forever
decisive. It is not by words, not by preaching, nor forms, that we are to
honour God and His truth; it is by our fidelity that men may see our good works
and glorify our Father who is in Heaven.¡¨ Lessons:
1. And, first, let this narrative reinforce our faith and constancy.
The secret of Christian strength is an open secret; it is a gracious habit of
trusting in God at all times. The song of the Three Holy Children is one of the
Apocryphal Books. The man who wrote that beautiful composition, if not inspired
himself, had power to inspire others. Nothing can be more touching than the
whole story, which I commend to you.
2. How amiable is the religion of Jesus Christ. To the faithful soul
it is really true, that ¡§all the way to heaven is heaven.¡¨ Even when all is
bright, how necessary is this religion for man. But are you bearing crosses and
making sacrifices for Jesus and His cause? If not, you are preferring some idol
to Him, and what must the end be? (R. Fuller.)
Verse 18
That we will not serve thy gods.
Christian Decision
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego were three very young men,
worshippers of the true God, living in a heathen land! They were exposed to
much persecution and distress on account of their religion, yet they were
enabled to act with faithfulness and prudence ¡§in the midst of a crooked and
perverse generation.¡¨ Religion, where it is genuine and active, will inevitably
excite the hatred or contempt of the world. The genuine Christian will be
obliged to stem the torrent; there will, there must be, opposition; if he ¡§were
of the world, the world would love its own; but because he is not of the world,
but is chosen out of the world, therefore the world hateth him.¡¨ How difficult,
oftentimes, and painful the line of duty! How much need is there of some
animating example, or affectionate, and faithful, and wise advice, to keep such
a person from offending against conscience, and forgetting his obligations to
his gracious Saviour! To be faithful in a family, in a neighbourhood in which
almost all around us conspire to forget God--to be in earnest in religion where
our friends, and associates, and connections are careless and indifferent--to
forsake sin, and the world, and temptation, where everything invites us to love
them and follow them, is no easy task. It can be performed only by the aid of
that Holy Spirit, who is at once a comforter and a sanctifier. Nebuchadnezzar,
not satisfied with his existing gods, commanded all his subjects to fall down
and worship a new image which he had set up. In like manner, is sin in its
various forms an idol which the world delights to serve.
By nature we are its slaves and votaries; and it is not till we
have been taught by the Spirit to worship God in truth, and to renounce the
world¡¦s vanities, that we begin to feel the burden of this service. New idols
are constantly presented to confirm the sinner in his slavery, and to tempt the
true Christian from his allegiance to God. Whatever be the last evil custom,
the last new mode of sinning, men are expected to follow it. Should all the
rich, the wise of this world, the gay, the splendid be against serious
religion; should a thousand new baits and allurements be added to seduce us
from it; should unsuspected dangers and persecutions spring up every moment
around our path--yet we may learn from the example before us a lesson of faith,
and constancy, and reliance upon God, and be incited, from the merciful support
given to His servants of old, to commit ourselves to Him as a faithful Creator,
knowing that with the ¡§temptation He will also make a way for our escape.¡¨ The
Christian is not to affect anything that may provoke the opposition of the
world; if he live holily, justly, and unblamably, as he ought to do, and if he
evidence in his life and conduct the faith, the hope, the prayerfulness of a
true disciple of Christ, opposition will almost inevitably arise without his
seeking it. He ought, as much as in him lies, if it be possible, to live
¡§peaceably with all men.¡¨ Some of the most powerful obstacles in the path of
the youthful Christian are the allurements of pleasure, the commands of
authority, the dread of persecution, and the specious solicitations of
friendship and kindness. I am well aware that this principle may be abused.
Enthusiasm may fancy, and hypocrisy may pretend, a Divine commission for the
wildest excesses; and resistance may be made about very trifling and
unimportant matters. But the principle exists notwithstanding. The clearest and
most valuable principles are liable to be abused. They knew that the first
authority to be obeyed is God; and that though all other authorities should
come in competition with this, yet that one was their Master, even that Messiah
who Himself appeared for their support and comfort walking in the midst of the
devouring flames. Many a young Christian, who could have braved all the terrors
of open persecution, has given way to this temptation, and has, if not for ever
ruined his soul, at least marred his present peace, and endangered his soul for
the sake of that friendship with the world ¡§which is enmity against God.¡¨ Not
so these heroic sufferers. If, then, we value our own souls, if we value the
souls of others, if we value the cause of Him who deserves all our love and
gratitude, let us be decided, ¡§steadfast, unmoveable.¡¨ But remember, that
Christian decision is exercised in regard to matters of real importance, and
when the command of God is clear and distinct. Among mere worldly men a certain
stoutness of spirit is often exhibited in matters of indifference, as well as
in matters of moment. Such firmness as this is a mere native obstinacy of
character. At the same time in matters of real moment, Christian decision
displays itself with unshrinking promptitude and perseverance. And such was the
case in which these persons in the plain of Dura were called to act. An attack
was made upon the very foundation of all true religion. It was a case,
therefore, imperiously demanding the decision they exhibited. Everything
precious in religious principle, as well as everything tremendous in religious
sanctions, required them to act as they did. True Christian decision keeps its
eye on the eternal law of God. The man of real Christian firmness admits not a
thought of a compromise with sin or with error. Man¡¦s policy will always be
narrow, unless it embraces considerations drawn from eternity. He who consults
his convenience and temporal interests--who has been controlled at one time by
the law of God, and at another by the will of man, will learn too late that he
has acted upon a plan not to be admitted in transactions with the Eternal. He
attempts a hard task indeed; that of uniting the service of God and mammon. Is
there in your deportment nothing like a compromise with sin and error? Are the
claims of Christ all met with cheerfulness, and discharged with promptness? Is
there no blending of the service of God and the service of the world? (H.
Irwin, B.A.)
The Choice of the Highest
These words represent the grand challenge of the human heart
against evil fate. Those who believe in the naturalistic origin of conscience
forget that its greatest achievements have not been in line with, but in
defiance of, popular sentiment. They have been the victories of minorities
rather than of majorities. Yet no such sacrifice has ever failed or can fail.
The three Hebrew children are a figure of the moral heroes of the world. They
did not debate what ought to be done in matters of conscience. It is often said
that first thoughts are best. I have only two things to say to you arising out
of this text. The first is that the supreme spiritual need of the hour is a
strenuous morality, and the second is, there is no morality worthy of the name
that is not born in conflict. You may think it strange if I say the supreme
spiritual need of the hour is a strenuous morality. What has morality got to do
with spirituality? Everything. There is no spiritual truth which has not a
moral bearing and places the man who receives it under a moral obligation. It
is a cheap spirituality that makes no demand upon conscience. I do not wish to
identify morality with spirituality, but I declare they can never be separated.
To-day we are confronted with two seemingly contrasted attitudes of the modern
mind towards Christianity. First we see before us an admiration for the ethical
value of Christianity, for the character of its Founder, for the ideal which He
set up, but along with this there comes a very considerable and widespread
distrust of its dogmas. He is worthy not only of imitation, but of the fullest
homage that a man¡¦s heart can render. Christ stands highest, Christ stands
first, Christ is my God. But about that I am not concerned to dispute at this
moment. I think Christ is not concerned so much as to what we say about who He
is, but He is a very great deal concerned as to the obedience we render unto
Him. There is a need to-day of warmth of devotion and moral enthusiasm about
the highest things which, after all, lie close to us every day. Poverty in
these things leads to pessimism. Every spiritual truth makes this moral demand.
The best way for you young men to find the truth about Christ, about God, about
Heaven, is to be good. The good and the true are ultimately one. Do one good
action and the universe speaks back to you its ¡§Well done.¡¨ Every one of you
bows before a moral ideal written in his heart. You may prove unfaithful to it,
but if you faithfully obey it, it will lead you into light. Whoever or whatever
wrought that ideal within you is your God, and your God makes His demands upon
you not simply sometimes now and then, but all the time and everywhere. The
greatest need, I repeat, of the present day, is the need of a strenuous form of
morality. Make men who are not afraid of rendering homage to conscience, and
you will make that type of character which Christ Himself delights to honour.
But to go to my second point, there is no goodness worth having which is not
born in conflict. Make a distinction between the morally beautiful and the
morally sublime. I trust you have all read Edmund Burke¡¦s essay on the ¡§Sublime
and the Beautiful.¡¨ You will remember that he declares one ingredient of the
sublime to be a feeling akin to fear, fear in the presence of an unknown dread
of an experience that may come. Now, young men, the morally beautiful may
contain nothing at all of that particular ingredient. The morally sublime goes
to the making of character, and in the long run it cannot be different from the
morally beautiful. There is nothing more winsome than the innocence of
childhood. Is childhood ideal? No, but childlikeness is. You will go from the
morally beautiful through the morally sublime. Begin with childlikeness if you
would come to the character of Christ. If you go through the morally sublime
you must be prepared to meet Apollyon in the Valley of Humiliation and the
demons in the darkness of the Valley of the Shadow of Death. Simplicity,
naturalness, transparency of character, absence of arrogance, are characteristic
of the child. It is remarkable but splendid to think that within are the very
things which the world is coming to demand from manhood. Test it yourself.
Examine your own virtue and see if you have obtained these qualities. That is
not virtue which is easily won. The false accent of religiosity to-day says
much about humility where humility is not, and a man may come to that dangerous
condition when, as has been truly said, he is proud of his own humility. Doing
what one wants to is no great virtue in the sight of God. We are every day
confronted with the choice between the higher and the lower, the golden image
or the fiery furnace. Sometimes a grand crisis comes in life. We have to choose
between God and Mammon, conscience or a momentary gain. In such crises we seem
left to ourselves, but we never really are left to ourselves. In the darkest
hour there stands by our side that unknown Friend. Most of us want God to
rescue us before the crisis comes. He very seldom does that, but He rescues us
on the other side of this strenuous activity by which character is beaten out,
gained, and won. When God calls us to a crisis, God brings us to a conflict It
is as though there was a bar to cross, and on the other side, and only on the
other side, is the still water and safety. God does not give His rescues upon
this side. It is an evil agency that would keep a man back from that by which
his manhood is won. Here is opportunity in the great crises of life--to venture
on for the right, and to leave the future to God. Supposing, then, that in this
house of prayer there is some man listening to me who is face to face with the
burning fiery furnace, I would say to him, Make this humble man your ideal. Be
not careful about your answer. First thoughts are best in eases like this. Play
the man. ¡§Our God is able to deliver¡¨ you from the burning fiery furnace--but
if not, if not? Then do not bow down. Leave the future to Him.Some of you are
instantly tempted to compromise with the ideal. Watch what you are doing. You
are perilling something higher than you know, driving from you, it may be,
God¡¦s great opportunity. Faithfulness is always vindicated. There is a grandeur
in moral victory. If it were otherwise, God¡¦s world would be wrongly made. No
man who has ever tested the worth of righteousness has had cause to regret his
choice. Listen to the call of inflexible good. Dare to trust it and obey. (R.
J. Campbell, M.A.)
Character versus Circumstances
The Babylonian kingdom is in the very height of its power and
prosperity. The great Nebuchadnezzar has become a powerful and mighty
potentate. His very word is law throughout all that vast realm. He is
accustomed to strict obedience in all the affairs of state. Since his subjects
are under such perfect control; since they dare not oppose his plans nor thwart
his purposes, he thinks he will command them as to what their religion shall
be. There are many religions in the realm of Nebuchadnezzar the king; there are
many gods to whom sacrifice is made; many images of stone before which the
people bow. But Nebuchadnezzar will change this order of things. He will make
one image of great stature. The day arrives. A great multitude has assembled.
The statue is unveiled with much pomp and display. Another victory for
Nebuchadnezzar! Great is the king of the Babylonians! Mighty is the monarch of
the Chaldeans! Wonderful is the power that he exerts over his subjects; for
their religion, even, is subject to his command. But what newt is this that he
hears? What strange report is this that his courier brings? ¡§There are three
men in your realm, O king,¡¨ the messenger says, ¡§who did not obey your royal
mandate, nor bow themselves down at your command.¡¨ ¡§Three men in all my kingdom
that dare to disobey! Three subjects in all my realm who disregard my command!
Who are they? Are they generals of war who have grown haughty? Are they men of
wealth who have become influential? Are they politicians of fame with whom is
power, that they dare thus to withstand the king? Speak, messengers, their
names! Who are they?¡¨ ¡§Neither wealth nor power nor royal lineage is theirs,
but they are three captives brought from Judea who dare to withstand thine own
edict. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego; these men, O king, have not regarded
thee nor worshipped the golden image which thou hast set up.¡¨ Then
Nebuchadnezzar commanded the three offenders to be brought before him. He tells
them of the law they have broken, and rehearses to them the penalty incurred. A
fearful penalty, a death sentence of execution terrible. But he will give them
one more chance. Our text forms a part of the answer that the Jewish captives
gave the king in the hour of trial.
1. These Israelites were true to their principles, in spite of
difficulties, and in the face of opposition. They were just as loyal and true
in Babylon as ever they had been in Jerusalem. They kept their religion as pure
and undefiled as captives as ever they did as free citizens. Circumstances were
tremendously against them, but they were the kind of men who did not give way to
circumstances. Popular opinion was mightily against them, but they were the
kind of men that are uninfluenced by wrong public opinion. They had grit as
well as grace; pluck as well as piety.
2. There are a good many people who are good enough so long as they
are surrounded by good influences, but get them away from those influences and
into temptation and they fall. Some men, who are very good citizens in
Jerusalem, lose all their piety as soon as they get down to Babylon. The men
who possess decision of character and firmness of purpose are the men who stand
where others fall. Young men come here to our city from their country homes.
Some advance to positions of responsibility and honour; others sink into lives
degraded and low. What is the difference?
The difference lies not in the circumstances that surround these
men, but in the characters that they possess.
3. That young man is safe, wherever you put him, who has the
consecrated courage, the God-like determination, the heroic devotion to
principle, that these three young men had. To tell what will become of a man,
inquire not so much into his surroundings, but look at the man himself and see
how he is made. When that young man leaves your home to go to a distant city,
look not at the reputation of that city so much as at that young man¡¦s
character, if you would read his future. Young men, into your lives trying
hours will come; into your experiences untoward circumstances will be thrust.
But you will have no experience more trying, and be placed in no circumstances
more difficult, than were the three Judean captives. And they found that the
God whom they worshipped, at home, and to whom they were true abroad, did not
forsake them in the hour of Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s rage, but in the very midst of the
fiery furnace He was with them, and from all harm He safely delivered them.
Their God is your God. He who gave them strength to resist will give you power
to overcome. (C. G. Mosher.)
Three Hebrew Martyrs
This persecuting spirit is of very ancient date in the history of
human folly. That the summons of the king met with general compliance is not
very wonderful. Accustomed as the Assyrian princes and nobles had been to the
worship of idols, it is not surprising that they yielded instant and implicit
obedience to the royal mandate. It was but adding another to the calendar of
the gods of Chaldea, and gratified that passion for variety in the objects of
worship which is characteristic of the spirit of idolatry.
I. In looking at
the conduct of these Hebrew confessors, the first circumstance that strikes us
is, that THEY DID NOT COURT
THIS OPPORTUNITY OF MANIFESTING THEIR ZEAL AND CONSTANCY. The
erection of the golden image was not the work of a day. Much preparation was
employed, and the scene that was to be exhibited in the plain of Dura was known
throughout the length and breadth of the land. But in the midst of all the
preparation for this new exhibition of human folly, this insult to the Majesty
of Heaven, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego did not feel it to be their duty to
interfere. It was enough for them to utter their testimony to the faith of
their fathers when legitimately called to do so, and to show their abhorrence
of the idol when commanded to bow down before it. They were prepared for
martyrdom, but they did not court it; they were ready to brave and defy the
tyrant¡¦s rage, but they sought not prematurely to provoke it. That forward
zeal, which courts opposition and seeks reproach, forms no part of the
Christian character; and to step out of the sphere in which Providence has
placed him to censure the errors that prevail in the world, or to make an
uncalled-for statement of his opinions and feelings, is going beyond the sphere
of legitimate duty, and causes his ¡§good to be evil spoken of.¡¨ If the
Christian adheres to the plain and obvious path of duty, and seeks to lead a
holy and blameless life, he will meet with difficulties enough to exercise his
faith and patience, and sufficient opportunities of proving and exhibiting the
strength and vigour of his principles, without going beyond the sphere of his
ordinary calling, or courting unnecessary publicity and distinction.
II. THE SUPERIORITY OF THESE HEBREW
MARTYRS TO THE ALLUREMENT OF PLEASURE merits our next
consideration. A slight examination of their history will satisfy you that they
were at that time of life when those attractions wherewith Nebuchadnezzar
introduced his golden image have the greatest power over enlightened and
cultivated minds. They were not, so far as the history before us testifies, the
gross and repulsive pleasures of mere sensualism, wherewith the introduction of
the golden image into the number of the Chaldean divinities was celebrated.
Pleasures of a more refined and attractive description were held out to allure
and deceive the princes and nobles of Babylon. All the charms of Eastern music
were employed to recommend this scene of idolatrous folly, and to drown all
inquiry concerning the wisdom and propriety of the measure. But these Hebrew
captives were superior to the attraction. It is probable that other pleasurable
attractions accompanied the powers of music on this memorable occasion; but, of
whatever description they were, and whatever passions they addressed, they had
no power to suppress or extinguish that fear of God which was the ruling and
master sentiment of their souls. They tell us to be on our guard against the
seductive influence even of innocent pleasure. ¡§The flute and the dulcimer, the
psaltery and the sackbut, the cornet and the harp,¡¨ were in themselves innocent
instruments of delight, and, employed in the service of God, would have filled
Shadrach and his companions with hallowed joy; but, prostituted to the purpose
of idolatry and sin, their notes were dissonant, and lost to these holy men all
their power to please. And thus do they teach us how pleasures, that are in
themselves innocent and susceptible of being rendered the ministers of our
improvement, are to be estimated. Sin is never so insidious as when it comes
attended by these pleasures which in themselves are innocent. Never let your
taste for any enjoyment, which in itself may be harmless, reconcile you to
scenes or indulgences with which the guilty ingenuity of men may have
associated it. Our most favourite enjoyments must be viewed with jealousy, and
shunned when we see them prostituted to the purpose of iniquity.
III. In maintaining
their fidelity, these pious Hebrews RESISTED ALL THE INFLUENCES OF KINDNESS AND FRIENDSHIP.
Throughout all the provinces they were viewed as the favourites of the mighty
monarch, and many an envious eye was cast at the eminence they had attained.
They were thus bound to the king by the ties of gratitude, and by the prospects
of future favour. Men who so truly and deeply feared God could not be deficient
in yielding every legitimate honour to the king. But the question which now
pressed upon them related to higher interests than the favour of a monarch, and
all the honour and wealth he could bestow. Similar sacrifices of worldly
interest to religious principle--of the sense of gratitude to the sense of
duty--are frequently demanded of the faithful servants of God; and where
religious principle and the sense of duty have a proper hold of the heart,
these sacrifices are made without hesitation or reluctance. These Hebrew
confessors would gladly have retained the favour and friendship of the king of
Babylon; but when these could not be retained but at the expense of their
religious consistency and by the sacrifice of their immortal interests, they
were willing to relinquish them.
IV. When we admire
this superiority to the influence of kindness and friendship in the cause of
religion, THE FIRMNESS AND
MAGNANIMITY WITH WHICH THEY BRAVED DEATH IN ITS CRUELEST FORM MERIT A STILL
HIGHER MEASURE OF OUR REGARD. In this moment of uttermost peril,
the feeling of self-preservation, the all-powerful instinctive love of life,
might have whispered, and doubtless did whisper, some excuse to conscience for
compliance with the king¡¦s command. Such are the considerations that enhance
the faith and fortitude of these confessors. Let us now, in conclusion, turn
our attention to the manner in which Heaven honoured their faith and constancy
in the hour of trial. (J. Johnston.)
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, or Decision in Religion
Decision of character never appears more truly great than when it
is displayed in defiance of danger and in contempt of death.
I. In looking at THE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTER OF
RELIGIOUS DECISION, as it is illustrated in this history:
1. It appears to be lofty in its principle. It is quite evident that
in this ease it was not exercised in order to gratify some mere impulse of
feeling. It did not spring from a foolish wish to affect singularity, nor from
a mere determination to oppose the king¡¦s authority. No; but it was a noble stand
in defence of the rights of conscience--it was a firm resistance of an unjust
demand--it was a lofty determination to obey God rather than man. Had
Nebuchadnezzar commanded Shadrach and his companions to perform some difficult,
but lawful service, we believe they would have performed it; but desirous as
they were of obeying him, they dare not do this, at the certain risk of
disobeying God--they knew that Jehovah had infinitely higher claims upon their
obedience than any earthly king--they knew that in the decalogue they wore
expressly and solemnly commanded to avoid the sin of idlolatry, and not even
the imperious mandate of a Nebuchadnezzar, nor yet the fiercest manifestations
of his displeasure, could make them swerve from their duty, or shake their constancy
to the King of kings. I say, their decision, in this matter, was lofty in its
principle. It was so, because it was based upon an intelligent sense of duty.
Reason and judgment and conscience were arrayed on the side of principle; while
all that worldly wealth could offer, and all that worldly power could indict,
were enlisted on the aide of expediency. Was it not noble in these men, under
such circumstances, to stand firm by their principles? But, again, their
decision was lofty in principle because it was an assertion of the
inalienability of man¡¦s right at all times to think and to act for himself in
all matters of religion. What right had the Babylonian king to enact laws on
the subject of religion? As the monarch of an earthly kingdom, it is true, he
had a temporal jurisdiction over his subjects, and he had a perfect right to
exercise it. But you perceive Nebuchadnezzar was not content with this.
Accustomed to wield the iron sceptre of despotism over the bodies of men, he
vainly wished to control their spirits too. But Nebuchadnezzar had yet to learn
a most important lesson--he had yet to learn that there is a power in the
spirit of man to burst asunder the chains that would enslave it--he had yet to
learn the supremacy of conscience, and the power ofreligious principle to
enable a man to press toward his object even with death itself in view.
2. I would remark that religious decision, as it is illustrated in
this history, appears to have the character of uncompromising firmness.
Throughout the whole of the conduct of Shadrach and his companions there does
not appear the smallest indication of a wish to accommodate matters or to
effect a compromise between principle and expediency. But, further, let us
follow them to the presence of the haughty king, before whom they were soon dragged at
the impeachment of their bloodthirsty foes; and here, how striking the scene.
See them confronted by everything most adapted to intimidate and appal human
nature. Once more, if we follow them on to the last and most fearful trial of
their constancy, we shall see the uncompromising firmness of their religious
decision. But even this barbarous mandate did not shake their constancy. They
saw the fury of the king--they heard his cruel command--but they were unmoved.
II. THE IMPORTANT TIME OF ITS
MANIFESTATION. It requires only a limited historical acquaintance
with the state of the world at the time when Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego
were called to act their parts upon it--to know that it was a time of great
mental degradation and moraldebasement. There seemed to be at that period a
concentration of effort on the part of the powers of darkness to quench the
last spark of vital religion yet remaining upon earth, and by a desperate piece
of policy to plunge in yet deeper gloom an already too fearfully benighted
world, and Shadrach and his companions seem to have been the appointed
instruments in the hands of God of defeating this infernal policy, and of
preserving this only remaining spark from utter extinction. Was not that a
critical season, when, before an assembled universe they were called to combat
the confederated power of darkness, and to vindicate the insulted majesty of
Jehovah? It was for these men, by their conduct, to show whether the whole
family of man should be publicly led captive by the devil at his will, or
whether, by boldly standing forth as witnesses for God, the work of darkness
should be arrested, and Satan deprived of his triumph. And here let me ask,
before passing on, whether the present period of time be not one which
preeminently demands the manifestation of religious decision on the part of the
professed servants of God.
III. THE BENEFICIAL RESULTS
resulting from religious decision, as illustrated in the history before us. Had
opportunity permitted, we might have dwelt upon the beneficial consequences
resulting from this decision to the individuals themselves who exercised it. It
was not only a manifestation of their consistency, and a proof of the reality
of their religion, but it secured them the respect of the king, and it opened
up a way for still greater aggrandisement and worldly honour. We might still
further have enlarged upon the effect of this decision upon the minds of the
captive Jews at Babylon. Doubtless, those of the Hebrews who had bowed down to
image, through a time-serving policy, would be ashamed of their inconsistent
and guilty course, while such as had done thus through a vacillation and
conscious weakness would be inspired with a fresh energy and zeal. We might
also have shown you at length the mighty change which this manifestation of
decision tended to effect in the views and purposes of the proud king of
Babylon; and, doubtless, also in the views and purposes of those by whom he was
surrounded. Oh! let us ever remember that with Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego
we are called to stand forward before an ungodly world as witnesses for God,
and that, as His professing people, our every action has an influence directly
or indirectly upon the destiny of the world. If we are faithful to our trust, a
stamp of reality shall be given to our religion which shall convince the most
unwilling, and convert the world; but if we are unfaithful, the reign of
darkness shall be perpetuated, and Satan shall triumph. Let me conclude in the
language of a well-known writer: ¡§Of this, Christians, you may rest assured,
you cannot stand neutral. Every moment you live you are testifying for or
against religion. Every step you take you tread on cords that will vibrate
through all eternity. Every time you move yon touch keys whose sounds will
re-echo over all the hills and dales of Kenyon, and peal through all the dark
caverns and vaults of hell. Every moment of your lives you are exerting a
tremendous influence that will tell on the immortal interests of souls all
around you. Are you asleep, while all your conduct is exerting such an
influence?¡¨ (G. W. Pegg.)
Active Religious Principle
I. THE PRINCIPLE FOR WHICH WE CONTEND
SHOULD BE TRUE. This should be our first consideration. The
standard of right or wrong is the Bible. These young men had not now to
investigate whether idolatry was allowable or not. Though the revelation of the
Divine will, which they had, was not so full and clear as that with which we
are favoured, it was quite decisive on this subject--and they knew it. We, too,
ought to be familiar with the Scriptures, so that when any line of conduct is
proposed to us we may be able instantly to say whether or not we ought to
pursue it.
II. TRUE PRINCIPLES SHOULD BE MAINTAINED
AGAINST ALL OPPOSITION.
III. TRUTH SHOULD BE MAINTAINED IN THE
SPIRIT OF LOVE. This is of great consequence, and is often
neglected. But if we fail in spirit and manner:
1. We injure our cause before men; who soon perceive our
inconsistency, and put a small price upon our bad-tempered exhortations.
2. We deprive ourselves of Almighty help; without which our most
earnest efforts will be vain.
IV. THERE ARE ABUNDANT ENCOURAGEMENTS FOR
US THUS TO MAINTAIN RIGHT PRINCIPLES. These young men were
encouraged by an assurance that God¡¦s power and goodness were exercised on
their behalf. They knew that God was ¡§able,¡¨ and would deliver them out of the
king¡¦s hand.
V. GLORIOUS RESULTS WILL FOLLOW THE
CONSISTENT MAINTENANCE OF RIGHT PRINCIPLE. In the case before us,
the confessors were themselves preserved and honoured, and the God whom they
served was glorified. (Edward Thompson.)
Witnesses to the Truth
This scene is one of the most sublime and majestic which the human
mind can conceive. On the one side is represented human power in its grandest
and most overwhelming form. On the other side we have three men who stand apart
and refuse to join in the act for which all the rest are met. Here is the
contrast between spiritual greatness and human greatness. Each complete and the
highest of its kind.
1. We ask ourselves what it was which gave these three men the power
to withstand the will of this great monarch, and stand firm though they were
alone in the midst of an assembled world? And the answer is obvious. It was
simply that they felt the importance of the truth for which they witnessed.
They knew that they were upholding the true religion against the false.
2. Here, then, is the lesson which the scene teaches us; that we have
laid upon us the duty of witnessing to the truth; and that in order to be able
to witness to the truth, we must have an inward perception of the value of the
truth to be witnessed to. We are told particularly in Scripture that this is
one of our great duties as servants of God. The whole Jewish nation entrusted
with the oracles of God. When Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-negro bore witness,
as they did in this striking manner, to the truth of the unity and spiritual
nature of God, and against the worship of idols, they fulfilled their special
duties as Jews, and did what God had sent the Jewish people into the world to
do. And we Christians, too, are told in Scripture that we are to be witnesses
to the truth, as the Jews were to be, though to a higher truth than the Jews
had. Our Lord Himself had this as one of His great offices (John 18:37). And the Apostles (1 John 1:1-3). And all Christians
are invested in a measure with office of witnessing to the truth of the
Christian revelation (Matthew 5:16).
3. And as Christians have the office imposed upon them, so they are
placed in a world which tries that office severely, and opposes great
temptations to, and brings an overwhelming influence to bear against, the
performance of that duty. The scene described in the Book of Daniel is indeed a
symbolical one. The great Babylon which arrayed itself in majesty on that
occasion, and set up its golden idol, has fallen, but there is another Babylon
which still goes on, and always will go on till Christ comes again to judgment.
As imposing, and as carnally majestic, great and sublime as ever. Go where we
will it follows us. And what a powerful influence does it exert upon our
minds--very same influence as that which tried the faith of Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abed-nego on plain of Dura. Doubtless they felt the commanding force of
that great spectacle, and had feelings and natural weaknesses of men. It was
influence of the visible world which they resisted.
4. Such being the office, then, which Christians have, and such the
temptations under which they have to exercise it, what is, as a matter of fact,
the way in which this duty is performed? Do we find Christians showing by their
lives, and by the objects they pursue here, their belief in eternity,
witnessing to the great truth of the Gospel dispensation, that our Lord by His
resurrection from the dead brought life and immortality to light? or do we not
find that the great rule of all action adopted by them is to do as other people
do, to think as other people think, and to aim at getting what all other people
strive to get? That is to say, do not the great mass of people do exactly the
same thing that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego would have done, if at the
proclamation of the herald, and at the sound of the music, they had fallen down
and worshipped the golden image?
5. The office of witness, however, to Divine truth, rejected as it is
by the generality, as if it were something more than could be expected of men,
is a privilege as well as a duty, and brings, if it is faithfully executed,
great rewards to those who execute it. We cannot conceive anything more sublime
than the triumph of the three great witnesses in this chapter. It is one of the
great triumphs of faith, one of those great anticipations of the final triumph
of good over evil, which Scripture has recorded for our encouragement. (Moses,
Elijah, etc.) The men were bound, the furnace was heated, etc. (Describe
result.) The strength of the whole earth was gone in a moment, in the presence
of One who was walking in the midst of the fire, and whose form was like the
Son of God.
6. Here was, indeed, a triumph of that faith which bears witness to
the truth; and, as I have said, this scene is symbolical. It is the figure of a
deep truth which holds now, and which we may apply to ourselves. Men know the
truth, but they will not witness to it. Yet, we may venture to say, and with
certainty, that never, on any occasion, by any one of the humblest servants of
God, was this office of witness to the truth executed without a reward. In the
adversity a companion; in the fire walking with him the Son of God. (Canon
Mozley.)
Faith Victorious Over the Fear of Man
I. Concerning THE OBJECT OF OUR FAITH.
By these holy writings we know and acknowledge Him to be the Lord our God in
Christ.
1. He is the Lord, whose name alone is Jehovah.
2. The object of faith is the Lord ¡§our God.¡¨ He says in the ear of
His people, ¡§Be not dismayed, for I am thy God¡¨; and hearing His speech, they
say, ¡§This God,¡¨ who speaketh in His holiness, is ¡§Our God.¡¨ Would ye have an
example? ye will see one in the eighteenth Psalm: ¡§The Lord is my rock, and my
fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my
buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my high tower.¡¨
3. The object of faith is the Lord our God in Christ. In the faith of
sinners this consideration of Him is essentially important. Without a mediator
of righteousness, atonement, and reconciliation, we can have no intercourse
with Him in believing. ¡§By Christ we believe in God, who raised Him from the
dead, that our faith and hope might be in God.¡¨ This consideration of the object
of faith is not peculiar to the New Testament. Though the revelation of it was
comparatively dark, the first believer, and all that followed, had it before
them, and saw it truly. God was then, as He is now, in Christ. The witnesses in
Babylon saw anal believed in Him as in Christ; and in the furnace had a
sensible proof of it.
II. Concerning THE GROUND OF FAITH.
The ground on which we stand and build in believing, is the record or testimony
of God, revealing Himself to us as the Lord our God in Christ. This record,
testimony, or witness, faith believes to be true, receives as good, rests in as
sure, and builds on with appropriation, according its address with full
assurance of its stability. The truth is, faith can neither stand nor build on
any other ground. Unless we have His own testimony before us, we cannot glorify
Him in believing. It would be presuming, and not believing, to call Him our God
on any other ground. Though the faith of believers doth not fix them always on
the same passage, they always build on some passage of the revealed testimony.
They never change their ground, but do not always build on the same spot. In
the Testimony which is the ground of faith there is an order that ought not to
be overlooked, since according to it the exercise of faith is to be regulated.
The glorious Object, in the front of the law, says, ¡§I am the Lord thy God¡¨;
and in the body of the particular commandment, which turned to His witnesses in
the plain of Dura for a testimony, He repeats it, saying, ¡§I the Lord thy God
am a jealous God.¡¨ Upon hearing this gracious declaration from His throne,
faith proceeds, and boldly advances its claim, saying, ¡§This God is our God.¡¨
In this very order the witnesses proceed, and add to their faith virtue.
3. Concerning the exercise of faith. In the exercise of faith there
is:
1. That believing God is warrantable and authourised exercise in all
extremities. Warrantable, because it is allowed; authorised, because it is
commanded.
2. That the gratuitous deed, which is the ground of believing,
proceeds upon a ransom found, and an atonement made. Grace reigns in it. The
reign of grace, however, is a righteous administration.
3. We infer the immorality of unbelief. By many in the visibles
church unbelief is not held to be an immorality. Discipline cannot lay hands
upon it, nor are ministers able to do anything but cry against it, It is,
notwithstanding, a crying immorality, denying the truth of God in His word,
despising the loving kindness of the Saviour of the world, resisting the spirit
of holiness, and drowning in destruction and perdition multitudes of precious
souls. (A. Shanks.)
Christian Heroism
The service of Christ demands heroism of the truest and highest
kind. This world is radically hostile to Christ and His religion, and no
disciple, in any age or land, can be, in all things and at all times, true to
his Master, in the full sense of the term, and not encounter opposition and
obstacles that will demand the very highest type of heroism to meet and
overcome. Examples of the sublimest heroism are not wanting in the history of
the church. We have such in Noah, in building the Ark; in Abraham, in the
sacrifice of Isaac; in Daniel; in the three Hebrew worthies; in Paul, and the
other disciples; in the long line of the prophets, martyrs and witnesses to the
truth, and in the lives of such missionaries as Brainerd, Martyn, Carey,
Judson, Morrison, and Harriet Newell. And in the grand roll of honour, read off
in the final day, will be found the names of untold thousands of true heroes,
whose deeds were never recognised on earth--men and women, who, in humble life,
or in private stations, away from the observation of men, heroically endured
and wrought for the Master, and won a crown as bright as any worn by
martyr-saint! Never was there greater need of Christian heroism than at the
present time.
I. IN THE PULPIT. The tide
of change, of insidious and seductive error, of worldliness and spiritual
declension, is rising high and beating fearfully against the old foundations of
faith, and spirituality, and a godly life. The pulpit of to-day is assailed by
more potent and dangerous influences than if we were in the midst of fiery
persecution. To stand firm for God and truth, and ¡§the simplicity that is in
Christ¡¨--to lift high the banner of righteousness and wage uncompromising war
with sin and error in every form--requires the heroism of apostles and martyrs.
Would to God our pulpits everywhere, in city and country., responded to the
demand.
II. IN ALL THE WALKS OF PRIVATE,
CHRISTIAN LIFE.
This a day that puts to a severe test the fidelity of the heart to Christ. Oh,
there are so many false Christs in the world, false standards of duty,
counterfeit experiences, ¡§lying and seducing spirits,¡¨ evil examples and
declensions, and so much ¡§conformity to the world,¡¨ and worship of ¡§mammon,¡¨
and lowering of the standard of discipleship, that to meet the full demands of
Christ-likenees and Christ¡¦s service calls for more heroism than it would to
face the stake! Alas, how little of it, comparatively, do we see!
III. IN THE GREAT MISSIONARY WORK,
TO WHICH GOD IS CALLING HIS PEOPLE.
IV. IN THE MART OF BUSINESS.
Terrible is the strain here, and how many fail and go down in the awful wreck
and rain of character, many of them, too, bearing the name of Christ; and all
because they have not true manliness, true courage, to face temptation and
disaster--have not heroism sufficient to live up to the principles of
righteousness.
V. IN PUBLIC LIFE, IN POLITICS, IN ALL PLACES OF HONOUR AND TRUST.
Heroism is here demanded, and heroism of the genuine stamp. Dare to do right,
though office be lost, or election fail, or poverty come, or clamour assail. To
do right is to win! To do or connive at wrong is to lose, always! (J. M.
Sherwood.)
Nor worship the golden
image which thou hast set up.
Steadfastness in the Midst of Dangers
At the king¡¦s command, the three Hebrew youths came forth from the
fire unscorched. The same scenes--differing simply in the lesser details--have
more than once been witnessed upon the earth. The whole world is one wide plain
of Darn, in which a golden image is set up. The God of Heaven proclaims His
sovereign will. Rival divinities set up their groundless claims. They all have
their due proportion of abject worshippers.
1. The man of the world bows down before the golden image. He adores
that which seems nearest to himself. Popularity, and power, and place are
foremost in his thoughts. He makes an idol of the world. Nothing is ¡§real¡¨ in
his sight which cannot be coined into money, and which will not aid him in his
ambitious plans.
2. The Christian has full scope for the exercise of the determined
spirit manifested by the Hebrew youths, in a consistent walk with God. ¡§All
that will live Godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.¡¨ If you are what
you ought to be, no degree of prudence and reserve will free you altogether
from the opposition and malice of an ungodly world. It seems, at first thought,
a hard lot; but it has its blessings. (John N. Norton.)
That they should heat the furnace one seven times more than it was
wont to be heated.
The Fiery Furnace
I. THE PERSON WHO CAUSED IT TO BE MADE. This
Oriental despot was then in the zenith of his glory. He was the acknowledged
master of the world. The pomp and pageantry, of that religious gathering has
never been surpassed. In deep awe, ¡§they stood before the image that
Nebuchadnezzar had set up¡¨ (v. 4).
II. THE PERSONS WHO WERE CAST INTO THIS BURNING FIERY FURNACE
AND WHY. These were Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego--¡§the three
Hebrew children,¡¨ who were carried to Babylon in captivity B.C. 606. They were of
royal birth. They first came into notice in refusing to eat the ¡§king¡¦s meat.¡¨
Why were they cast into the burning furnace? It was because they refused to do
that which would offend the living God. Listen to the answer given by those
Hebrews: ¡§Be it known unto thee, O king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor
worship the golden image which thou hast set up¡¨ (v. 18). What is our answer?
Observe, there is one great word in this verse now quoted. It is the word ¡§not¡¨!
¡§We will not serve thy gods¡¨! O this word, ¡§not¡¨! How grand it is!
1. It contains all the decision of 5:16. There they say: ¡§We are not
careful to answer thee in this matter.¡¨ ¡§There is no need for talk on this
subject, O king. You are determined what to do; so, also, are we!¡¨ Glorious
decision! There is never any ¡§not¡¨ where there is the least hesitation or
parleying with sin.
2. This word ¡§not¡¨ contains all the faith of 5:17. ¡§If it be so, our
God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning furnace.¡¨ This is what
the great Paul once said: ¡§The Lord shall deliver me from every evil work and
will preserve me unto His heavenly kingdom¡¨ (2 Timothy 4:18). How glorious such a
trust!
3. The ¡§not¡¨ before us contains the profoundest courage. It was
popular that day to bow to the image; the lend-mouthed ¡§herald¡¨ proclaimed the
penalty of not worshipping. Yet the brave men spoke out courageously. With
decision, faith, and courage, we can alone stand against the evils of our day.
Because Shadrach and his friends said ¡§net,¡¨ they were cast into the fire.
III. THE PERSON WHO DELIVERED THEM, AND WHY. It was
Almighty God (v. 28). Why? Because they ¡§trusted in Him¡¨ (v. 28). This the
versereferred to in Hebrews 11:33-34 --¡§who through fire
subdued kingdoms¡¨! It is faith that overcomes the world. Faith is the mighty
moral force of the age. The Apostles said unto the Lord, and so should we,
¡§Increase our faith¡¨ (Luke 17:5). Observe:
1. The completeness of this deliverance: ¡§Nor was an hair of their
head singed¡¨ (v. 27). So God always saves--it is complete, or not at all.
2. They were thrown into the furnace ¡§bound,¡¨ but soon they walked
through the flames ¡§loose¡¨ (v. 24, 25). O how Satan has tried to bind us in our
afflictions, but in the greatest sorrow--when the furnace has been heated
¡§seven times,¡¨ we have had both freedom and joy. ¡§If the Son therefore shall
make you free, ye shall be free indeed¡¨ (John 8:36).
IV. THE PERSONS BENEFITED BY THE FIERY FURNACE, AND WHY.
1. The three Hebrews were benefited by receiving another wonderful
evidence of the power of grace; by being promoted to a higher official rank in
the kingdom (v. 30). This was the result of decision, faith, and courage.
2. Nebuchadnezzar was benefited by being brought back to the
knowledge of God which, years before, he had professed (Daniel 2:47).
3. No doubt the great multitude which that day had worshipped the
golden image was benefited. They all saw that the true God was He whom the
Hebrews worshipped. Decision for the Lord Jesus is the best way to win the
wicked to His worship and service. (Alfred W. Moment.)
Religious Persecution
We have in this chapter an affecting case of an attempt to punish
men for holding certain opinions, and for acting in conformity with them. When
we read of an instance of persecution like this, it occurs to us to ask certain
questions.
1. What is persecution? It is pain inflicted, or some loss, or
disadvantage in person, family, or office, on account of holding certain
opinions. It has had two objects. One to punish men for holding certain
opinions, as if the persecutor had a right to regard this as an offence against
the state; and the other a professed view to reclaim those who are made to
suffer, and to save their souls. In regard to the pain or suffering involved in
persecution, it is not material what kind of pain is inflicted in order to
constitute persecution. Any bodily suffering; any deprivation of comfort; any
exclusion from office; any holding up of one to public reproach; or any form of
ridicule, constitutes the essence of persecution. It may be added that not a
few of the inventions most distinguished for inflicting pain, and known
as refinements of cruelty, have been originated in times of persecution, and
would probably have been unknown if it had not been for the purpose of
restraining men from the free exercise of religious opinions. The Inquisition
has been most eminent in this; and within the walls of that dreaded institution
it is probable that human ingenuity has been exhausted in devising the most
refined modes of inflicting torture on the human frame.
2. Why has this been permitted? Among the reasons may be the
following:
3. What have been the effects of persecution?
In the Fiery Furnace
Note the teachings of the miracle.
I. THOSE ONLY WHO LIVE ABOVE THE WORLD CAN AFFORD TO LEAVE IT
OR TO LOSE IT. The man who has temporal blessings without
fellowship with God cannot afford to disobey the world¡¦s laws or customs (Hebrews 11:14).
II. THE MEANS TAKEN TO EXTINGUISH TRUTH WILL BE USED TO EXTEND
ITS INFLUENCE. The Philippian jailer, not content with beating
his prisoners, thrust them into the inner prison, yet into this prison he shall
come, and falling upon his knees, shall beseech help from his prisoners. The
very means taken in that city by the magistrates to silence Paul and Silas led
to their being more highly esteemed, and consequently to the words which they
had spoken receiving more attention.
III. ONE SPECIAL INTERPOSITION OF PROVIDENCE IN A LIFETIME WILL
NOT GUARANTEE EXEMPTION FROM AN ORDINARY FATE AT ANOTHER PERIOD.
Peter was saved from Herod¡¦s sword, but he suffered martyrdom in later life.
IV. THE SERVANTS OF GOD WHO HAVE BEEN PUBLICLY CONDEMNED SHALL BE PUBLICLY
VINDICATED. The Son of God was publicly condemned and executed as
a malefactor by the Jews, but they will one day own Him as their Lord with ¡§Lo,
this is our God; we have waited for Him¡¨ Isaiah 25:9). (Outlines by a
London Minister.)
Verse 24
Then Nebuchadnezzar the
king was astonished.
The Astonishment of
Nebuchadnezzer as he looked into the Fiery Furnace
Consider the causes of his
astonishment.
I. HE WAS ASTONISHED AT THE NUMBER HE
BEHELD IN THE FURNACE ¡§Lo! I see four men; and the form of the
fourth is like the Son of God!¡¨ Some have imagined that by the expression ¡§Son
of God¡¨ Nebuchadnezzar meant a son of Jupiter, or of Baal, or of some other
heathen deity; but surely it is far more reasonable to suppose that by the
power of God, who ¡§causeth the wrath of man to praise Him,¡¨ and of whom we
read, ¡§He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh,¡¨ the king was constrained to
utter a great truth in spite of the fury of his spirit and the darkness of his
soul. Does it not seem clear that Jehovah was then dealing with Nebuchadnezzar
in essentially the same way as He had, ages before, dealt with Balaam, when He
caused his opposition to praise Him, and when, in spite of ¡§the madness of the
prophet,¡¨ he was constrained, instead of cursing Israel, to give utterance,
under a power he could not resist, to truths he did not understand, when he
spake of the coming of ¡§a Star out of Jacob,¡¨ and proclaimed: ¡§I shall see Him,
but not now: I shall behold Him, but not nigh¡¨? Can we fail in the light of
Scripture to recognise the fourth in the furnace as ¡§the Messenger of the
covenant¡¨ of whom we read: ¡§In all their afflictions He was afflicted, and the
angel of His presence saved them¡¨; ¡§the Word¡¨ that was to be ¡§made flesh and
dwell among men, the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth¡¨?
That cause of the king¡¦s astonishment, seeing four in the furnace, becomes to
us illustrative of a precious truth--that God, our Saviour, is with His people
in the furnace of affliction. ¡§The Lord loveth the righteous.¡¨ Loving man, He
prepares them for home; and affliction, ¡§if need be,¡¨ is one of the preparatory
means employed by Him ¡§whose fire is in Zion and His furnace in Jerusalem.¡¨ But
neither are others free from trial. The world has its furnaces. Was not Cain in
a furnace when he said, ¡§My punishment is greater than I can bear¡¨? Was not
Belshazzar, when, with trembling knees and a terrified soul, he quailed before
the writing on the wall: ¡§Thou art weighed in the balances and found wanting¡¨?
Was not Judas, when, casting on the ground the thirty pieces of silver, as if
burning not his fingers but his soul, he went out and hanged himself? And
multitudes now wandering in the ways of sin are in furnaces of affliction. But
when servants of the Lord are in the furnace of affliction they are in the
furnace that is ¡§in Jerusalem,¡¨ and in it they are not alone. He who controls
and regulates its heat, and can, at His pleasure, take them out of it, is with
them in it, as ¡§the consolation of Israel, the Saviour thereof, in time of
trouble.¡¨ ¡§will not leave you comfortless.¡¨ ¡§Lo! I am with you always¡¨; ¡§My
grace is sufflcient for thee.¡¨
II. Another cause
of the king¡¦s astonishment was this: ¡§THEY HAVE NO HURT.¡¨ How illustrative of the
precious truth that God¡¦s people receive no hurt in the furnace of affliction!
So the Psalmist seems to have felt when he said, ¡§The Lord shall preserve thee
from all evil: He shall preserve thy soul.¡¨ To have discoveries made to us of
errors in the judgment, deceitfulness in the heart, self-righteousness in the
spirit, and manifold deficiencies previously unnoticed by us in our character
and life, may be most humiliating and painful for a season, but far from
hurtful to the soul; for such are some of the expressly intended results of
sanctified affliction which, injuring none of the Christian graces, gives new
vigour to faith, new brightness to hope, new ardour to holy affections, and a
tone of new devotedness to the whole spirit and life. Surely, then, it becomes
the people of God, amid the various trials of life, to ¡§trust and be not
afraid,¡¨ and so ¡§glorify in the fires¡¨ their covenant God and Father.
III. That the king
saw in the furnace ¡§four men LOOSE,
whilst unhurt,¡¨ was another cause of astonishment. Not power only, but thought,
discrimination, and directing influence were acting amid the flames. He who
¡§directeth His lightning to the ends of the earth,¡¨ Lord of all the elements,
the God of nature and nature¡¦s laws, caused the fire to act only in such
direction and for such ends as He willed. It acted, but only to burn bonds.
That cause of astonishment illustrates another precious truth--that sanctified
affliction burns bonds--the bonds of sin, Satan, and the world. Children of
God, becoming entangled anew in bonds of various kinds, are often placed by the
unerring hand of a faithful and loving Father in the furnace of affliction; and
in due season, the bonds being burned, they are led out of the furnace to feel
anew and often far more than previously, ¡§the glorious liberty of the children
of God.¡¨
IV. Another cause
of the king¡¦s astonishment seems to have been this: THEIR DEMEANOUR IN THE FURNACE--¡§walking in
the midst of the fire,¡¨ so calm, self-possessed, joyful. How illustrative of
another precious truth, that God¡¦s people are not only supported but enabled to
be ¡§joyful in tribulation.¡¨ Before the multitude of amazed spectators went away
they must surely have fixed their eyes very intently for a few moments upon the
king, the furnace, and the three faithful servants of ¡§a great God.¡¨ Let us do
likewise.
1. The king. What is now the state of his mind? One thing he said was
this: ¡§There is no other God that can deliver after this sort.¡¨ ¡§True, O king.¡¨
But is there any other god that can deliver at all? Where were thy gods, O
Babylon, when some of their self-denying votaries, those ¡§mighty men,¡¨ were
being burned to death even outside the furnace? Sadly did Nebuchadnezzar fail
to turn to rational and right account that signally favourable opportunity of
looking fully at the question, ¡§What is truth ¡§? And not very long afterward he
was to be seen eating grass with the beasts of the field! What a lesson as to
the importance of improving every season of specially favourable opportunity,
every day of specially merciful visitation.
2. The furnace. Read as in letters of light among the subsiding
glories, such lessons as these: ¡§The path of duty is the path of safety¡¨; ¡§As
my days, so shall my strength be¡¨; ¡§Them that honour¡¨ God, He ¡§will honour¡¨;
¡§Blessed are all they that put their trust in Him.¡¨
3. The three tried ones that have come forth as gold¡¦.
Verse 25
Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire.
Consolation in the Furnace
The narrative of the glorious boldness and marvellous deliverance
of the three holy children, or rather champions, is well calculated to excite
in the minds of believers firmness and steadfastness in upholding the truth in
the teeth of tyranny and in the very jaws of death. Let young men especially,
since these were young men, learn from their example both in matters of faith
in religion, and matters of integrity in business, never to sacrifice their
consciences. To have a clear conscience, to wear a guileless spirit, to have a
heart void of offence, is greater riches than the mines of Ophir could yield or
the traffic of Tyre could win. Better is a dinner of herbs where love is than a
stalled ox and inward contention therewith. An ounce of heart¡¦s-ease is worth a
ton of gold; and a drop of innocence is better than a sea of flattery.
I. The place WHERE GOD¡¦S PEOPLE OFTEN ARE. In
the text we find three of them in a burning fiery furnace, and singular as this
may be literally, it is no extraordinary thing spiritually, for, to say the
truth, it is the usual place where the saints¡¦ are found. The ancients fabled
of the salamander that it lived in the fire; the same can be said of the
Christian without any fable whatever. It is rather a wonder when a Christian is
not in trial, for to wanderers in a wilderness discomfort and privation will
naturally be the rule rather than the exception. It is through ¡§much
tribulation¡¨ that we inherit the kingdom.
1. First, there is the furnace which men kindle. As if there were not
enough misery in the world, men are the greatest tormentors to their fellow
men. The elements in all their fury, wild beasts in all their ferocity, and
famine and pestilence in all their horrors, have scarcely proved such foes to
man, as men themselves have been. Religious animosity is always the worst of
all hatreds, and incites to the most fiendish deeds; persecution is as
unsparing as death, and as cruel as the grave. At times the Christian feels the
heat of the furnace of open persecution. Another furnace is that of oppression.
In the iron furnace of Egypt the children of Israel were made to do hard
bondage in brick and in mortar; and doubtless many of God¡¦s people are in
positions where they are little better than slaves. There is also the furnace
of slander.
2. Secondly, there is a furnace which Satan blows with three great
bellows--some of you have been in it. It is hard to bear, for the prince of
thepower of the air hath great mastery over human spirits; he knows our weak
places, and can strike so as to cut us to the very quick. He fans the fire with
the blast of temptation. Then he works the second bellows of accusation. He
hisses into the ear, ¡§Thy sins have destroyed thee! The Lord hath forsaken thee
quite! Thy God will be gracious no more!¡¨ Then he will beset us with
suggestions of blasphemy; for while tormenting as with insinuations, he has a
way of uttering foul things against God, and then casting them into our hearts
as if they were our own.
3. And thirdly, there is a furnace which God himself prepares for His
people. There is the furnace of physical pain. A furnace still worse, perhaps,
is that of bereavement. Then, added to this, there will crowd in upon us
temporal losses and sufferings. The business which we thought would enrich,
impoverishes.
4. The context reminds us that sometimes the Christian is exposed to
very peculiar trials. The furnace was heated seven times hotter; it was hot
enough when heated once; but I suppose that Nebuchadnezzar had pitch and tar,
and all kinds of combustibles thrown in to make it flame out with greater
vehemence. Truly at times the Lord appears to deal thus with His people. It is
a peculiarly fierce heat which surrounds them, and they cry out, ¡§Surely I am
the man that hath seen affliction--I may take precedence of all others in the
realm of sorrow.¡¨
5. I do not like to leave this point without observing, too, that
these holy champions were helpless when thrown into the furnace. They ware cast
in bound; and many of us have been cast in bound, too, so that we could not
lift hand or foot to help ourselves. Pretty plight to be in! Who does not
shudder at it! Certainly none of us would choose it; but we have not the
choice, and as we have said with David, ¡§Thou shalt choose mine inheritance for
me,¡¨ if the Lord determines to choose it for us among the coals of fire, it is
the Lord, lot Him do what seemeth Him good. Where Jehovah places His saints they
are safe in reality, although exposed to destruction in appearance.
II. WHAT THEY LOSE THERE.
Look at the text, and it will be clear to you that they lost something.
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego lost something in the fire--not their turbans,
nor their coats, nor their hosen, nor one hair of their heads or boards--no;
what then?
1. Why, they lost their bonds there. Do observe: ¡§Did not we cast
three men bound into the midst of the fire? Lo, I see four men loose, walking
in the midst of the fire.¡¨ The fire did not hurt them, but it snapped their
bonds. Blessed loss this! A true Christian¡¦s losses are gains in another shape.
Now, observe this carefully, that many of God¡¦s servants never know the fulness
of spiritual liberty till they are cast into the midst of the furnace. Shall I
show you some of the bonds which God looses for His people when they are in the
fire of human hatred? Sometimes He bursts the cords of fear of man, and desire
to please man. When persecution rages, it is wonderful what liberty it gives to
the child of God. Never a freer tongue than Luther¡¦s! Never a braver mouth than
that of John Knox! Never a bolder speech than that of John Calvin! Never a
braver heart than that which throbbed beneath the ribs of Wickliffe!
2. Again, when Satan puts us in the furnace, he is often the means of
breaking bonds. How many Christians are bound by the bonds of frames and
feelings; the bonds of depend-once upon something within, instead of resting
upon Christ the great Sacrifice. Fierce temptations may be like waves that wash
the mariner on a rock--they may drive us nearer to Christ. It is an ill wind
which blows no one any good; but the worst wind that Satan can send blows the
Christian good, because it hurries him nearer to his Lord. Temptation is a great
blessing when it looses our bonds of self-confidence and reliance upon frames
and feelings.
3. As for the afflictions which God sends, do they not loose our
bonds? Doubts and fears are more common to us in the midst of work and business
than when laid aside by sickness.
III. WHAT SAINTS DO THERE.
¡§Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire.¡¨ Walking! They are
walking--it is a symbol of joy, of ease, of peace, of rest--not flitting like
unquiet ghosts, as if they were disembodied spirits traversing the flame; but
walking with real footsteps, treading on hot coals as though they were roses,
and smelling the sulphureons flames as though they yielded nothing but aromatic
perfume. Enoch ¡§walked with God.¡¨ It is the Christian¡¦s pace, it is his general
pace; he does sometimes run, but his general pace is walking with God, walking
in the Spirit; and you see that these good men did not quicken their pace, and
they did not slacken it--they continued to walk as they usually did; they had
the same holy calm and peace of mind which they enjoyed elsewhere. Their
walking shows not only their liberty, and their ease, and their pleasure, and
their calm, but it shows their strength. Their sinews ware not snapped, they
were walking. These men had no limping gait, they were walking, walking in the
midst of the fire.
IV. WHAT THEY DID NOT LOSE THERE.
The text says, ¡§And they have no hurt.¡¨ They did not lose anything there.
1. But we may say of them first, their persons were not hurt. The
child of God loses in the furnace nothing of himself that is worth keeping. He
does not lose his spiritual life--that is immortal; he does not lose his
graces--he gets them refined and multiplied, and the glitter of them is best
seen by furnace-light.
2. The Christian does not lose his garments there. You see their
hats, and their hosen, and their coats were not singed, nor was there the smell
of fire upon them; and so with the Christian: his garment is the beauteous
dress which Christ himself wrought out in His life, and which He dyed in the
purple of His own blood. As it is not hurt by age, nor moth, nor worm, nor
mildew, so neither can it be touched by fire. I know you dread that
furnace--who would not?--but courage, courage, the Lord who permits thatfurnace
to be heated will preserve you in it, therefore be not dismayed!
V. WHO WAS WITH THEM IN THE FURNACE.
There was a fourth, and he was so bright and glorious that even the heathen
eyes of Nebuchadnezzar could discern a supernatural lustre about him. ¡§The
fourth,¡¨ he said, ¡§is like the Son of God,¡¨ What appearance Christ had put on I
cannot tell, which was recognisable by that heathen monarch; but I suppose that
He appeared in a degree of that glory in which He showed Himself to His servant
John in the Apocalypse. You must go into the furnace if you would have the
nearest and dearest dealings with Christ Jesus. Whenever the Lord appears, it
is to His people when they are in a militant posture. The richest thought that
a Christian perhaps can live upon is this, that Christ is in the furnace with
him. I know that to the worldling this seems a very poor comfort, but then if
you have never drank this wine you cannot judge its flavour. What must it be to
dwell with everlasting burnings! One¡¦s heart beats high at the thought of the
three poor men being thrown into that furnace of Nebuchadnezzar, with its
flaming pitch and bitumen reaching upwards its streamers of flame, as though it
would set the heavens on a blaze; yet that fire could not touch the three
children, it was not consuming fire. But, be ye warned, there is One who is ¡§a
consuming fire,¡¨ and once let Him flame forth in anger, and none can deliver
you. He calls to you to leave your sins and look to Him, and then you shall
never die, neither upon you shall the flame of wrath kindle because its power
was spent on Him, and He felt the furnace of Divine wrath, and trod the glowing
coals for every soul that believeth in Him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The Two Aspects of Life
Now, what I want to derive from the passage as an illustration is
this--that there are two aspects of life; one which is here described, as
Nebuchadnezzar described it to his counsellors, and as they acknowledged that
it was; and the other as it appears to the eye of faith, which is represented
to us by this king, who had his eyes opened to see that which apparently his
counsellors did not see. The three men, then, being cast into the furnace of
fire, may be taken as instances of daily commonplace life; that which
Nebuchadnezzar himself was enabled to perceive may be taken as that
interpretation and glorification of the ordinary facts of everyday life which
the Bible, which religion, and which emphatically Christianity is enabled to
cast over all the circumstances of our existence here. Now this may be taken as
a pattern of all the circumstances of life. There is the ordinary, the
commonplace, the matter-of-fact, the prosaic way of looking at everything; and
as things are so looked at, they show very much as the natural features of this
city do on one of our dull, foggy November mornings. There is nothing to
delight, there is no poetry, there is no light about them; they all seem dull,
and dead, and leaden. But, then, there is another aspect, and that is such as
the king had his eyes open to perceive; and you observe that what he saw was
something totally different from what things were to the eyes of his
counsellors, and from what they were as he thought they must be. He said, ¡§Lo,
I see four men.¡¨ There is another there. These men are not alone; they are
not left to grapple with the violence of the flame; they have a friend with
them; and, moreover, as they were cast bound, so now he perceives that they are
loosened, he sees them also walking in the midst of the fire. Observe that they
were there exposed to all these mighty flames. He allowed them to go down into
them, but they were walking about in the fire and they had no hurt. So it is
with Christian life. The Christian is not delivered out of temptation; he is
not one of those who are never exposed to trial; there is no exemption wrought
on his behalf; he has his lot with other men; he takes his part with other men;
and sometimes his lot and part are worse than those of other men, or at least
they appear to be so. But yet he is enabled to walk about in the midst of the fire.
Now there are those persons who always take the commonplace, matter-of-fact
view of life, and they are the tedious people. I know no people so tedious, so
difficult to get on with, as those who always see things in their dull, grey
light, precisely as they are; whereas those who can throw into the commonplace
and into the ordinary the glamour of a Divine existence and of a higher life,
who can throw poetry into the scene--those are the people who are interesting,
those are the people who know with whom it is a joy and a privilege to be.
Then, again, observe very often we may be in the midst of danger and not know
it. Who can tell how many dangers he has been preserved from? It is quite
possible that many of us from time to time walk over difficulties and dangers
of which we have no notion, and we probably never discover that we have been
preserved from difficulty and danger. Is not this the case with many of us? Or,
on the other hand, it is possible for us to walk in the midst of danger and to
know that we are in the midst of danger, as these men knew they were; and then
sometimes we are not conscious of that unseen, invisible protection which is
nigh unto us. Now I want you to learn to see this, to believe in it. We, as
Christians, walk by faith, and not by sight, and there should be no emergency
and no trial into which the Christian comes in which he should feel himself
left alone; he should always know that there is someone there with him, a
mighty friend, the strongest of the strong, and that the form of that unseen
one is like the Son of God. Oh, it is only the Word of God, it is only the
power of religion, it is only the truth of Christianity and the presence of the
grace of God, which can thus throw into the ordinary, the dull, and the
commonplace the light of the glory of the Sun of Righteousness, which tips
everything with gold, and makes everything to shine as with the light of the
glory of Kenyon. That, and that alone, can make life glorious; that, and that
alone, can steel your heart so that you may bear up under all opposition, and
under all trials, and may quit yourselves like men in the day of the Lord. That
question, ¡§Did we not cast three men bound into the midst of the fire?¡¨ could
be answered only in one way--¡§True, O king!¡¨ But it was the grace of God, it
was the mystery of the promise of God and the presence of God which enabled
that great king to say, ¡§Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the
fire, anal they have no hurt; the smell of the fire has not passed on them. It
had no power to damage or injure them because there was One with them who was
mightier than the flames, and the form of that fourth Mighty One was like the
Son of God.¡¨ Now, it is a very remarkable thing that in this Book of the
Prophet Daniel, the fourth and last of the four great prophets, we have such an
extraordinary foretaste, if I may say so, of the coming Gospel of Jesus Christ.
But when the king here says, ¡§The fourth is like that of the Son of God.¡¨ it is
impossible, and we see ourselves that it is impossible, that he can mean one of
those persons who are called by a figure of speech ¡§sons of God.¡¨ He must mean
the Son of God, who is, by eminence and excellence, the only begotten Son of¡¦
God, the one who is made in God¡¦s imago and God¡¦s likeness, who is of God and
from God, and who stands in the exact relation to God that a child stands to
his father. Such, then, is the glorification which is offered to every
Christian for all the times of life. Life, no doubt, for everyone under the
most advantageous circumstances, has its dull aspect. ¡§We all knew what it is
to travel along a road which has no variety, which is nothing but monotonous
from beginning to end, and we feel the effect of such journey on our spirit.
Life has such journeys for us all, even under the most favourable
circumstances. What we want is not to have those circumstances altered--because
it may be that they never will be altered, and certainly when we most feel
their monotony they are not so likely to be altered--but what we want is something
which will make us proof against their dulness and monotony, something which
will give us strength to cope with them, something which will shed the sunlight
of eternal day over the darkness and gloominess of the morning spread upon the
mountains, and will kindle for us by it a glorious day in which and through
which we may walk from hour to hour with the presence of Him whose form is like
that of the Son of God. Now, have you this presence of the Son of God with you?
I am quite sure you want Him. I am sure there is no one whose heart does not
yearn after a friend. Sometimes one solitary friend is worth a mine of wealth
to us, and if we have got one such friend we may count ourselves rich. Now,
there is such a friend for every one of us in the person of the Son of God, who
is also the Son of man, ¡§so pitying found.¡¨ That Son of man and Son of God is
very near to every one of us; and if we would see Him we must have our eyes
open as this great king¡¦s eyes were opened. It is only by faith that we can
behold Him. We are not told that these three men even knew that there was a
fourth with them. It was only given to one man to see that fourth, and it was
only given to him to recognise in Him the form ¡§like that of the Son of God.¡¨
The Son of God may be with us now. He is with us now, because He has promised
to be with us. What we want to make us strong is to know that He is with us,
and to feel that the form of that Son of God is indeed the form of the Son of
man, who was crucified for us, who rose from the dead for us, and who now
sitteth at the right hand of God, evermore to make intercession for us. But,
pray that your eyes may be opened, that in every want that you have in this
life, in every trial and temptation, you may ever feel that the Son of God and
the Son of man is with you. (Dean Stanley.)
And the form of the fourth
is like the Son of God.
Folly of Polytheism and Pantheism
There can be no confidence nor firm trust where men suppose that
there is a multitude of gods. For one god may have to yield to another, or may
find his power limited by another¡¦s dominion. The Greeks of old believed that
there wore quarrels and feuds and divisions among the inhabitants of their
Olympus, and that one deity might have to sacrifice the interests of his
devotees in order to obtain some concession for other favourites. Happy was
Israel of old in the belief in one God, and many were the deeds of heroism
wrought in the strength of this conviction. Nor can there be peace of mind and
calm fortitude where the one god is the mere sum of the being of the universe.
To the pantheist God is not a person, omniscient, omnipresent, almighty, who
sees and knows and takes interest in all he does. To him God is a blind power,
the mere aggregate of the working of nature and man, of whom he is himself
part, and into whom he will be finally absorbed. Such a deity has no separate
existence, no separate action, no separate knowledge, no personal will, no
special sphere of duty. The man may see, but the god, who is the mere sum of
all human and animal seeing, himself sees not. Man may work, and nature may
employ her physical and vegetative energies, but the sum of all this working
can do nothing. Whatever it be, it has not even an existence for and in itself,
and can inspire no hope, can give man no courage in danger, no consolation in
sorrow, no strength for right action. Such a god is a name, and not a being,
and there is no such thing as responsibility to him. And absorption into him at
death simply means the ceasing to have a separate existence. In life we are the
acting, thinking, energising part of the pantheistic god, to be absorbed into
him at death is to fall into unconsciousness. In neither Polytheism nor
pantheism is there any nobleness of thought, or anything to make man better and
aid him in becoming godlike on earth. It is responsibility to an almighty,
omniscient, and just Judge which raises man to the true height of his dignity,
as a being endowed by God with free will and a conscience; and the answer to
the question why God has made this world such as it is, and placed man in a
position so full of difficulty, is to be found in the thought that only by
bearing the burden of responsibility can man be made fit for God¡¦s service in
Heaven. Here, on earth, men rise in moral worth and social influence by
responsibility rightly borne; and the whole doctrine of a future judgment, and
of eternal rewards and punishments, has for one great purpose the impressing
the minds of men with a sense that they are responsible to a righteous Judge
for all they think and say and do. It was this sense of responsibility to a
personal God which gave these three Jewish martyrs their high courage, their
strength to resist a despotic monarch, their calmness and joy in the hour of
suffering. (Dean Payne-Smith, D.D.)
The Son of God in the Fiery Furnace
The concluding words should read not ¡§the Son of God,¡¨ but ¡§a Son
of God.¡¨ Nebuchadnezzar was a heathen, ignorant of the high religious teachings
of the Jews, and certainly not acquainted with the Christian doctrine of the
second Person in the Trinity. The fourth figure in the furnace struck him as
Divine in its beauty, majesty, glory, a godlike form.
I. A REVELATION IN A FIERY FURNACE.
Whether the startling appearance were an angel, or Christ before His
incarnation, or any other mode of Divine manifestation, it was in any case a
revelation of God.
I. God only needs
to be revealed to be seen. He exists always; He is seen at rare intervals. He
is not more existent when seen than when unseen. The veil hides His light, but
does not extinguish it. All we need is that the veil should be lifted. Then the
ever-present God will be recognised.
2. God is revealed in the fiery furnace of trouble. Invisible writing
starts into appearance when held to the fire. Characters suddenly flash out in
their true light at seasons of storm, terror, and pain. God reveals Himself in
critical moments of agony and need.
3. The revelation in the fiery furnace is seen by the outside world.
The three youths are not alone favoured with the cheering vision of the
Heavenly presence. Nebuchadnezzar also sees the wonderful appearance. Indeed,
it is he only who is expressly stated to have observed this additional figure
in the furnace. God was revealed by means of the faithful Jews, but so that the
heathen world might behold Him. The vision of God in the passion of Christ is
open to the gaze of the world, and may arrest the attention of those who are
blind to the daily revelation of the Divine in nature. May not this fact be an
explanation of the mystery of suffering? We take too narrow and personal a view
of the mission of pain. It has larger and wider ends than the sufferer¡¦s own
private advantage. May not others be called to endure pain that through the
flames that kindle about their own souls the light of Goal may flash out upon
their fellow-men?
II. DIVINE FELLOWSHIP IN HUMAN TROUBLE.
1. God is with His people in their troubles. He does not only look
down from Heaven. Pity from the serene altitude of perfect bliss may only
aggravate the torture of those who are writhing in the torture-chamber of
affliction. But we are told of God that in all His people¡¦s afflictions He is
afflicted. Christ came into the world to suffer with men. He was with St.
Stephen in the council chamber, with St. Paul in the gaol at Philippi.
2. The comforting Divine presence is dependent on the fidelity of
God¡¦s people. There are troubles in the midst of which we dare not expect to
see the cheering radiance of our Saviour¡¦s countenance. If He appears in them
at all, our consciences tell us that it must be with a look of grief or anger,
and a voice saying, ¡§What doest thou here?¡¨ The trouble which we bring upon
ourselves by heedless indifference or culpable disobedience to the will of God
invites no comforting Divine fellowship.
3. The Divine
presence in trouble is a security against all real harm. The cruel flames play
about their would-be victims as harmlessly as forest leaves. Sects the presence
of Christ and all will be well. (W. F. Adeney, M.A.)
A Son of God in the Fire
Sceptical criticism has railed out against all this, as showing
too much of the wonderful to be believed. But with the Almighty one thing is no
harder than another. He can make a blazing sun in the heavens with as much ease
as make a daisy in the meadow. Some have urged that it was unfitting the Deity
to show such wonders here. But who can decide what is, and what is not,
becoming to a Being whose thoughts no man can fathom? And when we consider that
millions of His chosen people were then in servitude in that empire; that the
great object of their being there was to purge them of their idolatries; that
no ordinary ministries for this purpose existed; that here was a great and
mighty people that knew not God, destitute of any effectual means of being made
acquainted with His superior majesty and power; and that here was an assembly
of all their heads and chiefs, who would thus be made to see His signs, and to
become the attestors and heralds of the miracle to all parts of the mighty
realm--there certainly would seem to be reason enough that here and now, if
anywhere or ever, the greatest wonders of the God of Heaven should be enacted.
Who can say that there was not ample occasion for just such a display of the
Eternal omnipotence? And see also the effect. A decree went forth from the
throne to ¡§every people, nation, and language,¡¨ reciting the wonder,
proclaiming the majesty of Jehovah, and forbidding, on pain of death, the
speaking of ¡§anything amiss against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abed-nego.¡¨ And these men were thenceforward promoted and honoured by the
empire as the living witnesses of the living God. (Joseph A. Seiss, D.D.)
True Souls
I. IMMENSELY TRIED.
¡§Walking in the midst of the fire.¡¨
II. MORALLY UNCONQUERABLE.
Not all the influence of the monarch and his ministers could break their
purpose, or make them unfaithful to God. You can¡¦t conquer a true soul.
III. ESSENTIALLY UNINJURABLE.
¡§And they have no hurt.¡¨ ¡§Who is that will harm you if ye be followers of that
which is good!¡¨ ¡§Fear not him that can kill the body.¡¨
IV. DIVINELY ACCOMPANIED.
¡§The form of the fourth is like the Son of God.¡¨ What a sight for the monarch!
Did it not rouse his conscience, think you? God always accompanies His people.
¡§Lo, I am with you alway.¡¨ (Homilist.)
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego
I. THEIR TEMPTATION.
II. THEIR FAITHFULNESS.
1. They stood alone (v. 7). Might they not fall in with the current
and perform the outward act with inward reserve?
2. Then the terrible alternative: ¡§Ye shall be cast the same hour
into the midst of a burning fiery furnace¡¨ (Daniel 3:15). Nothing more calculated to
inspire terror. But, like St. Polycarp, they ¡§preferred the fire which lasts an
hour and then cools, to the perpetual torment of eternal fire.¡¨ In the same
way, the Christian martyrs, St. Lawrence and others, were prepared to undergo
terrible tortures of gridiron and flame rather than lose the favour of God by
denying Christ. But these ¡§three children¡¨ were faithful in the days of the old
covenant, when God¡¦s love to man had not been made known by Christ, nor did the
Spirit of God as yet personally dwell among men; this accentuates their
courage.
3. Then note their readiness to endure the torture.
III. THEIR RESCUE.
1. It was miraculous. An old writer enumerates eight miracles in this
lesson; but, without going into minutiae, that they were not consumed by the
flames could certainly only be owing to Divine intervention.
2. It was the fulfilment of prophecy, ¡§When thou walkest through the
fire, thou shalt not be burned; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee¡¨ Isaiah 43:2). ¡§The flame,¡¨ says St.
Chrysostom, ¡§set free the captive, and itself was bound by the captive.¡¨ The
reality of the fire was shown by the molten chains; and the deaths of those who
cast the three children into the flames; but the Divine promise was evidenced
by their preservation.
3. The mode of the rescue was through the instrumentality of an
angel: ¡§The form of the fourth is like the Son of God¡¨; ¡§a son of the gods¡¨
(R.V.), that is, an angel. Some ancient interpreters thought Christ Himself was
here meant (Tertullian, St. Augustine), of whom Nebuchadnezzar had heard from
Daniel, and thus it would be classed with the ¡§theophanies¡¨; but St. Jerome
says, ¡§It was in truth an angel.¡¨ The visible presence of the angel was proof
to the king that the deliverance of the three youths was the result of God¡¦s
protection, and from no deception. Similarly, God
delivered Jerusalem from the power of the Assyrians by the
ministry of an 2 Kings 19:35); the Apostles from
prison (Acts 5:19; Acts 12:7); and St. John from the
cauldron of flaming oil.
4. The deliverance was complete. Completeness marks all the works of
God. There are no half-measures or imperfect contrivances--only the chains are
destroyed, not their garments, nor their hair singed, nor the smell of fire had
passed upon them (v. 27).
IV. LESSONS.
1. Temptation may be strong, but faithfulness to conscience should be
stronger. Temptation, though strong, is never overwhelming or an excuse for sin
(1 Corinthians 10:13). The three
children were faithful unto death; they were, like St. John, martyrs in will (Revelation 2:10).
2. What Nebuchadnezzar designed is unconsciously carried out by
multitudes amongst ourselves. They fall down before the golden image; they
worship wealth, and make a god Of ¡§the mammon of unrighteousness¡¨; and this
covetousness ¡§is idolatry¡¨ (Colossians 3:5; Ephesians 5:5).
3. Let us admire and imitate the courage of the three children in
disobeying the royal mandate, and take the side of Christ and His Church, if
ever obedience to the powers of the world should involve a violation of the
Laws of God.
4. Let us rejoice in the Divine deliverance. ¡§The angel of the Lord
encampeth round about them that fear Him, and delivereth them¡¨ Psalms 34:7). The furnace of
Nebuchadnezzar is an image of the ¡§fiery trial¡¨ of persecution, of sensual
passion, and of affliction; but to those who are faithful, like the three
children, temptation and tribulation are times of Divine manifestation, of
refinement and election, and of more entire self-surrender. ¡§Behold, I have
refined thee, but not as silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of
affliction¡¨ (Isaiah 48:10, R.V.). (The Thinker.)
The Three Children in the Furnace
This transaction is typical. It sets forth the security of God¡¦s
saints in the hour of their greatest peril--together with the reason of that
security. Fire represents trial, persecution, for fire consumes, devours,
destroys. A furnace is the very image of destruction in its wildest shape. To
have fallen down bound into such a furnace, and straightway to be seen walking
about there loose, is the liveliest picture possible of perfect security amid
tremendous danger. The presence of a companion, and he the Son of God, explains
the rest of the marvel, for it accounts for that safety which before was simply
inexplicable.
1. In every trial the victory is promised to faith; the same faith
which on the plain of Dura ¡§quenched the violence of fire.¡¨
2. The fire of temptation is illustrated by the security of the three
children in the furnace. The man is safe, because the Lord is with him.
3. We are here taught to behold the safety of God¡¦s elect children in
that tremendous day when ¡§the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his
mighty angels in flaming fire.¡¨ God Almighty so preserve us in adversity; so be
with us amid temptation; so absolve us in that tremendous day--even for His own
mercy¡¦s sake! (Anon.)
The Divine Presence in the Fire
This story has a far-reaching suggestiveness. It represents an
oft-repeated conflict. It stands as the picture of man in the face of the
fierce elements which oppose him--man in his agony, man in his heroism, man,
also, in his consolation. It does not need much insight to perceive one aspect
of the universality of the story. Man and the fire--that is life. All too soon
we say, man is thrust into the fire of pain and suffering. It needs some
insight, or some reflection, to perceive the other aspect of its universality.
If man and the fire shall be described as life, man and the fire and the Divine
presence walking with man in the fire--that is religion. It is something that
we are given the power of perceiving a greater than man with man in the fire.
Look again at man in the fire. I take man first as an intellectual being. It is
by reason of the understanding which the beasts do not possess that there comes
an added keenness to human suffering. We have memory, we have anticipation; and
out of these come fierce fires to increase our agony. Pain, which comes to the
sons of men, comes with an appeal to their consciousness. Man can anticipate,
and he knows that the pain which enters into his life to-day is the indication
of something which is working there, and he lives in constant dread of its
recurrence. From memory and anticipation there comes the agony of retrospect
and the agony of suspense. By the very law of our intellectual being we suffer
more than the beasts. But would you part with it? Though you know that the
capacities with which you are endowed make you capable of the greater
suffering, you will not forego the painful gifts. It is precisely as we grow in
the scale of being that our power of suffering grows with it. We are reasonable
beings, and because we are so we suffer the more. Take man as a moral being.
These Hebrews suffered because of their allegiance to a law higher than the law
of self-preservation. Why is it that a man who is conscientious must suffer? It
is just because he is conscientious. He cannot demoralize himself, and the law
within asserts itself, and makes him face the greater pain. But this proclaims
his greatness. He is the greater because he is the witness to a law which is
larger, truer, deeper than any of the outside laws that touch the physical
world. In another way his sense of right makes him suffer. He must do right,
though the world frown, because the Divine law within him is asserting itself
over the law outside. His suffering springs from this--his capacity to
understand the allegiance which he owes to the higher law. Take man as a
spiritual being. Men, in the history of religion, have exhibited a spiritual
conscientiousness. There are things which, though not wrong, are wrong to them.
The cause is within themselves. Others cannot understand. The man has recognised
a law of his being, which is deeper than the law of the Decalogue. Whatever
seems to him to drag him down is wrong for him, because hostile to his better
life. He is grieved with anything which hinders the spiritual development of
his being. In all this the Lord Jesus is our model. Mark Him in His temptation;
see the moral standard. Suffering seems to me as Heaven¡¦s subpoena, compelling
men to bear witness to the Divine which is within, and underneath, to the
eternal laws of right, and to the manifestation of a presence like unto the Son
of God. What shall be the law by which a man shall pass through the fire, and
the smell of fire shall not pass upon him? How few having gone into the fire of
life come out unsinged, untouched, the smell of fire not passing on them! Are
not men tainted so that you know that they have suffered? They have been singed
in the fire. How noble and great seem the few souls that pass through the fire
and come forth unharmed! They are the men who held their own in the battle!
What is the law? In every universal thing there is some law. The men at whose
side the Son of God walks, who are triumphant over the fierceness of the flame,
are the men who have had a victory previous to that. Their victory over the
fire was preceded by their victory over the multitude. They would not bow down.
We must go back further. These men have first been victors over themselves. The
man who is victorious over self is the man who is victorious over the world;
and the man who is victorious over the world is victorious over the fire that
is in the world. That is the law. But when you have discovered a law you are
very far from having discovered all you need. Is is not always easy to put the
law into operation. What force is at work behind law? In the midst of the fire
there was revealed a fourth figure, and his form was like unto the Son of God.
In the midst of the fire was the Divine presence. The motive force was the
Divine energy, the Divine life, the Divine presence. The law of success is
self-control, but the power to make the law effective is in the Divine
presence. Life has little meaning unless I recognise that wherever the fire is
kindled, there the Divine presence is also. To recognise that is the part of
faith; to work and live by that is the power of faith. Another question this
truth may answer. We are called upon to suffer, and who will unriddle its pain?
The pain is given that the Divine may be made manifest. The cross was to be the
symbol of the world¡¦s agony, and of the Divine presence also . . . Then let us
cultivate self-control as a protest against the frivolity of life which
destroys the heart, against the sensuality of life that corrupts the
conscience, against the intellectual dishonesty which disturbs the pure vision
of what life ought to be. As we do this, we shall not be alone. He who wore our
nature walked before us in the ways of suffering. When the flame shall kindle
upon us He will be with us. (W. Boyd-Carpenter, D.D.)
Standing Fire
I. THEIR PREPARATION FOR THE DAY OF TRIAL.
It came not unawares. Duty is easy when no lion is in the way. In the narrative
we only see the valiant three in the day of trial. Their heart was fixed before
it came. With no wavering mind went they out to the plain of Dura. They stood
in the evil day because they were well prepared, well-equipped for it. Great
men are not known by the world till they are great. So trials are to come on
us; sharp temptations. They will reveal our character, of what sort it is. Let
us every day be pure, unselfish, Christ-trusting, Christ-copying men. Then
every day will be a preparation for the terrible time when temptation will
assail us like fire; and we shall stand in the evil day.
II. THE CONDUCT OF THE THREE IN THE DAY OF
TRIAL. They stood in apparent isolation. To do good is easier
when we go with the multitude. But when we stand alone, then is the agony.
Alone, yet not alone. Christ is the maker of great men, great hearts. Many a
young man He is making brave, daring to stand alone amid terrible temptations
to impurity.
III. THEIR DELIVERANCE IN THE DAY OF TRIAL.
The king¡¦s eye is on the furnace, and he sees a fourth, one looking like a son
of the gods. We identify with the angel Jehovah the messenger of the covenant.
Christ¡¦s presence can make even a furnace into paradise. Their deliverer was
strong. He will be ours, and save us, if we seek it, from sin, all evil, all
that will harm us. Then trust in Him. (G. T. Coster.)
A Sermon to Firemen
The events here recorded probably occurred in the eighteenth year
of Nebuchadnezzar. He had just returned from triumphant war, bringing with him
the spoil of subjugated nations, and captives without number. At this juncture
he was inclined to make a pause. He thought the time was come for the
inauguration of a new era. First, however, he must be certain of the allegiance
of these races. The foundation must be firmly laid before he proceeds to erect
the superstructure on it. So he decided on the ceremonial which took place on
the vast plain of Dura. He was known to be a devout man in his way; an
enthusiastic worshipper of his god Merodach. The ceremony was no mere idle
pageant; it was not only a matter of state policy, it was an act of gratitude,
due to the deity to whom he believed himself to owe his victories and his
throne. It is well to bear this in mind if we would enter into the real
difficulties of both the monarch and his recalcitrant Jewish monarchs. The line
of conduct to which the three Jews felt themselves compelled was looked on by
Nebuchadnezzar as open rebellion, and an insult both to himself and his god.
These Jews had a most painful and distressing alternative before them--either
to act in opposition to their own deepest convictions by worshipping an idol,
or else to submit to a horrible death. We can imagine their mutual anxiety,
conference, and prayer. When the public refusal was made the monarch was
infuriated. To be bearded by his own officials at such a moment, in presence of
such a multitude, would have tried the patience of more patient men than he
was. He had a passionate temper. The king felt that he was committed to a
struggle with the God of the Hebrews.
1. We are inclined to praise the indomitable resolution of these
young men; but we must go behind them, and realise their trust in the unseen
Jehovah, and in the promises of His word. It was that made them manly. The
three young men found their way into a spiritual position, which enabled them
to endure the wrath of the king, because they could see a greater, although an
invisible King behind him.
2. In this chapter we have a duel between the world-power and the
Lord God himself. We have in it the Church of God almost at its lowest ebb. We
have the world in all the plenitude of its power, and in all the insolence of
its authority. Can we over-estimate the value of such a testimony as this to
the faithfulness of God? Take away this story of the three children from the
Bible, and how infinitely great would have been the church¡¦s loss!
3. A thought for ourselves. In some shape we may all of us have to
pass through the fire. Any one of us may be tried by the seductions of his
senses; the snares of business life, bitter loss and dissappiontment, or the
keen edge of long-protracted bodily agony. Let us see to it that we have with
us, as we may have, the presence of the personal Christ, of Jesus the great
High Priest, the Angel of the Covenant. Then we shall pass through the flame,
and it will not gather upon nor burn us. So shall we, in our small way, bring
glory to God and strength be ether people. (Gordon Calthrop, M.A.)
Safety with the Master of the Elements
The flame recogised the presence of Him that made it, and bowed
reverently before the Son of God, just as on other occasions the waters of the
sea owned Him, the winds heard Him, and all nature responded to Him, and obeyed
Him. The flame lost its power to consume, because it was commanded not to do so
by Him that kindled it at the first. Nature is all pliant in the hand of Jesus.
He is the Lord of creation; He has but to speak, and all things will respond in
ten thousand echoes, ¡§Speak, Lord thy servants hear.¡¨ These Hebrew youths, we
are told by the apostle Paul in his Epistle to the Hebrews, ¡§quenched the
violence of fire¡¨ by their faith. (J. Cumming.)
Jesus with us in the Hour of Trouble
Thou wilt not, Christian, have to pass through the river without
thy Master. We remember an old tale of our boyhood, how poor Robinson Crusoe,
wrecked on a foreign strand, rejoiced when he saw the print of a man¡¦s foot. So
it is with the Christian in his trouble; he shall not despair in a desolate
land, because there is the foot-print of Christ Jesus on all our temptations,
our troubles. Go on rejoicing, Christian; thou art in an inhabited country; thy
Jesus is with thee in all thy afflictions, and in all thy woes. Thou shalt
never have to tread the wine-press alone. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 28
Then Nebuchadnezzar spake, and said, Blessed be the God of
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, who hath sent His angel and delivered His
servants.
The Persecuting Spirit
The occasion of these words must be too well known to be repeated
in all its circumstances.
I. THE PARTICULAR CAUSE OF THE GREAT
DANGER WHICH THESE MEN WERE BROUGHT INTO. They would not serve or
worship any god except their own God. There is no one who has any conception of
God but must allow Him to be infinite in all His attributes. But infinity
implies unity; and if this being is One, Divine worship must be due to Him
alone. This made God forbid the Jews the serving any of the gods of the
neighbouring nations, under such severe penalties. As God showed his
approbation of those Jews¡¦ refusal to worship the image by the miracle He
wrought in their deliverance, so, I doubt not, but He has showed so many wonders
in delivering this nation so often for its constancy in the same refusal,
though, in all other respects, most unworthy of the least of His mercies.
II. EXAMINE THE PRETENCES OF RELIGIOUS
CRUELTY. They are, either to promote God¡¦s glory or our neighbour¡¦s
good. Cruelty is not proper for either of these purposes. By God¡¦s glory is
probably meant the improving that notion of God which men have by the light of
nature; or making His revealed will to be more readily embraced by them. With
mankind in a state of nature, fear forced the acknowledgment of a superior
being, so their worship was cruel and their manners were barbarous. When they
began to settle into societies, and when they reflected upon the first cause of
the benefits they enjoyed, and discovered the goodness of God, then love grew
as the principle of their glad obedience, and their worship was bloodless and
cheerful, and their manners innocent and endearing. The improvement of human
nature consists in the notions of goodness in the Divine. But if, when men had
got thus far by the light of nature, anyone should have started up and
pretended to have offered violence to his neighbour, by a particular commission
from God and for His glory, then love must at once have given place to fear,
and human nature turned savage and wild again. Take the other pretence, that
violence is intended to promote the Gospel. How contradictory and absurd is
this! This is to recommend love by hatred, mercy by cruelty, and forgiveness by
destruction. That which distinguishes the Gospel is its being so admirably
disposed to beget love and peace, justice and charity, among all men. Here
forgiveness is improved into beneficence, and humanity exalted into charity.
Here injuries are returned with prayers, and curses with blessings. The
Pharisees taught that it was lawful to hate enemies. The Cynics renounced all
humanity. The Stoics reckoned compassion an infirmity. All other sects were
deficient in this particular. But Christianity improved human nature into the
likeness of the Divine. Our Lord¡¦s disciples were to be distinguished from the
whole world by their ¡§loving one another.¡¨ And what examples did the great
Master leave us? Shall men, then, dare to imprison, impoverish, and murder
their brethren in the name of this Jesus? Another pretence of religious cruelty
is that it may promote the good of our neighbour. This is generally disguised
under the specious pretence of zeal. But true zeal ought first to be employed
upon ourselves. Zeal is as necessary to the life of devotion as the natural
heat is to that of the body. Religion must be a free consent of the soul; it
can be acceptable to God only as it is voluntary. How can full conviction be
wrought but by gentle usage, calm reasoning, and good example. The will can
never be forced to give a sincere assent, after all the violence that can be
offered. Beside, all error, considering the vanity of mankind, is of a nice and
tender nature; it requires a great deal of management and address to make
people own that they are in the wrong, especially in matters of religion. The
utmost we can expect from force is an outward compliance. Violence may extort
confession from the mouth, but will not hinder curses, at the same time, in the
heart. It may fright people into counterfeiting, but not persuade them into
believing. One particular reason against the rashness of zealous cruelty is
because the good should not suffer with the evil. The true causes of religious
cruelty are:
1. The pride and haughtiness of power.
2. The endeavouring to recommend ourselves to man rather than to God.
3. The opinion that such violence is meritorious for the expiation of
former sins.
III. COMPARE THE DELIVERANCE MENTIONED IN
THE TEXT WITH OUR OWN. These men trusted in God. (J.
Adams.)
The Fiery Trial
First, the idolatry is costly. The chapter tells us of an high
statue and idol of gold erected by the King of Babylon. Superstition and
idolatry will be no niggard, it will spare no cost; but be expensive and
sumptuous to maintain an invented and superstitious worship.
1. Nebuchadnezzar must have no petty diminutive god; six cubits in
breadth, sixty cubits in height. What¡¦s this to the infinite immensity of our
God, that fills Heaven and earth?
2. It must be of metal, too, lasting and durable. A mock imitation of
the true God¡¦s eternity.
3. It must be rich and costly, all of beaten gold. ¡§Their idols,¡¨
saith David, ¡§are silver and gold.¡¨ It may shame us Christians, that are so
basely penurious in maintaining and beautifying the worship of our God.
Secondly, the erecting of this idol is done with the greatest authority.
Thirdly, it is done with great pomp and solemnity. Fourthly, it is done with
great content and universality. All the governors and princes of the provinces
are gathered together, all engaged in this idolatrous worship. This sin of
idolatry, it hath been an over-spreading evil. Fifthly, it is imposed with all
strictness and severity; nay, it is pressed upon the people with cruelty and
tyranny. Blood and fire and persecution, they are the great promoters of
idolatry. Cruelty, ¡¥tis the brand of the malignant church. Such are the
enforcements of idolatry; far from the temper of true Christianity. Sixthly,
notwithstanding all this violence in pressing, and this great generality of
submitting to this idolatrous injunction, yet, here a few, three men, that deny
their conformity, and refuse to engage themselves in this public impiety. In
the greatest universality and prevailing of impiety, yet God hath some that
withstand superstition and give testimony to His truth. St. Paul speaks it to
another purpose, but it is true in this case also, God leaves not Himself
without witness. Seventhly, upon these the penalty of the law is inflicted in
all extremity.
1. Though but three.
2. They, men of great place and employment, set by the king over the
affairs of the province of Babylon, useful to the State.
3. Peaceable, no raisers of sedition and tumult.
4. No blasphemers of this new-made god, but only bare refusers, and
that for conscience sake.
Here is the rage of idolatry. Well, what is the success? that is
extraordinary and miraculous. God gives way to these men of blood, lets them do
their utmost; He saves not these three holy men by rescue, or prevention; He
keeps them not from the fire, but preserves them in it. They are, like Moses
his bush, burning, but not consumed, The voice of the Lord divides the flames
of fire. And this deliverance, it is not secret, but conspicuous in the eye and
observation of Nebuchadnezzar. So, then, this passage of Scripture reports to us
a solemn testimony given by Nebuchadnezzar to this miraculous deliverance of
these three holy men. And this, his testimony, will appear in three evidences
and manifestations of it. First, it appears in a thankful benediction of
Almighty God for this gracious deliverance (v. 28), ¡§Blessed be the God of
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego.¡¨ Secondly, it appears in a strict injunction
and provision for His glory, prohibiting all men, upon severe penalty, to
blaspheme or say anything amiss against the God of these holy men (v. 29).
Thirdly, it appears in an honourable promotion and advancement of these three
worthies to places of dignity and authority in the province of Babylon (v. 30).
And here we have: First, The action of blessing,. together with the agent, Nebuchadnezzar.
Secondly, the Object or Person to whom he ascribes this blessedness, that is,
the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, Thirdly, the benefit for which he
blesses Him, that is, the sending of His angel to work this deliverance. And,
fourthly, The motives acknowledged for which God delivered them, They are four:
I. Quia servi.
They were His servants.
II. Quia
confidentes. Because they trusted in Him.
III. Quia
constantes. They were resolute and constant in holy profession. They
changed the king¡¦s word.
IV. Quia
martyres. They chose to suffer death for their God and their religion; they
would rather die than dishonour Him. They yielded their bodies that they might
not serve nor worship any god except their own God. They loved not their lives
to death that they might be true to Him. Come we to the First, Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s
act of benediction and blessing, the thankful acknowledgment he makes of this
great deliverance. It is much to hear praises and benedictions of God out of
such a man¡¦s mouth. Well, this blessing of Nebuchadnezzar hath some sparks of
humanity in it. To be glad and well pleased for the saving of men¡¦s lives, for
the sparing of bloodshed, such thanksgivings are comely. To take a more
particular notice of this benediction and blessing of Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s, let us
consider it in a double notion.
I. Let us see
what was good and commendable in it.
We have seen what is commendable in this benediction; but yet it
hath its defects; something is wanting here in Nebuchadnezzar, more would have
been expected from him.
I. Implies three
errors in him.
II. Implies three
truths in itself.
But look upon this speech in itself, and so it carries with it an
intimation of three truths.
I. What is the
mercy?--deliverance.
II. What is the
minister and instrument? how is it wrought 7--by the dispatch of an angel.
I. The great work
here is deliverance, and riddance of these men from a mischief and destruction.
Indeed, deliverance is the work that God delights in, by which He will make
Himself known to be the true God. Samuel makes it the proof of a false god,
¡§That they cannot profit or deliver¡¨ 1 Samuel 12:21). And the prophet
upbraids Amaziah for choosing those gods that could not deliver their own
people out of his hands (2 Chronicles 25:15). And this
deliverance, it is the more admirable
II. For the
instrument, it was the sending and dispatch of an angel.
I. See now he
speaks honourably of these men, accounts them the servants of the Most High
God. Before, he esteemed them factious, refractory, turbulent men, such as will
be wiser, forsooth! And this consideration, that they are His servants; it is a
well-alleged motive why they are delivered, His faithful service; it is a safe
protection.
1. To His servants God promises protection.
2. His servants, upon this title, they plead for protection.
II. Because they
trusted in Him, therefore He delivered them. And faith hath this prevailing
power with God:
III. Because they
were constant in their religion. That is expressed in these words, ¡§They have
changed the king¡¦s word.¡¨ They would not be overborne by the king¡¦s command and
so sin against God. There is greater duty and greater safety to obey God rather
than man. We come to the last motive that graciously inclined God to work this
deliverance; that is:
IV. They yielded
their bodies that they might not serve nor worship any other god but only their
own God. And the goodness of this, their pious adhering to God, will appear in
two things: First, in their absolute refusal of this idolatrous command.
Secondly, in their ready yielding to the penalty of it upon their refusal.
First, see the fulness of their refusal.
Thirdly, this mixture in religion, to serve the Lord, and yet,
withal, to conform to the worship of any other god; it is contrary
Hence it is that
And this, their yielding, hath four things observable in it:
There is no other God that can deliver after this sort.
The Great Deliverer
These are the words of a heathen king. They are not the less
welcome to us on that account, but perhaps the more so. The testimony of a
saint has, of course, its special value, but the witness of a sinner has a
worth all its own, especially when it has been compelled from him by the power
of God Himself. This unwilling testimony seems to me to exceed in worth the
testimony of those from whom we should expect such witness. You may be sure
that Nebuchadnezzar was not prejudiced in favour of Jehovah. This he said only
through compulsion, yet he spake it with the accent of conviction. It was a
matter not of theory but of experience with him. It is true also that this
testimony is very far from satisfactory. We find ourselves wishing that
Nebuchadnezzar had gone much further. I wish he had left out those last three
words: That would have beans grand utterance, ¡§There is no other God that can
deliver.¡¨ But suppose he had left out three other words, and simply said,
¡§There is no other God,¡¨ what an improvement that would have been. Oh, but he
was a young beginner, you must remember; he was only just commencing to come
under Divine influences. This is a repeating of the alphabet, and he gets
through it wonderfully well considering. Wait till God has done with him, and
you will find he has made wonderful progress. Read his testimony after he has
been humbled by being driven into the fields to eat grass like the ox. Before
God and you have done with him he may have given such a record as
Nebuchadnezzar did towards the close of his career--¡§Now I, Nebuchadnezzar,
praise, and extol, and honour the King of heaven, all whose works are truth, and
His ways judgment; and those that walk in pride He is able to abase.¡¨
I. THERE IS NO OTHER GOD THAT CAN DELIVER FROM SUCH
OVERWHELMING PERIL. There are many features connected with this
case that make it special. We may extend the meaning of Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s
phrase.
1. There is no other God that can deliver from such strong
temptations. Try to put yourselves in the position of these three young men.
2. Moreover, these men were delivered from their accusers, for you
will remember that ¡§certain Chaldeans came near, and accused the Jews.¡¨ I
expect they had been on the look-out
for this opportunity. Now see--for you know the end of the story--how
wonderfully the Jews were delivered from the hands of those who were trying to
trip and destroy them. Hear me, if you are here who, if you told your story,
would have to say, ¡§One of my greatest troubles is that I am so watched; they
compass me about like bees; I get no rest or peace! they want to trip me up, to
catch me in my words, to entangle me in my talk, if they could only find an
occasion against me--and I am half afraid they will.¡¨ I charge you, do not be
afraid that they will succeed. If you are afraid, they will; but if you simply
trust in God and do the right He will deliver you from the hands of your accusers.
You need not fear what man can do unto you. ¡§If God be for you, who can be
against you?¡¨
3. Again, the holy children were delivered from the wrath of the
king, and I warrant you it was wrath of no ordinary nature. There are
indications that Nebuchadnezzar was a fair-minded man, at least to some degree.
He gave these offenders an opportunity to recant, and up to a certain point
seems to have treated them with a commendable humanity. But when he did get
angry, there was no mistaking it. Now read the sequel of the story. The lion
has become a lamb; he who was like to leap upon them from the thicket now
cringes before them, cowed and cowardly. He who had blasphemed their God now
praises Him; He who had threatened to destroy them now sets them on high in the
province of Babylon. I wonder if there is anybody present who has to deal with
those who give way to evil temper. Well, I am not very much surprised that you
are a little fearful of it, but oh, if God is with you and you with Him, He can
make the wrath of His enemies praise Him.
4. From the fierceness of the fire also these young men were saved.
Oh, how gloriously God delivers! They may do their worst--it only gives God an
opportunity to do His best. Let them heap on the fuel, let them say all manner of
evil against you falsely for His sake. God is a match for them, and more than
equal to the emergency. I wonder what the difficulty is under which you labour
just now. Is it the power of inbred sin? ¡§There is no other God that can
deliver after this sort.¡¨ You may see on every hand men and women who have been
delivered from the power of sin. Do not suppose that the seas of sorrow must
overwhelm you. God can turn your sighing into singing.
II. THERE IS NO OTHER GOD THAT DELIVERS BY SUCH MARVELLOUS
MEANS. Think of the methods God employed in this case to set His
servants free from their extremity.
1. He first of all inspired their confidence. Did you not admire them
and rejoice in them as we read the story of their behaviour before the king?
They were not in the least cowed by his august presence, nor frightened by his
fearful threat. Well, that is God¡¦s way of working with the hearts of men. He
is fitting them for the ordeal through which they are going to pass. God never
sends us through any ordeal without first preparing us.
2. Was it not God also who prompted them to a heroic confession of
their faith? I can imagine a man full in his heart with holy boldness, and yet
failing to speak it forth. They were altogether regardless of consequences. Yet
they were not alone, for God was with them.
3. Then God helped them to marvellous patience. It was the spirit of
peace and patience that kept them gentle as well as brave. ¡§There is no other
God that can deliver after this sort.¡¨ Some men can fight their way through
difficulties, but the men whom God helps can stand still and see the salvation
of the Lord.
4. Let it be noted, too, that God allowed these young men to be put
into the furnace. God has permitted it, but only with the purpose that His
strength may be made perfect in your weakness, and that he may eventually bring
you out into a wealthy place.
5. Remember, too, that Nebuchadnezzar, to his great surprise, saw the
form of a fourth walking amidst the flames. He did not know who it was. He used
an expression which has, I think, been somewhat misunderstood. He had no idea
that it could be God¡¦s dear Son, our blessed Saviour. It is not likely that he
had even heard of such an One. He really said, ¡§The form of the fourth is like
a Son of God,¡¨ and later he said that God had sent His angel to save His
servants. Oh, if he could have known what I believe is the actual fact, that
Jesus Himself, the second Person in the Trinity, put Himself side by side with
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, he would have wondered infinitely more. Oh,
this is the wonder of wonders, that in the hour of our extremity, Christ comes
right down to us, walks by us, holds us by the hand and does, by His presence,
cheer and save us. Oh, what a gracious God is ours!
III. THERE IS NO OTHER GOD THAT CAN DELIVER IN SUCH A
REMARKABLE MANNER. His methods are remarkable and strange, but
the nature of the delivery still more surprises us.
1. No other God saves so readily. There is no sign in all this story
of any particular stretching forth of the Divine arm. There is no visible and
ostensible exhibition of Divine might. There is, for instance, no sudden burst
of a waterspout to quench these flames; no mighty rushing wind to blow the fire
away. God wrought a miracle, I gladly own, but the forces He employed were
silent and secret. God often works that way. You hope He will deliver you. Yes!
but do not dictate to Him the manner of deliverance. He knows in every detail
what is best, and we are wise to leave them all to Him.
2. You may be sure He work effectually. There is no other god that
does his work so thoroughly as the Hebrews¡¦ God. So complete was the delivery
that the king was astonished at it. I expect that the fetters were forged to
the strongest point of resistance, but the fire seems to have centred all its
force upon the fetters which the king had put upon his prisoners. Oh, welcome
fires of persecution, and of temptation too, if the ultimate end is to set me
freer than I was before, to burn the bonds that bound me. But upon themselves
the fire had no power. And not so much as the smell of fire passed on them.
There is an old legend to tee effect that they sang in the midst of the flames.
I do not know whether that was really so, but I know that they did not singe in
the flames, for God took the power out of the fire, so that they walked
unharmed. All things are possible with Heaven.(Thomas Spurgeon.)
Then the king promoted Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego in the
province of Babylon.
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego
Whenever we hear of anyone¡¦s appointment to a Government place,
the first question we ask is, How did he get it? generally, in order to
ascertain whether or not we have at command any interest like that which has
proved successful. And so it is interesting to enquire how these men, Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abed-nego, came to be promoted in the province of that Babylon
which, after all, is not so unlike this Babylon. Of course, we know how it came
to pass, as we have read it in the lesson over and over again. But let us try
to place ourselves in the position of persons who did not know any more than
the fact that they had been promoted. What would be your conjecture as to the
way in which they obtained royal favour? I venture to say that you would at
once make up your mind that the promotion had been the result of ¡§trimming¡¨ of
some kind, or of what is pleasantly called sensible and wise ¡§compromise.¡¨ I
see the spirit everywhere. The genius and the man of principle in politics is
nowhere, except he be wanting to do work in a crisis. And, in the most
worldly-wise church on earth, the asserting diplomatist is everything and the
argumentative genius is nothing. The one is laden with honours; the other is
reserved for use, to be turned on and turned off according to circumstances. If
you say, ¡§The miracle made all the difference; let there be as much
time-serving and compromise as you please in the present day; still, if
anything like what we read in the chapter before us actually took place even
now, no Government--Liberal or Conservative--could resist the claims of such
men as Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego.¡¨ Even admitting that, which I do not
for a moment, I ask what caused the startling occurrence which you say would
have established their claims and ensured their promotion? It did not come down
from Heaven as something to mark its favourites, and to terrify the heathen
monarch, and cause him to act in a conciliatory spirit towards the subjects of
a superior power. No; what did it effect? This only as far as the king was
concerned. It impressed upon him the character of the men with whom he bad to
deal. The deliverance called attention to and attested the character of these
men; but it was the character thus attested which secured their promotion. To
understand their characters we must, I think, do two things:
1. We must get rid of the very prevalent idea that those who are
spoken of with approval in the Bible were good as a matter of course, and
breathed in and exhaled piety, virtue, and self-denial, in the ordinary course
of things; while, on the other hand, those who are condemned, being, by
supposition, in the same atmosphere, are much more inexcusable than we should
be for not being good! I cannot attempt to prove the absurdity of this notion;
I can only remind you that it is absurd. But besides getting rid of the idea
that it was easy for these men to do as they did, I think that, in order to
appreciate their character, we must try to ascertain how they could have done
otherwise--with a view to ¡§promotion¡¨--if they bad lived in our own
¡§enlightened¡¨ days. How could they have proceeded to reason with their
consciences if they had had the advantage of our superior knowledge? They had
many ways of escape. As loyal subjects, it was their duty to do what the king
commanded; and, of course, this strong loyal feeling would be somewhat
strengthened by the consideration of the alternative of the fire in the event
of its repression! These men might, then, have reasoned themselves into
compliance on the grounds that they ought to obey the powers that be; and their
loyalty might have been stimulated and confirmed by the contemplation of the
alternative furnace. When I hear or read the case of these men quoted as
instances in which ¡§the Church¡¨ opposed ¡§the State,¡¨ and received Divine
sanction, and am asked to regard Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego as prototypes
of modern violators of the law as declared by the courts to which they
voluntarily submitted themselves when they entered the ministry of the English
Church, by virtue of which they hold their position and emoluments, and from
which they can withdraw when they please--I feel myself unable to argue with
those who can be deluded by that fallacy. The parallel to Shadrach, Meshach,
and Aben-nego is not the man who receives position or emolument, or both, from
State and from Establishment, and then disobeys the law as declared
constitutionally by the State; but the dissenter who refuses to worship what he
considers the golden image set up by the State, and who refuses position and
emolument rather than be under the control of the State, or, in other words, of
the House of Commons. Whether he be right or wrong is another question. But he
is intelligible; he may quote Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, because he gets
nothing from Nebuchadnezzar the king; but if I disobey the law, I cannot claim
martyrdom on such Scriptural authority. I am the recognised officer of
Nebuchadnezzar, and my duty is to obey his law, which I accepted with my eyes
open, or to cease to be under that law, which I can do when I please. You must
bear with me here when I say that my argument will not be touched by saying
that these were men serving the true God, and that they were asked to worship
an idol. They were asked under pressure to do what they thought to be wrong.
Whether or not they judged rightly is not the question. They were men who had
no contract with the State. But setting aside the ¡§loyalty¡¨ plea altogether, if
they had consulted me as to how they had best manage their conscience in view
of the objectionable furnace; I mean if they had consulted me as one whose sole
business it was to get them out of the difficulty and keep them out of the
fire, I should have said, ¡§Look at it in this way; the whole thing is a ¡¥matter
of form.¡¦ Why should you be burnt for a form? Bow down with your body; that is
nothing; you are not bowing down with your heart; that is everything.¡¨ What
would be the answer to this plea about mere form? Simply this: Form is nothing
and heart is everything; but the association of ideas is such, with such beings
as we are, that when a form becomes associated width an idea, it will be a
matter of much time and much labour to sever them. The British flag is so much woollen
material, but if you insult it, you insult the great nation which is in idea
associated with it. And so, if these men had there and then bowed down--no
matter what was in their heart--they would simply have created a wrong
impression, sacrificed principle, or, to put it in plainer words, acted a lie.
Again, they could have said that they might ¡§cause a disturbance by disobeying
the royal command,¡¨ and that as Jehovah¡¦s servants they ought to ¡§promote
peace.¡¨ What is the answer? Certainly peace, but not at the price of principle.
Again, they might have said that ¡§everyone was going,¡¨ and that they had better
not be singular. I say they might have said this, for it would be no argument.
And looking for a practical answer in this eminently practical age, I should
like to know how many of the reforms of various kinds of which we are all proud
were brought about and worked by men who were not singular for many a long day.
But they might have had a still more subtle and refined reason for obedience.
By this single compliance, they might have said in their hearts and said to one
another, they should ¡§conciliate¡¨ the king, and so be able to do him spiritual
good afterwards! But, after all, the very best of their conceivable arguments
would come to this. They must sum it up into this simple question, ¡§Shall I do
evil that good may come?¡¨ They said ¡§No.¡¨ What was right they knew; what might
be the result of doing it they did not know, and it was no concern of theirs.
Obedience is our business. Its result, with all reverence I say it, is God¡¦s
business. Our next step He generally makes plain enough. This was their
practical faith, and this must be ours, if we would have the form who walks
with us in the midst of our fiery trials--whether seen or hidden--to be ¡§the
form of the Son of God.¡¨ Thesemen were promoted to place; why? Because they had
shown themselves to be ¡§a power.¡¨ And ¡§a power¡¨ they would have been--in spite
of Nebuchadnezzar and every other king who ever lived before or since, whether
they got the places or not. Why? Because against royalty, against public
opinion, and in the face of death, they acted according to their conscience,
and trusted to that God whose candle within them they knew that conscience to
be. The alternative presented to Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego is
essentially the same as that which presents itself often to everyone, high and
low, young and old. We all have to face it, not once, but ten thousand times in
life. And we do know that when that Book is opened, the dead--amongst whom you
and I must one day be numbered--shall be judged, as we now judge Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abed-nego, ¡§according to the things that are written in that
Book.¡¨ (J. C. Coghlan, D. D.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n