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Genesis Chapter
Forty-nine
Genesis 49
Chapter Contents
Jacob calls his sons to bless them. (1
2) Reuben
Simeon
Levi. (3-7) Judah. (8-12) Zebulun
Issachar
Dan. (13-18) Gad
Asher
Naphtali.
(19-21) Joseph and Benjamin. (22-27) Jacob's charge respecting his burial
His
death. (28-33)
Commentary on Genesis 49:1
2
All Jacob's sons were living. His calling them together
was a precept for them to unite in love
not to mingle with the Egyptians; and
foretold that they should not be separated
as Abraham's sons and Isaac's were
but should all make one people. We are not to consider this address as the
expression of private feelings of affection
resentment
or partiality; but as
the language of the Holy Ghost
declaring the purpose of God respecting the
character
circumstances
and situation of the tribes which descended from the
sons of Jacob
and which may be traced in their histories.
Commentary on Genesis 49:3-7
Reuben was the first-born; but by gross sin
he forfeited
the birthright. The character of Reuben is
that he was unstable as water. Men
do not thrive
because they do not fix. Reuben's sin left a lasting infamy upon
his family. Let us never do evil
then we need not fear being told of it.
Simeon and Levi were passionate and revengeful. The murder of the Shechemites
is a proof of this. Jacob protested against that barbarous act. Our soul is our
honour; by its powers we are distinguished from
and raised above
the beasts
that perish. We ought
from our hearts
to abhor all bloody and mischievous
men. Cursed be their anger. Jacob does not curse their persons
but their
lusts. I will divide them. The sentence as it respects Levi was turned into a blessing.
This tribe performed an acceptable service in their zeal against the
worshippers of the golden calf
Exodus 32. Being set apart to God as priests
they were in
that character scattered through the nation of Israel.
Commentary on Genesis 49:8-12
Judah's name signifies praise. God was praised for him
Genesis 29:35
praised by him
and praised in
him; therefore his brethren shall praise him. Judah should be a strong and
courageous tribe. Judah is compared
not to a lion raging and ranging
but to a
lion enjoying the satisfaction of his power and success
without creating
vexation to others; this is to be truly great. Judah should be the royal tribe
the tribe from which Messiah the Prince should come. Shiloh
that promised Seed
in whom the earth should be blessed
"that peaceable and prosperous
One
" or "Saviour
" he shall come of Judah. Thus dying Jacob at
a great distance saw Christ's day
and it was his comfort and support on his
death-bed. Till Christ's coming
Judah possessed authority
but after his
crucifixion this was shortened
and according to what Christ foretold
Jerusalem was destroyed
and all the poor harassed remnant of Jews were
confounded together. Much which is here said concerning Judah
is to be applied
to our Lord Jesus. In him there is plenty of all which is nourishing and
refreshing to the soul
and which maintains and cheers the Divine life in it.
He is the true Vine; wine is the appointed symbol of his blood
which is drink
indeed
as shed for sinners
and applied in faith; and all the blessings of his
gospel are wine and milk
without money and without price
to which every
thirsty soul is welcome. Isaiah 55:1.
Commentary on Genesis 49:13-18
Concerning Zebulun: if prophecy says
Zebulun shall be a
haven of ships
be sure Providence will so plant him. God appoints the bounds
of our habitation. It is our wisdom and duty to accommodate ourselves to our
lot
and to improve it; if Zebulun dwell at the heaven of the sea
let him be
for a haven of ships. Concerning Issachar: he saw that the land was pleasant
yielding not only pleasant prospects
but pleasant fruits to recompense his
toils. Let us
with an eye of faith
see the heavenly rest to be good
and that
land of promise to be pleasant; this will make our present services easy. Dan
should
by art
and policy
and surprise
gain advantages against his enemies
like a serpent biting the heel of the traveller. Jacob
almost spent
and ready
to faint
relieves himself with those words
"I have waited for thy
salvation
O Lord!" The salvation he waited for was Christ
the promised
Seed; now that he was going to be gathered to his people
he breathes after Him
to whom the gathering of the people shall be. He declared plainly that he
sought heaven
the better country
Hebrews 11:13
14. Now he is going to enjoy the
salvation
he comforts himself that he had waited for the salvation. Christ
as
our way to heaven
is to be waited on; and heaven
as our rest in Christ
is to
be waited for. It is the comfort of a dying saint thus to have waited for the
salvation of the Lord; for then he shall have what he has been waiting for.
Commentary on Genesis 49:19-21
Concerning Gad
Jacob alludes to his name
which
signifies a troop
and foresees the character of that tribe. The cause of God
and his people
though for a time it may seem to be baffled and run down
will
be victorious at last. It represents the Christian's conflict. Grace in the
soul is often foiled in its conflicts; troops of corruption overcome it
but
the cause is God's
and grace will in the end come off conqueror
yea
more
than conqueror
Romans 8:37. Asher should be a rich tribe. His
inheritance bordered upon Carmel
which was fruitful to a proverb. Naphtali
is
a hind let loose. We may consider it as a description of the character of this
tribe. Unlike the laborious ox and ass; desirous of ease and liberty; active
but more noted for quick despatch than steady labour and perseverance. Like the
suppliant who
with goodly words
craves mercy. Let not those of different
tempers and gifts censure or envy one another.
Commentary on Genesis 49:22-27
The blessing of Joseph is very full. What Jacob says of
him
is history as well as prophecy. Jacob reminds him of the difficulties and
fiery darts of temptations he had formerly struggled through. His faith did not
fail
but through his trials he bore all his burdens with firmness
and did not
do anything unbecoming. All our strength for resisting temptations
and bearing
afflictions
comes from God; his grace is sufficient. Joseph became the
shepherd of Israel
to take care of his father and family; also the stone of
Israel
their foundation and strong support. In this
as in many other things
Joseph was a remarkable type of the Good Shepherd
and tried Corner Stone of
the whole church of God. Blessings are promised to Joseph's posterity
typical
of the vast and everlasting blessings which come upon the spiritual seed of
Christ. Jacob blessed all his sons
but especially Joseph
"who was
separated from his brethren." Not only separated in Egypt
but
possessing
eminent dignity
and more devoted to God. Of Benjamin it is said
He shall
ravin as a wolf. Jacob was guided in what he said by the Spirit of prophecy
and not by natural affection; else he would have spoken with more tenderness of
his beloved son Benjamin. Concerning him he only foresees and foretells
that
his posterity should be a warlike tribe
strong and daring
and that they
should enrich themselves with the spoils of their enemies; that they should be
active. Blessed Paul was of this tribe
Romans 11:1; Philippians 3:5; he
in the morning
of his day
devoured the prey as a persecutor
but in the evening divided the
spoils as a preacher; he shared the blessings of Judah's Lion
and assisted in
his victories.
Commentary on Genesis 49:28-33
Jacob blessed every one according to the blessings God in
after-times intended to bestow upon them. He spoke about his burial-place
from
a principle of faith in the promise of God
that Canaan should be the
inheritance of his seed in due time. When he had finished both his blessing and
his charge
and so had finished his testimony
he addressed himself to his
dying work. He gathered up his feet into the bed
not only as one patiently
submitting to the stroke
but as one cheerfully composing himself to rest
now
that he was weary. He freely gave up his spirit into the hand of God
the
Father of spirits. If God's people be our people
death will gather us to them.
Under the care of the Shepherd of Israel
we shall lack nothing for body or
soul. We shall remain unmoved until our work is finished; then
breathing out
our souls into His hands for whose salvation we have waited
we shall depart in
peace
and leave a blessing for our children after us.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 49
Verse 1
[1] And
Jacob called unto his sons
and said
Gather yourselves together
that I may
tell you that which shall befall you in the last days.
Gather yourselves together ¡X Let them all be sent for to see their father die
and to hear his dying
words. "Twas a comfort to Jacob
now he was dying
to see all his children
about him tho' he had sometimes thought himself bereaved: 'twas of use to them
to attend him in his last moments
that they might learn of him how to die
as
well as how to live; what he said to each
he said in the hearing of all the
rest
for we may profit by the reproofs
counsels and comforts that are
principally intended for others. That I may tell you that which shall befal you
not your persons but your posterity
in the latter days - The prediction of
which would be of use to those that come after them
for confirming their
faith
and guiding their way
at their return to Canaan. We cannot tell our
children what shall befal them
or their families
in this world; but we can
tell them from the word of God
what will befal them in the last day of all
according as they carry themselves in this world.
Verse 2
[2] Gather yourselves together
and hear
ye sons of Jacob; and hearken unto
Israel your father.
Hearken to Israel your father ¡X Let Israel that has prevailed with God
prevail with you.
Verse 3
[3]
Reuben
thou art my firstborn
my might
and the beginning of my strength
the
excellency of dignity
and the excellency of power:
Reuben thou art my first-born ¡X Jacob here puts upon him the ornaments of the birth-right
that he and
all his brethren might see what he had forfeited and in that might see the evil
of his sin. As the first-born he was his father's joy
being the beginning of
his strength. To him belonged the excellency of dignity above his brethren
and
some power over them.
Verse 4
[4]
Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel; because thou wentest up to thy
father's bed; then defiledst thou it: he went up to my couch.
Thou shalt not excel ¡X A being thou shalt have as a tribe
but not an excellency. No judge
prophet
or prince
are found of that tribe
nor any person of renown only
Dathan and Abiram
who were noted for their impious rebellion. That tribe
as
not aiming to excel
chose a settlement on the other side Jordan. The character
fastened upon Reuben
for which he is laid under this mark of infamy
is
that
he was unstable as water. His virtue was unstable
he had not the government of
himself
and his own appetites. His honour consequently was unstable
it
vanished into smoke
and became as water spilt upon the ground. Jacob charges
him particularly with the sin for which he was disgraced
thou wentest up to
thy father's bed - It was forty years ago that he had been guilty of this sin
yet now it is remembered against him. Reuben's sin left an indelible mark of
infamy upon his family; a wound not to be healed without a scar.
Verse 5
[5] Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments of cruelty are in their habitations.
Simeon and Levi are brethren ¡X Brethren in disposition
but unlike their father: they were passionate
and revengeful
fierce and wilful; their swords
that should have been only
weapons of defence
were (as the margin reads it) weapons of violence
to do
wrong to others
not to save themselves from wrong.
Verse 6
[6] O my
soul
come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly
mine honour
be not
thou united: for in their anger they slew a man
and in their selfwill they
digged down a wall.
They slew a man ¡X
Shechem himself
and many others; and to effect that
they digged down a wall
broke the houses to plunder them
and murder the inhabitants.
O my soul
come not thou into their secret ¡X Hereby he professeth not only his abhorrence of such practices in
general
but his innocency particularly in that matter. Perhaps he had been
suspected as under-hand aiding and abetting; he therefore solemnly expresseth
his detestation of the fact.
Verse 7
[7]
Cursed be their anger
for it was fierce; and their wrath
for it was cruel: I
will divide them in Jacob
and scatter them in Israel.
Cursed be their anger ¡X Not their persons. We ought always in the expressions of our zeal
carefully to distinguish between the sinner and the sin
so as not to love or
bless the sin for the sake of the person
nor to hate or curse the person for
the sake of the sin.
I will divide them ¡X
The Levites were scattered throughout all the tribes
and Simeon's lot lay not
together
and was so strait that many of that tribe were forced to disperse
themselves in quest of settlements and subsistence. This curse was afterwards
turned into a blessing to the Levites; but the Simeonites
for Zimri's sin
Numbers 25:6-14
had it bound on.
Verse 8
[8]
Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise: thy hand shall be in the
neck of thine enemies; thy father's children shall bow down before thee.
Judah's name signifies praise
in allusion to
which he saith
Thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise
God was praised for
him
Genesis 29:35
praised by him
and praised in
him; and therefore his brethren shall praise him.
Thy hand shall be in the neck of thine
enemies ¡X This was fulfilled in David
Psalms 18:40.
Thy father's children shall bow down before
thee ¡X Judah was the law-giver
Psalms 60:7. That tribe led the van through the
wilderness
and in the conquest of Canaan
Judges 1:2. The prerogatives of the birth-right
which Reuben had forfeited
the excellency of dignity and power
were thus
conferred upon Judah. Thy brethren shall bow down before thee
and yet shall
praise thee
reckoning themselves happy in having so wise and bold a commander.
Verse 9
[9]
Judah is a lion's whelp: from the prey
my son
thou art gone up: he stooped
down
he couched as a lion
and as an old lion; who shall rouse him up?
Judah is a lion's whelp ¡X The lion is the king of beasts
the terror of the forest when he roars;
when he seizeth his prey
none can resist him; when he goes up from the prey
none dares pursue him to revenge it. By this it is foretold that the tribe of
Judah should become very formidable
and should not only obtain great victories
but should peaceably enjoy what was got by those victories. Judah is compared
not to a lion rampant
always raging but to a lion couching
enjoying the
satisfaction of his success
without creating vexation to others.
Verse 10
[10] The
sceptre shall not depart from Judah
nor a lawgiver from between his feet
until Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the people be.
The sceptre shall not depart from Judah till
Shiloh come ¡X Jacob here foretels
(1.) That the sceptre
should come into the tribe of Judah
which was fulfilled in David
on whose
family the crown was entailed. (2.) That Shiloh should be of this tribe; that
seed in whom the earth should be blessed. That peaceable prosperous one
or
the Saviour
so others translate it
shall come of Judah. (3.) That the sceptre
should continue in that tribe
till the coming of the Messiah
in whom as the
king of the church
and the great High-priest
it was fit that both the
priesthood and the royalty should determine. Till the captivity
all along from
David's time
the sceptre was in Judah
and from thence governors of that tribe
or of the Levites that adhered to it
which was equivalent; till Judea became a
province of the Roman empire just at the time of our Saviour's birth
and was
at that time taxed as one of the provinces
Luke 2:1
and at the time of his death the Jews
expressly owned
We have no king but Caesar. Hence it is undeniably inferred
against the Jews
that our Lord Jesus is be that should come
and we are to
look for no other
for he came exactly at the time appointed. (4.) That it
should be a fruitful tribe
especially that it should abound with milk and
wine
Genesis 49:11
12
vines so common
and so
strong
that they should tye their asses to them
and so fruitful
that they
should load their asses from them; wine as plentiful as water
so that the men
of that tribe should be very healthful and lively
their eyes brisk and
sparkling
their teeth white. Much of that which is here said concerning Judah
is to be applied to our Lord Jesus. 1. He is the ruler of all his Father's
children
and the conqueror of all his Father's enemies
and he it is that is
the praise of all the saints. 2. He is the lion of the tribe of Judah
as he is
called with reference to this
Revelation 5:5
who having spoiled
principalities and powers
went up a conqueror
and couched so as none can stir
him up when he sat down on the right hand of the Father. 3. To him belongs the
sceptre
he is the lawgiver
and to him shall the gathering of the people be
as the desire of all nations
Haggai 2:7
who being lifted up from the earth
should draw all men unto him
John 12:32
and in whom the children of God that
are scattered abroad should meet as the centre of their unity
John 11:52. 4. In him there is plenty of all
that which is nourishing and refreshing to the soul
and which maintains and
chears the divine life in it; in him we may have wine and milk
the riches of
Judah's tribe
without money
and without price
Isaiah 55:1.
Verse 13
[13]
Zebulun shall dwell at the haven of the sea; and he shall be for an haven of
ships; and his border shall be unto Zidon.
Zebulon shall dwell at the haven of the sea ¡X This was fulfilled
when 2 or 300 years after
the land of Canaan was
divided by lot
and the border of Zebulon went up towards the sea
Joshua 19:11.
Verse 14
[14]
Issachar is a strong ass couching down between two burdens:
Issachar is a strong ass
couching down
between two burdens ¡X The men of that tribe shall be strong and
industrious
fit for and inclined to labour
particularly the toil of husbandry
like the ass that patiently carries his burden. Issachar submitted to two
burdens
tillage and tribute.
Verse 16
[16] Dan
shall judge his people
as one of the tribes of Israel.
Dan shall judge his people ¡X Though Dan was one of the sons of the concubines
yet he shall be a
tribe governed by judges of his own as well as other tribes; and shall by art
and policy
and surprise
gain advantages against his enemies
like a serpent
suddenly biting the heel of the traveller.
Verse 18
[18] I
have waited for thy salvation
O LORD.
I have waited for thy salvation
Lord ¡X If he must break off here
and his breath will not serve him to finish
what he intended
with these words he pours out his soul into the bosom of his
God
and even breaths it out. The pious ejaculations of a warm and lively
devotion
though sometimes they maybe incoherent
yet they are not impertinent;
that may be uttered affectionately
which doth not come in methodically. It is
no absurdity
when we are speaking to men
to lift up our hearts to God. The
salvation he waited for was
1st
Christ
the promised seed
whom he had spoken
of
Genesis 49:10
now he was going to be gathered
to his people
he breathes after him to whom the gathering of the people shall
be. 2ndly
Heaven
the better country
which he declared plainly that he
sought
Hebrews 11:13
14
and continued seeking now he
was in Egypt.
Verse 19
[19] Gad
a troop shall overcome him: but he shall overcome at the last.
Concerning Gad
he alludes to his name
which
signifies a troop
foresees the character of that tribe
that it should be a
warlike tribe; and so we find
1 Chronicles 12:8
the Gadites were men of war
fit for the battle. He foresees
that the situation of that tribe on the other
side Jordan would expose it to the incursions of its neighbours
the Moabites and
Ammonites; and that they might not be proud of their strength and valour
he
foretells that the troops of their enemies should
in many skirmishes
overcome
them; yet
that they might not be discouraged by their defeats
he assures
them
that they should overcome at the last
which was fulfilled
when in
Saul's time and David's the Moabites and Ammonites were wholly subdued.
Verse 20
[20] Out
of Asher his bread shall be fat
and he shall yield royal dainties.
Concerning Asher
he foretells
That it should
be a rich tribe
replenished not only with bread for necessity
but with
fatness
with dainties
royal dainties
and these exported out of Asher
to
other tribes
perhaps to other lands. The God of nature has provided for us not
only necessaries but dainties
that we might call him a bountiful benefactor;
yet
whereas all places are competently furnished with necessaries
only some
places afford dainties. Corn is more common than spices. Were the supports of
luxury as universal as the supports of life
the world would be worse than it
is
and that needs not.
Verse 21
[21]
Naphtali is a hind let loose: he giveth goodly words.
Naphtali is a hind let loose ¡X Those of this tribe were
as the loosen'd hind
zealous for their
liberty
and yet affable and courteous
their language refined
and they
complaisant
giving goodly words. Among God's Israel there is to be found a
great variety of dispositions
yet all contributing to the beauty and strength
of the body. He closes with the blessings of his best beloved sons
Joseph and
Benjamin
with these he will breathe his last.
Verse 22
[22]
Joseph is a fruitful bough
even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run
over the wall:
Joseph is a fruitful bough
or young tree
for God had made him fruitful in the land of his affliction
as branches of a
vine
or other spreading plant
running over the wall.
Verse 23
[23] The
archers have sorely grieved him
and shot at him
and hated him:
The archer have sorely grieved him ¡X Tho' he now lived at ease and in honour
Jacob minds him of the
difficulties he had formerly waded through. He had many enemies here called
archers
being skilful to do mischief; they hated him
they shot their
poisonous darts at him. His brethren were spiteful towards him
mocked him
stripped him
sold him
thought they had been the death of him. His mistress
sorely grieved him
and shot at him
when she solicited his chastity; and then
shot at him by her false accusations.
Verse 24
[24] But
his bow abode in strength
and the arms of his hands were made strong by the
hands of the mighty God of Jacob; (from thence is the shepherd
the stone of
Israel:)
But his bow abode in strength ¡X His faith did not fail; he kept his ground
and came off conqueror. The
arms of his hands were made strong - That is
his other graces did their part
his wisdom
courage
patience
which are better than weapons of war: By the
hands of the mighty God - Who was therefore able to strengthen him; and the God
of Jacob
a God in covenant with him. From thence
from this strange method of
Providence
he became the shepherd and stone
the feeder and supporter of
Israel
Jacob and his family. Herein Joseph was a type of Christ: He was shot
at and hated
but borne up under his sufferings
and was afterwards advanced to
be the shepherd and stone: and of the church in general
hell shoots its arrows
against her
but heaven protects and strengthens her.
Verse 25
[25] Even
by the God of thy father
who shall help thee; and by the Almighty
who shall
bless thee with blessings of heaven above
blessings of the deep that lieth
under
blessings of the breasts
and of the womb:
Even by the God of thy father Jacob
who
shall help thee - Our experiences of God's power and goodness in strengthning
us hitherto
are encouragements still to hope for help from him. He that has
helped us
will. And by the Almighty
who shall bless thee; and he only
blesseth indeed. Observe the blessings conferred on Joseph; First
Various and
abundant blessings. Blessings of heaven above
rain in its season
and fair weather
in its season; blessings of the deep that lies under this earth
or with
subterraneous mines and springs. Blessings of the womb and the breasts are
given when children are safely born and comfortably nursed. Secondly
Eminent
and transcendent blessings
which prevail above the blessings of my progenitors
- His father Isaac had but one blessing
and when he had given that to Jacob
he was at a loss for a blessing to bestow upon Esau; but Jacob had a blessing
for each of his twelve sons
and now at the latter end
a copious one for
Joseph. Thirdly
Durable and extensive blessings: unto the utmost bound of the
everlasting hills - Including all the products of the most fruitful hills
and
lasting as long as they last. Of these blessings it is here said they shall be
so it is a promise; or
let them be
so it is a prayer
on the head of Joseph
to which let them be as a crown to adorn it
and a helmet to protect it.
Verse 27
[27]
Benjamin shall ravin as a wolf: in the morning he shall devour the prey
and at
night he shall divide the spoil.
Benjamin shall ravin as a wolf ¡X It is plain
Jacob was guided in what he said by a spirit of prophecy
and not by natural affection
else he would have spoken with more tenderness of
his beloved son Benjamin
concerning whom he only foretells
that his posterity
should be a warlike tribe
strong and daring
and that they should enrich
themselves with the spoil of their enemies
that they should be active in the
world
and a tribe as much feared by their neighbours as any other; in the
morning he shall devour the prey which he seized and divided over night.
Verse 29
[29] And
he charged them
and said unto them
I am to be gathered unto my people: bury
me with my fathers in the cave that is in the field of Ephron the Hittite
I am to be gathered unto my people ¡X Though death separate us from our children
and our people in this
world
it gathers us to our fathers
and to our people in the other world.
Perhaps Jacob useth this expression concerning death
as a reason why his sons
should bury him in Canaan
for (saith he) I am to be gathered unto my people
my soul must be gone to the spirits of just men made perfect
and therefore
bury me with my fathers Abraham and Isaac
and their wives.
Verse 33
[33] And
when Jacob had made an end of commanding his sons
he gathered up his feet into
the bed
and yielded up the ghost
and was gathered unto his people.
And when Jacob had made an end of commanding
of his sons ¡X He addressed himself to his dying work. He
put himself into a posture for dying; having sat upon the bed-side to bless his
sons
the spirit of prophecy bringing fresh oil to his expiring lamp
when that
work was done
he gathered up his feet into the bed
that he might lie along
not only as one patiently submitting to the stroke
but as one chearfully
composing himself to rest. He then freely resigned his spirits into the hand of
God
the father of spirit; he yielded up the ghost; and his separated soul went
to the assembly of the souls of the faithful
who after they are delivered from
the burden of the flesh are in joy and felicity; he was gathered to his people.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
49 Chapter 49
Verse 1-2
Gather yourselves together
that I may tell you that which shall befall
you in the last days
Jacob as a prophet of the Lord;
In this dying speech of Jacob to his sons we have the
characteristics of true prophecy.
I. THE NATURE OF
ITS CONTENTS.
II. THE NATURE OF
THE STYLE EMPLOYED. It is vague and mysterious; there are no accurate and
minute details
but all is given in shadowy outline; and this forbids us to
suppose that it was written in after-ages in order to fit into history.
III. THE
IMPOSSIBILITY OF ACCOUNTING FOR THESE DELIVERANCES UPON NATURAL PRINCIPLES.
Jacob was now a weak and aged man; the last sickness was upon him. And yet he
speaks in this sublime style
the proper vehicle of exalted thought and
feeling. Inspiration is the only solution. That which reveals so much of God¡¦s
thoughts and ways must be from God.
IV. THE STAGE OF
PROPHETIC DEVELOPMENT WHICH IT INDICATES
The prophecy of Messiah now becomes
clearer. First
it is ¡§the seed
¡¨ in general terms; then ¡§thy seed
¡¨ Abraham¡¦s.
Now
the very tribe out of which the Messiah is to spring is announced. We have
here the full bloom of patriarchal prophecy. The language rises to that poetic
form which is peculiar to the Messianic predictions. The blessing of Judah is
the central point
where the discourse reaches on to the last times
when God
would bring His first-begotten into the world
and set up His everlasting
kingdom.
V. THE PROMISE OF
ETERNAL LIFE WHICH IT SUGGESTS. The spirit of these prophecies is the testimony
of Jesus. And He came that we may have life. Eternal life is the end of all
prophecy. (T. H. Leale.)
Jacob¡¦s predictions:
1. The predictions are partly explicable on natural grounds. Jacob¡¦s
sagacity was sufficient to distinguish the germs of character already shown in
his sons
and from thence he could foretell the results. Reuben¡¦s instability
for instance
was the result of a sensual character. The nomad
fierce life of
the Simeonites and Levites was the natural consequence of a cruel disposition.
2. But there is a part of this remarkable chapter which we cannot so
get over--the prediction of Zebulon¡¦s future locality by the seaside; of the
descent of the Saviour from Judah--events both of which took place after the
settlement in Canaan. Here we are plainly out of the region of things
cognizable by sagacity
and have got into the sphere of the prophetic faculty.
3. Observe that five of these sons have their fortunes specifically
told
and in detail; the rest generally. We divide the chapter
therefore
into
these two divisions:
I. THE FIVE
SPECIFIC PROPHECIES.
1. The first of the specific prophecies is that respecting Reuben
and is in two divisions:
2. Next
learn how sin adheres to character. Years had passed since
Reuben sinned. Probably he had forgotten what he had done. It was but a single
act. But the act was not fixed to the spot which witnessed its performance. It
went inwards
and made him irresolute
feeble
wretched
unstable. So with
every sin
whether one of weakness or of violence
You are the exact result of
all your past sins. There they are in your character.
3. The second and third of whom Jacob uttered his predictions were
Simeon and Levi. They were charged with immoderate revenge. Observe
not
revenge alone. ¡§Cursed be their anger
for it was cruel¡¨ (Genesis 49:7). Had they not felt anger
had they not avenged
they had not been men. That responsibility which is now
shared between judge
jury
the law
and the executioner
was necessarily in
early ages sustained alone by the avenger of blood. That instinct of
indignation which is now regularly expressed by law was then of necessity
expressed irregularly. I do not think they were to be blamed for doing the
avenger¡¦s justice. But they slew a whole tribe. Now
the penalty which fell on
them was of a very peculiar kind: ¡§I will divide them in Jacob
and scatter
them in Israel.¡¨ This has a plain meaning in Simeon¡¦s case
for his tribe was
weak
his territory divided. But in Levi¡¦s case the prediction is not so
intelligible as a penalty. For Levi
though scattered in Israel
having no
territorial allotment
was a peculiarly privileged tribe; they were chosen to
be the tribe of priests. We consider this
therefore
as one of the many
many
cases in which a penalty is by grace transmuted into a blessing.
4. Predictions respecting Judah.
5. We now come to Joseph
the last of those five of whom we have a
special prediction. Here the whole tone of Jacob¡¦s language changes. Specially
observe two things:
II. GENERAL
BLESSINGS ON THE SEVEN REMAINING SONS. Observe in all these different
characters the true principle of unity. They were not lost in one
undistinguished similarity
but each has its own peculiar characteristic: one
made up of seamen
another of shepherds; one warlike
another cultivated; and
so on. And yet
together
one.
III. Finally
we
have on all this chapter FOUR REFLECTIONS to make.
1. Jacob¡¦s spiritual character
as tested by his ejaculation
¡§I
have waited for Thy salvation
O Lord¡¨ (Genesis 49:18)--a religious ejaculation
from the dying patriarch breathless and exhausted with speech. Our exact
character is tested by our spontaneous thoughts.
2. See what is assumed in this personification of the tribes. Judah
Simeon
Levi
are taken as the type of the future career of their several
tribes. Every man impresses his character on his descendants. Let us add that
to the innumerable motives for abstinence from sin.
3. Think of this father¡¦s feelings as his family gathered round him.
Over each of those children a mother¡¦s heart had bled and a father¡¦s heart
rejoiced. Their very names contained the record of such feelings: ¡§Reuben¡¨--lo!
a son. Yes; and
lo! there he is; and what has he become? Happy is it for
Christian fathers now
that in looking round on their assembled children they
cannot read the future as Jacob did
that they are not able to fix on each of
their sons and say
This for God and that for sin.
4. Lastly
let us see something here that tells of the character of
future judgment. Have you ever attended the opening of a will
where the
bequests were large and unknown
and seen the bitter disappointment and the
suppressed auger? Well
conceive those sons listening to the unerring doom.
Conceive Reuben
or Simeon
or Levi listening to their father¡¦s words. Yet the
day will come when
on principles precisely similar
our doom must be
pronounced. Destiny is fixed by character
and character is determined by
separate acts. (F. W. Robertson
M. A.)
The prophet; or
Jacob blessing his sons:
I. THE VALUE OF
THE TESTIMONY OF EXPERIENCE. It affords encouragement and warning; it reveals
the conditions of success
the means to be used
and the errors to be avoided.
II. THE STIMULUS
OF EXAMPLE (Genesis 48:16; cf. also Genesis 48:5). The memory of the efforts
and struggles of others nerves to patient endurance.
III. THE SOLEMN
RESPONSIBILITY OF LIFE. Each one is making his own future. Our daily conduct is
proving what we are fit for.
IV. THE
RECOGNITION THROUGHOUT OF OUR SPIRITUAL DEPENDENCE UPON GOD. This is the only
right
sure
and safe way of facing and bearing the solemn responsibility of
life.
V. THE PROPHECY
OF THE MESSIAH. (A. F. Joscelyne
B. A.)
The blessings of the tribes:
Jacob¡¦s blessing of his sons marks the close of the patriarchal
dispensation. Henceforth the channel of God¡¦s blessing to man does not consist
of one person only
but of a people or nation. It is still ¡§one seed
¡¨ as Paul
reminds us
a unit that God will bless
but this unit is now no longer a single
person--as Abraham
Isaac
or Jacob--but one people
composed of several parts
and yet one whole; equally representative of Christ
as the patriarchs were
and of equal effect every way in receiving God¡¦s blessing and handing it down
until Christ came. And it is at this point--where Israel distributes among his
sons the blessing which heretofore had all lodged in himself--that we see the
first multiplication of Christ¡¦s representatives
the mediation going on no
longer through individuals
but through a nation; and where individuals are
still chosen by God
as commonly they are
for the conveyance of God¡¦s
communications to earth
these individuals
whether priests or prophets
are
themselves but the official representatives of the nation. As the patriarchal
dispensation ceases
it secures to the tribes all the blessing it has itself
contained. The blessing of Israel is now distributed
and each receives what
each can take; and while in some of the individual tribes there may seem to be
very little of blessing at all
yet
taken together
they form a picture
of the common outstanding features of human nature
and of that nature as acted
upon by God¡¦s blessing
and forming together one body or Church. In these
blessings
therefore
we have the history of the Church in its most interesting
form. In these sons gathered round him the patriarch sees his own nature
reflected piece by piece
and he sees also the general outline of all that must
be produced by such natures as these men have. The whole destiny of Israel is
here in germ
and the spirit of prophecy in Jacob sees and declares it. Being
nearer to eternity
he instinctively measures things by its standard
and thus
comes nearer a just valuation of all things before his mind
and can better
distinguish reality from appearance. One cannot but admire
too
the faith
which enables Jacob to apportion to his sons the blessings of a land which had
not been much of a resting-place to himself
and regarding the occupation of
which his sons might have put to him some very difficult questions. And we
admire this dignified faith the more on reflecting that it has often been very
grievously lacking in our own case--that we have felt almost ashamed of having
so little of a present tangible kind to offer
and of being obliged to speak
only of invisible and future blessings; to set a spiritual consolation over
against a worldly grief; to point a man whose fortunes are ruined to an eternal
inheritance; or to speak to one who knows himself quite in the power of sin of
a remedy which has often seemed illusory to ourselves. And often we are rebuked
by finding that when we do offer things spiritual even those who are wrapped in
earthly comforts appreciate and accept the better gifts. So it was in Joseph¡¦s
case. No doubt the highest posts in Egypt were open to his sons; they might
have been naturalized
as he himself had been
and
throwing in their lot with
the land of their adoption
might have turned to their advantage the rank their
father held and the reputation he had earned. But Joseph turns from this
attractive prospect
brings them to his father
and hands them over to the
despised shepherd-life of Israel. One need scarcely point out how great a
sacrifice this was on Joseph¡¦s part. And his faith received its reward; the two
tribes that sprang from him received about as large a portion of the promised
land as fell to the lot of all the other tribes put together. You will observe
that Ephraim and Manasseh were adopted as sons of Jacob. Jacob tells Joseph
¡§They shall be mine¡¨; not my grandsons
but as Reuben and Simeon. No other sons
whom Joseph might have were to be received into this honour
but these two were
to take their place on a level with their uncles as heads of tribes
so that
Joseph is represented through the whole history by the two populous and
powerful tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh. Ephraim and Manasseh were not received
alongside of Joseph
but each received what Joseph himself might have had
and
Joseph¡¦s name as a tribe was henceforth only to be found in these two. This
idea was fixed in such a way
that for centuries it was stepping into the minds
of men
so that they might not be astonished if God should in some other
case--say the case of His own Son--adopt men into the rank He held
and let His
estimate of the worth of His Son
and the honour He puts upon Him
be seen in
the adopted. This being so
we need not be alarmed if men tell us that
imputation is a mere legal fiction or human invention. A legal fiction it may
be
but in the ease before us it was the never-disputed foundation of very
substantial blessings to Ephraim and Manasseh; and we plead for nothing more
than that God would act with us as here He did act with these two
that He
would make us His direct heirs
make us His own sons
and give us what He who
presents us to Him to receive His blessing did earn and merits at the Father¡¦s
hand. We meet with these crossed hands of blessing frequently in Scripture; the
younger son blessed above the elder--as was needful
lest grace should become
confounded with nature
and the belief gradually grow up in men¡¦s minds that
natural effects could never be overcome by grace
and that in every respect
grace waited upon nature. And these crossed hands we meet still; for how often
does God quite reverse our order
and bless most that about which we had less
concern
and seem to put a slight on that which has engrossed our best affection.
In Reuben
the first-born
conscience must have been sadly at war with hope as
he looked at the blind
but expressive
face of his father. He may have hoped
that his sin had not been severely thought of by his father
or that the
father¡¦s pride in his first-born would prompt him to hide
though it could not
make him forget
it. Could his father
at the last hour
and after so many
thronged years
and before his brethren
recall the old sin? He is relieved and
confirmed in his confidence by the first words of Jacob
words ascribing to him
his natural position
a certain conspicuous dignity too
and power such as one
may often see produced in men by occupying positions of authority
though in
their own character there be weakness. But all the excellence that Jacob
ascribes to Reuben serves only to embitter the doom pronounced upon him. Men
seem often to expect that a future can be given to them irrespective of what
they themselves are
that a series of blessings and events might be prepared
for them
and made over to them; whereas every man¡¦s future must be made by
himself
and is already in great part formed by the past. It was a vain
expectation of Reuben to expect that he
the impetuous
unstable
superficial
son
could have the future of a deep
and earnest
and dutiful nature
or that
his children should derive no taint from their parent
but be as the children
of Joseph. No man¡¦s future need be altogether a doom to him
for God may bless
to him the evil fruit his life has borne; but certainly no man need look for a
future which has no relation to his own character. His future will always be
made up of his deeds
his feeling
and the circumstances which his desires have
brought him into. The future of Reuben was of a negative
blank kind--¡§Thou
shalt not excel¡¨; his unstable character must empty it of all great success.
And to many a heart since have these words struck a chill
for to many they are
as a mirror suddenly held up before them. They see themselves
when they look
on the tossing sea
rising and pointing to the heavens with much noise
but
only to sink back again to the same everlasting level. Men of brilliant parts
and great capacity are continually seen to be lost to society by instability of
purpose. The sin of the next oldest sons was also remembered against them
and
remembered apparently for the same reason--because the character was expressed
in it. The massacre of the Shechemites was not an accidental outrage that any
other of the sons of Jacob might equally have perpetrated
but the most glaring
of a number of expressions of a fierce and cruel disposition in these two men.
In Jacob¡¦s prediction of their future he seems to shrink with horror from his
own progeny--like her who dreamt she would give birth to a firebrand. He sees
the possibility of the direst results flowing from such a temper
and
under
God
provides against these by scattering the tribes
and thus weakening their
power for evil. They had been banded together so as the more easily and
securely to accomplish their murderous purposes. ¡§Simeon and Levi are
brethren¡¨--showing a close affinity
and seeking one another¡¦s society and aid
but it is for bad purposes; and therefore they must be divided in Jacob and
scattered in Israel. This was accomplished by the tribe of Levi being distributed
over all the other tribes as the ministers of religion. The fiery zeal
the
bold independence
and the pride of being a distinct people
which had been
displayed in the slaughter of the Shechemites
might be toned down and turned
to good account when the sword was taken out of their hand. Qualities such as
these
which produce the most disastrous results when fit instruments can be
found
and when men of like disposition are suffered to band themselves
together
may
when found in the individual and kept in check by circumstances
and dissimilar dispositions
be highly beneficial. Very humbling must it have
been for the Levite who remembered the history of his tribe to be used by God
as the hand of His justice on the victims that were brought in substitution for
that which was so precious in the sight of God. The blessing of Judah is at
once the most important and the most difficult to interpret in the series.
There is enough in the history of Judah himself
and there is enough in the
subsequent history of the tribe
to justify the ascription to him of all
lion-like qualities--a kingly fearlessness
confidence
power
and success; in
action a rapidity of movement and might that make him irresistible
and in
repose a majestic dignity of bearing. If there were to be kings in Israel
there could be little doubt from which tribe they could best be chosen. A wolf
of the tribe of Benjamin
like Saul
not only hung on the rear of retreating
Philistines and spoiled them
but made a prey of his own people
and it is in
David we find the true king
the man who more than any other satisfies men¡¦s
ideal of the prince to whom they will pay homage--falling
indeed
into
grievous error and sin
like his forefather
but
like him also
right at heart
so generous and self-sacrificing that men served
him with the most devoted loyalty
and were willing rather to dwell in caves
with him than in palaces with any other. The kingly supremacy of Judah was here
spoken of in words which have been the subject of as prolonged and violent
contention as any others in the Word of God. ¡§The sceptre shall not depart from
Judah
nor a lawgiver from between his feet
until Shiloh come.¡¨ These words
are very generally understood to mean that Judah¡¦s supremacy would continue
until it culminated or flowered into the personal reign of Shiloh; in other
words
that Judah¡¦s sovereignty was to be perpetuated in the person of Jesus
Christ. But it comes to be an inquiry of some interest
How much information
regarding a personal Messiah did the brethren receive from this prophecy?--a
question very difficult indeed to answer. The word Shiloh means ¡§peacemaking
¡¨
and if they understood this as a proper name
they must have thought of a
person such as Isaiah designates as the Prince of Peace--a name it was similar
to that wherewith David called his son Solomon
in the expectation that the
results of his own lifetime of disorder and battle would be reaped by his
successor in a peaceful and prosperous reign. It can scarcely be thought
likely
indeed
that this single term ¡§ Shiloh
¡¨ which might be applied to many
things besides a person
should give to the sons of Jacob any distinct idea of
a personal Deliverer; but it might be sufficient to keep before their eyes
and
specially before the tribe of Judah
that the aim and consummation of all
lawgiving and ruling was peace. And there was certainly contained in this
blessing an assurance that the purpose of Judah would not be accomplished
and
therefore that the existence of Judah as a tribe would not terminate
until
peace had been through its means brought into the world. Thus was the assurance
given that the productive power of Judah should not fail until out of that
tribe there had sprung that which should give peace. But to us who have seer
the prediction accomplished it plainly enough points to the Lion of the tribe
of Judah
who in His own person combined all kingly qualities. In Him we are
taught by this prediction to discover once more the single Person who stands
out on the page of this world¡¦s history as satisfying men¡¦s ideal of what their
King should be
and of how the race should be represented--the One who
without
any rival
stands in the mind¡¦s eye as that for which the best hopes of men
were waiting
still feeling that the race could do no more than it had done
and never satisfied but in Him. Zebulun
the sixth and last of Leah¡¦s sons
was
so called because
said Leab
¡§Now will my husband dwell with me¡¨ (such being
the meaning of the name)
¡§for I have borne him six sons.¡¨ All that is predicted
regarding this tribe is that his dwelling should be by the sea
and near the
Phoenician city Zidon. This is not to be taken as a strict geographical
definition of the tract of country occupied by Zebulun
as we see when we
compare it with the lot assigned to it and marked out in the Book of Joshua;
but though the border of the tribe did not reach to Zidon
and though it can
only have been a mere tongue of land belonging to it that ran down to the
Mediterranean shore
yet the situation ascribed to it is true to its character
as a tribe that had commercial relations with the Phoenicians
and was of a
decidedly mercantile turn. It is still
therefore
character rather than
geographical position that is here spoken of
though it is a trait of character
that is peculiarly dependent on geographical position. We
for example
because
islanders
have become the maritime power and the merchants of the world; not
being shut off from other nations by the encompassing sea
but finding paths by
it equally in all directions ready provided for every kind of traffic. Zebulun
then
was to represent the commerce of Israel
its outgoing tendency; was to
supply a means of communication and bond of connection with the world outside;
so that through it might be conveyed to the nations what was saving in Israel
and that what Israel needed from other lands might also find entrance. In the
Church also this is a needful quality: for our well-being there must ever exist
among us those who are not afraid to launch on the wide and pathless sea of
opinion; those in whose ears its waves have from their childhood sounded with a
fascinating invitation
and who at last
as if possessed by some spirit of
unrest
loose from the firm earth
and go in quest of lands not yet discovered
or are impelled to see for themselves what till now they have believed on the
testimony of others. And as the seafaring population of a country might be
expected to show less interest in the soil of their native land than others
and yet we know that in point of fact we are dependent on no class of our
population so much for leal patriotism and for the defence of our country
so
one has observed that the Church also must make similar use of her Zebuluns--of
men who
by their very habit of restlessly considering all views of truth which
are alien to our own ways of thinking
have become familiar with
and better
able to defend us against
the error that mingles with these views. Issachar
receives from his father a character which few would be proud of or would envy
but which many are very content to bear. As the strong ass that has its stall
and its provender provided can afford to let the free beasts of the forest
vaunt their liberty
so there is a very numerous class of men who have no care
to assert their dignity as human beings
or to agitate regarding their rights
as citizens
so long as their obscurity and servitude provide them with
physical comforts and leave them free of heavy responsibilities. They prefer a
life of easy and plenty to a life of hardship and glory. They
as well as the
other parts of society
have amidst their error a truth--the truth that the
ideal world in which ambition
and hope
and imagination live is not
everything; that the material has also a reality
and that though hope does
bless mankind
yet attainment is also something
even though it be a little.
Yet this truth is not the whole truth
and is only useful as an ingredient
as
a part
not as the whole; and when we fall from any high ideal of human life
which we have formed
and begin to find comfort and rest in the mere physical
good things of this world
we may well despise ourselves. There is a
pleasantness still in the land that appeals to us all; a luxury in observing
the risks and struggles of others while ourselves secure and at rest; a desire
to make life easy
and to shirk the responsibility and toil that public
spiritedness entails. Yet of what tribe has the Church more cause to complain
than of those persons who seem to imagine that they have done enough when they
have joined the Church and received their own inheritance to enjoy; who are
alive to no emergency
nor awake to the need of others; who have no idea at all
of their being a part of the community
for which
as well as for themselves
there are duties to discharge; who couch
like the ass of Issachar
in their
comfort
without one generous impulse to make common cause against the common
evils and foes of the Church
and are unvisited by a single compunction that
while they lie there
submitting to whatever fate sends
there are kindred
tribes of their own being oppressed and spoiled? Next came the eldest son of
Rachel¡¦s handmaid
and the eldest son of Leah¡¦s handmaid
Dan and Gad. Dan¡¦s
name
meaning ¡§judge
¡¨ is the starting-point of the prediction--¡§Dan shall
judge his people.¡¨ This word ¡§ judge¡¨ we are perhaps somewhat apt to
misapprehend; it means rather to defend than to sit in judgment on; it refers
to a judgment passed between one¡¦s own people and their foes
and an execution
of such judgment in the deliverance of the people and the destruction of the
foe. We are familiar with this meaning of the word by the constant reference in
the Old Testament to God¡¦s judging His people; this being always a cause of joy
as their sure deliverance from their enemies. So also it is used of those men
who
when Israel had no king
rose from time to time as the champions of the
people
to lead them against the foe
and who are therefore familiarly called
¡§The Judges.¡¨ From the tribe of Dan the most conspicuous of these arose
Samson
namely; and it is probably mainly with reference to this fact that Jacob so
emphatically predicts of this tribe
¡§Dan shall judge his people.¡¨ And notice
the appended clause (as reflecting shame on the sluggish Issachar)
¡¨ as one of
the tribes of Israel
¡¨ recognizing always that his strength was not for himself
alone
but for his country; that he was not an isolated people who had to
concern himself only with his own affairs
but one of the tribes of Israel. The
manner
too
in which Dan was to do this was singularly descriptive of the
facts subsequently evolved. Dan was a very small and insignificant tribe
whose
lot originally lay close to the Philistines on the southern border of the land.
It might seem to be no obstacle whatever to the invading Philistines as they
passed to the richer portion of Judah
but this little tribe
through Samson
smote these terrors of the Israelites with so sore and alarming a destruction
as to cripple them for years and make them harmless. We see
therefore
how
aptly Jacob compares them to the venomous snake that lurks in the road and
bites the horses¡¦ heels; the dust-coloured adder that a man treads on before he
is aware
and whose poisonous stroke is more deadly than the foe he is looking
for in front. And especially significant did the imagery appear to the Jews
with whom this poisonous adder was indigenous
but to whom the horse was the
symbol of foreign armament and invasion. The whole tribe of Dan
too
seems to
have partaken of that ¡§grim humour¡¨ with which Samson saw his foes walk time
after time into the traps he set for them
and give themselves an easy prey to
him--a humour which comes out with singular piquancy in the
narrative given in
the Book of Judges of one of the forays of this tribe
in which they carried off
Micah¡¦s priest and even his gods. Gad also is a tribe whose history is to be
warlike
his very name signifying a marauding guerilla troop; and his history
was to illustrate the victories which God¡¦s people gain by tenacious
watchful
ever-renewed warfare. And there is something particularly inspiriting to the
individual Christian in finding this pronounced as part of the blessing of
God¡¦s people--¡§A troop shall overcome him
but he shall overcome at the last.¡¨
It is this that enables us to persevere--that we have God¡¦s assurance that
present discomfiture does not doom us to final defeat. (M. Dods
D. D.)
Jacob¡¦s prophetic survey:
What a mind was Jacob¡¦s
as shown in the various blessings
pronounced upon his children l How discriminating those now closing eyes l How
they glitter with criticism l How keen--penetrating
even to the finest lines
of distinction! Surely what we see in those eyes is a gleam of the very soul.
This is no joint salutation or valediction; this is no greeting and fare well
mixed up in one confused utterance. This is criticism. This is the beginning of
a career of mental development which is the pride of human education and
culture. How affectionate too! In nearly every line there is some accent of
affection peculiar to itself. And how prophetic! The ages are all revealed to
the calm vision and sacred gaze of this man who is more in heaven than upon
earth. But this prophecy is no phantasy. We have accustomed ourselves now to a
definition of prophecy which enables us in some degree to understand this way
of allotment and benediction. Prophecy is based on character. We have already
defined prophecy as moral prescience. Retaining the definition
we see in this
instance one of its finest and clearest illustrations. This is no fancy painting.
It is the power of the soul in its last efforts to see what crops will come out
of this seed and of that; it is a man standing upon fields charged with seed
the quality of which he well knows
forecasting the harvest. Moral prophecy is
vindicated by moral law. There was no property to divide. There was something
better than property to give. What a will is this I It has about it all the
force of a man being his own distributer--not only writing a will like a
testator
which is of no force until after the testator¡¦s death
but already
enriching his sons with an inheritance better than measurable lands. What have
you to leave to your children? to your friends? You could leave an inheritance
incorruptible
undefiled and that fadeth not away--bright memories of love
recollections of sacred sympathy prayers that lifted the life into new hope
forgiveness that abolished the distinction between earth and heaven
and made
pardoned souls feel as if they had seen their Father in heaven; great will:
eternal substance. How Jacob¡¦s conscience burned up in that sacred hour! He
remembered the evil of his sons. He reminded Reuben of what he had done; he
recalled the deed of shame
never to be spoken aloud by human tongue
wrought
by Simeon and Levi in the land of Hamor the Hivite; and because their anger was
fierce and their wrath was cruel
he divided them in Jacob and scattered them
in Israel. ¡§The evil that men do lives after them.¡¨ Simeon and Levi had
forgotten what they did in their sister¡¦s case. Jacob had not. In such a
malediction there are great meanings
even so far as Jacob is concerned. Jacob
knew the cost of sin. Jacob knew that no man can of himself shake off his sin
and become a free man in the universe. The sin follows him with swift fate
opens its mouth like a wolf and shows its cruel teeth. No man can forgive sin
Who but God can wrestle with it? We fly from it
try to forget it; but up it
leaps again
a foe that pursues unto the death
unless some Mighty One shall
come to deal with it when there is no eye to pity and no arm to help. But
presently Jacob will come to a name that will change his tone. How some faces
brighten us! How the incoming of some men makes us young again! Jacob we have
never seen until he comes to pronounce his blessing upon Joseph. (J. Parker
D. D.)
The destinies of Israel:
I. MORAL
DISTINCTIONS. What is it which ¡§exalts¡¨ a nation (Proverbs 14:34.)? In the development of
history
the character of individuals is an important element. God¡¦s government
of the world is moral government
and sin never
eventually
goes unpunished.
Sooner or later
our sin ¡§finds us out.¡¨
II. MESSIANIC
HOPE. The hope of a coming king is the central point of Judah¡¦s blessing. And
Judah¡¦s blessing is the central blessing of all that Jacob says concerning his
sons.
III. MANIFOLD
DESTINIES. Apply this to ourselves. How different the conditions
circumstances
capabilities of each one of us! how various the particular
destinies in store for us! Yet
God will help
and guide
and bring us on our
way
if we trust in Him. We know not exactly where God will lead us
or place
us; or what our particular difficulties or temptations may be
but let us trust
Him
and seek to do His will always
and everywhere. (W. S. Smith
B. D.)
Jacob¡¦s prophetical blessings of his sons:
Written it is of the swan
that before his death he singeth most
sweetly
and so did this holy patriarch in this place. Never more sweet songs
have passed from the godly than toward their latter ends (Moses in Deuteronomy 31:1-30. and in the two
chapters following
Joshua in his last chapter
and even our Saviour Himself in
John 14:15-17 and at His last supper).
The apostle Paul
when the time of his offering was at hand (2 Timothy 4:7-8
&c.). The
apostle Peter
when he told them he thought it meet
while he was in this
tabernacle
to stir them up
knowing that the time was at hand that he must lay
down his tabernacle
&c.
The right way to regard prophecy
I am profoundly affected by the grandeur of prophecy. God unveils
the frescoed wall of the future
not so much that we may count the figures
and
measure the robes
and analyze the pigments; but that
gazing upon it
our
imaginations may be enkindled
and hope be inspired
to bear us through the
dismal barrenness of the present. Prophecy was not addressed to the reason
nor
to the statistical faculty
but to the imagination; and I should as soon think
of measuring love by the scales of commerce
or of admiring flowers by the rule
of feet and inches
or of applying arithmetic to taste and enthusiasm
as
calculations and figures to these grand evanishing signals which God waves in
the future only to tell the world which way it is to march. (H. W.Beecher.)
Belief in death-bed prophecies
A belief prevailed among nearly all ancient nations
that the
human mind
at the approaching hour of death
is capable of penetrating into
the mysteries of the future
and of distinctly revealing them in prophetic
speech. We are on this point not restricted to obscure inferences. We find the
idea clearly and explicitly stated by more than one classical author. Cicero
observes: ¡§When death is near
the mind assumes a much more Divine character;
and at such times easily predicts the future.¡¨ Socrates
when defending himself
in the capital charge preferred against him
and foreseeing a condemnatory
verdict
is recorded to have reminded the judges that
with death before his
eyes
he was in that state which enables men to utter prophecies. Xenophon
relates
in his ¡§Institution of Cyrus
¡¨ that this prince
when feeling his
impending dissolution
summoned his sons and friends to his death-bed; and
in
order to impress upon them the doctrine of immortality
used the following
argument: ¡§Nothing resembles death more closely than sleep; but it is in sleep
that the soul of man appears most Divine
and it is then that it foresees
something of the future; for then
as it seems
it is most free.¡¨ In a
perfectly analogous manner
Pythagoras and other philosophers
according to
Diodorus Siculus
considered it a natural consequence of the belief in
immortality
that the soul
in the moment of death
becomes conscious of future
events. In harmony with these views
Greek and Roman writers not unfrequently
introduce persons in the last stage of their existence predicting the destinies
of those survivors who at that time particularly absorb their attention.
Patroclus
mortally wounded
foretells
in Homer¡¦s Iliad
the immediate death
of Hector
from the hand of Achilles; and when this prophecy was literally verified
Hector
in his last moments
augurs that Apollo and Paris would
at the Scaean
gate
soon destroy Achilles
who
convinced of the truth and reality of such
forebodings
exclaims: ¡§I shall accept my fate whenever Jupiter and the other
immortal gods choose to inflict it.¡¨ In the AEneid of Virgil
the expiring Dido
prophesies not only the chief incidents in the future life of AEneas
his
laborious and exhausting wars with Turnus
the Rutulians
and the Latins; his
separation from his beloved son
Iulus
when imploring assistance in Etruria;
and his early death
unhonoured by the sacred rites of sepulture: but she
alludes to the inextioguishable hatred and the sanguinary enmity that would
rage between the Romans and the Carthaginians
and to Hannibal himself
who
would avenge her sufferings
and as a fearful scourge of war desolate the
beautiful plains of Italy. In the same epic poem
Orodes
before closing his
eyes in death
threatens his victorious antagonist
Mezentius
that he would
not long enjoy his triumph
but would soon also be hurled into the lower
regions; which menace
indeed
Mezentius haughtily scorns but recognizing the
possibility of its fulfilment
he laughs ¡§with mixed wrath.¡¨ Posidonius makes
mention of a man of Rhodes
who
not long before his demise
stated the exact
order in which six of his friends would successively die. When Alexander the
Great
at the termination of his days
was asked whom he appointed his
successor
he replied ¡§the best; for I foresee that great funeral games will be
celebrated for me by my friends¡¨; and this remark is adduced by Diodorus as an
example of the astonishing realization of prophecies pronounced shortly before
death. And Cicero
extending the same power of presentiment to perfectly
uncivilized tribes
mentions the uneducated Indian Calanus
who
when about to
burn himself
predicted the almost immediate death of the Macedonian monarch. (M.
M.Kalisch
Ph. D.)
Verse 4
Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel.
Instability
I. The first
thing which strikes us in the instability of water is that IT HAS NO COHESIVE
SHAPE OF ITS OWN. It takes the form of the vessel into which you pour it; it
changes one form for another without resistance; and water spilt on the ground
falls asunder and vanishes. This suggests the first defect of instability--that
it prevents a man gaining an independent position in life. There is a true
position in the world which we should all aim at
a place where we may stand on
our own feet
fill our own sphere
and meet all the just claims which come upon
us in the family
in friendship
and in society. This cannot be gained without
some measure of stability. If
indeed
there is entire instability in the ground
of the character
it is very difficult to deal with
and if men were under
fixed laws of nature the case might be incurable. But nature has its emblems of
hope even for this indecision; there is a possibility of crystallizing water.
II. Another thing
in the instability of water is THE CHANGEFULNESS OF ITS REFLEXION. Look at the
water in an outspread lake. It takes moon and stars and changing seasons into
the depths of its confidence
and its seeming depths are only a surface. This
is beautiful in nature
but very unhappy in men; and we may see in it an
illustration of how instability unfits us for gaining either true culture or
character.
III. A third thing
we may mention in the instability of water is that IT INSPIRES DISTRUST. Its
very calm is danger: there are hidden rocks under the smoothness
and
treacherous currents which wind like serpents round those who trust them. This
reminds us that instability destroys influence. The world is governed not so
much by men of talent as by men of will.
IV. Water is READY
TO MOVE ANY WAY BUT UPWARD. It descends
but cannot rise to its source; and it
illustrates this most serious defect of instability
that it unfits a man for a
successful endeavour after the higher life. In seeking to conquer instability
there must
(a) Method or system;
(b) associations;
(c) the taking an early and manly stand. (J. Ker
D. D.)
Unsteadiness
The Holy Spirit is here describing the character of Reuben
the
eldest son of Jacob. He is acknowledged
indeed
as the firstborn
but at the
same time he is given to understand that he has forfeited his right; he is now
to have no pre-eminence or authority over his brethren; he is not to excel
This passage may well lead us to serious reflection on the great and peculiar
danger of unsteadiness.
I. This verse was
written especially for the learning of those among Christians who have GOOD
FEELINGS
who feel something of the beauty of holiness
who admire it
and are
shocked at crime in others. All of us are by nature more or less partakers in these
feelings; but we may
if we will
neglect to cherish them
and then they will
die away and do us no good.
II. The true and
faithful Christian is marked by nothing more certainly than by his FIRMNESS AND
DECISION OF PURPOSE. He makes good resolutions and keeps them. He sets his face
like a flint
and is not ashamed. A Christian without stability is a miserable
wonder in the sight of God and His angels.
III.
PERSEVERANCE--a kind of bold and generous obstinacy--is a necessary part of
Christian goodness. There is no excelling without it; nay
so many are the
snares and dangers which surround us
that there is no chance
but by it
of
keeping even the lowest place in God¡¦s kingdom.
IV. To all our
other good purposes this one must be added--we must resolve
by the grace of
God
not to measure things by the judgment of men
but to go strictly by THE
RULE OF GOD¡¦S COMMANDMENTS. We must guard against that tendency
so natural to
many
to exhaust their repentance and good meaning in feelings and professions
and strong words
instead of going on without delay to the calm and sober
keeping of the commandments. We must pray that He who holds our hearts in His
hand may not suffer our repentance to be as unstable as water
pouring itself
out in vain and useless lamentation. (Plain Sermons by Contributors to the
¡§Tracts for the Times. ¡¨)
The blessing of Reuben
I. HIS
PRIVILEGES. The first-born. Entitled to
II. HIS FORFEITURE
OF HIS PRIVILEGES.
1. By a foul sin.
2. By his instability of character.
3. By a life of sensuality. (T. H. Leale.)
Instability aloe to excellence
I. THAT ALL ARE
UNDER OBLIGATION TO EXCEL. This arises from our duty towards God
others
and
ourselves. It is taught in every department of nature
every scriptural
command
every instinct of the soul.
II. THAT ALL
EXCELLENCE HAS A DEADLY FOE IN INSTABILITY
How strikingly does St. James speak
of the waverer (James 1:6). Double-minded man
unstable
ways. Wrong in religion
wrong in everything.
III. THAT THIS
DEADLY FOE OF INSTABILITY MAY BE VANQUISHED. In the gospel there is all that is
necessary for conquest. It is the wisdom and power of God.
1. It points direct to God Himself.
2. It changes man¡¦s very nature (cf. Isaiah 11:6 with 1 Peter 1:16)
. (J. Barber.)
Excellence
I. WHAT OUGHT TO
BE THE GRAND AIM OF EVERY REASONABLE BEING--To ¡§excel.¡¨
1. An excellence of dignity which all ought to desire; an ¡§honour
that cometh of God only¡¨--a distinction
¡§whose praise is not of men
but of
God.¡¨
2. An excellence of power which should also be our aim.
II. WHAT MAY BE
REGARDED AS ONE OF THE MOST FATAL IMPEDIMENTS TO THE ATTAINMENT OF THIS OBJECT.
1. If you are unstable in your principles--ever wavering and
changing in your views of Christian truth--how is it likely that you should
gain any assurance of ranking high in the favour of God? any growing power
against the enemies of your soul?
2. If you are unstable in your purposes
it will be impossible for
you to excel.
3. If you are unstable in your practice
the same consequence must
needs follow; there can be no excellence.
III. BY WHAT MEANS
THIS IMPEDIMENT MAY BE SURMOUNTED.
1. Seek to have a more abiding sense of your own insufficiency.
2. Expose your heart more habitually to the influences of the Spirit
of God. (J. Jowett
M. A.)
Instability in religion
I. If we throw a
stone into the water
although at first certainly it divides the surface and
gives it a new impression
yet
after a few circling eddies
tranquility is
restored
and no mark remains of its recent motion. If you launch a boat upon
the stream
instead of its remaining a fixed weight upon it
it rolls and moves
with the rolling current. If we cast our eyes upon the ocean
that mighty world
of living waters
how changeable is the scene that comes before us! Every
breeze that blows varies even its colour
while its waves exhibit to us nothing
but tumult and commotion. Now all this is
in reality
what it is intimated to
be in the text--an emblem and a picture of several amongst the children of men.
1. Whenever a new object comes before some people
it makes
like
the stone cast into the water
an impression upon them at first; it engages
their attention; they are
probably
pleased with it and delighted
and fancy
that they have discovered the treasure of true satisfaction. But again
like
the stone
after a few circling eddies--that is
after a few observations
after a few gratifications and short acquaintances--the novelty is over;
something fresh catches the attention
and the former object departs without
leaving a single mark or vestige behind.
2. You shall see other people
like the boat upon the stream
quite
at the mercy of the fickle current. They never fix to anything; they are
without a rudder
without ballast
without any of the other requisites of good
management. The surface upon which they rest is soft and variable; and thereon
without allowing any confidence to be placed in their firmness and stability
they rock about with every momentary agitation of the water.
3. Thirdly
there are others completely like the sea. Such people
never continue in the same mind for a month
nay
sometimes not even for a day
together--and that too upon subjects of the greatest possible concern and
importance. Now they view life and the world under one colour
and now under
another: one while they are full of hope
and energy
and self-satisfaction; at
another time they are absorbed in gloomy presentiments
and anxieties
and
melancholy: one day they represent this life as everything; the next they speak
against it as of no kind of importance or value at all: and all this
not from
any change of circumstances; nor indeed from any one good cause
as relates to
themselves
is this alteration in their opinions
but from an innate principle
of unsteadiness
and from the temper and humour they happen to be in at the
moment of forming them. Now
look at such men in their pursuits
and in their
occupations; and there they are just the same as they were in their opinions;
there is a perpetual variation. Observe such persons once more--observe them in
their attachments: and what are they in this respect? The very same--inconstant
and fickle.
II. But I come now
to the most useful bearing in this argument: and that is the adaptation of it
to higher
and to spiritual designs. If the sentiment in the text be a true one
in affairs of this world how much more true is it in things connected with that
world which is to come! If a man cannot excel in a trade
a profession
or
science without study
application
and perseverance; if a man cannot
and with
very just cause cannot
we will say
become either a good scholar or a skilful
architect
provided he will not submit to the rules of the art
and if he only
attend by fits and starts; how
let me ask
can he reasonably expect to become
a good Christian by the same means? What is it that exempts Christianity from
that careful attention that belongs to every other pursuit? What is it that
induces us to hope that the foundation and superstructure
the knowledge
the
experience
the application
the comfort of religious truths
are all to be
acquired by a few trifling fanciful attempts
just according to a momentary
burst of feeling
or a capricious use of accidental opportunities? Is it that
religion is of no importance
and therefore need not take up much of our time?
Our work is never done. Amongst the clearest truths in the whole Bible is this:
that religion is a progressive state. (E. Scobell
M. A.)
The wretchedness of a wavering mind
I. Now the
condition of a man who is divided between two contrary ways of life
between
virtue and vice
godliness and irreligion
is CERTAINLY VERY WRETCHED AND
DEPLORABLE.
1. This doubtful
uncertain way of living and thinking proceeds from
a mean state of mind
such as is beneath the dignity of human nature.
2. But the dignity of our nature
is a consideration capable of
touching but few. Let us go on therefore to more plain and affecting
considerations. For such an unsettled temper of mind as we have described
creates a great deal of trouble and disturbance to the man who is so unhappy as
to be master of it.
3. But further
such a temper
so distracted between contrary
inclinations and practices
is mischievous to a man in point of interest as
well as ease. For it renders him unfit for all the affairs and business of
life; incapable of forming advantageous designs with confidence
or of
persecuting them with effect.
4. But these are slight inconveniences
in comparison of what
follows; that such a wavering
uncertain temper of mind is utterly inconsistent
with the terms of salvation
and the hopes of eternal happiness. For it is not
an holiness taken up by fits and starts that can carry a man to heaven. It must
be a constant regular principle
influencing us throughout
that must do that.
II. Secondly
to
persuade the man that is thus bewildered To RETRIEVE HIMSELF BY SERIOUS
CONSIDERATION
AS SOON AS IS POSSIBLE AND TO FIX A SURE PRINCIPLE OF VIRTUE IN
HIS MIND
THAT MAY GUIDE AND GOVERN HIM THROUGHOUT
AND MAKE HIM UNIFORMLY WISE
AND HOLY. For which purpose I shall take leave to recommend two or three plain
but useful considerations.
1. And first
he that sets about this work must be sure that his
belief is right and sound at the bottom. For it is generally the uncertainty
and waveringness of this that produces all that unevenness and disorder in the
life and practice of mankind.
2. In the next place
consider well what that particular weight was
that in the days of his irresolution still hung upon him
and clogged all his
virtuous endeavours.
3. When he has thus settled his faith upon good ground
and armed
himself well against that sin which does so easily beset him (Hebrews 12:1)
he must take care not to
suffer himself to come within reach of anything that may anyways unfasten his
resolutions
whilst they are yet young and tender.
4. If to these endeavours he joins fervent and unwearied prayer to
Almighty God for the aids and support of His grace
he shall assuredly from
thence be made perfect at last
be established
strengthened
settled. He shall
have a new heart created in him
that shall enable him to be steadfast
immovable
always abounding in the work of the Lord (1 Corinthians 15:58). (Bp.
Atterbury.)
Reuben¡¦s instability
Here there is a reference to the forfeiture of the birthright by
Reuben
and the sin of which that was the punishment. Its commission is traced
to the geyser-like quality of Reuben¡¦s character
which burst forth
intermittently
now boiling up in a sudden surge
and now receding out of
sight. Of this peculiarity we have instances in his spasmodic and therefore
unsuccessful attempt to save the life of Joseph by getting him put into the
pit
and then leaving him
and in his altogether extravagant offer to allow his
two sons to be slain if he did not bring Benjamin safely back. Now
such a
temperament never achieves excellence. It lacks perseverance and steadiness of
application
and Jacob affirms that Reuben¡¦s posterity
taken after their
father in this respect
would never rise to any eminence in the nation. Nor did
they; for it is remarkable that not one of the judges belonged to this tribe.
It gave no great captain to the armies of Israel
and no name to the goodly
fellowship of the prophets in the laud. In the song of Deborah it is mentioned
with disapprobation among those who came not up to the help of the Lord; and
the unreliableness of its members may be referred to in the words
¡§For the
divisions of Reuben there were great thoughts of heart. Why abe(lest thou among
the sheepfolds to hear the bleatings of the flocks? For the divisions of Reuben
there were great searchings of heart.¡¨ So it passes down into the region that
is below mediocrity
and becomes the type of superficial and short-lived impulse
that dies away into inactivity and inefficiency. (W. M. Taylor
D. D.)
Instability unsuccessful
Some years ago
there was an eldest boy in one of our religious
schools--it was a school at Marlborough--and he was a Christian boy
and the
younger boys loved him
and they said that he did more good than the master; he
was such a Christian boy. I will not tell you his name
though I know it--he
was always first in every good thing--first in loving and fearing God; and he
did such good in Marlborough
that many boys said they owed a great deal indeed
to that boy. He was the eldest
Reuben is the eldest
and therefore you will
see his father calls him
in the verse before the text
¡§the excellency of
dignity
and the excellency of power
¡¨ and he calls him too ¡§unstable as
water.¡¨ Reuben had one great fault
and that spoiled him. Do you know what it
was? He was unstable.¡¨ What does that mean? ¡§Unstable.¡¨ I will tell you what
that word means exactly; it means that his character did not stand; he was
always changing; he was not steady to one thing: he was not a firm character:
and because he was not a firm or steady character
it spoiled all. Now it says
here
you see
that an ¡§unstable man¡¨ is like ¡§water.¡¨ Shall we think how he
can be like ¡§water¡¨? There are several sorts of water--what water shall we
think of? There is the sea
that is all water
and you know the sea is very
restless--it does not keep still--it is not the same one day as it is another
day--it occasionally looks a different colour
it sometimes looks green
sometimes blue
sometimes a kind of purple
sometimes whitey-brown; and then it
is always tossing about. You remember it says in Isaiah 57:20
¡§Thewicked are like the troubled
sea
when it cannot rest
whose waters cast up mire and dirt.¡¨ I do not think
that this is what the word means. Do you know how ¡§water¡¨ is made? Water is
made up of numbers and numbers of little round things called ¡§globules
¡¨ little
spheres; and they touch one another only at points
just like marbles in a bag;
they cannot stick to one another. To speak properly
there is not much
attraction or cohesion
because they are little round things; but they may be
easily separated. Now a piece of wood is altogether different
because it is
close
it is not composed of little round things. We can put our hands into a
basin of water and move it about
but we cannot put our hands into a piece of
wood
it is too firm; but as water sticks so little together
you can easily
move it. If you put some water in a basin on a table
and you walk across the
room
the water will move by the shaking; and even if you breathe upon it
the
breath will cause it to move. For this reason it is so ¡§unstable.¡¨ And you
cannot
you know
make water stand up by itself. Supposing you get some water
and try to make a pillar of the water
you cannot do so. If you try to make
water stand up by itself
it will not stand up. No
not even the most wonderful
man that ever lived in the world
could make water stand up like a pillar. So a
man that is ¡§unstable¡¨ cannot stand; he is always moving--that is what it
means. Think of the sea--think of the water in the basin--how it moves by a
little touch. You may try but I am sure you cannot make water stand up. It is
said of some people they are just like ¡§water
¡¨ they cannot stand; they are
always moving
always changing--¡§Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel.¡¨ Will
you look at Hosea 6:4 --¡§O Ephraim
what shall I do
unto thee? O Judah what shall I do untothee? For your goodness is as a morning
cloud
and as the early dew it goeth away.¡¨ Are you like that? Does all your
religion soon pass away
soon go? It is very often the case with little
children. I will tell you how it is. You kneel down to say your prayers
and
before you have gone through them your thoughts travel I don¡¦t know where; your
thoughts all wander.
Then you go to other things. You go to your studies; you may be
very diligent; you commence well; you open your books and begin to study
but
before you get a very little way you have looked at something which sends your
thoughts all wandering about; you do not keep steady; you are ¡§unstable.¡¨ Then
I will tell you another thing I think about some of you; that yon determine
that you will be good
and love God
and do what is right; and yet
after
perhaps a very little time
you break your resolution. You are ¡§ unstable.¡¨ I
will tell you a sad story. An old man was lying on a sick and dying bed
and he
sent for all his children. When they gathered round him he said something like
this: ¡§ My dear children
never grieve the Holy Spirit. Take warning by me.
When I was a little boy I had often religious instructions
but I did not take
much account of them till I was about sixteen. Then I had very strong religious
feelings--I had great convictions of sin
and I remember what I did. I remember
saying to myself
¡¥I must become a Christian
I must be religious
but I am
very young now; there are a great many pleasures
and I will take my pleasure
now
but will become religious soon.¡¦ And so I put it away
and went on till I
was twenty-five--just after I was married--and then came another
when it
seemed as if the Holy Spirit was striving with me again
for He was very
patient with me
and I had very strong religious feelings
and something seemed
to whisper to me ¡¥Now
now.¡¦ I remember what I did then. I said
¡¥ Now I am
married
and I must attend to my wife
to my home
and my children; I cannot
forget them just now.¡¦ And so it went on till I was forty. And when I was
forty
I remember how the Spirit worked in my heart again
and urged me very
strongly to decide for God. And again I said
¡¥I am a man of business
I can¡¦t
do it while I have to keep up my business; when I give up my business
then I
will give my whole heart to God.¡¦ And so it went on for another ten years
till
I was fifty
and then it once more came to me and said
¡¥Now is the accepted
time
now is the day of salvation.¡¦ I put it away more easily than I did
before; I thought that soon I should be a very old man
and then I should be
infirm and be obliged to stop in-doors
and then it would be the time to be
religious. But now I lie upon my sick-bed
and now it does not seem as if the
Holy Spirit is with me; He does not seem to draw me. I listen
I listen; but I
quenched the Spirit--I stifled conviction. I have gone through life without
Him
and now He seems gone! ¡¥Quench not the Spirit.¡¦¡¨ And he died. I am not
going to say
my dear children
whether that man was saved or not--God only
knows--he may be; Jesus may have saved him. I know he was very unhappy indeed
to look back and think when he was dying that
he had been so ¡§unstable.¡¨ Now I
will tell you one more thing in which I think you are like the ¡§water.¡¨ Don¡¦t
you find that you are very different
when you are with different sorts of
people? When you are with good people
you feel hew pleasant it is to be good!
Ah
when you go with another sort of people--wicked people
then you are like
the wicked people
and you act like them
and feel like them! You are always
like the people you are with--changing your character
and striving to please
everybody. There is avery awful instance in the Bible of a man who did that. Do
you know who it is? Pontius Pilate--he was like the people he was with. When he
was with Christ
he was a Christian; when he was with a Jew
he was like a Jew;
and when he was with a Roman
he was always like a Roman; and just see what he
did. He at last became so wicked that he crucified Christ! He was a weak
character. ¡§Unstable as water thou shalt not excel.¡¨ Now I think you see how
you are like ¡§water.¡¨ Do you remember whether it is so? I think it is.
Sometimes you have very good feelings
and they pass away like ¡§the dew¡¨ in the
morning. I think you make good resolutions and break them again. I think you
act according to the people you are with. And in all these things you are
¡§unstable¡¨ like the ¡§water.¡¨ Now God has said
my dear children
that if you
are ¡§unstable¡¨ like the ¡§water
¡¨ you ¡§shall not excel.¡¨ If you are restless and
changeable--if you are easily moved
like the ¡§water¡¨ in the basin
by the
breath of what anybody says
or the footsteps of a companion--if you cannot
stand up you will never be great. Now I come to the all-important thing. Are
you very weak
my dear children? Which is weaker--your bodies or your souls?
You have not very strong bodies
but your souls are weaker than your bodies
A
good old divine
one of the old Puritans
who lived a long time ago in England
says that he always had a broken wine glass
without the bottom
and around the
wine glass he used to have the text written--¡§Hold Thou me up
and I shall be
safe.¡¨ His soul was like the wine glass. To remind him how weak he was
he had
this wine glass before him with the text written around it--¡§Hold Thou me up
and I shall be safe.¡¨ How can we become more firm and strong that we may
¡§excel¡¨--that we may all be useful Christians? That is what I want you to think
about. One thing is (and I am going to tell you four things)
to keep your
promise
to be consistent and decided. That is one thing. Let us look at
something which does not change. It helps us very much if we want to do
anything steadily
to look steadily at steady things. For instance
when a man
is steering a ship
he must not look at the waves
he must look at the compass
or at some star; or when a man is ploughing a furrow
he must not look close to
him
but at some object at the end of the field
and then the furrow would be
straight; and if you want to walk along a plank
you must not look on the
plank
you must look at the end. Do that with your soul. Think how unchangeable
Jesus Christ has been to you ever since you were born. This is one thing; now I
come to the second. You will find
if you live long enough and think about it
that you cannot stand
and your soul cannot stand by itself. As soon as you get
a vine in your garden
and you wish to make that vine a splendid tree
you bind
it around something--all the little creepers must be entwined about something
for that purpose
else it will not become beautiful; and
oh I my dear
children
we are all of us creepers
we cannot live and grow unless we creep.
Well
let us look at Psalms 61:2 --¡§Lead me to the Rock that
is higher than I.¡¨ What a pretty prayer! ¡§Oh! I am a poor
weak little girl
(says one)
I cannot keep my good resolutions; oh! ¡¥lead me to the Rock that is
higher than I
¡¦--that is
Jesus Christ: He is the Rock
and He will hold me up.
And I shall twine around Christ
and shall get strong
because He is strong.¡¨ I
will tell you about a man who lived some time ago. When he was a boy
he was
very passionate
and often became very angry. This little boy had a very good
mother--a kind
pious mother; and this mother used to read the Bible with him
every morning
and she did what a great many good mothers do
when she had read
a passage she used to say to the boy
¡§Let us take a verse and think of it
during the day--have it for our motto for the day.¡¨ And one morning
when this
little boy had been in a great passion
and had been a very naughty boy indeed
when he went to read to his mother
she chose the sixty-first Psalm
and they read
it together
and she said
¡§Now
my dear boy
let us choose out of this Psalm a
verse that shall be for our text for the day; and I think the best will be
¡¥Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I.¡¦¡¨ And then she explained to him
that Jesus Christ was ¡§the Rock
¡¨ and that he could not conquer his temper if
he did not go to Jesus Christ for help
and if he loved Jesus Christ he would
be able to conquer himself; and he said
¡§I know I shall
I am sure I shall
I
will conquer myself; I feel so different
that I am sure I shall never be angry
again.¡¨ But
before the breakfast was over
the little boy was in a passion;
yet when he was in that passion
his text came to his mind
¡§O lead me to the
Rock that is higher than I¡¨: and he was conquered much sooner than was
generally the case
because he offered up the prayer
¡¨ O lead me to the Rock
that is higher than I He will conquer me.¡¨ That boy lived on
and had a great
many troubles in life. He was a young man who was very unkindly treated. I will
not tell you who it was; but he said he found his text like a talisman--that
is
a sort of charm; and whenever he was getting angry
he thought of these
words
¡§Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I and I shall conquer.¡¨ And
when that man came to lie upon his dying bed
a minister went to see him
and
he said
¡§What shall I read?¡¨ And he said
¡§Oh
read the sixty-first Psalm--I
owe everything to that--read it; oh
read it on!¡¨ and when the minister came to
the end of the second verse--¡§Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I
¡¨--the
sick man cried out
¡§Stop
stop; I can¡¦t tell you what I owe to my mother who
pointed out to me that verse when I was a little boy! She taught me to say
¡¥Lead me to the Rock that is higher than I¡¦; and so I was conquered.¡¨ Now I must
go on to my third point. If you are a weak character
and know it
you must not
expose yourself to temptation. Supposing a doctor came and said to you
¡§Now
you are a person who will very easily take a fever¡¨--would not you take great
care not to go near a place where you knew there was a fever? Would not you be
very careful? Supposing the cholera was very bad about
and you were told you
must be particularly careful what you ate or drank
for you would easily take
the cholera. Would not you be careful about your diet? I tell you
as the
physician of your soul
that you are a character that will easily catch sin.
Then
for God¡¦s sake
don¡¦t go near it--to danger; don¡¦t go in temptation¡¦s
way
lest you catch that most contagious disease--sin. Once more. Take good
care that you have some good foundation
as you are so ¡§unstable.¡¨ We may be
easily led--take care to have a good foundation. Some time ago a ship was
wrecked on the coast. She was riding at anchor
but she slipped her anchor
and
so
drifting
ran on shore. The sea was running very high; only a few were
saved on that dreadful night; they were saved by swimming on shore
or by
getting on planks. There was one man on board ship
who was as calm as possible
on that terrific night. One of the sailors went to him and said
¡§Do you not
know the danger? Don¡¦t you know we have lost our anchor
and are drifting on to
the shore? Our destruction is certain.¡¨ ¡§Oh
I know
I know
¡¨ he replied
¡§I
have an anchor for the soul
a castle built upon a rock
sure and steadfast.¡¨
And it was that which gave him such stability; because he had the anchor of the
soul
he could do anything. (J. Vaughan
M. A.)
Reuben
As the first-born
the full sprout of Jacob¡¦s strength
Reuben was
entitled according to natural right to the first rank among his brethren
the
leadership of the tribes
and a double share of the inheritance. This dignity
is expressed by Jacob in a few but simple words: ¡§Reuben
thou art my
firstborn
my might
and the beginning of my strength
the excellency of dignity
and the excellency of power.¡¨ Reuben¡¦s standing among his brethren could not
have been more exalted
and Jacob seems to set it before him in increased and
reiterated language. Dignities such as are implied in these words involve
tremendous responsibilities
which Reuben did not realise or fulfil. In equally
few but startling words
Jacob sets before him his sin and consequent judgment:
¡§Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel; because thou wentest up to thy
father¡¦s bed; then defiledst thou it; my couch is gone.¡¨ Reuben¡¦s sin was
sensuality
lust
by which he was carried away; and because of this dominating
propensity he would never excel. And what is the first truth taught us in this
dignity and utter failure of Reuben? It is the truth running through the entire
Scripture in every varied form--man¡¦s original dignity and his utter failure.
Its bud is seen in Eden at man¡¦s creation
and the full-blown fruit in the
awful and universal apostacy in the Book of Revelation. But there are other and
more startling truths shadowed forth in this sin of Reuben¡¦s. It is probable
that old Jacob had not resented that sin at the time
or that Reuben had
thought little of his father¡¦s deep wrong
and of the sorrow that had wrung his
heart in secret. In a little while it was passed over
and Reuben thought
nothing more of it. How often it is so with many. The crime they have committed
in secret has for the moment made the conscience uneasy. The deep wrong
inflicted has perhaps left some temporary compunction. But because no hand of
retribution has been laid upon them
and no shadow of vengeance has darkened
their path
it is soon forgotten. The pressure of business
and the round of
amusements
and the ten thousand influences driving the thoughts into new
channels
has forced it out of memory
and so the thing is forgotten. Nay
but
sin dogs the steps
and brings its consequences to light at unexpected moments
and in most unlikely ways. Here
years after its commission
it starts up to
darken the path of the criminal
surefooted though slow of pace to cast a
blight over all its prospects
and make a man feel that there is a judgment
awaiting him. Observe
again
how few trace their not excelling to some past
act which has tainted their whole moral and intellectual nature. Some secretly
gratified lust has given a downward impetus to the character
which has been
again and again repeated. These undisclosed chapters in the man¡¦s history are
the explanation of his ¡§instability¡¨ of character
just as the hectic flush on
the countenance betrays the deadly disease preying upon the vitals. There is no
remedy for such a state of things but a change of heart
a great and mighty
transformation
of soul by the Spirit of God. And even then
the taint of the
original sin will colour the natural life to the end
and can only be met by
constant watchfulness
struggle
and prayer. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Instability
Perfect stability has ceased from the world since the day when
Adam fell. He was stable enough when in the garden he was obedient to his
Master¡¦s will; but when he ate of the forbidden fruit he did not only slide
himself
but he shook the standing places of all his posterity. Perfect
stability belongs alone to God; He alone
of all beings
is without
variableness or shadow of a turning. He is immutable; He will not change. He is
all-wise; He need not change. He is perfect; He cannot change. But men
the
best of them
are mutable
and therefore to a degree they are unstable
and do
not excel. Yet it is remarkable that
although man has lost perfect stability
he has not lost the admiration of it. Perhaps there is no virtue
or
rather
no compound of virtues
which the world more esteems than stability of mind.
You will find that
although men have often misplaced their praise
and have
called those great who were not great
morally
but were far below the level of
morality
yet they have scarcely ever called a man great who has not been
consistent
who has not had strength of mind enough to be stable in his
principles. Now my brethren
if it be so in earthly things
it is so also in
spiritual. Instability in religion is a thing which every man despises
although every man has
to a degree
the evil in himself; but stability in the
firm possession and practice of godliness will always win respect
even from
the worldly
and certainly will not be forgotten by Him whose smile is honour
and whose praise is glory
even the great Lord and Master
before whom we stand
or fall. I have many characters here to-day whom I desire to address in the words
of my text. ¡§Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel.¡¨
I. First
then
to all Christians permit me to address myself. We are none of us stable as we
should be. We had a notion when we were first converted
that we should never
know a change; our soul was so full of love that we could not imagine it
possible we should ever flag in our devotion; our faith was so strong in our
Incarnate Master
that we smiled at older Christians who talked of doubts and
fears; our faces were so steadfastly set Zionward that we never imagined
By-path Meadow would ever be trodden by our feet. We felt sure that our course
would certainly be ¡§like the shining light
which shineth more and more unto
the perfect day.¡¨ But
my brethren
have we found it so? Have we not this day to
lament that we have been very changeable and inconstant
even unstable as
water? How unstable have we been in our frames? We have had more changes than
even this variable climate of ours. It is a great mercy for us that frames and
feelings are not always the index of our security; for we are as safe when we
are mourning as we are when we are singing; but
verily
if our true state
before God had changed as often as our experience of his presence
we must have
been cast into the bottomless pit years ago. And how variable have we been in
our faith! In the midst of one trouble we have declared
¡§though He slay me
yet will I trust in Him
¡¨ we have courted the jeer
we have laughed at the
scorn of the world
and have stood like rocks in the midst of foaming billows
when all men were against us; another week has seen us flying away
after
denying our Master
because like Peter
we were afraid of some little maid
or
of our own shadow. And have you not also
at times
my friends
felt variable
in your love? How unstable we are! At one time we are quite certain we are the
Lord¡¦s; though an angel from heaven should deny our election
or our adoption
we would reply that we have the witness of the Spirit that we are born of God
but perhaps within two minutes we shall not be able to say that we ever had one
spiritual feeling. We shall perhaps think we never repented aright
never fled
to Christ aright
and did never believe to the saving of soul. Oh! it is no
wonder that we do not excel
when we are such unstable creatures.
II. And now
leaving these general remarks I have to single out a certain class of persons.
I believe them to be TRUE CHRISTIANS
but they are Christians of a singular
sort. How many Christians have we in our churches that are unstable as water? I
suppose they were born so. They are just as unstable in business as they are in
religion; they open a grocer¡¦s shop
and shut it in three months
and turn
drapers
and when they have been drapers long enough to become almost
bankrupts
they leave that and try something else. When they were boys they
could never play a game through; they must always be having something fresh:
and now they are just as childish as when they were children. Look at them in
doctrine
you never know where to find them. Oh ye unstable Christians
hear ye
the word of the Lord! ¡§Unstable as water
thou shalt not excel.¡¨ Your life
shall have little of the cream of happiness upon it: you shall not walk in the
midst of the King¡¦s highway
in which no lion shall be found
but you shall walk
on the edge of the way
where you shall encounter every danger
feel every
hardship and endure every ill. You shall have enough of God¡¦s comfort to keep
you alive
but not enough to give you joy in your spirit and consolation in
your heart. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Reuben the unstable
1. Reuben seems to have been a man who exercised no control over
himself. He schooled himself to no particular line of thought or work
but was
carried hither and thither by every momentary desire or passion.
2. Jacob¡¦s prophecy concerning Reuben was a true one. His weakness
and character and its baneful influence would have seem to have affected all
his posterity. There is no record of any great action
and no mention of any
judge or prophet or leader of any kind belonging to the tribe of Reuben.
3. The character of this man is by no means a rarity. There are
those who have had every advantage of birth
education
and social position to
start with in life; but from the first they were so shifting in purpose
so
volatile in character
and so apt to be carried away by impulse and passion
that they have not benefited by their superior advantages
and have utterly
failed to make progress in the race of life.
4. It is the curse of sin
that it unnerves man
destroying the
nobility of his character and bringing him down to be the slave of his lower
nature.
5. The great secret of excellence lies in steadiness and
perseverance. (J. Menzies.)
Example of indecision
Pilate exhibited a sad degree of vacillation
inconsistency
indecision. Now he throws all blame upon the priests: ¡§I am innocent of His
blood; see ye to it.¡¨ Again he takes the entire responsibility upon himself.
¡§Knowest Thou not that I have power to crucify Thee
and power to release?¡¨ Now
he pronounces Jesus innocent
yet with the same breath proposes to have Him
punished as guilty; now he gives Him up
and then he has recourse to every kind
of expedient to rescue. Unstable as water
he does not
he cannot succeed. He
allowed others to dictate to him. Carelessly and inconsiderately
he submits
that to their judgment which he should have kept wholly within his own hold. He
becomes thus as a wave of the sea
as a feather in the air
which every breeze
of heaven bloweth about as it listeth. (Dr. Hanna.)
Vacillation of indecision--
A man without decision can never be said to belong to himself;
since
if he dared to assert that he did
the puny force of some cause about as
powerful you would have supposed as a spider
may make a seizure of the hapless
boaster the very next moment
and contemptuously exhibit the futility of the
determinations by which he was to have proved the independence of his
understanding and his will. He belongs to whatever can make capture of him
and
one thing after another vindicates its right to him
by arresting him while he
is trying to go on; as twigs and chips floating near the edge of a river
are
intercepted by every weed and whirled in every little eddy. Having concluded on
a design
he may pledge himself to accomplish it--if the hundred diversities of
feeling which may come within the week will let him. His character precluding
all foresight of his conduct
he may sit and wonder what form and direction his
views and actions are destined to take to-morrow; as a farmer has often to
acknowledge that next day¡¦s proceedings are at the disposal of its winds and
clouds. (J. Foster.)
Weakness of indecision
Incapable of setting up a firm purpose on the basis of things as
they are
he is often employed in vain speculations on some different
supposable state of things which would have saved him from all this perplexity
and irresolution. He thinks what a determined course he could have pursued if
his talents
his health
his age had been different; if he had been acquainted
with some one person sooner; if his friends were on this or the other point
different from what they are; or if fortune had showered her favours on him.
And he gives himself as much license to complain as if all these advantages had
been among the rights of his nativity
but refused by a malignant or capricious
fate to his life. Thus he is occupied
instead of marking with a vigilant eye
and seizing with a strong hand all the possibilities of his actual situation. (J.
Foster.)
Example of indecision
He was--i.e. Balaam--as an old writer remarks
one of those
unstable men whom the apostle calls ¡§doubleminded
¡¨ an ambi-dexter in religion
like Redwald king of the East Saxons
the first that was baptised
who (as
Camden relates) had in the same church one altar for the Christian religion
and another for sacrificing to devils; and a loaf of the same leaven was our
resolute Rufus
that painted God on one side of his shield and the devil on the
other
with this desperate inscription
In utrunque paratus--¡§ready for
either.¡¨
Not wavering
It is related of Alexander the Great
that
being asked how it was
that he had conquered the world
he replied
¡§By not wavering.¡¨
The decided man
Behold the decided man! He may be a most evil man; he may be
grasping
avaricious
covetous
unprincipled
still
look how the difficulties
of life know the strong man
and give up the contest with him. A universal
homage is paid to the decided man as soon as he appears among men. He walks by
the light of his own judgment; he has made up his mind; and having done so
henceforth action is before him. He cannot bear to sit amidst unrealised
speculations; to him speculation is only valuable that it may be resolved into
living and doing. There is no indifference
no delay. The spirit is in arms;
all is in earnest. Thus Pompey
when hazarding his life on a tempestuous sea in
order to be at Rome on an important occasion
said
¡§It is necessary for me to
go; it is not necessary for me to live.¡¨ Thus Caesar
when he crossed the
Rubicon
burned the ships upon the shore which brought his soldiers to land
that there might be no return. (E. P. Hood.)
Evils of inconstancy
An inconstant and wavering mind
as it makes a man unfit for
society (for that there can be no assurance of his words or purposes
neither
can we build on them without deceit)
so
besides that
it makes a man
ridiculous
it hinders him from ever attaining any perfection in himself (for a
rolling stone gathers no moss
and the mind
while it would be everything
proves nothing. Oft changes cannot be without loss); yea
it keeps him from
enjoying that which he hath attained. For it keeps him ever in work
building
pulling down
selling
changing
buying
commanding
forbidding. So
while he
can be no other man¡¦s friend
he is the least his own. It is the safest course
for a man¡¦s profit
credit and ease
to deliberate long
to resolve surely
hardly to alter
not to enter upon that whose end he sees not unanswerable
and
when he is once entered not to surcease till he have attained the end he
foresaw. So may he
to good purpose
begin a new work when he hath well
finished the old. (Bp. Hall.)
Difficulty of decision:
¡§I have often made stern resolutions not to overwork myself
and
to take more relaxation; but ¡¥no¡¦ is not learnt in a day.¡¨ (George Moore.)
A contrast of decision:
When general Suwaroff commanded
under the Prince of Coburg
on
the frontiers of Turkey
he had an army of twenty-five thousand men. Coburg
himself had thirty-seven thousand
and the Turks only twenty-eight thousand.
Prince Coburg¡¦s army
which had taken a good position on a rising ground
about
nine miles distant from Suwaroff
was attacked and obliged to fall back. Coburg
then wrote to Suwaroff
¡§I was attacked this morning by the Turks. I have lost
my position and artillery. I send you no instructions what to do. Use your own
judgment
only let me know what you have done as soon after as you can.¡¨
Suwaroff immediately sent the following answer
¡§I shall attack the Turks
to-morrow morning
drive them from your position
and retake your cannon.¡¨
Before three o¡¦clock in the afternoon Surwaroff kept his word; and Coburg¡¦s
army had the cannon and their old position before night.
The prophecy respecting Reuben:
That the tribe of Reuben did not excel is evident at the first
glance of Hebrew history. At the time of the Exodus it was but the seventh in
population
and
before entering Canaan
its numbers had so far diminished that
it was then the ninth (Numbers 1:21; Numbers 26:5). On the division of the
Promised Land
the Reubenites received an inheritance on the east side of the
Jordan
where they were exposed to the incursions of surrounding nations (Numbers 32:1; Joshua 1:14
&c.)
and it is
observable that they were among the first of the tribes of Israel who were
carried away by the kings of Assyria (see 1 Chronicles 5:26). (Thornley
Smith.)
Strong resolution:
It is a miserable thing to see men and women driven before the
wind like thistledown. You can make your choice whether
if I may so say
you
shall be like balloons that are at the mercy of the gale
and can only shape
their course according as it comes upon them and blows them along; or like
steamers that have an inward power that enables them to keep their course from
whatever point the wind blows; or like some sharply-built sailing ship
that
with a strong hand at the helm
and canvas rightly set
can sail almost in the
teeth of the wind and compel it to bear it along in all but the opposite
direction to that in which it would carry her if she lay like a log on the
water. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
An irresolute man:
Surely there is nothing walks the earth more contemptible
as well
as more certainly evil
than a man who lets himself be made by whatever force
may happen to be strongest near him
and fastening up his helm
and unshipping
his oars
is content to be blown about by every vagrant wind
and rolled in the
trough of each curling wave. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Man united to the strong
We must be made fast to something that is fast
if we are not to
be swept like thistledown before the wind. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
A strong purpose in life:
What a noble thing any life becomes
that has driven through it
the strength of a uniting single purpose
like a strong shaft of iron bolting
together the two tottering walls of some old building. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Verses 5-7
Simeon and Levi are brethren
The blessing of Simeon and Levi:
I.
THEIR
SIN.
1. Immoderate revenge.
2. Cruelty to unoffending beasts.
3. Their cruelty was deliberate.
II. THEIR PENALTY.
1. To be disavowed by the good.
2. Their deed is branded with a curse.
3. They are condemned to moral and political weakness. (T.
H.Leale.)
Simeon and Levi
The passage begins by declaring ¡§Simeon and Levi are brethren.¡¨
¡§Brethren¡¨ not merely as having the same parents
but in thought
feeling
action. ¡§Instruments of cruelty are in their habitations.¡¨ Such wickedness had
these two brothers committed (see chap. 34. 25th and following verses) that
Jacob could have no sympathy with it. As they had joined together to commit it
so righteous retribution was to follow. They were to be ¡§ divided¡¨ and ¡§
scattered.¡¨ Thus the murderous propensity of their nature would bring untold
trouble upon Israel
and only by breaking this union and scattering them
throughout Israel could their power for evil be weakened. They should form no
independent or compact tribes. This sentence was so strikingly fulfilled when
Canaan was conquered
that on the second numbering under Moses
Simeon had
become the weakest of all the tribes (see Numbers 26:14).
1. Among the many lessons taught by the conduct of this tribe let us
notice first
that though men may be ¡§brethren
¡¨ there may be underneath this
hallowed term principles utterly at variance with it. How sacred may be the
outward sign
how suggestive of all that is commendable and holy
how hideous
the principles it covers! The whited sepulchre may indeed cover the revolting
sight of dead men¡¦s bones. Such terms are the outward memorials of what should
be
but too often they serve to represent their very opposite. One bearing the
holiest of all names
Christian
may have a devil at heart.
2. Mark another truth. ¡§Their swords are weapons of violence
¡¨ the
patriarch says--the ¡§anger was fierce
¡¨ the ¡§wrath was cruel.¡¨ The sword is a
lawful weapon. Anger may be right and wrath too. It is when they degenerate
into ¡§violence
¡¨ ¡§fierceness
¡¨ and ¡§cruelty¡¨ that they become sin. From being
instruments of righteousness it is an easy transition to become instruments of
Satan. And let not our inveterate self-righteousness take refuge under the covering
that because no such crime as ¡§houghing the oxen¡¨ is ours
therefore we are all
right before God. Is it possible for such an easy self-deception: Yes
possible
and the thought of many
yea of most. What I is there not adultery in
a ¡§look¡¨? Is there not murder in a feeling?
3. And observe
it is the sin that is cursed and not the sinner:
¡§Cursed be their anger
for it was fierce; and their wrath
for it was cruel.¡¨
It is the same all through the Bible. The sinner is never cursed apart from the
sin that is in him. And for this sin which draws down that curse God has made a
rich provision in Christ¡¦s precious blood. If the sinner is cursed it is
because he loves his sin
and clings to it
and will not have it removed. ¡§The
blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin.¡¨ Sin must be cursed. And if the
sinner will not avail himself of the remedy
but still cleave to his sin
then
he may be cursed with it--¡§the wrath of God abideth on him.¡¨
4. Observe another truth in the history of these tribes in conjunction
with that of Reuben in the last chapter. It is this
that the result of all
sin
all living to the flesh
is diminution. Reuben¡¦s sin led to it
for Moses
had to pray that he might have a ¡§few men¡¨ left
and not become altogether
extinct. Simeon and Levi were to be ¡§divided¡¨ and¡¨ scattered¡¨; and both
traceable to one cause--giving way to the flesh
to sensuality and self-will.
Yes
living to self
to sin
to anything lower than Christ
does diminish. It
makes us little--increasingly little. It banishes every vestige of largeness
and greatness and grandness from our character
and from everything about us.
We become little hearted
little souled
little in our ways of looking at
things.
5. Lastly
let Jacob¡¦s word of warning go forth to every Christian: ¡§O
my soul
come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly
mine honour
be
not thou united.¡¨ The patriarch
as he thinks of their sin
traces its source
to a ¡§secret¡¨ spring
and its manifestation in an ¡§assembly.¡¨ He
warns us to have nothing to do with one or the other. The outward association
and the secret spring are both alike dangerous to the soul. Like the Psalmist
in his first Psalm
he would
as a faithful sentinel
warn us against coming in
the way of either. And it is well
when evil is around us
to talk to one¡¦s own
soul about it all. ¡§O my soul
come not thou into their secret; mine honour
be
not thou united.¡¨ To make a clamour is easy. But let us watch our own souls
and all such meditation should have one effect--one of solemnity
separation
holiness: ¡§Come not thou into their secret; unto their assembly
mine honour
be not thou united.¡¨ If there is anything of God in you
then
¡§be not
thou united.¡¨ No union with the flesh
or with aught that is contrary to God. (F.
Whitfield
M. A.)
The tutor¡¦s prediction respecting Tiberius
Theodorus Gaddaraeus
who was tutor to Tiberius the Roman Emperor
observing in him
while a boy
a very sanguinary nature and disposition
which
lay lurking under a show of levity
was wont to call him ¡§a lump of clay
steeped and soaked in blood.¡¨ His predictions of him did not fail in the event.
Tiberius thought death was too light a punishment for any one that displeased
him. Hearing that one Carnulius who had displeased him had cut his own throat
¡§Carnulius
¡¨ said he
¡§has escaped me.¡¨ To another
who begged of him that he
might die quickly
¡§No
¡¨ said he
¡§you are not so much in favour as that yet.¡¨
(Moral and Religious Anecdotal.)
A curse or a blessing
I would remind you of the different histories of the tribes of
Simeon and Levi
as being alike fulfilments of one and the same prophecy. That
was not because the prediction itself was
like some of the heathen oracles
so
vague or so ambiguous that it could not be falsified by any event
for the
phrases
¡§I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel
¡¨ are both
definite and clear. But the explanation is to be found in the subsequent
conduct of the men of Levi
as contrasted with that of the men of Simeon
whereby in the one case the prophecy took the ultimate character of a blessing
and in the other it kept that of a curse. Now this was in the lifetime of a
tribe which extended over hundreds of years
but something not dissimilar may
occur in the lifetime of an individual. Let us suppose that two men have been
guilty of the same sin
and that as the penal consequence they have both had to
bear the same thing
namely
separation from their native land and virtual
transportation to a new and strange country. But the one
unwarned thereby
continues in his wicked ways
and goes down and down in iniquity
until he
ceases to be recognizable even by those who look for him; while the other
moved to penitence
begins a new career
earns an honourable independence
gives himself to public affairs
and becomes a benefactor to the colony or the
state
so that at length his name is everywhere mentioned with gratitude and
respect. Here the proximate results in both cases were the same
but the
ultimate how different! and all owing to the different dispositions of the two
men. Nor is this an improbable supposition; you may have come on many eases
like it
and they are all full of warning to some and encouragement to others
not only for the present life
but also for that which is to come. Up to a
certain point we have power
by our penitence
to make blessing for ourselves
for the life that now is and for that which is to come; nay
even after we have
lost the first opportunity
there may come another on a lower plane; but at
length there is a limit
beyond which all such opportunities cease
and we must
¡§dree our weird¡¨ eternally. (W. M. Taylor
D. D.)
Verses 8-12
Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise
The blessing of Judah:
I.
THAT
HE SHOULD WIN THE PRAISE OF HIS BRETHREN.
II. THAT HE SHOULD
BE THE TYPE OF THE VICTORIOUS HERO.
1. A growing power.
2. A. righteous power.
3. A power to be dreaded.
III. THAT HE SHOULD
BE THE TYPE OF THE MESSIAH.
1. In his sovereignty. For--
2. In his prosperity. (T. H. Leale.)
Judah¡¦s praise:
I. JUDAH¡¦S
PRAISE.
1. He is first in intercession.
2. He is first in wisdom.
3. He takes precedence in offering (see Numbers 7:12).
4. He takes precedence in march (see Numbers 10:14; Judges 1:2). In all things he has the
pre-eminence (Psalms 68:67-68).
II. JUDAH¡¦S
TRIUMPHS ABROAD. ¡§Thy hand shall be in the neck of thine enemies.¡¨ Illustrate
by life of David--He passed through severe conflicts 1 Samuel 17:34-36). He gained great
victories (2 Chronicles 13:14). He founded a
peaceful empire. He utterly crushed the forces of his foes
and broke the neck
of all opposition. So has our Lord done by His life
death
resurrection
reigning power
and second coming.
III. JUDAH¡¦S
HONOURS AT HOME. ¡§Thy father¡¦s children shall bow down before thee.¡¨
1. He became the head of the family.
2. He was clothed with lion-like power. ¡§He couched as a lion
and
as an old lion¡¨ (see verse 9). ¡§The lion of the tribe of Judah hath prevailed¡¨ Revelation 5:5).
3. He is the centre of our assembling. ¡§To him shall the gathering
of the people be¡¨ (verse 10).
4. His glory is His meekness. ¡§Binding his foal
¡¨ &c. (verse
11). ¡§Thy King cometh
meek and sitting upon a colt the foal of an ass¡¨ (Matthew 21:5).
5. The wine hath at His first and second advent makes Him lovely in
our eyes (verses 11
12); also ¡§I have trodden the wine-press alone¡¨ (Isaiah 63:1-3).
6. He is king to us for ever. Hallelujah (see Hosea 11:12). ¡§Ephraim compasseth me
about with lies
and the house of Israel with deceit: but Judah yet ruleth with
God.¡¨ Are we among the foes against whom He fights as a lion? Let us beware how
we rouse Him up (verse 9). Are we among His friends for whom He fights? Let us
praise Him with all our hearts
and now bow down before Him. Are we not His Father¡¦s
children? Do we hunger and thirst after heavenly food? See in the 12th verse
how abundant are wine and milk with Him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The blessing of Judah
The first verse of Jacob¡¦s blessing on Judah begins with the final
triumph of the tribe and victory over all its foes. It then descends to details
as to how this victory will be accomplished. As we look at it let us read in it
the history of the Lion of the tribe of Judah. There are consecutive stages in
the verses
beginning with the highest in the first line of the first verse of
the text: ¡§Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise.¡¨ The order of
these verses is one of constant occurrence in the Bible. The issue
great
grand
and glorious
is first stated
then we descend to the details by which
it is brought about. ¡§Thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise.¡¨ Praise is
the final note and the never ending one to the Lord Jesus Christ. It begins
when the soul is first brought to know experimentally the Lord Jesus Christ
in
His Person and in His work
as the Lion of the tribe of Judah. Praise for the
pardon of all guilt and the forgiveness of all sin through the precious blood
of Jesus. Praise for that wondrous love that has stooped down to our lowest
condition and lifted us up out of the pit of corruption to His throne of glory.
And whence is the source of all this joy and praise now and hereafter? We have
it in the next clause: ¡§Thy hand shall be in the neck of Thine enemies.¡¨ It is
that hand of which we read so much in God¡¦s Word. ¡§He laid His right hand upon
me.¡¨ ¡§And Jesus stretched forth His hand.¡¨ These and such passages tell us what
it means. It is Christ putting forth His power over every foe. He conquered
death and hell. He conquers still every foe thou hast. Therefore it is that ¡§Thy
Father¡¦s children bow down to Thee.¡¨ For whom have we in heaven or on earth
like Him! There is none like Thee! Lord
to whom shall we go?
Let every tongue be vocal with Thy praise
every heart bow down at
Thy feet. Let all our powers
all that is nearest and dearest
be laid there.
Yes
¡§the father¡¦s children shall bow down before Him.¡¨ The whole of Israel and
Judah shall bow down before Jesus. He is their Messiah and their King. But
observe further how this is brought about. ¡§Judah is a lion¡¦s whelp: from the
prey
my son
thou art gone up: he stooped down
he couched as a lion and as an
old lion: who shall rouse him up?¡¨ The words point to something far greater and
deeper in spiritual import. In this graphic picture we behold the Lion of the
tribe of Judah
the Lord Jesus Christ. In the young lion ripening into full
strength as a growing lion
and becoming the ancestor of the lion tribe
we see
the growth of this Lion from infancy to manhood. ¡§He shall grow up before Him
as a tender plant and as a root out of a dry ground.¡¨ ¡§But thou
Bethlehem
Ephratah
though thou be little among the thousands of Judah
yet out of thee
shall He come forth unto Me that is to be ruler in Israel
whose goings forth
have been from of old from everlasting. And the remnant of Jacob shall be among
the Gentiles in the midst of many people as alien among the beasts of the
forest
as a young lion among the flocks of sheep: who
if he go through
both
treadeth down and teareth in pieces
and none can deliver¡¨ (Micah 5:2-8). ¡§He couched; he lay down as
a lion
and as a great lion; who shall stir him up?¡¨ Numbers 24:9). In all these passages we
see the Lion of the tribe of Judah going forth at the head
and as the Leader
of His people Israel. And what is the meaning of the lion seizing its prey and
then ascending to its lair in the mountains? What but that same Lion of the
tribe of Judah
the Son of God from heaven
seizing its prey and conquering it
when He laid down His life on the cross. There He met every foe
and gained His
great victory over the devil
over sin and death and the grave. There He seized
the prey
and from that great fight and victory ¡§He went up¡¨--up to His
Father¡¦s throne as man¡¦s great Representative. And so we have Him brought
before Revelation 5:5-6) in the double character
as the Lamb of God
the Sin-bearer of the human race
and in the royal dignity
of the Lion of the tribe of Judah. Yes
our Jesus went up from the prey
and as
He went up
ten thousand times ten thousands of angels uttered their voices
¡§Lift up your heads
O ye gates; and be ye lift up
ye everlasting doors; and
the King of Glory shall come in. Who is this King of Glory? The Lord
strong
and mighty; the Lord
mighty in battle. Who is this King of Glory? The Lord of
hosts
He is the King of Glory¡¨ (Psalms 24:7-8; Psalms 24:10). But there is another
figure in the picture drawn by Jacob. The figure of a lion is followed by that
of a lioness
peculiarly fierce in defending its young. Have we not here the
Lion of the tribe of Judah as the Avenger of His people
coming forth to
execute judgment upon the nations? At present we see this Lion ¡§ stooping
down
¡¨ ¡§couching
¡¨ waiting for that moment when He shall come forth to seize
upon the prey. ¡§From the prey¡¨ He has indeed ¡§gone up¡¨; but He is to return
again as the Lion of the tribe of Judah to ¡§take vengeance on them that know
not God
and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ¡¨ (2 Thessalonians 1:7-10; Romans 11:26; John 14:2-3; Acts 1:11; Revelation 19:11-15; Mt Amos 3:11; Revelation 1:7; Hebrews 9:28; Isaiah 11:10-11; Philippians 3:20-21; 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17; Zechariah 14:4-5). But to pass on to the
remaining portion of the text: ¡§The sceptre shall not depart from Judah
nor a
lawgiver from between his feet
till Shiloh come
and unto Him shall the
gathering of the people be.¡¨ A sceptre is the symbol of regal command
and
in
its earliest form
it was a long staff which the king held in his hand when
speaking in public assemblies; when he sat upon his throne he rested it ¡§
between his feet¡¨ inclining towards himself. The idea is that Judah was to have
the rule
the chieftainship
till Shiloh came. We must also bear in mind that
the coming of Shiloh was not to terminate the rule of Judah. It would then only
attain to full dominion in the Person of the Lion of the tribe of Judah. Judah
was to bear the sceptre with victorious lion-courage until
in the future
Shiloh
the obedience of the nations came to Him
and through Him eventually
widening into the peaceful government of the world. The term ¡§ Shiloh¡¨
is strikingly confirmatory of this view in relation to Christ and His work.
Critically it means ¡§rest
¡¨ ¡§peace
¡¨ ¡§quietness.¡¨ So Christ is called the
Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6). ¡§In His time
¡¨ it is said
¡§there shall be abundance of peace so long as the moon endureth¡¨ (Psalms 72:7). Again
¡§This Man shall be
our peace¡¨ (Micah 5:5). Of Christ
it is said
¡§peace
on earth¡¨ was sung by angels at His birth. His own words were
¡§Peace I leave
with you; My peace I give unto you¡¨: ¡§Come unto Me
all ye that are weary and
heavy laden
and I will give you rest¡¨: and again
¡§Take My yoke upon you
and
learn of Me: and ye shall find rest unto your souls¡¨: again
¡§These things have
I spoken unto you that in Me ye might have peace.¡¨ Peace
rest
and quietness
these are the meaning of ¡§Shiloh
¡¨ and they are all fulfilled in the Lord Jesus
Christ. But let us mark another expression of Jacob¡¦s with reference to this
Shiloh: ¡§unto Him shall the gathering of the people be.¡¨ Two meanings are
wrapped up in these words. First
Shiloh is the Gatherer; and secondly
He gathers
to Himself. Mark how our blessed Lord confirms this Himself: ¡§I
if I be lifted
up from the earth
will draw all men unto Me.¡¨ This the Lord Jesus is doing now
in grace; but the full accomplishment has not yet taken place. The time is
drawing near when ¡§all kings shall bow down before Him
all nations shall serve
Him.¡¨ ¡§As I live
saith the Lord
to Me every knee shall bow
every tongue
shall confess.¡¨ And the time is at hand. We can even now hear the sound of His
chariot wheels in the distance. The Church¡¦s journey is nearly done. All things
tell us that the morning is at hand
and with that morning the joyous greeting
and the eternal gladness
the sun that shall no more go down
and the
hallelujahs of a multitude that no man can number meeting in the house of their
Father to go no more out. Blessed morning
long expected! Hasten thy dawning
upon our troubled world; Yea
¡§come
Lord Jesus
come quickly!¡¨ But to revert
once more to Jacob¡¦s blessing on Judah. Observe the superabundance of Judah¡¦s
blessings
and their deep spiritual import: ¡§binding his foal unto the vine;
and his ass¡¦s colt unto the choice vine; he washed his garments in wine
and
his clothes in the blood of grapes.¡¨ ¡§His eyes shall be red with wine
and his
teeth white with milk.¡¨ Judah is here depicted as having attained
even before
the coming of Shiloh
to a rest acquired by victory over surrounding foes
and
enjoying in peaceful repose the abundance of his inheritance. But such a view
is far from exhausting the words here brought before us. Indeed
in no full
sense were they ever realized in the tribe of Judah. It is to the many and
great spiritual blessings of the Lion of the tribe of Judah these words refer.
We read of ¡§the love of Christ that passeth knowledge¡¨; of ¡§joy unspeakable and
full of glory¡¨; that if all the things about Jesus were to be written ¡§the
world itself could not contain the books that should be written;¡¨ that ¡§eye
hath not seen
nor ear heard
neither have entered into the heart of man to
conceive
the things that God hath prepared for them that love Him.¡¨ And let us
notice
every one of these blessings are directly connected with Christ
Himself. The word ¡§His
¡¨ which runs through these verses
shows us this. ¡§His
eyes red¡¨; ¡§His teeth white¡¨; ¡§His garments washed in wine¡¨; ¡§His clothes in
the blood of grapes.¡¨ Such expressions remind us of the Song of Solomon
in
which the Beloved is described in similar language. They all show us the
preciousness of the Person of the Lord Jesus; just as the beloved apostle loved
to dwell upon it in his description in Revelation 1:13-16. (F. Whitfield
M.
A.)
Verse 10
The sceptre shall not depart from Judah
nor a lawgiver from
between his feet
until Shiloh come; and unto Him shall the gathering of the
people be
A revelation of Christ:
I.
Using
the word prophecy in its predictive sense
this is THE LANGUAGE OF
UNQUESTIONABLE PROPHECY.
II. This prophecy
contains REVELATION OF CHRIST.
III. This
revelation of Christ was connected with the announcement of THE PARTICULAR TIME
WHEN HE WAS TO APPEAR.
IV. This
announcement is connected with a statement showing IN WHAT WAY HIS PEOPLE WILL
COME TO HIM. It is at once predictive and descriptive.
V. This statement
suggests an inquiry into THE DESIGN OF CHRIST IN GATHERING THE PEOPLE TO
HIMSELF. In harmony with His title as ¡§the Peaceful One
¡¨ His grand design is
to give them rest.
1. Rest
by reconciling them to God.
2. Rest
by effecting the spiritual union of man with man.
3. Rest
by leading us to perfect rest in another world. (C.
Stanford
D. D.)
The Shiloh; or
the world¡¦s tranquilizer:
I. THE FULFILLED
PART OF THIS PROPHECY CONCERNING CHRIST.
1. That Judah should have regal power.
2. The continuation of this authority up to a certain time.
3. The fulfilled part of this prophecy shows two things--
(a) His faithfulness
strictly adhering to His word through the sweep
of ages.
(b) His almightiness
so over-ruling the affairs of nations and of
generations as to bring about to the very hour the facts He foretold.
II. THE FULFILLING
PART OF THIS PROPHECY. ¡§Unto Him shall the gathering of the people be.¡¨
1. Self-sacrificing kindness attracts men.
2. Marevellousness attracts men.
3. Promise of good attracts men.
4. Sublime grandeur attracts men. (Homilist.)
The promised Shiloh:
I. THE TITLE OF
THE SAVIOUR.
1. A messenger
or one who is sent (John 6:29; John 6:38; John 6:57; John 7:16; John 28:9-33).
2. Peace-maker (Ephesians 2:13; Colossians 1:20).
3. Prosperous Saviour.
II. THE APPEARING
OF THE MESSIAH.
1. He was to be of the tribe of Judah.
2. He was to come before the rule and authority of the tribe of
Judah should cease.
III. THE WORK OF
THE MESSIAH ¡§Unto Him shall the gathering of the people be.¡¨ They are
gathered--
1. To His cross as the source of salvation.
2. To His cause as His devoted followers.
3. To His Church as the visible friends of His kingdom.
4. To His royal standard as His loyal and obedient subjects.
5. To His glorious kingdom as the trophies of His grace
to shine
forth in the lustre of purity and blessedness for ever and ever.
Learn:
1. The true character of the Lord Jesus. He is the promised Shiloh.
2. Have we been brought to a saving experimental knowledge of His
grace?
3. The full accomplishment of the text is yet to come. (J. Burns
D. D.)
The prophecy of Jacob respecting Shiloh:
I. It will be
proper
first
TO CONSIDER THE PROPHECY AND ITS FULFILMENT. Until the period at
which it was delivered the nation of Israel was not divided into tribes; but
from this period it was always so divided. The prophecy asserts that the
sceptre should not depart from the tribe of Judah until a personage here denominated
Shiloh should appear.
1. What we are to understand by the term ¡§sceptre
¡¨ as here
employed
is the whole question: whether it relates to regal authority
as some
suppose. This appears improbable; for
in the first place
the regal sceptre
was not specially placed in the tribe of Judah
and could not be said to depart
from that tribe more than another; secondly
Saul was of the tribe of Benjamin
not of Judah; neither were the Maccabeans of Judah¡¦s tribe. ¡§Sceptre¡¨ here
denotes a staff of office; each tribe had its rod of power
and the meaning is
that the authority of a tribe should remain in Judah until the period specified
should arrive. After the three captivities the ten tribes
which had been
separated from those of Judah and Benjamin in the reign of Rehoboam
were lost
and blended among the nations. But Judah and Benjamin
thenceforward regarded
as one tribe
still possessed its rod of authority
and hence the name of Jew
derived from Judah
was used to mark the whole nation. Judah remained as a
separate people during the captivity at Babylon.
2. The term ¡§lawgiver¡¨ must be limited in its interpretation by the
term ¡§sceptre.¡¨
3. Concerning the meaning of the term ¡§Shiloh
¡¨ which occurs only in
the text
various opinions have been proposed; the most probable is that it
denotes the Peace-maker
Jesus Christ
who came (as the angels celebrated His
nativity) to give ¡§peace on earth¡¨; or
as others think
it may mark Him as
¡§sent
¡¨ and thus be taken as the same word with ¡§Siloam
¡¨ which the evangelist
interprets as ¡§sent¡¨; He continually spoke of Himself as one whom God
had ¡§sent.¡¨
4. The prophecy proceeds to state that ¡§to Him shall the gathering
of the people be¡¨; words which express the dependence of faith
the allegiance
of hope
which would centre in the promised Lord of all. Jesus Christ is the
bond of a new society on earth!
II. BY WAY OF
BRIEF IMPROVEMENT OBSERVE--
1. The force of prophecy as an evidence of inspiration. The sign and
test of prophecy is its fulfilment
according to the rule laid down by Moses
¡§if the word does not take place the Lord has not spoken.¡¨
2. The dignity of our Lord. He appears as the chief
the central
object of prophecy; the light that illuminates its obscurity.
3. The consolation which believers may derive from the character
which our Saviour sustains.
4. Our assembling on this and similar occasions proves the truth of
the prediction; it is a comment on the words
¡§To Him shall the gathering of
the people be.¡¨ Why are we not Gentile idolaters? it is because ¡§Shiloh¡¨ has
appeared among us.
5. Observe
as the last thing
the vanity of Jewish hope. The people
to whom He came are still ¡§looking for another¡¨: contradicting all prophecy
all history! But when the fulness of the Gentiles shall come in
when the times
of the Gentiles shall be fulfilled
the children of Judah shall yet be visited
with the Spirit of grace and supplications; ¡§ they shall look on Him whom they
have pierced; and shall mourn for Him as one that mourneth for his first-born.¡¨
Let us pray for their national conversion. (R. Hall
M. A.)
The prophecy respecting Shiloh:
I. WE SHALL
ENDEAVOUR TO ASCERTAIN THE GENERAL PURPORT OF THE TERMS
SCEPTRE
LAWGIVER
AND
SHILOH. If these words are satisfactorily defined
and correctly applied
there
will be no difficulty whatever in the discussion of our second proposition. In
our language the sceptre is a kind of royal staff or baton
which is borne on
solemn occasions by kings as a token of their command and royal authority. In
the Word of God it has evidently the same meaning
and was similarly used in
ancient times. With regard to the word lawgiver it seems to signify
legislative
or rather judicial
authority
and is intended to express the
continuance of both civil and ecclesiastical power until the coming of Shiloh.
But the remaining term appears the most important
and demands particular
attention. It is the keystone of the prophetic edifice by which we must observe
the symmetry
the magnificence
and the perfection of the whole. Shiloh
evidently relates to some person
and the question is
¡§Of whom speaketh the
prophet this?¡¨ Acts 8:34). We hesitate not to reply
he
speaks of the Messiah
even Jesus Christ
the Son of the living God.
II. To CONSIDER OR
PROVE THE EXACT ACCOMPLISHMENT OF THE PROPHECY. The passage intimates--
1. The departure of the sceptre from the other tribes of Israel.
2. That on Messiah¡¦s appearance Judah should also give up his
pre-eminence.
3. Men are to be gathered to Christ. It is of little consequence
what name they bear in the professing world
what talents they possess
or with
what external privileges they are favoured unless they are brought to Christ.
He is the end of prophecy
the substance of ancient shadows
The Shiloh prophecy:
There are
you perceive
three parts of the blessing
each taking
up and repeating the happy name of Judah: ¡§Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren
shall praise
¡¨ &c.; ¡§Judah is a lion¡¦s whelp
¡¨ &c.; and
¡§The sceptre
shall not depart from Judah
¡¨ &c. Let us take these three parts in their
order.
I. ¡§Judah
thou
art he whom thy brethren shall praise: thy hand shall be in the neck of thine
enemies: thy father¡¦s children shall bow down before thee.¡¨ There are here two
things the relation of Judah to his brethren in Israel and his relation to the
enemies of Israel. His relation to his brethren in Israel is expressed in the
first and last clauses
¡§Thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise¡¨--¡§thy
father¡¦s children shall bow down before thee.¡¨ Now that there is a general
reference here to the supremacy of Judah among the tribes is beyond doubt; but
I cannot avoid the conclusion
a conclusion which has been strengthened by a
very close examination of the principal words in this verse
that a greater
than Judah is here
even Jesus
whose praise is sung by all the true Israel of
God
before whom all the children of Abraham according to the spirit bow down
and worship. This is supported by several considerations. The name ¡§Judah ¡§ means
¡§Praise of God
¡¨ or ¡§ Glory to God.¡¨ And there is
I cannot help thinking
something more than curiosity in the fact that if Hebrew equivalents were given
for the Greek words in the hymn which was sung by angels over Bethlehem¡¦s
plains
when the great Son of Judah was born there
a Prince and a Saviour
it
might read thus
¡§Judah in the highest
on earth Shiloh¡¨; ¡§Glory to God in the
highest
and on earth peace.¡¨ This view is still further strengthened by the
fact that the word here rendered ¡§praise¡¨--¡§thy brethren shall praise¡¨--is used
almost exclusively of praise to God. And if we are right in our view as to the
clauses which refer to the relation of Judah to his brethren in Israel
it
follows that in that clause which refers to his relation to the enemies of
Israel we see not only the victories of Judah over the nations around him
but
the victories of the great Son of Judah over His enemies all over the world. We
have in fact here the germ of those numerous prophecies of which the second
Psalm may be taken as a specimen.
II. ¡§Judah is a
lion¡¦s whelp: from the prey
my son
thou art gone up; he stooped down
he
couched as a lion
and as an old lion: who shall rouse him up?¡¨ We have here
Judah¡¦s supremacy and strength set before us in a lively figure
the figure of
a lion. You observe of course the gradation in the prophecy: first the young
lion rejoicing in his growing strength; then the adult lion in the full
development of his power; and lastly
the old lion reposing in quiet majesty
satisfied with former triumphs
enjoying the fruit of them
but retaining his
terrible strength
so that even the boldest dare not rouse him up. Here again
we have the basis and explanation of not a little of subsequent prophecy. We
find the Lion of Judah again in Balaam¡¦s prophecy (Numbers 24:9; also 23:24). We find it in
prophecies where perhaps we little expect it
e.g.
Isaiah 29:1-2
where Ariel
you must
remember
is the Hebrew for ¡§Lion of God.¡¨ So
too
the lamentation of Ezekiel 19:1-14. is all founded on this
prophecy. The reference throughout all these is obvious
to the lion strength
and prowess of the royal tribe of Judah. But is this all? Perhaps some of you
may be ready to say
¡§Yes
it is all.¡¨ Surely it cannot be said that there is
any of the testimony of Jesus in a passage like that. It certainly seems as
unlikely as any other prophetic passage in the whole Bible. Yet even here
if
we take the Scripture for our guide
comparing Scripture with Scripture
the
testimony of Jesus is not absent. And if you wish proof
follow me to two
passages far apart from each other and from this
and yet evidently related to
each other and to this. First
let us turn to that chapter about Ariel
¡§the
Lion of God¡¨ (Isaiah 29:1-24.). Read especially verses
11 and 12
and compare them with Revelation 5:1-5. The Ariel of the Old
Testament here appears as the ¡§Lion of the tribe of Judah ¡§ in the New. Who is
the ¡§Lion of the tribe of Judah¡¨? No one reading that chapter in Revelation can
hesitate about the answer. After all it is
Jesus
the meek and lowly
and yet
the great and terrible Jesus
the Lamb slain
and also the Lion slaying. He is
the ¡§Lion of the tribe of Judah!¡¨ We may not forget that there is such a thing
as ¡§the wrath of the Lamb.¡¨
III. ¡§The sceptre
shall not depart from Judah
nor a lawgiver from between his feet until Shiloh
come
¡¨ &c. Who is Shiloh? Most clearly He is ¡§the Seed of the woman.¡¨ I set
aside the translation
¡§until Judah come Shiloh
¡¨ i.e.
the place where
the tabernacle was set up after the conquest of Canaan; I set it aside
because
though grammatically possible
it is contrary to the scope of the prophecy
Judah having no more relation to the place long afterwards called Shiloh than
any of the other tribes
and less than Joseph
in whose territory the place
was; because it exhausts the prophecies in the early history of the tribes of
Israel
whereas the patriarch says at the beginning that he is about to speak
of that which shall happen ¡§in the last days¡¨; and because the supremacy of
Judah over the other tribes
and her lion-like conquests
are to be found
after
and not before
the children of Israel came to Shiloh. Besides
there is
no evidence that any place of the name of Shiloh was known at this time
and
there was certainly no gathering of the nations (the word in the Hebrew is not
the singular
¡§people
¡¨ but the plural
¡§peoples¡¨ or ¡§nations¡¨) to Shiloh.
Without any hesitation
then
we adhere to our own translation. And then the
question comes: if Shiloh be the Messiah
as He evidently is
what is the
meaning of the name? The vast majority of interpreters have always
and do
still connect the word ¡§ Shiloh¡¨ with that well-known family of Hebrew words
signifying ¡§peace
¡¨ ¡§rest
¡¨ so that ¡§Shiloh¡¨ will signify ¡§the One who brings
peace
¡¨ ¡§the One who gives rest.¡¨ There is almost everything in favour of this
interpretation. It connects beautifully with the image of peace set forth in
verses 11 and 12 which follow
and is strongly contrasted with the war-like
metaphor of that which precedes (verse 9). It agrees with the circumstances
under which the name ¡§Shiloh¡¨ was given to the place where the Tabernacle of
God was set up by the children of Israel after God had given them rest from
their enemies. Then in 1 Chronicles 5:2
we find
in
explanation of the elder tribes being set aside
these words
¡§For Judah
prevailed above his brethren
and from him the chief ruler (or the prince)was
to come
¡¨ which you may compare with that beautiful passage Isaiah 9:6
¡§Unto us a child is born
unto us a son is given; and the government shall be upon His shoulder
and His
name shall be called Wonderful
Counsellor
the Mighty God
the Everlasting
Father
the Prince of Peace.¡¨ Then
too
the name which David gave to his son
Solomon (a name closely connected with the name ¡§Shiloh¡¨--it does not appear in
English so distinctly as in the original); in that name we can scarcely fail to
recognize the expectation of David
that in his just and peaceful reign there
would be a type of the reign of the Prince of Peace--a position which is fully
borne out by those Psalms of the kingdom
of which the well-known 72nd Psalm
may be taken as a specimen. We have already referred to the angel doxology
¡§Glory to God in the highest
and on earth peace
¡¨ where the words ¡§Judah¡¨ and
¡§Shiloh¡¨ come into a connection with each other very similar to what we find in
this prophecy. Then we cannot help thinking of such precious words as these of
our Shiloh
¡§Come unto Me
ye that labour and are heavy laden
and I will give
you rest.¡¨ ¡§Peace I leave with you
My peace I give unto you; not as the world
giveth give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled
neither let it be
afraid.¡¨ And not to multiply passages
for many more might be given
do we not
find at the close of the Word of God
in the Book of Revelation
¡§the Lion of
the tribe of Judah
¡¨ and ¡§the Lamb
¡¨ the one the emblem of strength
and the
other the emblem of gentleness and peace
close beside each other
and
referring to the same glorious Saviour? We have already spoken of the ¡§Lion of
the tribe of Judah¡¨--well
the Lamb is the Shiloh of our text. It is
then
the
¡§Prince of Peace¡¨ whose coming is spoken of here. ¡§And unto Him shall the
gathering of the peoples be.¡¨ The meaning of this is surely very obvious now.
The Shiloh is the Seed in whom all nations of the earth are to be blessed. Here
is the culmination of the royalty of Judah. The true idea is that the royalty
is never to pass away from Judah
but is to culminate in the everlasting
kingdom of the ¡§Lion of the tribe of Judah
¡¨ ¡§the Root of David
¡¨ ¡§King of
kings and Lord of lords.¡¨ The sceptre is not to depart at all. The kingdom is
to be an everlasting kingdom. The royalty of the tribe of Judah will last
through all eternity
because the ¡§Lion of the tribe of Judah
¡¨ the ¡§Prince of Peace
¡¨
the Shiloh of God
in whom that royalty culminates
is ¡§the same yesterday
to-day
and for ever
¡¨ ¡§King of kings and Lord of lords ¡§ for evermore! And
then began the ¡§ gathering of the peoples.¡¨ It may be interesting to take a
passing glance at this prophetic gathering
as actually realized already in
history. To begin with
we have an earnest of it in the long journey of the
wise men of the East to worship the child Jesus. There we have the first-fruits
of the great ingathering of the long excluded Shemites. Then again you remember
the Syro-Phoenician woman
who
when Jesus came into the coasts of Tyre and
Sidon
fell down at His feet and worshipped Him
and besought Him for a
blessing for her child. There we see the first-fruits of the great ingathering
of the Hamites. Yet again
you remember how
when Jesus was at one of the
feasts in Jerusalem
there were certain Greeks among them that came up to
worship at the feast
who came to Philip of Bethsaida in Galilee
earnestly
asking
¡§Sir
we would see Jesus.¡¨ There we see the first fruits of the great
ingathering of the sons of Japheth. So ranch for the first fruits; now for the
harvest. And here we find that saying true
¡§The last shall be first
and the
first last;¡¨ for when Shiloh came the very Jews refused to gather to Him; that
very tribe of Judah from which
according to the prophecy
He sprung
despised
and rejected Him; and accordingly
in the just displeasure of God
they were
set aside ¡§until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in¡¨ Romans 11:25). Thus it is that the very
Jews themselves are the last of all the peoples to gather unto their own
Shiloh. (J. M. Gibson
D. D.)
Shiloh
The dying patriarch was speaking of his own son Judah; but while
speaking of Judah he had a special eye to our Lord
who sprang from the tribe
of Judah. Everything therefore which he says of Judah
the type
he means with
regard to our greater Judah
the antitype
our Lord Jesus Christ. First
let the
title ¡§ Shiloh
¡¨ and secondly the testimony
¡§To Him shall the gathering of the
people be
¡¨ engage our attention.
I. The title
¡§Shiloh.¡¨ What an old word it is! What an old world word! I should not wonder
if it was one of Jacob¡¦s own coining. A pet name is often the product of
peculiar love. Tender affection takes this kindly turn. Jacob¡¦s name for Jesus
was ¡§Shiloh¡¨; and it is so long ago since he called Him Shiloh that I do not
wonder that we have almost forgotten the meaning of it. He knew it had a wealth
of meaning as it came from his lips
and the meaning is there still; but the
well is deep; and those that have studied the learned languages have found this
to be a word of such rare and singular occurrence
that it is difficult
with
any positive certainty
to define it. Not that they cannot find a meaning
but
that it is possible to find so many meanings of it. Not that it is not rich
enough
but that there is an embarrassment of riches. It may be interpreted in
so many different ways. Some maintain that the word ¡§Shiloh¡¨ signifies ¡§sent.¡¨
Like that word you have in the New Testament
¡§He said to them
go to the pool
of Siloam
which is
by interpretation
¡¥Sent
¡¦¡¨ you observe the likeness
between the words Siloam and Shiloh. They think that the words have the same
meaning; in which case Shiloh here would mean the same as Mes-siah the sent
one--and would indicate that Jesus Christ was the messenger
the sent one of
God
and came to us
not at His own instance
and at His own will
but
commissioned by the Most High
authorized and anointed to that end. Here let us
stop a minute. We rejoice to know that
whatever this title means
it is quite
certain Jesus was sent. It is a very precious thing to know that we have a
Saviour; but often and often it has cheered my heart to think that this dear
Saviour who came to save me did not come as an amateur
unauthorized from the
courts of heaven
but He came with the credentials of the Eternal Father
so
that
whatever He has done
we may be sure He has done it in the name of God.
Jehovah will never repudiate that which Jesus has accomplished. Him hath God
sent forth to be a propitiation; He is a mediator of God¡¦s own sending. Dwell
sweetly dwell
upon this meaning of the word Shiloh. If it means ¡§sent
¡¨ there
is great sweetness in it. Others have referred it to a word
the root of which
signifies the Son. Upon such a hypothesis the name would be strictly
appropriate to our Lord. He is the ¡§Son of God¡¨; He is the ¡§Son of Man¡¨; He was
the ¡§Son of Judah¡¨; He was the ¡§ Son of David¡¨: ¡§Unto us a child is born
unto
us a Son is given.¡¨ Let us linger for a while upon this gloss--¡§Until Shiloh
¡¨
¡§Until the Son shall come.¡¨ Be the annotation right or wrong
Jesus is the Son
of God. He that hath come to save us is Divine. Let us bless Him as the
Son--the Son of God
the Son of man. A third meaning has been given to the word
¡§Shiloh¡¨ which rather paraphrases than translates it. The passage
according to
certain critics
would run something like this: ¡§Until He come to whom it belongs
to whom it is
for whom it is reserved¡¨; or
as Ezekiel puts it
¡§Overturn
until He shall come whose right it is
and Thou wilt give it Him.¡¨ It may mean
then
¡§The sceptre shall not depart from Judah until He shall come whose that
sceptre is.¡¨ This meaning is supported by many learned authorities
and has its
intrinsic value. The sceptre belongs to Christ. All sceptres belong to Him. He
will come by and by and verify His title to them. Have you not seen the picture
that represents Nelson on board a French man-of-war
receiving the swords of
the various captains he has conquered
while there stands an old tar at his
side putting all these swords underneath his arm as they are brought up. I have
often pictured to myself our great Commander
the only King by Divine right
coming back to this our earth
and gathering up the sceptres of the kings in
sheaves
and putting them on one side
and collecting their crowns; for He
alone shall reign King of kings and Lord of lords. When the last and greatest of
all monarchs shall come a second time
¡§without a sin-offering unto
salvation¡¨--oh
the glory of His triumph! He has a right to reign. If ever
there was a king by nature
and by birth
it is the Son of David; if ever there
was one who would be elected to the monarchy by the suffrages of His subjects
it is Jesus Christ. Let Him be crowned with majesty for ever and ever. To Him
the royalty belongs
for Him it is reserved. The interpretation
however
which
has the most support
and which I think has the fairest claim to be accorded
correct
is that which derives the word ¡§Shiloh¡¨ from the same root as the word
¡§Salem.¡¨ This makes it signify peace. ¡§Until the peace
or the peace-bearer
or
the peace-giver
¡¨ or
if you like it better
¡§the rest
or the rest-maker--shall
come.¡¨ Select the word you prefer
it will sufficiently represent the sense.
¡§Until the peace-bringer come
until the rest-maker come.¡¨ His advent bounds
the patriarch¡¦s expectation and his desire. Oh
beloved
what a vein of
soul-charming reflection this opens! Do you know what rest means? Such ¡§peace
peace
¡¨ such perfect peace as he hath whose soul is stayed; because he
trusteth
as the prophet Isaiah hath it. Here is rest! Man may well take his
rest when he has nothing to do
when it is all done for him. And that is the
gospel. The world¡¦s way of salvation is ¡§Do
¡¨ God¡¦s way of salvation is
¡§It is
all done for you; accept and believe.¡¨
II. Trusting
then
dear friends
that your faith has identified the Shiloh of Jacob¡¦s
vision
let us occupy the few minutes that remain to us in considering the
testimony which the patriarch here bears. ¡§Unto Him shall the gathering of the
people be.¡¨ ¡§Unto Him
¡¨ as the Hebrew runs
¡§shall the gatherings of the
peoples be.¡¨ So wide the circumference that converges in this glorious centre.
It comprehends all the peoples of the Gentiles as well as Jews. Of course it
includes the favoured nation
but it also takes in the isles afar off; yea
all
of us
my brethren. ¡§Unto Him shall the gatherings of the peoples be.¡¨ What joy
this announcement should give us! Do you realize it
that around Jesus Christ
around His cross
which is the great uplifted standard
the people shall
gather? Be assured of this: Christ is the only centre of true unity to His
people. The true Christendom consists in all that worship God in the spirit
not having confidence in the flesh. The true Church consists of all that
believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and are quickened by the Holy Ghost. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The gathering of the people to Shiloh
It seems to me the old man was sad. One
and another
and another
of his sons passed before him
and from their posterity there came no Saviour
no Messiah. Judah came
and as his eyes rested upon him
and the visions of the
future opened up
he beheld the tribe growing
becoming conspicuous
becoming
the leader of the other tribes
and enduring; kings sat upon his throne
and
princes were among his posterity; and then he saw Judah
becoming feeble
carried away; the tribeship crumbling; desolation is about to come
and just
then he saw the star appear--a light shining on Judah--and he said: ¡§Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise¡¨; and then cried out
as if his soul
were enraptured with a vision: ¡§The sceptre shall not depart from Judah
nor a
lawgiver from between his feet
until Shiloh come
and unto Him shall the
gathering of the people be.¡¨ He saw the day of Christ. It was just as Judah was
crumbling to decay; it was just as prince and lawgiver were for ever passing
from among his posterity; but he had not quite gone until the light and joy of
Israel appeared
and the Prince of Peace
whose right it was to take the
kingdom
took possession
and then
instead of Israel being carried captive
into strange lands--instead of his hosts being wasted on the plains of Babylon
and Persia
instead of being fugitives and strangers among all nations--he saw
a new Israel
a new nation
under a new covenant of promise; and he cried out:
¡§And unto Him shall the gathering¡¨--not of Judah
nor of Ephraim
nor of Manasseh
nor of Benjamin
merely
but
¡§unto Him shall the gathering of the people
be¡¨--all tribes
all nations
all kindreds. The sons of humanity everywhere
shall gather around Him; for He takes in both Jew and Gentile
Greek and
barbarian
bond and free. All shall receive the blessings of peace. Such was
the vision that came to Jacob¡¦s peaceful departing hours. That we may the
better understand this subject
we may refer to the expressions here used: ¡§The
sceptre shall not depart from Judah.¡¨ But there is another part of this
prophecy. When that Shiloh should come
to Him should the gathering of the
people be. Now
how beautifully was this contrasted with what Jacob saw in his
vision t He had seen the scattering of the ten tribes--their being lost
merged
into other nationalities
and he said: ¡§Are these gone for ever?¡¨ He saw Jacob
about to pass away
and that he was to be scattered
but as the compensation
for all this
around the Shiloh
the promised Seed
the One who was to be sent
the Prince of Peace
should the gathering of the people be. In some
particulars
this seemed to be an enlargement of the promises given to the
Jews
and we may trace an apparent connection between their power and that
under the reign of Shiloh. For instance
the gathering of the people was at
Jerusalem. They came up three times in the year to worship before God on Mount
Zion. Scattered
there is no longer the worship. The temple services have been
long since closed. The people no longer come gathering around Mount Moriah. There
is no temple standing
around which humanity gathers; but there was a cross
erected. Shiloh hung on that cross
and He said: ¡§And I
if I be lifted up
will draw all men unto Me.¡¨ And now
as the result
do we not see the gathering
of humanity around the Lord Jesus Christ? But while men
here and there
may
remember the name of a Homer
or an Alexander
or a Plato--while their prowess
and intellect may be admired in the schools--how few of the human race know
anything of them 1 But the name of Jesus I At that name every knee shall bow;
to R every tongue shall confess. It is being sung east and west
north and
south. Men divide on everything else
but they are rallying around Jesus. He is
reigning
King of kings
and Lord of lords. He has established a kingdom which
is growing wider and wider every day. Civilization attends the preaching of the
gospel; inventions and arts
and refinement and culture
go hand in hand with
the proclamation of the name of Jesus; and in this respect humanity is
gathering around Him. But the word here interpreted¡¨ gathering ¡§means not
merely assembling. Some translate it obedience. ¡§To Him shall the obedience of
the people be.¡¨ The idea
as I take it
embraces both. The people assemble for
instruction and to obey. It is like the gathering of scholars in a school. They
assemble
but it is for instruction
and it is to obey. (M. Simpson
D. D.)
Shiloh:
I. THE COMING ONE
PREDICTED.
II. THE CHARACTER
OF THE KING AND HIS KINGDOM. The name ¡§Shiloh¡¨ means ¡§Peaceable
¡¨ or
¡§Peace-givers¡¨ or ¡§rest
¡¨ and is akin to the name of David¡¦s son ¡§Solomon.¡¨
This name intimates that the King
who is to come
will give tranquillity to
His people.
III. THE
COMPLETENESS OF HIS RULE. The Christian religion is but the unfolding and the
fulfilment of the hope of Israel. Do we rejoice in our knowledge of Jesus as
King? Are we trying our best to serve and obey Him? and to do what we can to
bring others under His peace-giving rule? (W. S. Smith
B. D.)
Shiloh¡¦s sceptre spiritual
not political:
How constantly do we find this blessed assurance interpreted as if
it were a shred of political news
a piece of political prognostication! ¡§The
sceptre¡¨ is interpreted as an earthly sceptre
the ¡§lawgiver¡¨ suggests no other
or higher conception than the head of an earthly government
and the gist of
the whole promise is made to be that a certain earthly state
of very small
account among the great kingdoms of the world
shall continue to exist till the
coming of a certain person
and then shall pass away. It might be suggested
by
the way
that on this principle of interpretation we should rather call it a
threatening than a promise. If the coming of the promised Shiloh was to be the
signal for the passing away of the very kingdom which was the subject of the
prophecy
then Judah and all true lovers of Christ¡¦s kingdom might well pray
that Shiloh should be very long in coming. But let this pass
and look at the
subsequent difficulties in which the political interpretation involves us. We
have first a long period during which there was no political kingdom at all.
Then
shortly after the setting up of the political kingdom
we have it rent in
twain. Later on we find
first
the one part of it
and then the other
utterly
subverted. Then we have hundreds of years
during the greater part of which it
can not be said with honesty that there was a political kingdom at all. And
when Shiloh did come
there was no political kingdom in Judah to pass away.
These difficulties have been felt to be of such magnitude
that endless ingenuity
have been expended in the attempt to evade or surmount them. Some have tried to
twist history to make it agree with the passage
and others have tried to twist
the passage to make it agree with the history
and neither of the methods has
been found satisfactory; whereas all becomes simple
natural
beautiful
and
most true
when interpreted
not according to the letter which killeth
but
according to the spirit; when it is freed from those carnal
Jewish notions
which have obscured it
when it is lifted out of the region of politics into
the region of truth
where our Lord¡¦s conversation with Pilate
as recorded by
John
might well lead us to look for the kingdom of the prophetic word. Then we
find a beautiful consistency both with the history of truth
and with the truth
of history; with the former
as regards the inner reality
with the latter
as
regards the outer form of the kingdom. First
in regard to the inner reality.
Did not the kingdom in the truth
the kingdom in its essential
spiritual reality
continue in Judah all the while? ¡§Was not the kingdom of God among the chosen
people before either Saul or David was anointed
while as yet Jehovah was their
only King? Was not the kingdom of God in Judah still
when her sons and
daughters sat ¡§by Babel¡¦s streams
¡¨ and hung their harps upon the willows
and
wept as they remembered Zion? There
in their remembrance of Zion
have we the
evidence that
though the form of the kingdom had passed away for a time
the
great reality remained in the weeping heart of Judah still. Truth to tell
the
kingdom had much more nearly passed away
while yet the political ¡§sceptre¡¨ and
¡§lawgiver¡¨ remained both in Judah and in Israel
in those dark days of
infidelity and idolatry
when poor Elijah thought God¡¦s kingdom the true
theocracy
was reduced to one solitary individual
till he was assured by Him
who ¡§seeth not as man seeth
¡¨ that He still had left remaining seven thousand
loyal men. And was there not in Judah
through all her captivities and all her
sufferings from foreign oppressors
a true kingdom of God? A very little one
indeed at times
and especially in the times which immediately preceded the
advent of Shiloh; but small as it was
was it not there all the while? And when
we seek for the fulfilment of the old promise as to the continuance of the
kingdom till the coming in human form of the King
we are to seek it
not where
so many interpreters of prophecy have sought it
in the political
administration of that infidel and villain
belonging to Idumea
and not to
Judah
who happened to sway a little sceptre
and give out his little laws
under the great sceptre and mighty law of a foreign tyrant
but in the lowly
loyal lives of the Simeons and Annas of the time
who had the sceptre and law
in their hearts
and who were waiting for the fulfilment of the kingdom in the
coming of Shiloh. The fulfilment of the kingdom--for there is no evidence that
these faithful ones imagined that the coming of Shiloh was to be the subversion
of that kingdom
which
as true Israelites
they dearly loved
but every
evidence that they regarded it as the firm establishment of Judah¡¦s throne
and
the beginning of a triumphal progress which should not cease till every knee
should bow before the sceptre
and every tongue confess that Judah¡¦s King was
Lord. So much for the fulfilment of the promise in regard to its inner reality.
And now a moment¡¦s glance at the consistency of the prophecy with history
so
far as form is concerned. Here we must bear in mind what Principal Fairbairn
has so clearly shown in his work on ¡§Prophecy
¡¨ that the great object of
prophecy was to support the faith of God¡¦s people--a support which would be
especially- needed in times of darkness. Now
if the outward earthly form
in
which the kingdom was for a time embodied
had been predestined to be abiding;
had nothing been anticipated in the process of history which would look like
the passing away of the kingdom
there would have been no need of such a
special promise as that in Genesis 49:10. On the other hand
the
very fact that there is such a promise would lead us
a priori
to
anticipate that there would be times
probably long times
when it would seem
that the sceptre had departed from Judah--times during which it would be
necessary for those who were waiting for the salvation of God
to have some
assurance to rest upon
that
though the form had passed away
the reality was
with them still. Thus we find that
when once we get rid of these carnal Jewish
ideas of the kingdom
we discover not only an agreement between the prophecy
and the true spiritual history of the kingdom
but also a correspondence
between the expectations it suggests concerning the outward and formal history
of the kingdom and the actual facts of the ease
as seen in the external
history of the political kingdom of Israel. (J. M.Gibson
D. D.)
Verses 13-21
Genesis 49:13-21; Genesis 49:27
Zebulun . . . Issachar . . . Dan . . . Gad . . . Asher . . .
Naphtali . . . Benjamin
The
blessings of Zebulun
&c.
:
Consider these blessings--
I. IN THEIR
VARIETY.
1. Maritime power.
2. Husbandry.
3. Political sagacity.
4. The power to conquer by perseverance.
5. Plenty.
6. Eloquence.
7. The warlike character.
II. IN THEIR
UNITY. Unity in variety. This diversity in the distribution of gifts and
endowments contributes to human happiness and to human prosperity. (T. H.
Leale.)
Zebulun and Issachar:
The tribes of the last two sons of Leah Moses unites together
and
like Jacob
places Zebulun
the younger
first. It has been represented by
many
that from the words Jacob used with regard to Issachar
the patriarch was
reproving this tribe for its indolence and for preferring ease at the sacrifice
of liberty
that
¡§like an idle beast of burden
he would rather submit to the
yoke and be forced to do the work of a slave than risk his possessions and his
peace in the struggle for liberty.¡¨ It is impossible
however
to be satisfied
with such a view after reading the words of Moses with reference to this tribe.
When we read of Issachar ¡§calling the people unto the mountain
and there
offering the sacrifices of righteousness
¡¨ such a view would be utterly
inconsistent with these words. If we trace the further history of this tribe
recorded in Judges 5:15
we find that
so far from
shrinking from difficulty and danger
they were among the foremost in coming to
the help of the Lord against Israel¡¦s enemies. Jacob¡¦s language is clearly not
that of reproof
but of praise
prophetically applied to them for their
patience under what was heavy to be borne. With such a view the passage becomes
clear
and contains many points of beautiful instruction. And let us mark first
how God apportions to each one his own appointed place. Jacob allotted to each
tribe the place it was afterwards to occupy
just as if he had had a map before
him of the country they were to inhabit
while as yet they had not one foot of
land in their possession. The tribes were not settled in their various
positions according to Joshua¡¦s plan. God appointed that their places should be
given them by lot
and He made the lot to fall exactly as Jacob and Moses
uttered their predictions. And God placed each one exactly in the place suited
to its capacities and the best adapted for developing all that was in them
and
thus for His own glory. One He placed at the haven of the sea
another inland.
One where it would have to endure oppression and hardship
another where it
would have great prosperity
and be less subject to such pressure. We may be
sure it is the same with every one of us. We may sometimes be tempted to say
¡§If I were only in another place or in other circumstances
how differently I
could act.¡¨ But it is not so. We may be quite sure we are each one of us in the
very place God would have us to he--the very best place both for our own
temporal and eternal welfare
and for His highest glory. And such a spirit
it
appears to me
is manifested in the character of Issachar here. Issachar is
brought before us as finding the position in which God had placed him to be the
best. ¡§He saw that rest was good and the land that it was pleasant.¡¨ Thus the
Christian finds the rest into which Christ has brought him to be indeed good
and that his place in Christ is a good land. When this has been learned by
experience through the teaching of God¡¦s Holy Spirit
the soul becomes ready
for all else. And then it is that
like Issachar
the soul is ready to ¡§ bow
the shoulder to bear
and become a servant to tribute.¡¨ It can stoop
yea
joyfully stoop
to the meanest service for Christ. It asks no questions
makes
no bargains
but with a spirit ever sitting at the feet of the Master
exclaims
¡§Lord
what wilt thou have me to do?¡¨ It ¡§bows the shoulder to bear¡¨
whatever the Lord may be pleased to lay upon it. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Issachar; or
couching between the borders:
If we consider nothing more than Issachar after the flesh
we
shall have done with the text almost immediately upon noticing it as a
prediction that Issachar should become a tribe of laborious husbandmen. But
there is a spiritual Issachar
a borderer between good and evil; and would to
God that his tents were nowhere to be found in our church. With this Issachar
or in other words
the wavering and undecided
for the description of whose
character we find appropriate words in the text
let us now endeavour to become
better acquainted. We shall notice--
I. WHERE HE
COUCHES DOWN. Issachar has a strange and unprepossessing appellation
that of a
¡§bony ass.¡¨ But who shall say how many amongst ourselves may not be thus unflatteringly
designated in various parts of the book of God? We shall see why to the
spiritual Issachar this name may be given
when we have learnt the
characteristics which belong to him. Where do we find him? It is between the
borders. He is couched down between the borders. Now
if we give a spiritual
application to these words
we may take them as describing an evil and unhappy
condition. How awfully does the Lord rebuke those whose hearts are halting in
indecision--who are neither cold nor hot! To each of such lukewarm ones He
declares
¡§I will spew thee out of My mouth.¡¨ He would that they were either
one thing or the other: either cold or hot. Indecision is to Him an
abomination. Where
then
is it that the spiritual borderer couches down
and
between what borders has he pitched his tent? Strictly speaking
he is not one
of those who are neither for nor against religion
neither Christian nor
heathen. He is professedly for that which is right. He appears
indeed
to
many
to have pitched his tent within the kingdom of God
and yet he is in a
very deplorable situation. He has mettled down
as it were
between Canaan and
Egypt. He cannot exactly be classed with the people of the world; but still
less can he be numbered with the children of God. He cannot properly be placed
in the same rank with the crooked and perverse generation; but still less can
he be accounted one of the chosen generation and royal priesthood. He is
couched down between the borders of the kingdom of grace and the kingdom of
Belial. In this unhappy middle situation he can never sit down with the
subjects of the former; but he will perish and be consumed with the subjects of
the latter. He is a nominal Christian without a birth into a new life; he
acknowledges the corruption of human nature without feeling his own; he is
conversant with spiritual things
but not truly enlightened in them; he
professes to believe in Jesus
but is insensible of his need of Him; he numbers
himself among the saints
without being one; he knows how to talk of a life of
grace
without having entered upon it; he imagines his life and conversation to
be quite Christian
and yet is in thought and disposition no better than a
natural man. His heart and mind are unchanged.
II. How DID HE
COME INTO THIS CONDITION? ¡§He saw rest
that it was good; and the land
that it
was pleasant.¡¨ ¡§He saw rest
¡¨ or repose
¡§that it was good.¡¨ What rest or
repose? Was it rest for his soul in Christ? Was it peace with God? Was it
repose in the great Redeemer¡¦s merits? Was it a release from the burden and
curse of sin? Was it deliverance from the servile drudgery of legal bondage? Oh
no! quite another repose attracted him
and provoked his longing desire. ¡§He
saw the land that it was pleasant.¡¨ What land? Was it that better country
namely
the heavenly? Was it that blissful and glorious region of light and love
in a
superior state of being
unto which Jesus Himself is the Way and the Door? Or
was it even that region of grace here on earth
wherein His people live by His
dew and sunshine? Did his soul really desire this? Did he long after it?
Nothing of the kind can be said of him. Very different inducements was he
conscious of. It is sometimes one thing
and sometimes another
which leads
persons of this character into their dubious situation between the borders.
Some are attracted by the harmony and mutual love which they find among those
who are quiet in the land. Another has naturally a soft and yielding
disposition. He is easily affected and influenced. Another has a natural
inclination to thought and inquiry. This leads him to search the Scriptures
where he finds abundance for his mind to feed upon
and to exercise his
quickness of understanding. Another
from being naturally gifted with a keen
perception of what is intellectually beautiful
is charmed with the sublimity
of the inspired writings. The moving descriptions
the luminous imagery
the
parabolic language
the lovely and touching scenes with which Scripture
abounds
beget in him a kind of enthusiasm. In such various ways men may be
spiritually couching down between the borders. ¡§He saw rest
that it was good;
and the land
that it was pleasant.¡¨ Thus it may be no real longing for
reconciliation with God
no hunger for Christ¡¦s righteousness
no thirst for
the graces of the Holy Spirit
which induces them to renounce the world
and to
join the people of the Lord.
III. In the last
place
briefly notice THE SPIRITUAL TOILS AND PAINS THAT NECESSARILY ATTEND
THIS STATE
AS ALSO THE FEARFUL PERILS WHICH SURROUND IT. This toilsome and
harassing condition is depicted in the words
¡§He bowed his shoulder to bear
and became a servant unto tribute.¡¨ Having bowed his shoulder to bear
he has a
burden laid upon him
under which he sighs and groans; and this burden is--not
the burden of sin! Would that he felt this
for his state would then soon begin
to amend. But this burden is
alas! his Christianity itself: that notional
Christianity
to the drudgery of which his own wisdom has allied him. (F.
W.Krummacher
D. D.)
Issachar an example of the evil that results from too easy
circumstances
Looking at the characterization of Issachar
we may see the
enervatinginfluence
of too comfortable circumstances on a man or on a people.
The inheritance of Issachar was pleasant
fertile
easily cultivated
and
exceedingly remunerative. So his descendants came at length
for the most part
to take things easy
and submitted to outrages which those in poorer
circumstances must have resisted even to the death. They grew indolent and
luxurious
caring for little or nothing but their own ease
and sinking at last
into mere tribute-payers. Now all this reminds us of the truth that conflict is
absolutely necessary to strength of character. He who has no difficulties to
contend with has therein the great misfortune of his life; for he has little or
no motive for exertion
and without exertion he will be nothing in particular.
It is a serious affliction to a man to be too well off
and many a son has been
ruined because he inherited a fortune from his father. Unvarying prosperity is
not by any means an unmingled blessing
and may be often a great evil. In the
struggle for existence which adversity causes many may sink
but the ¡§survival¡¨
is always ¡§of the fittest
¡¨ for it is of those who have been made by the struggle
into manly
earnest
strong
heroic souls. Do not plume yourself
therefore
on
your easy circumstances
for they may make you only selfish
indolent
and
lacking in public spirit
like that son of Jacob who had his fitting symbol in
the contented
because well-fed and Trot overloaded
ass. But
on the other
hand
do not whimper over your poverty
for
bravely wrestled with and nobly
overcome
that may be the very making of you. Too much money has undone many a
youth; too little has been the spur that has urged on many another to put forth
all his strength
and so has developed and increased that strength. When you
are getting comfortable and easy
therefore
suspect yourself
and watch lest
your patriotism should grow languid
your activity disappear
and
self-sacrifice drop entirely out of your life. (W. M. Taylor
D. D.)
Dan
We come now to consider the character of Dan
the eldest son of
Rachel¡¦s handmaid. The meaning of the name--¡§judge
¡¨ is here expanded by Jacob
into the character of the tribe: ¡§Dan shall judge his people as one of the
tribes of Israel
¡¨ or in other words
Dan would procure justice to his
people--to the people of Israel as truly as any other of the tribes of Israel.
He would be behind none of them in that respect. The word ¡§judge¡¨ is sometimes
misapprehended. Its meaning is rather to defend than to sit in judgment upon.
It is used of those who
when Israel had no king
God raised up from time to
time as ¡§judges¡¨ or ¡§defenders¡¨ of the people
and who led them against their
foes. The most conspicuous of these was Samson
who arose out of the tribe of
Dan
and was himself an apt illustration of the character of the tribe. By his
serpent-like arts he laid traps for his foes
and with great delight saw them
fall into them one after another. This word ¡§judge
¡¨ out of which Dan¡¦s future
history is evolved
is constantly used throughout the Bible with reference to
God as judging His people; this judging being always a cause of thankfulness
as it meant a sure deliverance from all their foes. So much for the critical
meaning of the word itself. The wisdom which is implied in the word ¡§serpent¡¨
may be
however
of a two-fold character. It may be that wisdom which is
commended by our Lord
or it may be that low cunning and craftiness which is of
the very opposite character
and which stoops to the meanest arts to accomplish
its ends. The expression ¡§Dan shall judge his people as one of the tribes of
Israel¡¨ clearly means that Dan would use his wisdom for the good of Israel
generally
not for his own selfish ends but as one of the tribes of Israel. At
the same time it is held by many that this form of serpent-like craft will be
developed in a very special way as the end of the present dispensation draws
near. The first germ of idolatry that showed itself in Israel
after their
settlement in Canaan
was in the tribe of Dan. In the eighteenth chapter of
Judges we are told the children of Dan found an image in the house of Micah
and that this image became an object of idolatrous worship all the time the house
of God was in Shiloh. Here was a continuous system of idolatry
carried on in
direct opposition to God and the worship of God
¡§until the day of the
captivity of the land.¡¨ Later on again we read that Jeroboam made two calves of
gold for Israel to worship in opposition to the worship of God
and he put
them
one in Bethel and the other in Dan; and it is said
¡§this thing became a
sin; for the people went to worship before the one even unto Dan.¡¨ There is
also an allusion to this tribe in Jeremiah 8:16-17; and again in Amos 8:11; Amos 8:14
both of which are striking
and go far to confirm the view thus taken. In addition to this I may add the
very singular fact that
in the enumeration of the tribes of Israel (Revelation 7:1-17.) as ¡§the servants of
God that were sealed in their forehead
¡¨ the tribe of Dan is omitted
and the
only one so omitted. And now
the patriarch
having given utterance to his
prediction with reference to the future history of this tribe
suddenly
exclaims
¡§I have waited for Thy salvation
O Lord.¡¨ There are two aspects in
which those words must be viewed. In the first place
the previous declaration
of Jacob that ¡§Dan should be a serpent by the way
an adder in the path that
biteth the horse heels
so that his rider shall fall backward
¡¨ intimated
clearly enough
that warlike times were in store for Israel
in which this
tribe should take a prominent part. It would seem as if for a moment he was
carried in spirit into the midst of these times
and the dangers which would on
every side surround Israel
and realizing the utter insufficiency of all human
help from every quarter
he gave utterance to the earnest longing of soul for
God¡¦s help on their behalf in this prayer
¡§I have waited for Thy salvation
O
Lord.¡¨ ¡§Dan¡¦s is insufficient
Israel¡¦s tribes united are insufficient
every
human arm is insufficient: O Lord
we wait for Thy salvation.¡¨ But more than
even this. As a true Israelite he yearns for the time when the Messiah
God¡¦s
salvation
should appear for the help of His people. Accordingly the Jewish
Targums have given the true view of Jacob¡¦s Words. They represent Jacob as
passing over all the victories which Israel might gain in these battles
and
saying
¡§Not for the deliverance of Gideon the son of Joash does my soul wait
for that is temporary
not for the redemption of Israel by Samson
for that is
transitory
but for the redemption of the Messiah
the Son of David
which Thou
through Thy Word has promised to bring to Thy people Israel; for this Thy
redemption my soul waits.¡¨ But there is a second aspect of these words of
Jacob. He may have been carried in spirit to that time when out of this very
tribe Antichrist has arisen
and as he views for a moment his own people
passing through its greatest tribulations
and beholds that darkest of all dark
nights through which they have yet to pass
he breathes the earnest prayer for
the salvation which shall be theirs at the close of it. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Verse 18
I have waited for Thy salvation
of Lord
Times of waiting
A parenthesis in Jacob¡¦s long blessing of his sons.
Exhausted with the thoughts and visions which passed over his mind in such
quick succession
he paused to take a spiritual inspiration: ¡§I have waited for
Thy salvation
O Lord.¡¨
1. Such chapters of life
such seasons of suspense
such exercises
of the quiet confidences of the soul
are to be found in every Christian¡¦s
experience. They may come in different ways to different men
but they are in
some form or other a necessity to every man--an essential part of the
discipline of the school of salvation.
2. These intervals of waiting must be filled up with four things:
prayer
praise
fellowship
and work.
3. It will be a helpful thought to you as you wait
that if you
wait
Christ waits. Whatever your longing is that the time be over
His longing
is greater. There are many things that you have had that have turned to a
curse
which would have been blessings if only there had been more ¡§waiting.¡¨ (J.
Vaughan
M. A.)
Waiting for salvation:
1. From these words we may learn what was the nature of that
inheritance which the patriarchs regarded as bequeathed to them by the Divine
promises. The patriarchs looked for salvation.
2. We learn from the text what had been the great characteristic of
Jacob¡¦s life from the time that he was first brought under the power of Divine
grace. His affections had been set on things above. His chief interest had lain
in eternity.
3. The language of Jacob in the text proves most fully the truth
elsewhere stated
that ¡§the righteous hath hope in his death.¡¨ Practical
questions:
Jacob¡¦s dying confidence:
I. THE IMPORTANT
OBJECT FOR WHICH THE PATRIARCH WAITED.
1. Salvation is present in its commencement.
2. Salvation is future in its consummation.
II. THE GLORIOUS
BEING IN WHOM THE PATRIARCH CONFIDED.
1. Salvation is Divinely devised and provided.
2. Salvation is Divinely revealed and promised.
3. Salvation is Divinely imparted and realized.
III. THE SACRED
EXERCISE IN WHICH THE PATRIARCH WAS OCCUPIED.
1. We must wait for salvation patiently.
2. We must wait for salvation believingly.
3. We must wait for salvation importunately.
4. We must wait for salvation perseveringly. (Sketches of
Sermons.)
Jacob¡¦s dying words:
I. The believer
can use this language of the text
because he will be PUT
AT DEATH
IN
POSSESSION OF A GLORIOUS INHERITANCE--¡§I have waited
¡¨ said Jacob
¡§for Thy
salvation¡¨; language implying that there was a future good not yet attained
long as he had been a subject of the Divine government
seeking humbly and
holily to ¡§ walk with God.¡¨
II. The words
imply Jacob¡¦s WILLINGNESS TO LEAVE HIS CHOICEST EARTHLY COMFORTS. He looked for
a better heritage
not exposed to vicissitude and change; not amidst a dark and
idolatrous land
but in the region of glory where cherubim and seraphim abide;
not accorded by the bounty of Pharaoh
but prepared by God for His people. He
looked to a house
the ¡§builder and maker of which is God.¡¨ He lived under a
darker dispensation than ours; but he had heard the invitation
¡§Come up
hither¡¨: ¡§Enter
thou blessed of the Lord.¡¨ If then
like Jacob
we have been
reconciled and brought near through the ¡§blood of the everlasting covenant
¡¨
are we not warranted in thinking that God will not leave His people comfortless
at the last?
III. Jacob had
EXPERIENCED MANY TRIALS AND BEEN SUBJECT TO MANY SORROWS. The words
accordingly
seem to have been spoken in assured belief that these would soon
be past.
IV. The Christian
may feel the force of Jacob¡¦s words
inasmuch as he expects to be favoured with
the nearer vision of
and to hold CONGENIAL INTERCOURSE WITH
THE SAVIOUR. (A.
R. Bonar
D. D.)
Salvation
Salvation! Blessed be God
that our fallen earth has heard the
joyful sound! It is unheard in hell. Blessed be the grace which brought it to
your ears! To multitudes it is a tuneless cymbal. Salvation! It peoples the
many mansions of the heavenly kingdom. Salvation I It is a roll written by
Jehovah¡¦s pen. It is the decree of Divine councils: the fruit of omniscient
mind: the first-born of unmeasured love: the perfection of eternal thought: the
strength of omnipotence. Salvation! It is the work for which Jesus was born in
Bethlehem
and lived on earth
and died at Calvary
and descended into the
grave
and burst the bonds of death
and mounted to heaven
and sits on the
right
hand of God. For this He reigns and prays on high. It is the work for
which the Spirit seeks our earth
and knocks at the barred entrance of the
sinner¡¦s heart. For this He assails the fortress of self-love
and reveals the
perils of sin
and wrestles with ignorance and vain excuses. Salvation! It is
the first message which mercy uttered to a ruined world. It is the end of every
prophecy--the purport of every precept--the beauty of every promise--the truth
of every sacrifice--the substance of every rite--the song of every inspired
lip--the longing desire of every renewed heart--the beacon which guides through
the voyage of life--the haven to which the tides of grace convey--the end of
faith
the full light of hope
the home of love. Salvation! It is the absence
of this blessing which builds the prison-house of hell
which kindles the
never-quenched fires-which forges the eternal chains which wraps the dreary
regions in one mantle of blackness--which gives keenness to the undying
worm--which blows up the smoke of torment--which gives the bitterness of
despair to the hopeless wail. Does any eager soul exclaim
Tell me
further
wherein Salvation¡¦s blessedness consists? It is a blessed rescue
to change
ceaseless wailings into endless praise: the blackness of darkness into the
glories of brightness beyond the sun in his strength. Does any add
Let me
clearly understand how this is all accomplished! Come
see the excellent things
which Jesus works. He saves by rescuing from hell. He saves by giving title to
heaven. He saves by meetening for heaven. He by His Spirit dethrones the love
of sin: implants delight in God. It is great
because willed
provided
accepted by a great God
even the Father: because wrought out and finished by a
great God
even Jesus: because applied by a great God
even the Spirit. It is
great
because it averts great woe: bestows great grace: and blesses a great
multitude. O my soul! see to it that you are saved. (Dean Law.)
The death-bed:
I. WHAT IS THIS
SALVATION OF WHICH JACOB SPEAKS? As a dying man
he speaks of a salvation
towards which he had looked
and for which he had waited until that hour. What
that salvation really is
we now know by clear and unequivocal revelation; but
the question before us is
what it was in Jacob¡¦s estimation
what it was in
its actual results upon the dying believer of his day? The full knowledge of
the salvation of the gospel gives victory over sin
and death
and the grave.
1. Salvation with him would be deliverance from the burden of the
flesh. A mind so spiritual as his
and so habituated to intercourse with the
great Father of spirits
could not but discriminate between the immortal spirit
and the perishable tenement in which it was confined. He had long experienced
the sorrows incident to this imperfect state. The infirmities of age had long
been stealing upon him.
2. The salvation for which he looked would be deliverance from sin.
Sin was a permanent evil
with which
in some form or other
he had to contend
in every period of his life. In youth
maturity
and age
it had still been
in
one way or other
the cause of his anxiety. He had
however
attained by faith
to the hope of the remission of sin. He leaned upon ¡§the Angel that redeemed
him from all evil.¡¨ The system of grace
however fully or scantily revealed
was to him a sufficient ground of hope and practical comfort in the house of
his pilgrimage.
3. Jacob would include also in this salvation the high and permanent
felicities of an eternal existence. I have waited all the days of my appointed
time until my change come. And now
O Lord
fulfil all that I have been led to
hope for
and crown this faint and failing spirit with immortal strength
and
blessedness
and perfection.
4. Jacob evidently implied
in this strong expression of reliance
upon God
the expectation of deliverance from the evils of death itself. The
act of dissolution is an event from which human nature shrinks. It is
unnatural. It is the consequence of sin. But
Lord
I have waited for Thy
salvation. I have looked for complete deliverance. Let my Shepherd and my Guide
be with me in the shadowy valley. O God most holy
O Lord most mighty
O
merciful Saviour
Thou most worthy Judge Eternal
suffer me not
at my last
hour
for any pains of death
to fall from Thee. Here
then
we have a view of
the salvation for which Jacob waited.
II. WHAT ARE WE TO
UNDERSTAND BY JACOB HAVING WAITED FOR THIS SALVATION? He refers to the habit of
his previous life
to the whole tenor of his course. ¡§This has been the grand
object of my existence. This is the thing for which I have sought.¡¨
1. The expression implies that he had believed the truth of this salvation;
but of this we need say nothing
for every step of his life exhibits his
willing acceptance of the promise of deliverance
and his perfect satisfaction
with the covenant of mercy.
2. He had sought for this salvation in the zealous use of the means
of grace
in the way of holy and prayerful obedience.
3. He had expected this salvation with increasing affection. It
became more and more the object of endeared attachment. To wait
implies the
intense occupation of the soul.
4. That Jacob waited implies that he was patient. A waiting spirit
is a patient and submissive one. His is not a petulant wish
in a moment of
dissatisfaction
to depart; but a calm and even energy of soul bearing towards
immortality.
Lessons:
1. Be thankful that
in a rebellious and lost world
the benevolence
and the wisdom of God provided
even in the earlier stages of our history
a
means of redemption so ample and effective
and left on an infallible record
such bright examples for our encouragement and comfort. Let us thank God
and
take courage.
2. Again
be humbled when you compare the faith of earlier days with
ours in days so rich in evangelical privilege.
3. Lastly
be diligent
then
that you may be found of God in peace
without spot and blameless. (E. Craig.)
The believer waiting for God¡¦s salvation:
I. THE LIVING
SAINT¡¦S CHARACTER. He is one who is ¡§waiting for the salvation of God.¡¨ By the
term ¡§salvation¡¨ here
we are probably to understand the Saviour Himself--the
Messiah who had been promised. By the words he uses in the text
Jacob
evidently expressed his faith in the testimony of God as to the coming of the
Messiah
to whom he looked
as every guilty sinner must do
and in whose name
he trusted for salvation and eternal life. Salvation
taken in its fullest sense
expresses all that the soul can require for time and eternity. And well might
this good old saint
Jacob
say here
in addressing God
¡§Thy salvation.¡¨ The
glorious design of saving sinners of the human race by a Mediator was conceived
in the infinite Mind
and determined upon in the counsels of God
before the
foundations of the world were laid
or even time had begun its course. For this
salvation Jacob had waited. Numerous had been the incidents of his past life
but amidst them all he had kept his eye fixed on the salvation of God
and had
consequently passed through things temporal so as not to lose those things
which were eternal.
II. THE DYING
SAINT¡¦S COMFORT. Brethren
there is no real comfort in dying moments
but that
which comes from having waited for God
and being in immediate prospect of
entering on a full and uninterrupted enjoyment of the salvation of God; a
lively and well-grounded confidence that we are in Christ
and shall be saved
in Him
with an everlasting salvation; a hope that maketh not ashamed
that we
are heirs of
and are about to be admitted to
glory
honour
and immortality.
Sorrow is banished
and desire fully satisfied. A well-grounded hope of thus
receiving the end of his faith
even the salvation of his soul
and of being
admitted to the felicities
full and perfect and enduring
of the heavenly
world
affords strong and abundant consolation to a dying saint. To enjoy this
salvation at death and in eternity
it must now be sought by you. (W. Snell.)
Waiting for salvation:
I. How BELIEVERS
LIVE. They live waiting for the salvation of the Lord. This comprehends many
important particulars both in doctrine and experience.
1. A conviction of the need of salvation. The sick man only needs
healing; the man in danger only needs rescuing: to offer to one that is not
sick a remedy
and to one that is not lost
salvation
would only be mockery.
And this teaches us the reason of a fact which is awful: the whole
in their
own estimation
refuse a physician; those who are unconscious that they are
lost
ruined
and undone
neglect the great salvation.
2. A knowledge of the method by which salvation is to be obtained.
Waiting for a thing implies a sense of its value and importance.
3. Diligence in the use of those means with which the salvation of
the soul is connected. Faith and hope do not lie dormant in the heart; they are
active principles
always in exercise. The more diligent and devout your
attendance on the means which God has appointed in dependence on the influences
of the Spirit
the more clear will be your vision
the more fervent your
desires
the more full your foretastes of salvation. Waiting on the Lord
you
shall renew your strength
and go on in the beauty of holiness
till you appear
perfect before God in Zion.
4. That the hope of salvation is the grand support of the believer
and the only source of his consolations under all the sufferings to which he is
exposed. He ¡§endures
as seeing Him that is invisible
¡¨ and ¡§in hope rejoices
against hope.¡¨
II. How BELIEVERS
DIE. The reigning temper of his heart is still the same. He lived
and now he
dies
¡§waiting for the salvation of the Lord.¡¨ ¡§The ruling passion¡¨ is ¡§strong
in death.¡¨ The last emotion
when nature sinks
and all is feebleness and
decay
is a desire for the salvation of God. And this implies that the believer
considers death--
1. As an entrance on immortality. Surely when he says
¡§I have
waited for Thy salvation
O Lord!¡¨ it does not imply that he wishes his being
to become extinct. David knew that he should live in the presence of God. Jacob
knew that when ¡§the earthly house of his tabernacle was dissolved
¡¨ he had ¡§a
building of God
a house not made with hands
eternal in the heavens.¡¨
2. As the termination of his sufferings. His temptations and sorrows
can follow him no further. At the gate of death he lays down his burden: he is
to sigh and suffer no more for ever. His warfare is accomplished. His long
tedious
painful struggles are at an end. Death
which is to some the beginning
of sorrows and of sufferings
is to him the end of both.
3. As the harvest
when all the graces of the spirit would be
ripened
and matured
and gathered
it is said that the good man shall come to
his grave
¡§like as a shock of corn cometh in his season.¡¨ Observe this figure:
The fallow ground is first broke up
the seed is sown
and it remains unseen.
But the process of vegetation is going forward; the germ is
expanding; ere long the green blade appears. The frosts pass over it
and it
withers; but the sun shines
and it recovers. At length
after it has
experienced a few storms
and been impeded in its growth by noxious weeds
in
consequence of fruitful showers and genial sunshine
it is fully ripe and fit
for the harvest. So the fallow ground of the heart is broken up; the good seed
of the kingdom
the incipient principles of grace are implanted. They are
hidden for a season
but they proceed; there is the principle of vitality; and
we see ¡§first the blade
then the ear
and after that the full corn in the
ear.¡¨ All the graces of the Spirit are then ripened and perfected; faith into
vision
hope into fruition
and love is made perfect so as to cast out all
fear. Then the believer shall see God without an interposing cloud
love Him
with a perfect heart
and serve Him without weariness.
4. An assurance of a glorious resurrection. When Jacob was dying
he
took an oath of his son that he would bury him in the land of Canaan. And
Joseph also ¡§gave commandment concerning his bones.¡¨ What should make these
holy men so anxious about the place of their interment? The world is lost to a
dead man; and what matters it whether he lies in Egypt or in Canaan? What could
it he for
but to express their faith in the promise of God; their belief that
death would not cut them off from His favour. The place of their burial
therefore
will remain as a monument of their faith to the latest period of
time: and when the angels gather up their fragments
where are they to look for
them but in that land where they are laid
and where Christ appeared
and will
appear again?
From the whole let us--
1. Learn the vast importance of that salvation which has been an
object of desire to the saints of God in all ages. The word signifies
deliverance--deliverance from all evil
and introduction to all good.
2. Behold the perfect man
and mark the upright; for the end of that
man is peace. If his life is honourable to religion
his death is a
confirmation of all that he professed. (W. Thorpe.)
Verse 19
He shall overcome at the last
Faith¡¦s triumph:
Consider--
I.
FAITH
TRIUMPHANT IN DOUBT. The gospel is a revelation. It is the telling of a secret.
There is not one mystery either about man or about God which has been either
caused or aggravated by the gospel. Doubtless there are matters not yet
revealed. There are unexplained
perhaps inexplicable
difficulties
as regards
God¡¦s will and man¡¦s future
which the gospel leaves where it found them. Faith
triumphs in and over doubting (John 6:67-68).
II. FAITH TRIUMPHS
IN DISAPPOINTMENT. TO be willing to wait
even for encouragement
much more for
victory
is an essential part of his character who has seen the promise afar
off
and been persuaded of it
and embraced it
and who now lives day by day in
the calm
humble looking-for of a light that shall arise and a rest reserved in
heaven.
III. FAITH CONQUERS
SIN. That is our most urgent want
and that is faith¡¦s most solemn office.
Faith conquering is
above all things
faith conquering sin
faith looking
upwards to a loving Saviour
and drawing down from Him the desire and the
effort and the grace to be holy.
IV. FAITH CONQUERS
DEATH. Death is not dreadful to the Christian
because he has in the other
world a Father
a Saviour
a Comforter. (Dean Vaughan.)
Stock-taking:
The text is a prophecy respecting one of the tribes of Israel
declaring that Gad
whose name signifies a troop
should be overcome again and again;
but that at the last they should overcome all their foes. It also is a prophecy
concerning every Christian
and it is a picture of the life of every Child of
God. We often have been overcome
but the Spirit of God has enabled us to beat
back the enemies of our soul; and we to-day can cry Victory! through the blood
of the Lamb. Though we stand on slippery ground
and have need every moment to
watch and pray lest we fall into sin
and though
alas! we do fall continually
yet the prophecy declares that we shall not utterly be cast down
but at the
last we shall stand in our lot in the city of the heavenly Jerusalem.
I. REVIEW THE
PAST. The memory should be like a tradesman¡¦s storehouse
filled with valuable
commodities
such as shall be useful in the future
rather than lumber places
for that which does more harm than good. But
alas! when we turn over the
leaves of the past
what heaps of lumber we find we have gathered!
1. During the past year many have gone through severe trials. We are
not like the great rock at Llandudno
on which the angry waves cast their fury
time after time
but which hurls them back. We are rather like the trembling
ship lifted up and cast down by the force of the wind and waves. We have felt
every wind of sorrow that blows; and the cutting wave of trouble has dashed
over us and filled our souls with vexation of spirit. But
in the midst of all
our God has kept us from despair. There is no case but what might have been
worse; and according to our day our strength has been given. ¡§Hitherto hath the
Lord helped us.¡¨
2. Some have had bereavement by death. There was once
when we
arrived at home
a face generally looking for us from the window
and a kindly
hand to open to us the door; but that gentle one has departed from us
and we
are alone.
3. Many
yea
all of us
this last year have passed through fierce
temptations. I do not know whether any of you have been like a heavily laden
ship; perhaps your particular temptation has been too much cargo of gold. ¡§How
hardly shall they that have riches enter the kingdom of heaven.¡¨ Like some of
those ships that Mr. Plimsoll has told us about
weighted with cargo until
their water-line is under the wave
and the sea washes over the decks. Oh
how
wearily the over-weighted ship wends its way across the ocean! The most weary
of men is he who is weighted with gold. It is not riches alone that give to us
happiness
peace
and contentment. The world thinks so; but the Word of God is
a better guide
and we are told that it is hard for the rich man to ¡¥be happy.
Many of us this last year have been like unseaworthy ships; we have not had
strength to weather the storm; every wind of temptation has made the seams in
our ship wider
and floods of sin have entered into our hearts and swamped our
piety
and many are hopeless wrecks. You entered this last year holy; you are
now wicked. You entered this last year with a character on which there was not
a single stain; it is now black with sin. Everybody trusted you at the
beginning of this year; alas! nobody believes you now. You have not had a good
captain of your ship. Your pilot has wrecked many souls
yet you trusted him.
The devil carries every ship he steers to the awful rocks of perdition. Thank
God that a new Captain
the Lord Jesus
is willing to gather you in His arms
and to lead you to the harbour of salvation
and there create within you a new
heart and a new spirit. But
brethren
let us rejoice for the many who have
weathered the storms of the year¡¦s temptation. Some of us come to this period with
furled sails and bare poles; but
thank God
we are still guided by our good
Captain
the Lord Jesus; the rudder of our will obeys His wish
and our only
compass is the Bible. Brethren
we shall reach the harbour at the last.
Rejoice
for your names are written in heaven.
4. We have had many blessings.
5. We all have had mercy. The mercy-seat covered the law. Have not
we broken the commandments during the last year? But mercy has covered our
transgressions; and God has declared to us
¡§I will not remember thy sin.¡¨ In
the great plague of 1666
every house door in London had painted on it these
words
¡§Lord have mercy on us.¡¨ Well
dear friends
every hour of every day
we
alas! need to say
¡§God be merciful unto us¡¨; and blessed be His name
He
has poured mercy upon us. ¡§Goodness and mercy have followed us all the days of
our life.¡¨
6. What progress have we made in the past? During snowy weather
if
you go to a field and try to walk in a straight line
you must not look down at
the snow
but up at some mark at the end of the field. Our footsteps are in the
snow
and what a zigzag line to be sure! Why? Because we did not fix our eye
upon the tree in the distance. Now
dear friends
look back upon the past year.
Is your pathway a straight one or not?
II. TAKE STOCK OF
THE PRESENT. What are we worth? Is God our Banker? Have we any treasure in
heaven? Have we drawn out anything from Him by the cheque of prayer? Have we
trusted Him with all our life and all that we have? How much do we owe unto our
Lord? And let us reckon the debt of love to our fellow-men. As Christians
are
we able to pay twenty shillings to the pound? Do we pay our pew-rent at the
church
and yet forget to pay the debt of love to our poorer brethren?
Brethren
are your hearts any bigger than they were twelve months ago? Have you
any increase of faith? At the time of one of the terrible inundations which
frequently take place in St. Petersburg
the Empress Catherine stood at one of
the windows of the palace watching the fearful sight. The river had stolen into
the city during the night
and hundreds of people were drowned. As her majesty
was intently looking upon the flood and the havoc it was causing
she saw
something above the surface of the water which was rapidly filling the courtyard;
and
observing it more attentively
she found it to be the head of a soldier
nearly up to his chin in water; but apparently taking no notice of his danger
as he still shouldered his musket as if on duty among the fishes. The Empress
at once sent a servant in a boat to ask why the man remained there at the peril
of his life. The soldier replied that he had been placed there to guard the
palace
and that he could not quit his post until his sergeant sent another
sentry to relieve him. He would not stir; and he had to be dragged into the
boat by main force in-order to save his life. Brethren
in all duties let us be
faithful unto death. It is he that endures to the end who shall be saved. Have
you any increase of hope? Lord Bacon said that hope made a good breakfast
but
an idle supper. Brethren
has your hope in God been an idle one? Has He
disappointed you? What is the depth of peace in the reservoir of your heart?
The Word declares that the peace of God shall be an inward garrison to your
soul. Have you let the devil enter within the fortress of your honour? The
peace of God shall keep the gates of all who trust Him. Have you thus trusted
Him? And
then
examine your character. Your signboard may be all right
but
what is the hidden state of the business of your soul? Going down the street
the other day I saw in a stonemason¡¦s yard a beautiful pillar
but it was
broken. Does it not represent the character of some? But
thank God
though it
is broken
it may be repaired. How about the policy with which you conduct your
business? In the days of Alexander
it was fashionable for his captains and
soldiers to walk with their heads leaned to one side; because Alexander had
somewhat of a crooked neck
and they thought it to be an honour to imitate him.
How sad it is that in our rich land men have made money with a wry policy; it
has not been straight in the straightness of honour and truth. Their policy has
been a crooked one. It has been
¡§Get money
honestly if you can
but get it.¡¨
Do not imitate such men. Their success is no proof of their wisdom. But what is
your policy? Do you consider it to be expedient to cheat? And
if so
are you
not a secret thief? In taking stock let the question
¡§Am I honest?¡¨ be fairly
answered!
III.
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE FUTURE. (W. Birch.)
Lines of circumvallation:
My text speaks of a tribe who were often discomfited in battle
yet were at last victorious. But the words may be used as graphically
descriptive of the defeat of Christ
to be followed by His successes. When
Christ¡¦s chin dropped upon His breast in death
the world shouted in triumph.
Driven as He has been from the heart
from the social circle
from literature
from places of influence
the world gazes now upon what seems to be a
vanquished Redeemer. But He shall yet rally His forces
and though now overcome
by other troops
He shall overcome at the last. When a city is about to be
besieged
lines of circumvallation are run out; in half circles the
fortifications sweep around; the first line fifteen miles out; the second
ten
miles; the next
five; the next
one mile out. The attacking host first takes
the outworks
then a line nearer
coming on up until the embankment nearest the
city is captured. Now
the human heart is defending itself against Christ
and
it has run out four or five lines of circumvallation
and they must one by one
be taken
so that Christ may overcome at the last and the heart surrender.
1. Forward
ye troops of God
and take the line of fortification
farthest out
which is prejudice against ministers and churches. There are men
who
for various reasons
do not believe in these things
and from that outward
entrenchment contend against Christ. My reply to this is
seek out a Church and
a minister that you do like. Amid all the denominations there must be one place
where your soul will be blessed. This very church
to some of you
shall be the
way to heaven
and through this one break in the long fortification of your
prejudice I pass through with the battle-cry of the Cross
feeling that
though
these prejudices have been the troop that overcame Christ
He shall overcome at
the last.
2. Forward
ye troops of God
to the next entrenchment! It is a
circumvallation of social influences. There are hundreds of people here
to-high
whose surroundings in the world are adverse to the Christian religion.
Evil companionship has destroyed innumerable men. Through this high battlement
no human force can break
but
oh! that the Lord Jesus might storm it tonight.
3. Forward
ye troops of God
to the third line of entrenchment
namely
the intellectual difficulties about religion. A hundred perplexities
about the parables; a hundred questions about the ninth chapter of Romans;
passage set against passage in seeming contradiction. You pile up a battlement
of Colenso on the ¡§ Pentateuch
¡¨ and Tom Paine¡¦s ¡§Age of Reason
¡¨ and Renan¡¦s
¡§Life of Christ¡¨; and some parts of the wall are so high that it would be folly
to attempt to take them. But there is a hole in the wall of fortification
and
through that hole in the wall I put my right hand
and take your own
and say
¡§My brother
do you want to be saved? ¡§And you say¡¨ Yes.¡¨ ¡§Well; Jesus Christ
came to seek and to save that which is lost.¡¨ Scepticism seems to do quite well
in prosperity
but it fails in adversity. A celebrated infidel
on shipboard
in the sunshine caricatured the Christian religion
and scoffed at its
professors. But the sea arose
and the waves dashed across the hurricane-deck
and the man cried out
¡§O my
God
what shall I do? what shall I do?¡¨ A father
went down to see his dying son in a Southern hospital during the war. Finding
that the boy was dying
he went to the chaplain and said
¡§I wish you would go
and see my boy
and get him prepared for the future.¡¨ ¡§Why
¡¨ said the chaplain
¡§I thought you did not believe in religion!¡¨ ¡§Well
¡¨ said he
¡§I don¡¦t
but his
mother does; and I would a great deal rather the boy would follow his mother.
Go and get him prepared.¡¨ Scepticism does tolerably well to live by
but it is
a poor thing to die by. The fortification of your soul this hour gives way; and
the Christ
who seemed to have been overcome by argument
and by profound
questions
and elaborate analysis
now
by the force of love
overcomes at the
last!
4. Forward
ye troops of light
to the next circumvallation of the
heart
namely
pernicious habit. I do not believe that it is necessary to be a
teetotaller in order to be a Christian (although I wish all were teetotallers)
but I do say that a man who is excessive in the use of strong drink cannot love
Christ. He will not dispute with you the supremacy of the bottle. Some years
ago
when the cholera was raging in New Orleans
a steamer near nightfall
put
out from the city
laden with passengers escaping from the pestilence. The
steamer had been but a little while out when the engineer fell at his post with
cholera. The captain
in despair
went up and down among the passengers
asking
if there were any one there who could act as engineer. A man stepped out
and
said that he was an engineer
and could take the position. In the night the
captain was awakened by a violent motion of the steamer
and he knew that there
was great peril ahead. He went up
and found that the engineer was a maniac;
that he had fastened down the safety-valves; and he told the captain that he
was the emissary of Satan
commissioned to drive the steamer to hell. By some
strategy
the man was got down in time to save the steamer. There are men
engineered by maniac passions
sworn to drive them to temporal and everlasting
destruction. Every part of their nature trembles under the high pressure.
Nothing but the grace of Almighty God can bring down those passions
and chain
them. A little while longer in this course
and all is lost. Whatever be the
form of evil habit
Christ is able fully and finally to deliver that man. Where
sin abounded
grace does much more abound. Victory over thy sin! Victory
through the Lord Jesus Christ! Through many a long year thy appetites overcame
Him
but He has overcome at the last!
5. Forward
ye troops of light
to the last and the mightiest line
of fortification--the pride and the rebellion of the natural heart. This
entrenchment must be taken
or all the rest of the contest is lost. This is the
crisis of the battle. (Dr. Talmage.)
Intermediate failures and final triumphs:
1. Do not judge until ¡§the last.¡¨
2. Men who are overcome should be encouraged.
3. Apply this to beginners in business--in Christian life--in the
reformation of bad habits.
4. Apply this to spiritual doubt. Do not too readily describe men as
infidels. Even may at last believe.
5. Hope for your children. (J. Parker
D. D)
It may seem
as we look at it spiritually
strange that the fact
of being ¡§overcome¡¨ by foes should be part of the blessing of God¡¦s people. And
yet through the darkness to the light is the order everywhere in God¡¦s kingdom
of nature
providence
and grace; and to be ¡§overcome¡¨ is as truly a needed
discipline for the soul as to be a triumphant conqueror. The type of nature¡¦s
strength is not the hot-house plant needing constant care and watchfulness to
keep it alive. It is the pine-tree rocked by Norwegian winds which threaten
every moment to imperil its existence by uprooting it. Thus
too
it is in the
Christian life; and without such dealing the very best of us would be but
dwarfs
stunted and crippled
and incapacitated for that warfare with the
world
the flesh
and the devil by which we win our way to the kingdom
Nor
does the Holy Spirit leave us in any doubt as to this. ¡§A troop shall overcome
him¡¨ are the words. Not a solitary foe
but many. Sometimes wave upon wave of
trial rolls over the soul until we know not what it means. But the cup is
measured out. Not one drop is in it beyond what is absolutely needful for the
soul¡¦s welfare. And the end is the same in every case-to lead us up out of self
wholly into God. Nor let us suppose for a moment that it is because of some sin
in us that this bitter cup is put into our hands. It may be this indeed
for
God will be quit of sin in us at any and every cost. The gravitation of every
believer is earthward
and the quick pruning-knife of the Husbandman can never
be unused long without the soul suffering damage. The process of restoration
may lie in a constant succession of small trials pressing upon the spirit to
draw it nearer to God
or in some sharp quick operation of the knife that makes
itself felt for years
turning the hair grey
and making the body stoop. But it
is not always to get rid of sin in us that these strokes are sent. It may be to
mould us more into the likeness of Christ. Every follower of the Lamb must be a
cross-bearer. It is the branch that bears fruit which is pierced and purged
and not the unfruitful one. It may be because you are so like Christ you are
made to feel the pruning-knife--in order that you may become more like Him. And
how blessed the assurance of our God that we ¡§shall overcome at last!¡¨ It is
not that we shall overcome at the end of life. It is that the issue of every
conflict shall be victory. This Divine assurance of the certainty of victory
receives its explanation from Romans 8:35-39. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Verse 20
Asher
The blessing of Asher:
Let us look at some of the spiritual points of instruction
contained in this blessing of Jacob upon Asher.
And first as to their ¡§ bread
¡¨ which is described as ¡§fat.¡¨ Christ is the
¡§bread of life¡¨ to all His people
and this bread may indeed be said to be
¡§fat.¡¨ The Psalmist uses a similar figure when he says
¡§My soul shall be
satisfied with marrow and fatness¡¨; and again
¡§They shall be abundantly
satisfied with the fatness of Thy house.¡¨ And again
in speaking of those who
dwell in God¡¦s presence
he says
¡§Those that be planted in the house of the
Lord shall flourish in the courts of our God: they shall still bring forth
fruit in old age; they shall be fat and flourishing¡¨ (Psalms 92:13-14). What a rich and blessed
portion for the soul is hid in Christ! How our highest thoughts of it are
infinitely surpassed! ¡§I sat down under His shadow with great delight
and His
fruit was sweet to my taste
lie brought me to the banqueting-house
and His
banner over me was love¡¨ (Song of Solomon 2:3-4). And observe
another deeply important truth: ¡§He shall yield royal dainties.¡¨ The possession
and enjoyment of Christ
and all the treasures of His grace
involves a great
responsibility. Asher is to ¡§yield royal dainties¡¨--to give out what it
possesses to others. If Christ be indeed ours
and weare living upon Him
continually
we shall do the same. And to give out
we must live upon Him. It
is this we need--living
abiding communion with a precious Christ. O reader!
let not Satan deceive us by allowing us to have everything but this! This is
his grand device
and how wonderfully he has succeeded let the lives of most
Christians tell! And what is Asher said to give out in this passage? ¡§Royal
dainties.¡¨ Yes
indeed
as we live upon Christ
that which the soul gives out
is no ordinary food. It is dainties--precious food--and with the stamp of the
King upon them. There is a royal pardon
a royal love
a royal Saviour
from
whom they all flow freely down. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Verse 21
Naphtali
The blessing of Naphtali
In Gad we have the Christian
soldier fighting the good fight of
faith
and more than conqueror over all foes.
In Asher we have the Christian living upon Christ
and giving out Christ to
others. In Naphtali we have the Christian enjoying his liberty and freedom and
happiness in Christ
and testifying of Christ to others. In Joseph we have the
Christian bringing forth much fruit from abiding in Christ
the well of living
waters
and also showing forth that fruit to all around. As we look at these
passages
we find they are a chain. Each one is a link depending upon the
other. You must fight the good fight of faith if you would enjoy Christ as the
¡§fatness¡¨ of the Living Bread; and the enjoyment of Christ brings with it true
liberty and freedom; and there must be all these
with the addition that you
must abide in Christ
the roots of your life ever drawing from the ¡§well of
living waters
¡¨ if you are to ¡§bring forth much fruit.¡¨ It is surely not
without design that the Holy Spirit has placed these passages thus in this consecutive
order. May we dwell upon them continually in this light
and test our souls by
this Divine standard. Our subject now is the third of these four passages--the
tribe of Naphtali. He is brought before us under a most striking symbol--that
of a hart or gazelle ¡§let loose.¡¨ It brings before us the liberty and
exultation of the soul in its new sphere of existence. It has been ¡§let loose¡¨
from its prison-house of sin
and darkness
and misery. Its prison-doors have
been flung wide open by the great Emancipator
Christ Jesus the Lord. Its debt
has been fully paid. All its guilt
and sin
and transgression has been
cancelled by the blood of Christ. ¡§Let loose!¡¨ No other word in the English
language could so fitly express the effect of the grand redemption-work of
Christ (see Isa 2 Corinthians 5:17; Galatians 6:1; John 11:44). Turning again to Jacob¡¦s
blessing on this tribe
we see another truth: ¡§He giveth goodly words.¡¨ It is
so always. St. Paul says
¡§Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all
wisdom: teaching and admonishing one another: in psalms
and hymns
and
spiritual songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.¡¨ Asher lived
upon the fatness of the Bread of Life
and as a result gave out ¡§royal
dainties.¡¨ Naphtali is ¡§satisfied with favour and full of the blessing of the Lord
and so gives out goodly words.¡¨ Joseph is a ¡§bough
¡¨ whose roots go down into
the Well of Living Waters
and so brings forth ¡§much fruit.¡¨ ¡§Royal dainties
¡¨
¡§goodly words
¡¨ ¡§much fruit.¡¨ ¡§Out of the fulness of the heart the mouth
speaketh.¡¨ Let us only be living upon and abiding in Christ
and such will ever
be our testimony. It is not dainties
but ¡§royal dainties¡¨; not words
but
¡§goodly words¡¨; not fruit
but ¡§much fruit.¡¨ Oh
reader! this is the kind of
life God asks for! This is the Christianity we need. Not your just Christians
and no more. No; God wants a high order of Christianity. ¡§Royal dainties
¡¨
¡§goodly words
¡¨ ¡§much fruit¡¨--mark it well! Not only to be engaged in the work
of the Lord
but abounding in it; nay
more
¡§always abounding¡¨ in it. (F.
Whitfield
M. A.)
Verses 22-26
Joseph is a fruitful bough
The blessing of Joseph:
I.
PREDICTION
OF HIS FUTURE GREATNESS.
1. His extraordinary increase.
2. His great prosperity.
II. PRAISE OF HIS
CHARACTER.
1. He had been a much-tried man (verse23).
2. He had gained the victory over his trials (Genesis 49:24).
III. HIS DESTINY
THE NATURAL RESULT OF HIS CHARACTER.
1. His filial obedience.
2. His desire for God¡¦s glory.
3. The operation of that principle by which God rewards in kind.
4. The principle that God¡¦s dealings in the past constitute a ground
of hope and trust for the future.
5. The principle by which a firm and well-established godliness
tends to continue. (T. H. Leale.)
The fruitful bough:
I. IN HIS UNION
WITH CHRIST
THE CHRISTIAN IS AS A ¡§BOUGH.¡¨
1. Union with Christ.
2. Dependence upon Christ.
3. Sustentation from Christ.
II. IN THE RESULTS
OF HIS UNION WITH CHRIST
THE CHRISTIAN IS AS A ¡§FRUITFUL BOUGH.¡¨
1. Some united
but dead.
2. Some living
but fruitless.
III. IN THE SOURCE
OF HIS FERTILITY
THE CHRISTIAN IS AS A ¡§FRUITFUL BOUGH BY A WELL.¡¨ As the
bough drinks of the spring through the tree
so the Christian drinks of
spiritual blessings through Christ.
1. Secretly.
2. Constantly.
IV. IN THE HIGHER
ATTAINMENTS OF SPIRITUAL LIFE
THE CHRISTIAN IS AS A ¡§FRUITFUL BOUGH BY A WELL
WHOSE BRANCHES RUN OVER THE WALL.¡¨
1. Over the wall of sectarian prejudices.
2. Over the wall of unbelieving doubt.
3. Over the wall that separates the world from the Church
and
blesses the dying
with fruit.
4. Over the wall that separates earth from heaven
and looks
¡§within the veil.¡¨ (W. H. Burton.)
The blessing of Joseph--¡§Joseph is a
fruitful bough
even a fruitful bough by a well.¡¨ In these words we are
reminded of our Lord¡¦s own statement (John 15:5)
¡§I am the vine
ye are the
branches.¡¨ The Christian is only a bough of the Tree of Life. But he is to be a
fruitful bough. ¡§Herein is My Father glorified
¡¨ said our blessed Lord
¡§that
ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be My disciples.¡¨ And how is this fruitfulness
produced? The passage shows us: ¡§a fruitful bough by a well.¡¨ The believer is
to live near to Christ
the well of living waters
and to be drawing forth all
his nourishment from Christ by the Holy Spirit. The roots of the tree draw
forth the waters from the well
and send them up into all its branches. Thus
the ¡§bough¡¨ becomes beautiful and fruitful. And the well is hidden. The process
goes on in secret
but
notwithstanding
it is an unceasing process. Mark
also
that the branches of this fruitful bough are said to ¡§run over the wall.¡¨
The believer¡¦s fruit must be seen--seen by all who pass by. Alas! only the
foliage is too often seen l But the world looks beneath all. But now observe
how the patriarch passes rapidly from the figure of a fruitful branch to that
of a military warrior: ¡§But his bow abode in strength
and the arms of his
hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob.¡¨ True
faithfulness is ever linked with the cross
and also with warfare. ¡§Fight the
good fight of faith¡¨; ¡§put on the whole armour of God¡¨; ¡§quit you like men; be
strong¡¨--such are the expressions used to show us our true position in this
world. There is an inseparable connection between life and faithfulness
between the cross and the warfare. But the ¡§bow abiding in strength¡¨ points
also to Christ. It tells us of the strong
unyielding position in which He
would carry on His government (see Revelation 6:1-2). And we see the ¡§arms
of the hands¡¨ of the true Joseph ¡§made strong¡¨--in the power of His exalted
position at the right hand of the Father--¡§by the mighty God of Jacob.¡¨ In
beautiful keeping with this we see the ¡§white horse¡¨--always the emblem of
victory--victory in holiness
purity
and truth. Let us now return to the rest
of the passage: ¡§from thence¡¨--i.e.
the mighty God--¡§is the Shepherd
the
Stone of Israel.¡¨ We must read the passage correctly: ¡§ The arms of his hands
were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob
even from the
Shepherd and Stone of Israel.¡¨ Thus we find here that Joseph¡¦s hands were made
strong for his work by the mighty God of Jacob
the Shepherd and Stone of
Israel. He who is the mighty God is the great Shepherd of His sheep
and the
great Foundation Stone of Israel. And now the blessings promised and to be
prayed for are described: ¡§blessings of heaven above
blessings of the deep
that lieth under.¡¨ They begin with heaven
and they take in the earth. This is
ever God¡¦s order. The patriarch continues: ¡§blessings of the breast and the
womb.¡¨ Jacob prays that his son may be blessed from heaven with rain and dew
and with fountains and brooks which spring from the great deep or abyss of the
earth
so that everything that had womb and breast in the natural world should
become pregnant
bring forth
and suckle. He then continues: ¡§The blessings of
thy father have prevailed above the blessings of my progenitors
unto the
utmost bound of the everlasting hills.¡¨ The blessings which Jacob implored for
his son Joseph were to surpass the blessings which his parents had transmitted
to him
as far as the great mountains towered above the earth. These blessings
were to descend upon ¡§the head of Joseph
and on the crown of the head of the
separated one from among his brethren.¡¨ As we read these promises and prayers
for blessing on Joseph
our thoughts are carried forward to the Lord Jesus
Christ. Language seems to fail the old patriarch in his longings for blessings
on his son; but as we see Jesus
¡§the separated One
¡¨ we behold these desires
fulfilled. (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Over-the-wall fruitfulness
¡§Joseph is a fruitful bough
whose branches run over the wall¡¨ (Genesis 49:22). These words remind us of
our Lord saying
¡§I am the vine
ye are the branches; he that abideth in Me
and I in him
the same bringeth forth much fruit.¡¨ And they take our thoughts
to an eastern vineyard
where the trellis bends with clusters
and a few strong
shoots are left by the kindly husbandman to overhang the enclosure for the
passer-by.
I. In the first
place
consider THE BRANCH THAT BEARS FRUIT OVER THE WALL. It is one thing to
bear fruit in the vineyard
and another to have such vigour that we also bear
fruit beyond; and we speak now of the latter.
1. Fruitfulness to more than have claim upon us. Some have such
claim; their relationship
their desert
their needs
appeal to us so forcibly
and reasonably
that we wrong them if we refuse our sympathy and help; these
are they who have right to the vintage--the children of the husbandmen
as it
were
for whom the vine exists
and who are somewhat free to the grapes. But
others have no such right
or have forfeited the right they had
the unloving
and unlovable
those who abuse your kindness
those who bring their troubles on
themselves
those who again fall when they have many times been raised
those
who seem hopelessly bad and to have no redeeming trait. And there are those
of
whom all this cannot be said
who are deserving
and yet have no claim on
us--whose rights extend to some other vineyard
but not to ours. Now we take
our text as symbolically speaking of usefulness to all these
the branch
breaking away from its support
and reaching
with its grateful fruit
to those
outside. And do we not need
my friends
to consider that? The good Samaritan
in his kindness to the Jew that had fallen among thieves
was a branch that ran
over the wall. Our Lord¡¦s deed of mercy to the Syro-Phoenician woman was a
branch that ran over the wall. Anal whilst it is right to give the bin-Jest of
our life to those who have claim on the vine
it must be right to let some
shoots trail to the larger world outside
and to the very grating of the
prisoner¡¦s cell.
2. Ministry to those outside our particular vineyard. Into every
department of life Christianity casts some healing influence. There is much
indeed
for it to do yet; but it has been the originator or beneficent ally of
all onward movements in the history of the race. See how its branches run over
the wall; how contrary it is to the spirit of exclusiveness! Its blessings are
for the Church
but
in a less degree
it blesses the world as well. And that
warns us Christian people against exclusiveness in religious sympathy; exclusiveness
is not Christianity. It were a bad day for any church when its thought
and
effort
and means are spent only on its own work and wants
and it ceases to
care with brotherly interest for other churches
God¡¦s vast world-wide work.
Let the main clusters
if you will
be for those for whom
God planted the vine
but see to it that strong fruitful branches
run over the wall.
3. Refreshment to the casual passer-by. The text was suggested in
passing a vineyard on the south side of the Alps
as outside the enclosure some
unpruned shoots
with their just-formed grapes
were waving in the wind
to be
perhaps a refreshment to some traveller in the summer¡¦s heat. It is the picture
of a Christian whose abundant inner life comes out unawares
as it were
for the
benediction of any who may pass that way. Tired pilgrims pass us every hour
some oppressed with their burden
some parched with the world¡¦s dust
some who
have lost their strength in conflict
and some who thirst but for a tender
look
a friendly utterance
a sympathetic grasp
and with these would go their
way revived. Think of such finding this reviving in us!
II. Consider
secondly
THAT THIS IS THE MARK OF THE BRANCH OF THE TRUE VINE.
1. Christianity tends to the enlarging of our sympathies. It brings
us into contact with Christ
and makes us partakers in His Spirit. Nothing is
more striking or blessed in Scripture than the absence of exclusiveness in our
Lord¡¦s love and readiness to bless. Christianity is the being joined to Him
¡§and he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit.¡¨ In His people
then
this
spirit of unexclusive sympathy exists in germ; and as they commune with Him it
grows
and they spontaneously care for those He cares for.
2. Beside this
Christianity claims a deliberate consideration of
others¡¦ wants. ¡§We
then
that are strong
ought to bear the infirmities of the
weak
and not to please ourselves¡¨; ¡§let every one of us please his neighbour
for his good
for even Christ pleased not Himself¡¨; ¡§bear ye one another¡¦s
burdens
and so fulfil the law of Christ.¡¨
3. And Christianity results in unconscious
unchecked fruitfulness.
Christianity is not so much a doing as a being. We are not Christians because
we do this or that. ¡§Many will say to Me in that day
Lord
Lord
have we not
prophesied in Thy name
and in Thy name have cast out devils
and in Thy name
done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them: I never knew you;
depart from Me ye that work iniquity.¡¨ Christianity is a new nature taking the
place of ours
by which heart and mind
and character and life become Divine.
Now our nature cannot appoint set times in which to express itself
nor fence
off a few to whom alone it shall make itself known. Every branch of the Vine
which
Jesus is
necessarily runs over the wall somewhere
bearing
unconscious fruit not only for the vineyard it is expected to enrich
but also
for the passer-by outside to pluck.
III. Then CONSIDER
HOW THIS OVER-THE-WALL FRUITFULNESS MAY RE SECURED. The very word ¡§fruit ¡§
teaches us. Distinguish between ¡§works¡¨ and ¡§fruit.¡¨ ¡§Works
¡¨ says one
¡§may be
the actings of a legal spirit; they are done in obedience to laws; they may be
performed perfunctorily
and are no part of one¡¦s nature.¡¨ But fruit is the
sign of life; it is not due to commands
nor even to effort; it is life
spontaneously
naturally
sweetly giving itself forth. Now it is fruit of which
we speak
fruit that Christ wants. ¡§Herein is My Father glorified that ye bear
much fruit
so shall ye be My disciples.¡¨ Then what is needed for this over-the-wall
fruitfulness is the earnest culture of our spirituality. Culture the life
and
the fruit comes of its own accord; branches running over the wall are but the
exuberance of life. Let me give these three brief rules:
1. It depends on the measure in which we receive the life of Christ.
¡§Joseph is a fruitful bough.¡¨ Only a bough. We are ¡§boughs
¡¨ that is all;
therefore we have no life in ourselves
and God does not require us to have
any; the life is in the Vine--¡§our life is hid with Christ¡¨; ¡§as a branch
cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the vine
no more can ye except
ye abide in Me . . . severed from Me
ye can do nothing.¡¨
2. And it depends on our fruitfulness to those nearest to us. For
the strong shoots that trail outside will spring from the strong wood in the
vineyard itself
and the dresser of the vines
we may be sure
will only permit
the branch that does its duty first within to carry strength elsewhere. To bear
fruit over the wall only
or chiefly
is to rob the Husbandman
for where He
has planted us He means our richest grapes to grow. We must love our own
best--our own family
our own church; our deepest sympathies and best energies
are for those to whom God has given most claim upon them; and only when we have
done that
He would have us not forget them that are without. ¡§Learn first to
show piety at home¡¨; ¡§do good unto all men
but specially to them that are of
the household of faith.¡¨ And that is the successful order. It is by putting
strength into our nearest duties
and fulfilling Christian love to those
nearest to us
that we get the power for the ministry beyond. Bear ripe good
fruit within the wall
then--for then it will be possible
and the Husbandman
will permit it--let some branches run over.
3. And it depends on our submission to the Divine culture of our
piety. For Joseph was the fruitful bough--Joseph
of whom it was said ¡§God made
him fruitful in the land of his affliction.¡¨ ¡§Every branch in Me that beareth
fruit
He purgeth it
that it may bring forth more fruit. ¡§The fruitful branch
is pruned closest
and if the shoots that stray over the enclosure are to bear
grapes
some others must be nipped. Is not that blessed compensation (even were
it all) for Christian suffering--more fruit to God and man? That is a price
that must be paid for fruitfulness. ¡§The vine that bears much fruit is proud to
stoop with it; the palm stands upright in a realm of sand.¡¨ (C. New.)
The archers shot at him
but his bow abode in strength
and the arms of his hands were made strong by
the hands of the mighty God of Jacob
Man helped by God:
I. STRENGTH FOR
CONFLICT by contact with the strength of God. The word here rendered ¡§made
strong¡¨ might be translated ¡§made pliable
¡¨ or ¡§flexible
¡¨ conveying the notion
of deftness and dexterity rather than of simple strength. It is practised
strength that He will give
the educated hand and arm master of all the
manipulation of the weapon.
II. The text not
only gives the fact of Divine strength being bestowed
but also THE MANNER OF
THE GIFT. What boldness of reverent familiarity there is in that symbol of the
hands of God laid on the hand of the man. A true touch
as of hand to hand
conveys the grace. Nothing but contact will give us strength for conflict and
for conquest. And the plain lesson
therefore
is--See to it that the contact
is not broken by you. ¡§In all these things weare more than conquerors through
Him that loved us.¡¨ (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Joseph attacked by the archers:
I. THE CRUEL
ATTACK. ¡§The archers have sorely grieved him.¡¨ Joseph¡¦s enemies were archers.
The original has it
¡§masters of the arrows
¡¨ that is
men who were well
skilled in the use of the arrow. Though all weapons are alike approved by the
warrior in his thirst for blood
there seems something more cowardly in the
attack of the archer
than in that of the swordsman. The swordsman plants
himself near you
foot to foot
and let you defend yourself and deal your blows
against him; but the archer stands at a distance
hides himself in ambuscade
and without you knowing it
the arrow comes whizzing through the air
and
perhaps penetrates your heart. Just so are the enemies of God¡¦s people.
1. First
Joseph had to endure the archers of envy. When he was a
boy
his father loved him. Therefore
his brethren hated him. Full often did
they jeer at the youthful Joseph
when he retired to his prayers; when he was
with them at a distance from his father¡¦s house
he was their drudge
their
slave; the taunt
the jeer
did often wound his heart
and the young child
endured much secret sorrow. Truly the archers sorely shot at him. And
my
brethren
do you hope
if you are the Lord¡¦s Josephs
that you shall escape
envy? I tell you
nay; that green-eyed monster envy lives in London as well as
elsewhere
and he creeps into God¡¦s church
moreover. Oh! it is hardest of all
to be envied by one¡¦s brethren.
2. But a worse trial than this was to overtake him. The archers of
temptation shot at him. You know it is opportunity that makes a man criminal
and he had abundant opportunity; but importunity will drive most men astray. To
be haunted day by day by solicitations of the softest kind--to be tempted hour
by hour--oh! it needs a strength superangelic
a might more than human
a
strength which only God can grant
for a young man thus to cleanse his way
and
take heed thereto according to God¡¦s word. Truly the archers sorely grieved him
and shot at him; but his bow abode in strength.
3. Then another host of archers assailed him: these were the archers
of malicious calumny. Seeing that he would not yield to temptation
his
mistress falsely accused him to her husband
and his lord
believing the voice
of his wife
cast him into prison. There was poor Joseph. His character ruined
in the eyes of man
and very likely looked upon with scorn even in the
prison-house; base criminals went away from him as if they thought him viler
than themselves
as if they were angels in comparison with him. Oh I it is no
easy thing to feel your character gone
to think that you are slandered
that
things are said of you that are untrue. Many a man¡¦s heart has been broken by
this
when nothing else could make him yield. The archers sorely grieved him
when he was so maligned
so slandered. Oh child of God
dost thou expect to
escape these archers? Wilt thou never be slandered? Shalt thou never be
calumniated? It is the lot of God¡¦s servants
in proportion to their zeal
to
be evil spoken of.
II. We have seen
these archers shoot their flights of arrows; we will now go up the hill a
little
behind a rock
to look at the SHIELDED WARRIOR and see how his courage
is while the archers have sorely grieved him. What is he doing? ¡§His bow
abideth in strength.¡¨ Let us picture God¡¦s favourite. The archers are down
below. There is a parapet of rock before him; now and then he looks over it to
see what the archers are about
but generally he keeps behind. In heavenly
security he is set upon a rock
careless of all below. Let us follow the track
of the wild goat
and behold the warrior in his fastness.
1. First
we notice that he has a bow himself
for we read that ¡§his
bow abode in strength.¡¨ He could have retaliated if he pleased
but he was very
quiet and would not combat with them.
2. Mark well his quietness. His bow ¡§abideth.¡¨ It is not rattling
it is not always moving
but it abides
it is quite still; he takes no notice
of the attack. The archers sorely grieved Joseph
but his bow was not turned
against them
it abode in strength. He turned not his bow on them. He rested
while they raged. Doth the moon stay herself to lecture every dog that bayeth
her? Doth the lion turn aside to rend each cur that barketh at him? Do the
stars cease to shine because the nightingales reprove them for their dimness?
Doth the sun stop in its course because of the officious cloud which veils it?
Or doth the river stay because the willow dippeth its leaves into its waters?
Ah! no; God¡¦s universe moves on
and if men will oppose it
it heeds them not.
3. But we must not forget the next word: ¡§His bow abode in
strength.¡¨ Though his bow was quiet
it was not because it was broken. Joseph¡¦s
bow was like that of William the Conqueror
no man could bend it but Joseph
himself; it abode ¡§in strength.¡¨ I see the warrior bending his bow
how with
his mighty arms he pulls it down and draws the string to make it ready. His bow
abode in strength; it did not snap
it did not start aside. His chastity was
his bow
and he did not lose that; his faith was his bow
and that did not
yield
it did not break; his courage was his bow
and that did not fail him;
his character
his honesty was his bow; nor did he cast it away.
III. The third
thing in our text is the SECRET STRENGTH. ¡§The arms of his hands were made
strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob.¡¨
1. First
notice concerning his strength
that it was real strength.
It says
¡§the arms of his hands
¡¨ not his hands only. You know some people can
do a great deal with their hands
but then it is often fictitious power; there
is no might in the arm
there is no muscles
but of Joseph it is said
¡§the
arms of his hands were made strong.¡¨ It was real potency
true muscle
real
sinew
real nerve. Oh ye foes of God
ye think God¡¦s people are despicable and
powerless; but know that they have true strength from the omnipotence of their
Father
a might substantial and divine. Your own shall melt away
and droop and
die
like the snow upon the low mountain¡¦s top
when the sun shines upon it
it
melteth into water; but our vigour shall abide like the snow on the summit of
the Alps
undiminished for ages. It is real strength.
2. Then observe that the strength of God¡¦s Joseph is divine
strength. His arms were made strong by God. Why does one of God¡¦s ministers
preach the Gospel powerfully? Because God gives him assistance. Why does Joseph
stand against temptation? Because God gives him aid. The strength of a
Christian is divine strength.
3. Again: I would have you notice in the text in what a blessedly
familiar way God gives this strength to Joseph. It says
¡§the arms of his hands
were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob.¡¨ Thus it represents
God as putting his hands on Joseph¡¦s hands
placing his arms on Joseph¡¦s arms.
In old times
when every boy had to be trained up to archery
if his father
were worth so many pounds a year
you might see the father putting his hands on
his boy¡¦s hands and pulling the bow for him
saying
¡§There
my son
in this
manner draw the bow.¡¨ So the text represents God as putting His hand on the
hand of Joseph
and laying His broad arm along the arm of His chosen child
that he might be made strong. Like as a father teaches his children
so the
Lord teaches them that fear Him. He puts His arms upon them.
4. This strength was covenant strength
for it is said
¡§The arms of
his hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob.¡¨ Now
wherever you read of God of Jacob in the Bible
you may know that that respects
God¡¦s covenant with Jacob. Covenant mercies
covenant grace
covenant promises
covenant blessings
covenant help
covenant everything--the Christian must
receive if he would enter into heaven. Now
Christian
the archers have sorely
grieved you
and shot at you
and wounded you; but your bow abides in strength
and the arms of your hands are made strong. But do you know
O believer
that
you are like your Master in this?
IV. That is our
fourth point--A GLORIOUS PARALLEL. ¡§From thence is the shepherd
the stone of
Israel
¡¨ Jesus Christ was served just the same; the Shepherd
the Stone of
Israel
passed through similar trials; He was shot at by the archers
He was
grieved and wounded
but His bow abode in strength; His arms were made strong
by the God of Jacob
and now every blessing rests ¡§upon the crown of the head
of Him who was separated from His brethren.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 24
The mighty God of Jacob.
Prom thence is the Shepherd
the Stone of Israel
Three names:
These three names which we find here are striking and beautiful in
themselves; in their juxtaposition; in their use on Jacob¡¦s lips. Look at them
as they stand.
I. THE MIGHTY GOD
OF JACOB. The meaning of such a name is clear enough. It is He who has shown
Himself mighty and mine by His deeds for me all through my life. The very vital
centre of a man¡¦s religion is his conviction that God is his. The dying
patriarch left to his descendants the legacy of this great Name.
II. THE SHEPHERD.
That name sums up the lessons that Jacob had learned from the work of himself
and of his sons. His own sleepless vigilance and patient endurance were but
shadows of the loving care
the watchful protection
the strong defence
which
¡§the God who has been my Shepherd all my life long¡¨ had extended to him and
his.
III. THE STONE OF
ISRAEL. Here
again
we have a name that after-ages have caught up and
cherished
used for the first time. The Stone of Israel means much the same
thing as the Rock. The general idea of this symbol is firmness
solidity. God
is a Rock--
1. for a foundation;
2. for a fortress;
3. for shade and refreshment.
None that ever built on that Rock have been confounded. We clasp
hands with all that have gone before us. At one end of the long chain this dim
figure of the dying Jacob stretches out his withered hands to God
the Stone of
Israel; at the other end we lift up ours to Jesus and cry--
¡§Rock
of Ages
cleft for me
Let me hide myself in Thee.¡¨
(A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 27
He shall divide the spoil
The division of spoils:
There is nothing more fascinating than the life of a hunter.
On a certain day in all England you can hear the crack of the sportsman¡¦s gun
because
grouse hunting has begun; and every man who can afford the time and
ammunition
and can draw a bead
starts for the fields. On the 20th of October
our woods and forests will resound with the shock of fire-arms
and will be
tracked of pointers and setters
because the quail will then be a lawful prize
for the sportsman. Xenophon grew eloquent in regard to the art of hunting. In
the far East people
elephant-mounted
chase the tiger. The American Indian
darts his arrow at the buffalo until the frightened herd tumble over the rocks.
European nobles are often found in the fox-chase and at the stag-hunt. Francis
L was called the father of hunting. Moses declares of Nimrod: ¡§He was a mighty
hunter before the Lord.¡¨ Therefore
in all ages of the world
the imagery of my
text ought to be suggestive
whether it means a wolf after a fox
or a man
after a lion. ¡§In the morning he shall devour the prey
and at night he shall
divide the spoils.¡¨ I take my text
in the first place
as descriptive of those
people who
in the morning of their life
give themselves up to hunting the
world
but afterwards
by the grace of God
in the evening of their life divide
among themselves the spoils of Christian character. There are aged Christian
men and women in this house who
if they gave testimony
would tell you that in
the morning of their life they were after the world as intent as a hound after
a hare
or as a falcon swoops upon a gazelle. They wanted the world¡¦s plaudits
and the world¡¦s gains. They felt that if they could get this world they would
have everything. Some of them started out for the pleasures of the world. They
thought that the man who laughed loudest was happiest. They tried repartee
and
conundrum
and burlesque
and madrigal. After awhile misfortune struck them
hard on the back. They found there was something they could not laugh at. Under
their late hours their health gave way
or there was a death in the house. They
awoke to their sinfulness and their immortality
and here they sit to-night
at
sixty or seventy years of age
as appreciative of all innocent mirth as they
ever were
but they are bent on a style of satisfaction which in early life
they never hunted: the evening of their days brighter than the morning. In the
morning they devoured the prey
but at night they are dividing the spoils. Then
there are others who started out for financial success. Wherever a dollar was
expected to be
they were. They chased it across the ocean. They chased it
across the land. They stopped not for the night. Hearing that dollar
even in
the darkness
thrilled them as an Adirondack sportsman is thrilled at midnight
by a loon¡¦s laugh. They chased that dollar to the money-vault. All the hounds
were out--all the pointers and the setters. They leaped the hedges for that
dollar
and they cried: ¡§Hark away! a dollar! a dollar!¡¨ And when at last they
came upon it and had actually captured it
their excitement was like that of a
falconer who has successfully flung his first hawk. In the morning of their
life
oh
how they devoured the prey! But there came a better time to their
soul. From that time they did not care whether they walked or rode
if Christ
walked with them; nor whether they lived in a mansion or in a hut
if they
dwelt under the shadow of the Almighty; nor whether they were robed in French
broadcloth or in homespun
if they had the robe of the Saviour¡¦s righteousness;
nor whether they were sandalled with morocco or calf skin
if they were shod
with the preparation of the gospel. Now you see peace on their countenance. Now
that man says: ¡§What a fool I was to be enchanted with this world.¡¨ This world
is a poor thing to hunt. It is healthful to go out in the woods and hunt. It
rekindles the lustre of the eye. It strikes the brown of the autumnal leaf into
the cheek. It gives to the rheumatic limbs a strength to leap like the roe.
Christopher North¡¦s pet gun
the muckle-mounted-Meg
going off in the summer in
the forests
had its echo in the winter-time in the eloquence that rang through
the university halls of Edinburgh. It is healthy to go hunting in the fields;
but I tell you that it is belittling and bedwarfing and belaming for a man to
hunt this world. So it was with Lord Byron. So it was with Coleridge. So it was
with Catherine of Russia. Henry II. went out hunting for this world
and its
lances struck through his heart. Francis I. aimed at the world
but the
assassin¡¦s dagger put an end to his ambition and his life with one stroke. Mary
Queen of Scots wrote on the window of her castle:--
¡§From
the top of all my trust Mishap hath laid me in the dust.¡¨
The Queen Dowager of Navarre was offered for her wedding-day a
costly and beautiful pair of gloves
and she put them on; but they were
poisoned gloves
and they took net life. Better a bare hand of cold privation
than a warm and poisoned glove of ruinous success. Again
my subject is
descriptive of those who come to a sudden and a radical change. You have
noticed how short a time it is from morning to night--only seven or eight
hours. You know that the day has a very brief life. Its heart beats twenty-four
times
and then it is dead. How quick this transition in the character of these
Benjamites! ¡§In the morning they shall devour the prey
and at night they shall
divide the spoils.¡¨ Is it possible that there shall be such a transformation in
any of our characters? (Dr. Talmage.)
The blessing of Benjamin:
In Benjamin
the youngest and last of the sons of Jacob
there is
expressed the culmination of all blessing for all the tribes of Israel. In this
tribe is summed up
in a climax
all spiritual blessing for every child of God.
Morning and evening together suggests the idea of incessant and victorious
capture of booty. The warlike character manifested by this tribe was shown on
many occasions in their history
and exhibited marked features of a fierce and
wolfish character. Israel
as represented in Benjamin
shall devour the prey
and at night divide the spoil. The prophecies of Balaam
Isaiah
Jeremiah
and
Ezekiel
as well as the minor prophets
are full of announcements that the Lord
will again take in hand His ancient people
and they shall go forth
in mighty
power
under the leadership of Christ as their Messiah
and shall destroy their
foes on the right hand and on the left
and shall carry off ¡§the spoil.¡¨ This
is the emphatic declaration in the blessing on Benjamin. ¡§At night
¡¨ at the
close of this dispensation of darkness and sin and sorrow
it will receive its
decisive fulfilment
and a morning shall be ushered in such as the world has
never yet seen--the morning of resurrection
when the Church of the living God
shall exchange her weeds of widowhood for her garments of glory and beauty
and
shall rise to meet her Lord in the air
and for ever reign with Him over a
regenerated world. Blessed morning
long expected! Well may every true and
loyal-hearted servant of Christ exclaim with the beloved disciple in his
closing word of prophecy
¡§Even so; come
Lord Jesus.¡¨ (F. Whitfield
M. A.)
Verse 29
Bury me with my fathers
Love in death
The patriarch Jacob
in his last request
says
¡§Bury me with my
fathers¡¨; and this feeling has illustration all along the ages in different
races and climes.
What is it but the outward symbol of that which is deepest in the heart? What
is it but an expression of the preciousness of these earthly relationships?
Bury me with my fathers. Of course in the grave
with silence and darkness
there is no device or knowledge. So far as the perishing bodies are concerned
it cannot matter essentially where they repose when the spirit has fled. And
yet they are the tenements of thought and will. They are associated with all
that is most expressive in our being. With them are grouped the activities
the
endearments
the acquirements
the possessions
that make up our estimate of
life. When the patriarch said
¡§Bury me with my fathers
¡¨ he thought of those
whom he revered and loved
whose remains were lying in the sepulchre of
Machpelah; he thought of the holy friendships that had consecrated and
sweetened his years; and those forms of parent and wife and kindred seemed
endued with life and feeling in the strong ardour of his soul. He wished to
continue the relationship
and would sleep with those from whom he descended
and loved. How natural is this sentiment
and how largely is the custom
observed throughout the world l When we think of death and our place of burial
it is with thoughts of others who have gone before us. A lonely grave
a burial
away from friends and kindred--remote
unvisited
neglected--brings sad
thoughts. We cannot help shrinking from the picture that we make of it. To die
alone
to be buried by strangers
to lie afar from any dust that once was dear
is not what we would prefer. But there where our ancestors repose
where
parents are entombed
where sleeps the companion of our journey
or child
or
sister
or brother
or beloved friend--there
too
we would be borne by tender
hands
when we can tell none how kind they are. It is the same feeling that
prefers those who love us to minister to us in our last hours
and perform the
last offices that friendship can render. The human cries out of the darkness of
death for the beloved presence
the heart that was true and kind. And if we can
feel that when we are gone there will be any to follow us with sorrow to the
grave
and there to plant some symbol of affection
and
as the days and years
pass
¢o go aside sometimes and think of us as we were
with our friendship and
faith
there comes a grateful emotion. There is something sweetly tranquilizing
in the thought that we shall lie down with the family around us
the revered
and good who closed their eyes long ago
and those who follow us out of the
doors where we followed others who have gone; and that they shall bring the
children one by one to sleep by our side. All this is grateful to our
thought
I say; and why? What could it mean if the heart did not reach onward
to everlasting attachments
to life with the beloved beyond the grave I And oh!
how dark would it be
when we come to face the dread necessity of death
were
it not for the light that comes from the broken sepulchre of Christi What would
be our hope without this victorious and mighty Saviour
who has put death under
His feet? Dear friends
here is an assurance
glorious and indubitable
that is
given for everlasting comfort and strength. He who consecrated home while on
earth
with all that could sanctify and sweeten it
prepares the heavenly home.
(H. N. Powers.)
Jacob¡¦s dying charge:
I. AN EXPRESSION
OF NATURAL FEELING. A natural feeling it is
a strong instinctive impulse of
our humanity
this concern about the body
this concern about it to the last
this desire that
when the spirit has fled
it should not be neglected--should
not be thrown carelessly into the ground anywhere
but should receive a
respectful interment where its mouldering remains may mingle with the dust of
our nearest relatives. How instinctive the thought that the dust in the family
sepulchre has still some relationship to our material frame I How instinctive
the desire that our bodies and those of our beloved friends should take the
long
still sleep together I Not less natural is the wish to be remembered--to
be remembered in connection with those who have been so near to us in kindred
and kindly fellowship. Such feelings
my friends
are not unlawful; but neither
are they unprofitable. If they be kept in their own place
if they be cherished
in subordination to higher principles
if they be not permitted to overgrow and
stifle the desires and expectations of that which is spiritual
they are
neither unbecoming nor useless. We are the better of feeling that the body is a
part of man
an integral part of our personal identity
and not lost
or
unworthy of care
even in its dissolution. We are the better of feeling that
beyond death there is still some tie of kindred between our dust and the dust
of our beloved relatives
as well as between our souls and their souls. We are
the better of feeling the wish to be remembered after we are no more seen in
the world--to be remembered in association with those whom we esteem and
reverence.
II. In their
holier import
the words before us expressed THE PEACE AND FAITH OF THE DYING
PATRIARCH. ¡§I am to be gathered unto my people¡¨--¡§I am being gathered unto my
people¡¨ seems to be the proper force of the expression
pointing rather to a
present than to a future event. It was the language of one who felt that the
last short journey was already commenced
that his feet were already dipping
into the swellings of Jordan. But there was no appearance of alarm
no token of
anxiety
no struggling search as if he wanted something to rest upon
or as if
the anchor of the soul were not holding firmly. All is quiet
untroubled
and
peaceful. Thus he passed down--down into the dark valley--down into the rushing
river--as you might speak of going home from your day¡¦s work at evening. A
similar inference may be drawn from the manner in which he conveyed to his sons
the charge concerning his burial. Observe his careful
leisurely description of
the place to which he referred
and its purchase by his grandfather: ¡§Bury me
in the cave which is in the field of Ephron the Hittite
¡¨ &c. That was no
hurried glance at a secondary matter
amid the agony of an arduous and
uncertain conflict--no snatching of a moment out of engrossing anxieties and
apprehensions about his spiritual interests
to indicate his desire regarding
the body which was about to be resolved into the dust from which it had been
taken. If he had not been at rest in reference to his undying soul
if he bad
not felt a quiet
holy confidence that it was safe
would he have been so
deliberately careful in describing the situation and the purchase of the
sepulchre? Let us not marvel
my friends
that saints about to depart can dwell
upon the thought of some earthly and temporal matter; neither should we grieve
to hear them then speaking with interest about other things besides the
spiritual and heavenly. It may be the very strength and quiet assurance of
their hope of immortality that permit them to give some special attention still
to the body
or the household
or the world which they are leaving. Whence that
peace
that terrorless tranquility of Jacob in the death-hour? Here he made no
particular reference to the source of it. This was not necessary. He had
indicated
by his religious profession
and by the consistent piety which
adorned his life
especially the latter portion of it
that his trust was in
the covenant mercy of Jehovah. In the prophetic blessing also
the sound of
which had scarcely left the ears of his assembled children
he had spoken of
the Shepherd
the Stone of Israel; he had named the Shiloh
to whom the
gathering of the nations would be; and had concluded his prediction respecting
one of the tribes with these words
¡§I have waited for Thy salvation
O Lord.¡¨
There was no need of further explanation there was no need for his declaring
now that his peace was the fruit of faith
faith in the saving grace of that
God who had given him the covenant with its blessings and promises
ratified by
sacrifice and predictive of the Messiah. (W. Bruce
D. D.)
Verse 33
When Jacob had made an end . . . he gathered up his feet into the
bed
and yielded up the ghost
Jacob¡¦s death-bed:
I.
HIS
AFFECTION FOR THE LIVING.
1. His affection was impartial.
2. His affection was religious.
II. SYMPATHY WITH
THE DEAD
III. HIS
MAGNANIMITY IN ALL. No perturbation. Two things alone can explain his calmness.
1. Faith in his future existence.
2. Faith in the happiness of his future existence. (Homilist.)
Jacob¡¦s death and funeral:
I. THE PATRIARCH
DEPARTURE.
1. A hint of immortality. Amid the shadows of the past there were
beams of light that spoke of a future state (life and immortality brought to
life by the gospel). Jacob ¡§was gathered to his people¡¨ (Genesis 49:33). Jehovah was known as ¡§the
God of Abraham
and Isaac
and Jacob.¡¨ He is not the God of the dead
but of
the living. The patriarchs were therefore living. To them Jacob was ¡§gathered.¡¨
2. An illustration of natural sorrow. Joseph ¡§fell on his father¡¦s
face
and wept upon him
and kissed him.¡¨ Picture this affecting sight. Wealth
and power had not hardened Joseph¡¦s heart. We sorrow not
as they that have no
hope.
3. An illustration of filial obedience. Joseph remembering his
promise to his father (Genesis 47:29-31)
had him embalmed
&c. Do we remember dying parent¡¦s wishes
not to carry him to the promised
land
but to meet him there?
II. THE
MAGNIFICENT FUNERAL.
1. There was the usual ceremonious mourning of many days.
2. Joseph seeks permission of the king to bury his father.
3. At the head of a great retinue he passes up once more to Canaan.
How great the difference between his leaving and entering Canaan. Thirty-nine
years have elapsed. The youth of seventeen has become a man of fifty-six. The
slave has become a prince. Both were occasions of grief. Then he was leaving
his father through the treachery of his brothers; now he is burying his father
with his brethren around him.
4. Such a funeral never before seen in Canaan. The Canaanites find
that the old shepherd who went away seventeen years before is a great man. So
sometimes men are brought back to be buried among the people who thought little
of them while they lived. (Ill. the funeral of Cobden in the Sussex
village
&c.)
. (J. G. Gray.)
Sermons from saintly death-beds:
Jacob did not yield up the ghost until he had delivered the last
sentence of admonition and benediction to his twelve sons. He was immortal till
his work was done. So long as God had another sentence to speak by him
death
could not paralyse his tongue.
Yet
after all
the strong man was bowed down
and he who had
journeyed with unwearied foot full many a mile
was now obliged to gather up
his feet into the bed to die. From the wording of the text
it appears very
clearly that Israel did not dispute the irrevocable decree
nor did his soul
murmur against it. He had long before learned that few and evil were his days
and now that they came to an end
he joyfully accepted their conclusion. It is
remarkable that the Holy Spirit has given us very few death-bed scenes in the
Book of God. We have very few in the Old Testament
fewer still in the New
and
I take it that the reason may be because the Holy Ghost would have us take more
account of how we live than how we die
for life is the main business. He who
learns to die daily while he lives
will find it no difficulty to breathe out
his soul for the last time into the hands of his faithful Creator. If we fight
well the battle
we may rest assured of the victory.
I. First
THE
DEPARTURES OF GOD¡¦S SAINTS
AND ESPECIALLY OF HIS MINISTERS--WHAT ARE THEIR
LESSONS?
1. The first that lies upon the surface
is this
¡§Be ye also ready:
for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of Man cometh.¡¨ When in the forest
there is heard the crash of a falling oak
it is a sign that the woodman is
abroad
and every tree in the whole company may tremble lest soon the sharp
edge of the axe should find it out.
2. Secondly
the deaths of righteous men should teach us their
value. According to the old saying
we never know the value of things till we
lose them. I am sure it is so with holy men. Let me urge young people here to
prize their aged godly parents
to treat them kindly
to make their last days
happy
because they cannot expect to have them long on earth to receive their
tokens of affectionate gratitude.
3. Furthermore
I think the departures of great saints and those who
have been eminent
teach us to pray earnestly to God to send us more of such--a
lesson which
I am quite certain
needs to be inculcated often. There is sadly
little prayer in the church for the rising ministry.
4. Yet there is a valuable truth on the other side. We desire always
to look at both sides of a question. The taking away of eminent saints from
among us should teach us to depend more upon God
and less upon human
instrumentality. I was reading
yesterday
the dying prayer of Oliver Cromwell
and one sentence in that man of God¡¦s last breathings pleased me exceedingly.
It was to this effect
¡§Teach those who look too much upon Thy instruments to
depend more upon Thyself.¡¨ The Lord would have all the glory given unto His own
name.
5. Coming back
however
to the old thought
do you not think that
the departure of eminent saints should teach each one of us to work with more
earnestness and perseverance while we are spared? One soldier the less in the
battle
my brethren; then you must fill up the vacancy; you who stand next in
the ranks must close up
shoulder to shoulder
that there be no gap. Here is
one servant the less in the house: the other servants must do the more work. It
is but natural for us so to argue
because we wish the Master¡¦s work to be
done
and it will not be done without hands.
II. Come with me
to the second part of my discourse. Much may be learned from the MODE OF
DEPARTURE of God¡¦s servants.
1. To some of God¡¦s own children the dying bed is a Bochim
a
place of weeping. It is melancholy when such is the case
and yet it is often
so with those who have been negligent servants: they are saved
but so as by
fire; they struggle into the port of peace
but their entrance is like that of
a weather-beaten vessel which has barely escaped the storm
and enters into
harbour so terribly leaking as to be ready to founder
without her cargo
for
she has thrown that overboard to escape the waves
sails rent to ribands
masts
gone by the board
barely able to keep afloat. Many a dying pillow has been wet
with the penitential tears of saints
who have then fully seen their formerly
unobserved shortcomings and failures and laxities in the family
in the
business
in the church
and in the world. Brethren
it is beautiful to see the
repentance of a dying saint; travel far as you may
you will not readily behold
a more comely spectacle. Yet at the sight; of such instances it has struck me
that the fruit though precious was scarcely seasonable; it must be acceptable
to God
for He never rejects repentance anywhere
but yet a brighter state of
soul would have glorified Him more in dying moments. We regret to see mourning
of soul as the most conspicuous feature in a departing brother
we desire to
see joy and confidence clearly manifested at the last.
2. It has not unfrequently occurred that the dying scene has been to
the Lord¡¦s departing champions a battle
not perhaps by reason of any slips or
shortcomings--far from it
for in some cases the conflict appeared to arise by
very reason of their valour in the Lord¡¦s service. Who among us would assert
that Martin Luther failed to live up to the light and knowledge which he had
received? So far as he knew the truth
I believe he most diligently followed
it; beyond most men he was true to conscience
he knew comparatively little of
the truth
but what he did know he maintained with all his heart
and soul
and
strength; and yet it is exceedingly painful to read the record of Luther¡¦s last
few days. Darkness was round about him
thick clouds and tempest enveloped his
soul. At the last the sky cleared
but it is very evident that
among all the
grim battles in which that mighty German fought and conquered
probably the
most tremendous conflict of his life was at its close. Can we not guess the
reason? Was it not because the devil knew him to be his worst enemy then upon
the earth
and therefore hating him with the utmost power of infernal hate
and
feeling that this was his last opportunity for assaulting him
he gathered up
all his diabolical powers
and came in against him like a flood
thinking that
mayhap he might at the last overcome the stout heart
and cow the valiant
spirit! Only by Divine assistance did Luther win the victory
but win it he
did. Is this form of departure to be altogether deprecated? I think not. Is it
to be dreaded in some aspects
though not in others
for is it not a noble
thing for the knight of the Cross to die in harness? a blessed thing for the
Christian soldier to proceed at once from the battle fold to his eternal rest?
3. To many saints their departure has been a peaceful entrance into
the fair haven of repose. The very weakest of God¡¦s servants have frequently
been happiest in their departing moments. John Bunyan
who had observed this fact
in the description of Mr. Feeblemind¡¦s passage of the river
¡§Here also I took
notice of what was very remarkable; the water of that river was lower at this
time than ever I saw it all my life. So he went over at last not much above
wet-shod.¡¨ Heaven¡¦s mercy tempers the wind to the shorn lamb
and gives to
babes no battle
because they have no strength for it: the lambs calmly rest on
the bosom of Jesus
and breathe out their lives in the Shepherd¡¦s arms. What
encouragement this ought to be to you who are the tender ones among us I what
cheering tidings for you who are weak in faith 1
4. Many of the saints have gone farther than this
for their
death-beds have been pulpits. When Mr. Matthew Henry was dying
Mr. Illidge
came to him
and he said
¡§You have been used to take notice of the sayings of
dying men; this is mine
¡¥A life spent in the service of God and in communion
with Him
is the most pleasant life that any one can bye in the world.¡¦¡¨ Well
spoken! Our pulpits often lack force and power; men suppose that we speak but
out of form and custom
but they do not suspect dying men of hypocrisy
nor
think that they are driving a trade and following a profession. Hence the
witness of dying saints has often become powerful to those who have stood around
their couch; careless hearts have been impressed
slumbering consciences have
been awakened
and children of God quickened to greater diligence by what they
have heard.
5. And
brethren
we have known not unfrequent cases (nay
commonly
this is the case) when the dying bed has become a Pisgah
from the top
of which the saint has viewed his inheritance
while anon his couch has glowed
on a sudden into the chariot--a flaming chariot such as that in which Elias was
borne away to dwell with God. Saints have frequently been in such triumphant
conditions of mind
that rapture and ecstacy are the only fit words in which to
describe their state. ¡§If this be dying
¡¨ said one
¡§it is worth while living
for the mere sake of dying.¡¨ (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Jacob¡¦s debit and credit account
The struggle is over. Life¡¦s record is completed. The sorrows of a
hundred and forty-seven years
like the sufferings of the dying babe
come to
an end. And now that the balance is struck
how stands the account? Debit:
infirmities many; sins not a few; wrongs done to Esau; polygamy with its legacy
of bickerings; partiality in the family; murmurings under the succession of
distresses which his own conduct brought upon him. Credit: The early choice of
Jehovah; habitual reliance upon Divine guidance; deep and abiding impressions
of piety; an unquenchable faith in God; the approval of a conscience
which
though not greatly enlightened was evidently sincere; a life marred by
transgressions of deep moral turpitude
but remarkably exemplary for the rude
age in which he lived. (J. S. Van Dyke.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n