| Back to Home Page | Back to Book Index
|
Deuteronomy Chapter
Thirty-three
Deuteronomy 33
Chapter Contents
The glorious majesty of God. (1-5) The blessings of the
twelve tribes. (6-23) Strength to believers. (24
25) The excellency of Israel.
(26-29)
Commentary on Deuteronomy 33:1-5
(Read Deuteronomy 33:1-5)
To all his precepts
warnings
and prophecies
Moses
added a solemn blessing. He begins with a description of the glorious
appearances of God
in giving the law. His law works like fire. If received
it
is melting
warming
purifying
and burns up the dross of corruption; if
rejected
it hardens
sears
pains
and destroys. The Holy Spirit came down in
cloven tongues
as of fire; for the gospel also is a fiery law. The law of God
written in the heart
is a certain proof of the love of God shed abroad there:
we must reckon His law one of the gifts of his grace.
Commentary on Deuteronomy 33:6-23
(Read Deuteronomy 33:6-23)
The order in which the tribes are here blessed
is not
the same as is observed elsewhere. The blessing of Judah may refer to the whole
tribe in general
or to David as a type of Christ. Moses largely blesses the
tribe of Levi. Acceptance with God is what we should all aim at
and desire
in
all our devotions
whether men accept us or not
2 Corinthians 5:9. This prayer is a prophecy
that God will keep up a ministry in his church to the end of time. The tribe of
Benjamin had their inheritance close to mount Zion. To be situated near the
ordinances
is a precious gift from the Lord
a privilege not to be exchanged
for any worldly advantage
or indulgence. We should thankfully receive the
earthly blessings sent to us
through the successive seasons. But those good
gifts which come down from the Father of lights
through the rising of the Sun
of righteousness
and the pouring out of his Spirit like the rain which makes
fruitful
are infinitely more precious
as the tokens of his special love. The
precious things here prayed for
are figures of spiritual blessing in heavenly
things by Christ
the gifts
graces
and comforts of the Spirit. When Moses
prays for the good will of Him that dwelt in the bush
he refers to the
covenant
on which all our hopes of God's favour must be founded. The
providence of God appoints men's habitations
and wisely disposes men to
different employments for the public good. Whatever our place and business are
it is our wisdom and duty to apply thereto; and it is happiness to be well
pleased therewith. We should not only invite others to the service of God
but
abound in it. The blessing of Naphtali. The favour of God is the only favour
satisfying to the soul. Those are happy indeed
who have the favour of God; and
those shall have it
who reckon that in having it they have enough
and desire
no more.
Commentary on Deuteronomy 33:24
25
(Read Deuteronomy 33:24
25)
All shall be sanctified to true believers; if their way
be rough
their feet shall be shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace.
As thy days
so shall thy strength be. The "day" is often in
Scripture put for the events of the day; it is a promise that God would
graciously and constantly support under trials and troubles
whatever they
were. It is a promise sure to all the spiritual seed of Abraham. Have they work
allotted? They shall have strength to do it. Have they burdens appointed? They
shall have strength
and never be tempted above what they are able to bear.
Commentary on Deuteronomy 33:26-29
(Read Deuteronomy 33:26-29)
None had such a God as Israel. There is no people like
the Israel of God. What is here said of the church of Israel is to be applied
to the spiritual church. Never were people so well seated and sheltered. Those
who make God their habitation
shall have all the comforts and benefits of a
habitation in him
Psalm 91:1. Never were people so well supported
and borne up. How low soever the people of God are at any time brought
everlasting arms are underneath them
to keep the spirit from sinking
from
fainting
and their faith from failing. Divine grace is sufficient for them
2 Corinthians 12:9. Never were people so well
commanded. Thus believers are more than conquerors over their spiritual
enemies
through Christ that loved them. Never were people so well secured and
protected. Israel shall dwell in safety alone. All who keep close to God
shall
be kept safe by him. Never were people so well provided for. Every true
Israelite looks with faith to the better country
the heavenly Canaan
which is
filled with better things than corn and wine. Never were people so well helped.
If in danger of any harm
or in want of any good
they had an eternal God to go
to. Nothing could hurt those whom God helped
nor was it possible the people
should perish who were saved by the Lord. Never were people so well armed.
Those in whose hearts is the excellency of holiness
are defended by the whole
armour of God
Ephesians 6. Never were people so well assured
of victory over their enemies. Thus shall the God of peace tread Satan under
the feet of all believers
and shall do it shortly
Romans 16:20. May God help us to seek and to set
our affections on the things above; and to turn our souls from earthly
perishing objects; that we may not have our lot with Israel's foes in the
regions of darkness and despair
but with the Israel of God
in the realms of
love and eternal happiness.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Deuteronomy¡n
Deuteronomy 33
Verse 1
[1] And
this is the blessing
wherewith Moses the man of God blessed the children of
Israel before his death.
Moses blessed Israel ¡X He is said to bless them
by praying to God with faith for his blessing
upon them; and by foretelling the blessings which God would confer upon them.
And Moses calls himself here the man of God
that is
the servant or prophet of
God
to acquaint them that the following prophecies were not his own
inventions
but divine inspirations.
The children of Israel ¡X The several tribes: only Simeon is omitted
either in detestation of
their parent Simeon's bloody carriage
for which Jacob gives that tribe a curse
rather than a blessing
in Genesis 49:5-7. Or
because that tribe had no
distinct inheritance
but was to have its portion in the tribe of Judah
Joshua 19:1.
Verse 2
[2] And he said
The LORD came from Sinai
and rose up from Seir unto them; he
shined forth from mount Paran
and he came with ten thousands of saints: from
his right hand went a fiery law for them.
The Lord came ¡X
Namely
to the Israelites
manifested himself graciously and gloriously among
them.
From Sinai ¡X
Beginning at Sinai
where the first appearance of God was
and so going on with
them to Seir and Paran.
And rose up ¡X He
appeared or shewed himself
as the sun doth when it riseth.
From Seir ¡X
From the mountain or land of Edom
to which place the Israelites came
Numbers 20:14
etc. and from thence God led them
on towards the land of promise
and then gloriously appeared for them in
subduing Sihon and Og before them. But because the land of Edom is sometimes
taken more largely
and so reacheth even to the Red-sea
and therefore mount
Sinai was near to it
and because Paran was also near Sinai
being the next
station into which they came from the wilderness of Sinai: all this verse may
belong to God's appearance in mount Sinai
where that glorious light which
shone upon mount Sinai directly
did in all probability scatter its beams into
adjacent parts
such as Seir and Paran were. And if so
this is only a poetical
expression of the same thing in divers words
and God coming or rising or
shining from or to or in Sinai and Seir and Paran note one and the same
illustrious action of God appearing there with ten thousands of his saints or
holy angels
and giving a fiery law to them.
Paran ¡X A
place where God eminently manifested his presence and goodness both in giving
the people flesh which they desired
and in appointing the seventy elders and
pouring forth his spirit upon them.
With ten thousands of saints ¡X That is
with a great company of holy angels
Psalms 68:17
which attended upon him in this
great and glorious work of giving the law
as may be gathered from Acts 7:53.
From his right hand ¡X
Which both wrote the law and gave it to men. An allusion to men who ordinarily
write and give gifts with their right hand.
A fiery law ¡X The
law is called fiery
because it is of a fiery nature purging and searching and
inflaming
to signify that fiery wrath which it inflicteth upon sinners for the
violation of it
and principally because it was delivered out of the midst of
the fire.
Verse 3
[3] Yea
he loved the people; all his saints are in thy hand: and they sat down at thy
feet; every one shall receive of thy words.
The people ¡X
The tribes of Israel. The sense is
this law
though delivered with fire and
smoke and thunder
which might seem to portend nothing but hatred and terror
yet in truth was given to Israel
in great love
as being the great mean of
their temporal and eternal salvation. Yea
he
embraced the people
and laid
them in his bosom! so the word signifies
which speaks not only the dearest
love
but the most tender and careful protection. All God's saints or holy
ones
that is
his people
were in thy hand
that is
under God's care to
protect
direct and govern them. These words are spoken to God: the change of
persons
his and thy
is most frequent in the Hebrew tongue. This clause may
farther note God's kindness to Israel
in upholding them when the fiery law was
delivered
which was done with so much terror that not only the people were
ready to sink under it
but even Moses did exceedingly fear and quake. But God
sustained both Moses and the people
in or by his hand
whereby he in a manner
covered them that no harm might come to them.
At thy feet ¡X
Like scholars to receive instructions. He alludes to the place where the people
waited when the law was delivered
which was at the foot of the mount.
Every one ¡X Of
the people will receive or submit to thy instructions and commands. This may
respect either
the peoples promise when they heard the law
that they would
hear and do all that was commanded. Or
their duty to do so.
Verse 4
[4]
Moses commanded us a law
even the inheritance of the congregation of Jacob.
Moses ¡X He
speaks this of himself in the third person
which is very usual in the Hebrew
language. The law is called their inheritance
because the obligation of it was
hereditary
passing from parents to their children
and because this was the
best part of their inheritance
the greatest of all those gifts which God
bestowed upon them.
Verse 5
[5] And he was king in Jeshurun
when the heads of the people and the tribes
of Israel were gathered together.
He was king in Jeshurun ¡X Moses was their king not in title
but in reality
being under God
their supreme governor
and law giver.
Gathered together ¡X
When the princes and people met together for the management of public affairs
Moses was owned by them as their king and lawgiver.
Verse 6
[6] Let
Reuben live
and not die; and let not his men be few.
Let Reuben live ¡X
Though Reuben deserve to be cut off or greatly diminished and obscured
according to Jacob's prediction
Genesis 49:4
yet God will spare them and give
them a name and portion among the tribes of Israel
and bless them with
increase of their numbers. All the ancient paraphrasts refer this to the other
world
so far were they from expecting temporal blessings only. Let Reuben live
in life eternal
says Onkelos
and not die the second death. Let Reuben live in
this world
so Jonathan and the Jerusalem Targum
and not die that death which
the wicked die in the world to come.
Verse 7
[7] And
this is the blessing of Judah: and he said
Hear
LORD
the voice of Judah
and
bring him unto his people: let his hands be sufficient for him; and be thou an
help to him from his enemies.
Hear
Lord ¡X
God will hear his prayer for the accomplishment of those great things promised
to that tribe
Genesis 49:8-12. This implies the delays and
difficulties Judah would meet with
that would drive him to his prayers
which
would be with success.
Unto his people ¡X
When he shall go forth to battle against his enemies and shall fall fiercely
upon them
as was foretold
Genesis 49:8
9. Bring him back with honour and
victory
to his people
to the rest of his tribe who were left at home when
their brethren went to battle: and to his brethren the other tribes of Israel.
Let his hands be sufficient for him ¡X This tribe shall be so numerous and potent that it shall suffice to
defend itself without any aid
either from foreign nations or from other
tribes; as appeared when this tribe alone was able to grapple with nine or ten of
the other tribes.
From his enemies ¡X
Thou wilt preserve this tribe in a special manner
so that his enemies shall
not be able to ruin it
as they will do other tribes
and that for the sake of
the Messiah who shall spring out of it.
Verse 8
[8] And
of Levi he said
Let thy Thummim and thy Urim be with thy holy one
whom thou
didst prove at Massah
and with whom thou didst strive at the waters of
Meribah;
Let thy Urim ¡X
The Thummim and the Urim
which are thine
O Lord by special institution and
consecration
(by which he understands the ephod in which they were put
and
the high priesthood
to which they were appropriated
and withal the gifts and
graces signified by the Urim and Thummim
and necessary for the discharge of
that high-office) shall be with thy holy one
that is
with that priest
whom
thou hast consecrated to thyself
and who is holy in a more peculiar manner
than all the people were; that is
the priesthood shall be confined to and
continued in Aaron's family.
Whom thou didst prove ¡X Altho' thou didst try him
and rebuke him
yet thou didst not take away
the priesthood from him.
At Massah ¡X
Not at that Massah mentioned Exodus 17:7
which is also called Meribah
but
at that other Meribah
Numbers 20:13.
Thou didst strive ¡X
Whom thou didst reprove and chastise.
Verse 9
[9] Who
said unto his father and to his mother
I have not seen him; neither did he
acknowledge his brethren
nor knew his own children: for they have observed thy
word
and kept thy covenant.
I have not seen him ¡X
That is
I have no respect unto them. The sense is
who followed God and his
command fully
and executed the judgment enjoined by God without any respect of
persons
Exodus 32:26
27.
They kept thy covenant ¡X When the rest broke their covenant with God by that foul sin of idolatry
with the calf
that tribe kept themselves pure from that infection
and adhered
to God and his worship.
Verse 11
[11]
Bless
LORD
his substance
and accept the work of his hands: smite through the
loins of them that rise against him
and of them that hate him
that they rise
not again.
His substance ¡X
Because he hath no inheritance of his own and therefore wholly depends upon thy
blessing.
The work of his hands ¡X All his holy administrations
which he fitly calls the work of his
hands
because a great part of the service of the Levites and priests was done
by the labour of their hand and body
whereas the service of evangelical
ministers is more spiritual and heavenly.
Smite ¡X He
pray's thus earnestly for them
because he foresaw they who were to teach and
reprove
and chastise others would have many enemies
and because they were
under God
the great preservers and upholders of religion
and their enemies
were the enemies of religion itself.
Verse 12
[12] And
of Benjamin he said
The beloved of the LORD shall dwell in safety by him; and
the LORD shall cover him all the day long
and he shall dwell between his
shoulders.
Of Benjamin ¡X
Benjamin is put next to Levi
because the temple
where the work of the Levites
lay
was upon the edge of the lot of this tribe. And 'tis put before Joseph
because of the dignity of Jerusalem
(part of which was in this lot) above
Samaria
which was in the tribe of Ephraim: likewise because Benjamin adhered
to the house of David and to the temple of God
when the rest of the tribes
deserted both.
The beloved of the Lord ¡X So called in allusion to their father Benjamin who was the beloved of
his father Jacob; and because of the kindness of God to this tribe which
appeared both in this
that they dwelt in the best part of the land
as
Josephus affirms
and in the following privilege.
Shall dwell in safety by him ¡X Shall have his lot nigh to God's temple
which was both a singular
comfort and safeguard to him.
Shall cover ¡X
Shall protect that tribe continually while they cleave to him.
He ¡X The Lord shall dwell
that is
his temple shall be placed
between his shoulders
that is
in his
portion
or between his border's as the word shoulder is often used. And this
was truly the situation of the temple
on both sides whereof was Benjamin's
portion. And though mount Sion was in the tribe of Judah
yet mount Moriah
on
which the temple was built
was in the tribe of Benjamin.
Verse 13
[13] And
of Joseph he said
Blessed of the LORD be his land
for the precious things of
heaven
for the dew
and for the deep that coucheth beneath
And of Joseph ¡X
Including both Ephraim and Manasseh. In Jacob's blessing that of Joseph's is
the largest. And so it is here.
His land ¡X
His portion shall be endowed with choice blessings from God.
Of heaven ¡X
That is
the precious fruits of the earth brought forth by the influences of
heaven
the warmth of the sun
and the rain which God will send from heaven.
The deep ¡X
The springs of water bubbling out of the earth: perhaps it may likewise refer
to the great deep
the abyss of waters
which is supposed to be contained in
the earth.
Verse 14
[14] And
for the precious fruits brought forth by the sun
and for the precious things
put forth by the moon
By the sun ¡X
Which opens and warms the earth
cherishes and improves and in due time ripens
the seeds and fruits of it.
The moon ¡X
Which by its moisture refreshes and promotes them. Heb. Of the moons
or
months
that is
which it bringeth forth in the several months or seasons of
the year.
Verse 15
[15] And
for the chief things of the ancient mountains
and for the precious things of
the lasting hills
The chief things ¡X
That is
the excellent fruits
as grapes
olives
figs
etc. which delight in
mountains
growing upon
or the precious minerals contained in
their mountains
and hills called ancient and lasting
that is
such as have been from the
beginning of the world
and are likely to continue to the end of it
in
opposition to those hills or mounts which have been cast up by man.
Verse 16
[16] And
for the precious things of the earth and fulness thereof
and for the good will
of him that dwelt in the bush: let the blessing come upon the head of Joseph
and upon the top of the head of him that was separated from his brethren.
And for ¡X
And in general for all the choice fruits which the land produceth in all the
parts of it
whither hills or valleys.
Fulness thereof ¡X
That is
the plants and cattle and all creatures that grow
increase
and
flourish in it.
The good will ¡X
For all other effects of the good will and kindness of God who not long since did
for a time dwell or appear in the bush to me in order to the relief of his
people
Exodus 3:2.
Of Joseph ¡X
That is
of Joseph's posterity.
Him that was separated from his brethren ¡X His brethren separated him from them by making him a slave
and God
distinguished him from them by making him a prince. The preceeding words might
be rendered
My dweller in the bush. That was an appearance of the divine
majesty to Moses only
in token of his particular favour. Many a time had God
appeared to Moses; but now he is just dying
he seems to have the most pleasing
remembrance
of the first time that he saw the visions of the Almighty. It was
here God declared himself the God of Abraham
Isaac and Jacob
and so confirmed
the promise made to the father
that promise which our Lord shews
reaches as
far as the resurrection and eternal life.
Verse 17
[17] His
glory is like the firstling of his bullock
and his horns are like the horns of
unicorns: with them he shall push the people together to the ends of the earth:
and they are the ten thousands of Ephraim
and they are the thousands of
Manasseh.
His glory is like the firstling of his
bullock ¡X Or young bull
which is a stately
creature
and was therefore formerly used as an emblem of royal majesty. This
seems to note the kingdom which Ephraim should obtain in Jeroboam and his
successors.
His horns ¡X
His strength and power shall be very great.
The people ¡X
All that shall oppose him
and particularly the Canaanites.
The ten thousands ¡X Of
the land of Canaan. Though Manasseh be now more numerous
yet Ephraim shall
shortly outstrip him
as was foretold Genesis 48:17-19.
Verse 18
[18] And
of Zebulun he said
Rejoice
Zebulun
in thy going out; and
Issachar
in thy
tents.
Rejoice ¡X
Thou shalt prosper and have cause of rejoicing.
In thy going out ¡X 1.
To war
as this phrase is often used. 2. To sea
in way of traffick
because
their portion lay near the sea. And in both respects his course is opposite to
that of Issachar
who was a lover of peace and pasturage. He is here joined
with Zebulun
both because they were brethren by father and mother too
and
because their possessions lay near together.
In thy tents ¡X
Thou shalt give thyself to the management of laud and cattle
living quietly in
thy own possessions.
Verse 19
[19] They
shall call the people unto the mountain; there they shall offer sacrifices of
righteousness: for they shall suck of the abundance of the seas
and of
treasures hid in the sand.
They ¡X
Zebulun of whom Moses takes more special notice. And so having dispatched
Issachar in two words
he returns to Zebulun.
The people ¡X
the Gentiles
either those of Galilee
which was called Galilee of the
Gentiles
who were their neighbours; or people of other nations
with whom they
had commerce
which they endeavoured to improve in persuading them to worship
the true God.
The mountain ¡X
That is
to the temple
which Moses knew was to be seated upon a mountain.
Sacrifices of righteousness ¡X Such as God requires. Their trafficking abroad with Heathen nations
shall not make them forget their duty at home
nor shall their distance from
the place of sacrifice hinder them from coming to it to discharge that duty.
Of the abundance of the sea ¡X They shall grow rich by the traffick of the sea
and shall consecrate
themselves and their riches to God.
Hid in the sand ¡X
Such precious things as either 1. Are contained in the sand of the sea and rivers
in which sometimes there is mixed a considerable quantity of gold and silver.
Or
2. Such as grow in the sea
or are fetched from the sandy bottom of it
as
pearls
coral
ambergrease. Or
3. Such as being cast into the sea by shipwreck
are cast upon the shore by the workings of the sea. It were well
if the
enlargement of our trade with foreign countries
were made to contribute to the
spreading of the gospel.
Verse 20
[20] And
of Gad he said
Blessed be he that enlargeth Gad: he dwelleth as a lion
and
teareth the arm with the crown of the head.
Enlargeth ¡X
That bringeth him out of his straits amid troubles
which he was often engaged
in
because he was encompassed with potent enemies.
As a lion ¡X
Safe and secure from his enemies
and terrible to them when they rouse and
molest him.
Teareth the arm ¡X
Utterly destroys his enemies
both the head
the seat of the crown
their
dignity and principality
and the arm
the subject of strength and instrument
of action; both chief princes
and their subjects.
Verse 21
[21] And
he provided the first part for himself
because there
in a portion of the
lawgiver
was he seated; and he came with the heads of the people
he executed
the justice of the LORD
and his judgments with Israel.
The first part ¡X
The first fruits of the land of promise
the country of Sihon
which was first
conquered
which he is said to provide for himself
because he desired and
obtained it of Moses.
Of the law-giver ¡X Of
Moses
whose portion this is called
either because this part of the land
beyond Jordan was the only part of the land which Moses was permitted to enter
upon: or because it was given him by Moses
whereas the portions beyond Jordan
were given to the several tribes by Joshua according to the direction of the
lot.
Seated ¡X
Heb. hid or protected: for their wives and children were secured in their
cities
while many of their men went over to the war in Canaan.
He came ¡X He
went
or he will go
to the war in Canaan
with the princes
or captains
or
rulers of the people of Israel
that is
under their command and conduct
as
indeed they did; or with the first of the people; or
in the front of the
people
as the Syriack renders it; for this tribe and their brethren whose lot
fell beyond Jordan
were to march into Canaan before their brethren.
He executed ¡X
The just judgment of God against the Canaanites
as the rest of the Israelites
did.
Verse 22
[22] And
of Dan he said
Dan is a lion's whelp: he shall leap from Bashan.
A lion's whelp ¡X
Courageous
and generous
and strong
and successful against his enemies.
Which leapeth ¡X
From Bashan
because there were many and fierce lions in those parts
whence
they used to come forth and leap upon the prey. Or this may refer either to the
particular victories obtained by Samson
who was of the tribe of Dan
or to a
more general achievement of that tribe
when a party of them surprised Laish
which lay in the farthest part of the land of Canaan from them. And the
mountain of Bashan lying not far from that city
from whence they probably made
their descent upon it
thus leaping from Basham.
Verse 23
[23] And
of Naphtali he said
O Naphtali
satisfied with favour
and full with the
blessing of the LORD: possess thou the west and the south.
Satisfied with favour ¡X With the favour of God. That only is the favour that satisfies the soul.
They are happy indeed that have the favour of God; and they shall have it
that
place their satisfaction in it.
And full with the blessing of the Lord ¡X Not Only with corn
wine and oil
the fruit of the blessing
but with
the blessing itself
the grace of God
according to his promise and covenant.
Possess thou the west and the south ¡X Or
the sea and the south. This is not to be understood of the place
that his lot should fall there
for he was rather in the east and north of the
land; but of the pleasures and commodities of the west or of the sea
which
were conveyed to him from his neighbour Zebulun; and of the south
that is
from the southern tribes and parts of Canaan
which were brought to him down
the river Jordan
and both sorts of commodities were given him in exchange for
the fruitful rich soil which he had in great abundance.
Verse 24
[24] And
of Asher he said
Let Asher be blessed with children; let him be acceptable to
his brethren
and let him dip his foot in oil.
Let Asher ¡X
Who carries blessedness in his very name
be blessed with children - He shall
have numerous
strong and healthful children.
Acceptable to his brethren ¡X By his sweet disposition and winning carriage.
In oil ¡X He
shall have such plenty of oil that he may not only wash his face
but his feet
also in it.
Verse 25
[25] Thy
shoes shall be iron and brass; and as thy days
so shall thy strength be.
Iron and brass ¡X
The mines of iron and copper
which were in their portion
whence Sidon their neighbor
was famous among the Heathens for its plenty of brass
and Sarepta is thought
to have its name from the brass and iron which were melted there in great
quantity.
Thy strength shall be ¡X Thy strength shall not be diminished with age
but thou shalt have the
vigor of youth even in thine old age: thy tribe shalt grow stronger and
stronger.
Verse 26
[26]
There is none like unto the God of Jeshurun
who rideth upon the heaven in thy
help
and in his excellency on the sky.
There us none ¡X
These are the last words that ever Moses wrote
perhaps the greatest writer
that ever lived upon the earth. And this man of God
who had as much reason to
know both as ever any mere man had
with his last breath magnifies both the God
of Israel
and the Israel of God. Unto the God of Jeshurun
who to help thee
rideth upon the heaven
and with the greatest state and magnificence
on the
sky. Riding on the heaven denotes the greatness and glory
in which he
manifests himself to the upper world
and the use he makes of the influences of
heaven and the products of the clouds
in bringing to pass his own counsels in
this lower world. All these he manages and directs
as a man doth the horse he
rides on.
Verse 27
[27] The
eternal God is thy refuge
and underneath are the everlasting arms: and he
shall thrust out the enemy from before thee; and shall say
Destroy them.
The eternal God ¡X He
who was before all worlds
and will be
when time shall be no more: Is thy
refuge - Or
thy habitation or mansion-house (so the word signifies) in whom
thou art safe
and easy
and at rest
as a man is in his own house. Every true
Israelite is at home in God: the soul returns to him
and reposes in him. And
they that make him their habitation shall have all the comforts and benefits of
an habitation in him.
And underneath are the everlasting arms ¡X The almighty power of God
which protects and comforts all that trust in
him
in their greatest straits and distresses.
He shall thrust out the enemy from before
thee ¡X Shall make room for thee by his resistless
power
and shall say
Destroy them - Giving thee not only a commission but
strength to put it in execution. And
has he not given the same commission and
the same strength to believers
to destroy all sin?
Verse 28
[28]
Israel then shall dwell in safety alone: the fountain of Jacob shall be upon a
land of corn and wine; also his heavens shall drop down dew.
Alone ¡X
Either 1. Tho' they be alone
and have no confederates to defend them
but have
all the world against them
yet my single protection shall be sufficient for
them. Or
2. Distinct and separated from all other nations
with whom I will
not have them mingle themselves.
The fountain ¡X
That is
the posterity of Jacob
which flowed from him as waters from a
fountain
in great abundance. The fountain is here put for the river or streams
which flow from it
as Jacob or Israel who is the fountain is often put for the
children of Israel.
His heavens ¡X
That is
those heavens or that air which hangs over his land.
Verse 29
[29]
Happy art thou
O Israel: who is like unto thee
O people saved by the LORD
the shield of thy help
and who is the sword of thy excellency! and thine
enemies shall be found liars unto thee; and thou shalt tread upon their high
places.
The shield of they help ¡X By whom thou are sufficiently guarded against all assailants; and the
sword of thy excellency - Or
thy most excellent sword
that is
thy strength
and the author of all thy past or approaching victories. Those in whose hearts
is the excellency of holiness
have God himself for their shield and sword.
They are defended by the whole armour of God: His word is their sword
and
faith their shield.
And thine enemies shall be found liars unto
thee ¡X Who said they would destroy thee: or at
least
that they would never submit: and thou shalt tread upon their high
places - Their strong holds
palaces and temples. Thus shall the God of peace
tread Satan under the feet of all believers
and that shortly.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Deuteronomy¡n
33 Chapter 33
Verses 1-5
This is the blessing wherewith Moses
the man of God
blessed the
children of Israel before his death.
The blessing of the tribes
The many successive ¡§blessings¡¨ of Israel were a necessary
consequence of his Divine election. In that seed all families of the earth were
to be blessed. Therefore it was fitting that formal and repeated blessings
should be pronounced upon the bearer of such high destinies
that none of the
issues of his history might seem to be by chance
and that he and all men might
know what was ¡§the hope of his calling
and what the riches of the glory of his
inheritance among the saints
and what is the exceeding greatness of God¡¦s
power towards us who believe.¡¨ The notion of a distinct continuity in calling
and in privilege between Israel and the Christian Church is no fancy of an
antiquated theology. It springs out of the very root idea of the Bible
the
principle which rightly leads us to speak of so many Scriptures
written at
sundry times and in divers manners
as one book and one revelation. The first
utterance of blessing upon the chosen people proceeded from the lips of God
Himself
and was renewed in nearly the same form of language to each of the
three great patriarchs
Abraham
Isaac
and Jacob. It can hardly be by an
accident that the record in Genesis of this initial benediction is sevenfold.
Seven times exactly did God declare His purpose to bless the seed of Abraham in
the line of Isaac and of Jacob; and having thus established His covenant as by
an oath
He spake no more by a like direct communication
but He used the lips
of inspired men to enlarge the scope of His blessing
and to give definiteness
to its first and necessarily somewhat vague generalities. The blessing of Moses
was evidently founded upon the earlier utterance of the dying Jacob concerning
the future of his twelve sons. But the differences between the two blessings
are far more suggestive than their resemblances. There are parts of Jacob¡¦s
discourse to which the notion of ¡§blessing¡¨ is altogether foreign. Simeon and
Levi are stricken in it with an absolute curse; the prediction concerning
Issachar is at least equivocal in its reference to willing servitude; and for
Reuben there is nothing but a mournful foreclosure of his natural birthright (Genesis 49:3-7; Genesis 49:14-15). But the prophecy of
Moses is really a benediction upon every tribe that is named therein. It is
couched throughout in the language of unfeigned affection
intercession
and
giving of thanks for what is or for what may be unequivocally good. Careful
readers will observe that the tribes of Israel are arranged in different order
in the two blessings by Jacob and by Moses. The natural order of age and of
maternal parentage is followed by Jacob; but Moses at first sight seems to
adopt an altogether arbitrary arrangement
three times putting a younger before
an elder son
separating children of the same mother
and omitting one name
altogether. This fact
however
is itself one of our clues to the right
understanding of the blessing as a whole
for its only possible explanation
depends upon the typical character of Israel¡¦s national history. The place
which Divine Providence assigned to each tribe in the temporal commonwealth of
Israel at different stages of its development was meant to illustrate some
permanent principle of God¡¦s spiritual kingdom which Moses foresaw in its
continuance to our own day. The thirty-third chapter of Deuteronomy has a
prologue and an epilogue
which may not be passed over in silence. The
blessings of the children of Israel are embraced between them intentionally
for the inspired author wished to set forth the unalterable conditions of
blessing in God¡¦s kingdom
and the inseparable connection which subsists
between obedience
happiness
and faith towards God. No grander description of
the Divine covenant with Israel was ever given than is contained in the opening
verses of this chapter
nor has the law from Sinai been anywhere else depicted
so awfully and yet so attractively in its character of ¡§the inheritance¡¨ of
Jehovah¡¦s ¡§congregation.¡¨ That law
in its outward form
has no doubt passed
away for Christians
but the obligation of its spirit is perpetual
and the
blessing of each citizen of God¡¦s new covenant kingdom depends upon a loving
acceptance of that obligation. Not Moses
but Christ
has ¡§commanded us a law.¡¨
He is our ¡§king
¡¨ and we are ¡§not without law to God
but under the law to
Christ.¡¨ (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
The end in sight; or last works and dying songs
There is not a more illustrative example of the benefits of early
training and religious culture than Moses. Whether we think of the depth of his
religious convictions
the purity of his personal character
the clearness of
his spiritual insight
the sagacity of his legislation
or the rectitude of his
administration
we cannot but wonder at the manifold perfection of his human
greatness and the closeness of his walk with God. But in one respect he stands
preeminent. He was transcendent in moral glory when age had wrinkled his brow
and whitened his head
when the sun began to go down in the golden west
and
the shadows were casting their long lengths of darkness round him. ¡§His eye was
not dim
nor his natural force abated.¡¨ Neither was his mind obscured
nor were
his sympathies narrowed
nor his heart soured. The shadow of a great
disappointment was trailing over his path and clouding his future; yet
to his
fellows
the radiance of his spirit was undimmed
and the clear shining of his
intellect was as sparkling as the morning dew.
I. The end in
sight and the last works of the man of God.
1. He knew his death was certainly near. God hardly ever allows men
to wear the crown of completed undertakings in this world--¡§that no flesh
should glory in His presence.¡¨
2. Faithful in his house
he set everything in order
under the
influence of this certainty.
3. The characteristics of the last work of his pen are worthy of
special study. There is a rich and glowing beauty about these last words. There
are in them some of the most marvellous predictions of the Old Testament. ¡§The
Prophet like unto himself¡¨ finds its fulfilment in Him who was both Prophet and
Redeemer. There is also a forecast of the Hebrew history and the Hebrew doom
which cannot be read without wonder at its truth
and awe in presence of
certain Divine judgments disclosed. His burdened heart looks down the vista of
ages
and sees
with but too clear a vision
the sad departures from the true
line of spiritual duty and obedience
which were only too possible. Side by
side with ritual and ceremonial requirements
he lays down the principle that
spiritual consecration
that loving devotion to God
is the only safety. He is
not a Jew
even to Moses
who is one outwardly. Even here ¡§love is the
fulfilling of the law.¡¨ But he uses
especially
¡§the terrors of the Lord¡¨ to
fortify them against the unfaithfulness and unbelief which were their danger.
As Dean Milman says
¡§The sublimity of these denunciations surpasses anything
which has ever been known in the oratory or poetry of the whole world. Nature
is exhausted in furnishing terrific images; nothing except the real horrors of
Jewish history
the miseries of their sieges
the cruelty
the contempt
the
oppressions
the persecutions
which for ages this scattered and despised
nation have endured
can approach the tremendous maledictions which warned them
against the violation of their law.¡¨
II. His dying
songs; or the thoughts which animated the great Lawgiver in the near prospect
of death.
1. Here is his faith in Divine relations to those who were to come
after him. Nothing is more difficult to an old man than the graceful
resignation of the power and authority which have come to him through his
origination of office or business
and through the long experience of active
ruling life. Abdication is the most difficult act of sovereign authority. But
Moses has supreme confidence in God.
2. Not only was there this confidence in God for those who were to
succeed him
there was a supreme consciousness of the Divine glory. There is
here a singular absence of self-glorying; a marvellous prominence given to the
Divine ideas which underlie true life. Jehovah appears in almost every line of
his dying song; Moses never. The song of the dying believer is always one which
celebrates distinguishing
elective
and redeeming graze. When the spirit gets
close to the realities of things
it is the Divine that is felt to be
uppermost
the human which sinks and fades away. When John Owen
greatest of
the Puritan theologians
the Nonconformist Vice-Chancellor of Oxford
was
dying
he said to Charles Fleetwood
¡§I am going to Him whom my soul has loved
or rather
who has loved me with an everlasting love
which is the whole ground
of all my consolation. I am leaving the ship of the Church in a storm; but
while the Great Pilot is in it
the loss of a poor under-rower will be
inconsiderable. Live
and pray
and hope
and wait patiently
and do not
despond; the promise stands invincible
and He will never leave us nor forsake
us.¡¨
3. There was calm trust in a faithful God and in His faithful
promises. These were the most powerful of his inspirations
and they poured
themselves out in his glowing song. There is not one of the blessings but has
this basis; and they have also a deep
inner
spiritual
religious
redemptive
sense. Dr. Watts
after the scholarly labours of a long and devoted life
said:
¡§I find it is the plain promises of the Gospel that are my support. And I bless
God
they are plain promises that do not require much labour and pains to
understand them
for I can do nothing now but look into my Bible for some
simple promise to support me
and I live upon that. I bless God
I can lie down
with comfort at night
not being solicitous whether I awake in this world or
another.¡¨ ¡§Underneath are the Everlasting Arms!¡¨ So Guthrie felt that it was
the simpler
fundamental truths and facts which inspired dying trust and hope
and said: ¡§Sing me a bairn¡¦s hymn
¡¨ and fell asleep on the bosom of the
Eternal. So Benjamin Parsons said: ¡§My head is resting very sweetly on three
pillows: infinite power
infinite love
and infinite wisdom.¡¨ Horace Bushnell
one of the great teachers of our age
but recently departed
woke up in the
night and said
¡§Oh
God is a wonderful Being!¡¨ And when his daughter replied
¡§Yes; is He with you?¡¨ the old man replied
¡§Yes
in a certain sense He is with
me; and I have no doubt He is with me in a sense I do not imagine.¡¨ So He is.
It is ¡§above all we ask or think¡¨! Then the old man eloquent said: ¡§Well
now
we are all going home together; and I say
the Lord be with you--and in
grace--and peace--and love--and that is the way I have come along home!¡¨ (W.
H. Davison.)
From His right hand went a fiery law for them.
Yea
He loved the people.
The law of antagonism
At first sight the text might seem to involve a contradiction
but
closer consideration will show that it expresses a great truth
namely
that
the severity of human life is an expression of the Divine goodness.
I. In nature. The
fiery law published at Sinai is proclaimed from every mountaintop; it burns and
blazes through all the earth; the sea also is crystal mingled with fire. Nature
knows nothing of indulgence; she makes no concessions to ignorance
folly
or
weakness. Nature is imperative
uncompromising
terrible. In our day the
severity of nature has been recognised as ¡§the struggle for existence
¡¨ and
students have shown with great clearness and power how full the world is of
antagonism and suffering; yet these same students distinctly perceive that the
struggle for existence is at bottom merciful
and that whenever nature chooses
an evil it is a lesser evil to prevent a greater.
1. They see the advantage of severity so far as all sound and healthy
things are concerned. If the conditions of life are in any degree softened
it
is to the detriment of the noble organisms concerned.
2. They see also the advantage of severity so far as defective things
are concerned. It is better for the world at large that weak organisms should
be eliminated
otherwise the earth would be filled with imperfection and
wretchedness; it is better for the creatures concerned that they should perish
for why should a miserable existence be indefinitely prolonged?
II. In
civilisation. It is not by gentle yielding restrictions
by pliant
understandings
by soft phrases
by light penalties easily remitted
by
facility and complaisance
by the coddling of the individual
and the pampering
of the nations
but by laws most exacting and rigorous
that God governs the
race and conducts it to ultimate perfection. And yet once more we may see that
the fiery law is only a definition of love.
1. Take the struggle of man with nature. The tropical sun burns us;
the Arctic cold freezes us; in temperate regions the changeability of the
weather troubles us; everywhere we experience the fury of the elements. All
climates and countries have their special inconveniences
inhospitalities
and
scourges. But is not this conflict with nature part of the inspiration and
programme of civilisation? Contending with the globe
we are like Jacob
wrestling with the angel. The fight is long and hard amid the mystery and the
darkness
and the great Power seems reluctant to bless us; but the breaking of
the day comes
and we find ourselves blest with corn
wine
oil
purple
feasts
flowers. Ah! and with gifts far beyond those of basket and
store--ripened intelligence
self-reliance
courage
skill
manliness
virtue.
2. Take the struggle of man with man. Society is a great system of
antitheses. There are international rivalries--a relentless competition between
the several races and nations for power and supremacy. The various peoples
watch each other across the seas; the earth is full of feuds
stratagems
competitions. And within the separate communities what complex and unceasing
emulations and antagonisms exist! But this social rivalry brings its rich
compensations. Solicitude
fatigue
difficulty
danger
hunger
these are the
true king-makers; and the misfortune with many rich families today is
that
they are being gradually let down because they are losing sight of the wolf.
The wolf not merely suckled Romulus; it suckles all kings of men. The wolf is
not a wolf at all; it is an angel in wolves¡¦ clothing
saving us from rust
sloth
effeminacy
cowardice
baseness
from a miserable superficiality of
thought
life
and character.
III. In character.
When we are called upon to perform duties utterly repugnant to flesh and blood
to suffer grievous losses
to experience bitterest disappointments
to bleed
under social humiliations
to be tortured by pain
to lose those whose love was
our life
to endure the great fight of afflictions which sooner or later comes
upon us all
we may rationally and consolingly murmur to ourselves
¡§This is a
lesser evil to prevent a greater.¡¨ For as the catastrophes of nature are
after
all
but partial and temporary
preventing immeasurably greater calamities
so
our physical pain
impoverishment
social suffering
severe toil
bereavement
and all our terrestrial woes are the lesser evils
saving us from the
infinitely greater one of the superficiality
corruption
misery
and ruin of
the soul. And not only is the fiery law a wall of fire securing our salvation
from the abyss; it is also a call unto a high and splendid perfection. It shows
the way to the dignities
freedoms
treasures
felicities
perfections
of the
highest universe and the unending life.
1. Let us not reject the law of Sinai because of its severity. The
musician with the harp believes in strait-lacing
and it is only when the
strings are stretched nigh to the breaking that he brings out the finest music.
So in human life
caprice
licence
abandonment mean dissonance and misery;
only through obligation
duty
discipline do all the chords of our nature
become tuned to the music of a sweet perfection.
2. Let us not reject the Lord Jesus because He comes to us with a
cross. To attain the highest
we must be crucified with Christ.
3. Let us not shrink from the tribulations of life. ¡§Beloved
think
it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you
as though some
strange thing happened unto you: but rejoice
¡¨ etc. The whole case is here. We
must not consider the fiery trial ¡§a strange thing.¡¨ It is the universal order.
We witness it in all nature; we discern it in all the history of civilisation;
it is the common experience. The fiery trial is not some ordeal peculiar to the
Christian saints; it is appointed to the whole of humanity. We must not
consider the fiery trial an uncompensated thing. The cross we carry is no
longer a pitiless and crushing burden; we look to its ultimate design
and know
it as the rough but precious instrument of our purification and perfecting. (W.
L. Watkinson.)
All His saints are in Thy
hand.
Saints in the Lord¡¦s hand
These holy ones are distinguished by many things from each other.
Some of them are in public life and some in private. Some are rich and some
poor. Some are young and some old. But all are equally dear to God; and
partakers of the common salvation; in which there is neither Jew nor Greek
for
we are all one in Christ Jesus. This honour have all His saints--¡§All His
saints are in His hand.¡¨
1. In His fashioning hand. They are the clay
He is the potter; and
He makes them vessels of honour
prepared unto every good work.
2. In His preserving hand. For now they are precious
they are the
more exposed. They are called a crown and a diadem; and the powers of darkness
would gladly seize it.
3. In His guiding hand. Though God
says Bishop Hall
has a large
family
none of His children are able to go alone: they are too weak
as well
as too ignorant. But fear not
says God: I will strengthen thee
yea
I will
help thee
yea
I will uphold thee with the right hand of My righteousness.
4. In His chastening hand. (W. Jay.)
God and His saints
I. The Divine love
which is the foundation of all. ¡§He loved the people.¡¨ The word used here is
probably connected with words in an allied language
which mean ¡§the bosom
¡¨
and ¡§a tender embrace¡¨; so the picture we have is of the great Divine Lover
folding ¡§the people¡¨ to His heart
as a mother her child
and cherishing them
in His bosom.
2. The word is in a form which implies that the act is continuous and
perpetual. Timeless
eternal love--always the same.
3. Mark the place in the song where this comes in. It is the
beginning of everything. This old singer
with the mists of antiquity round
him
who knew nothing about the Cross or the historic Christ
who had only that
which modern thinkers tell us is a revelation of a wrathful God
somehow or
other rose to the height of the evangelical conception of God¡¦s love as the
foundation of the very existence of a people who are His.
4. If the question is asked
Why does God thus love? the only answer
is
Because He is God. The love of God is inseparable from His being
and flows
forth before
and independent of
anything in the creature which could draw it
out. It is like an artesian well
or a fountain springing up from unknown
depths in obedience to its own impulse.
II. The guardian
care extended to all those that answer love by love. ¡§All His saints are in Thy
hand.¡¨
1. A saint is a man that answers God¡¦s love by his love. The root
idea of sanctity or holiness is not moral character
goodness of disposition
and action
but separation from the world and consecration to God. As surely as
a magnet applied to a heap of miscellaneous filings will pick out every little
bit of iron there
so surely will that love which God bears to the people
when
it is responded to
draw to itself
and therefore draw out of the heap
the men
that feel its impulse and its preciousness.
2. The saints lie in God¡¦s hand.
III. The docile
obedience of those that are thus guarded. ¡§They sat down at Thy feet; everyone
shall receive of Thy words.¡¨ These two clauses make up one picture
and one
easily understands what it is. It presents a group of docile scholars
sitting
at the Master¡¦s feet. He is teaching them
and they listen open-mouthed and
open-eared to what He says
and will take His words into their lives
like Mary
sitting at Christ¡¦s feet
whilst Martha was bustling about His meal. But
perhaps
instead of ¡§sitting down at Thy feet
¡¨ we should read ¡§followed at Thy
feet.¡¨ That suggests the familiar metaphor of a guide and those led by him who
without him knew not their road. As a dog follows his master
as the sheep
their shepherd
so
this singer felt
will saints follow the God whom they
love. Religion is imitation of God. They ¡§follow at His foot.¡¨ That is the
blessedness and the power of Christian morality
that it is keeping close at
Christ¡¦s heels
and that
instead of its being said to us
¡§Go
¡¨ He says
¡§Come¡¨; and instead of us being bade to hew out for ourselves a path of duty
He says to us
¡§He that followeth Me shall not walk in darkness
but shall have
the light of life.¡¨ They ¡§receive His words.¡¨ Yes
if you will keep close to
Him
He will turn round and speak to you. If you are near enough to Him to
catch His whisper He will not leave you without guidance. That is one side of
the thought
that following we receive what He says
whereas the people that
are away far behind Him scarcely know what His will is
and never can catch the
low whisper which will come to us by providences
by movements in our own
spirits
through the exercise of our faculties of judgment and common sense
if
only we will keep near to Him. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 6
Let Reuben live
and not die.
Reuben
The name of Reuben stands first in the blessing of Moses
but this
recognition of his natural place among the tribes is almost sadder in its
suggestiveness than would have been the putting of his name farther down. When
the substance of a high and ancient dignity has been withdrawn
the continuance
of its hollow outward semblance becomes a pitiable spectacle. Reuben had
outraged the most sacred principles of patriarchal law and primitive morality
Moses could not disregard the curse which behaviour so flagrant had provoked.
Nay
in Reuben and his tribe Moses recognised an inherent vice which forbade
them ever to ¡§excel
¡¨ He could therefore only pray that Reuben might ¡§live and
not die¡¨--not become extinct and cast out from Jehovah¡¦s inheritance
as it
seemed only too likely he might become. The fatal flaw which Moses thus
discerned in the fortunes of Jacob¡¦s firstborn arose from the instability of
his character; a fault which seems by no means to have been corrected
bur
rather to have been perpetuated and confirmed in the character of his descendants.
A practical lesson of warning for ourselves is surely not far to seek. The
impulsive yet irresolute disposition of Reuben is painfully common amongst
ourselves. Too many a young man
the excellency of his father¡¦s dignity
and
the centre of highest hopes
both for this world and the next
is at this
moment the subject of sorely anxious prayers
such as this which Moses uttered.
And too many a Christian convert
who has been baptized like Reuben unto God¡¦s
high calling
in the cloud and in the sea
is seeming at this moment to his
pastor to be coming short of the promised reward
because of his unstable will
and his fickle yielding to influences that lie outside the boundaries of
Jehovah¡¦s covenant. Not even the loving intercessions of a Moses can deliver
such souls from death
if they make not an end of their wavering and
indecision
and engage not themselves to seek the life of God with all their
hearts. God Himself can only mourn over them
saying
¡§What shall I do unto
thee? for thy goodness is like the morning cloud
and like the dew which early
goeth away.¡¨ (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
The omission of Simeon
The Alexandrian manuscript of the Greek Old Testament contains a
remarkable interpolation in the clause of Reuben¡¦s blessing. It introduces the
name of Simeon
and refers to that tribe the prayer of Moses that ¡§his men may
not be few.¡¨ The suggestion cannot possibly be entertained; although
if it be
rejected
the very singular fact stares us in the face that the tribe of Simeon
is passed over in absolute silence. This omission has been used to support the
theory of a later origin of the Book of Deuteronomy. It has been said that the
Simeonites had disappeared from the soil of Canaan in the reign of Josiah
and
that therefore the writer thought it needless to make allusion to them. But the
same reason would have caused him to pass over all the tribes comprised in the
northern kingdom of Israel; for they had been recently rooted out of their
possessions in the land of promise
and carried away captive into Assyria.
Moreover
as a matter of historical fact
there were flourishing settlements of
the Simeonites within the territory of Judah so near to Josiah¡¦s time as the
reign of Hezekiah (1 Chronicles 4:34-43)
and the
heroine of the apocryphal book of Judith was a daughter of Simeon: a fact
which
even with all allowance for the license of historic fiction
obliges us
to recognise the continuance of Simeon as a tribe in the very latest period of
Jewish national existence. The true reason why Simeon¡¦s name is passed over in
this blessing was the deep and righteous indignation which the inspired prophet
felt in regard to the recent sin of Israel at Shittim. Simeon had headed the
foul apostasy which cast the glory of Jehovah¡¦s chosen people at the feet of
Moabs vilest idol; and the bulk of the twenty-four thousand victims of God¡¦s
avenging plague were men of this guilty tribe. With such recollections fresh in
his mind
it was impossible for Moses to utter words of blessing upon Simeon
or to mitigate in any sense the curse which Jacob had already pronounced upon
his posterity (Genesis 49:5; Genesis 49:7). (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 7
And thus is the blessing of Judah.
Judah
The name ¡§Judah¡¨ was given to Jacob¡¦s fourth son in memory of his
mother¡¦s grateful utterance of praise to God when this child was vouchsafed to
her. It is the Hebrew word meaning ¡§praised
¡¨ and had reference originally to
Jehovah
upon whom Leah in her joy conferred that title
saying
¡§Now will I
praise the Lord¡¨ (Genesis 29:35). But
by a very natural
change
the praise which this name implied came to be attributed to the
individual who bore it; and Jacob¡¦s dying blessing embodies that new
application of the idea: ¡§Judah
thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise.¡¨
The blessing of Jacob goes on to disclose the great reasons for Judah¡¦s
exaltation in the esteem of men. He was to be the royal tribe in Israel; from
him was to spring the Prince of Peace
the promised Messiah
¡§unto whom shall
be the obedience of the peoples¡¨ (Genesis 49:8; Genesis 49:10). A third part of his
eldest brother Reuben¡¦s birthright was conferred upon him
--and this
not by
his father¡¦s caprice
but by God¡¦s deliberate appointment; so that the refusal
of his brethren to acknowledge Judah as their leader would have been nothing
less than rebellion against Jehovah. The sons of Jacob
however
seem to have
acknowledged this leadership very willingly from the first. Reuben
Simeon
and
Levi yielded the place of honour to Judah without a murmur
so far as the sacred
record suffers us to judge
Only one tribe submitted with ill-concealed
impatience and reluctance to the divinely appointed leadership of Judah. This
was Ephraim
which had come to represent Joseph
the favourite of Jacob and the
inheritor of another third part of Reuben¡¦s forfeited birthright. The first
settlement of Canaan after its conquest by Joshua shows us the secret rivalry
between these two tribes
and also allows us to see how completely these two
had cast all the others into the shade. For Judah and Joseph divided the whole
conquered territory between themselves; so that the central mountain ridge of
Palestine received a permanent name from the one tribe in its southern portion
and from the other tribe in its northern continuation. It was not until some
few years had elapsed that the murmurs of seven other tribes
for which no
landed possessions had been allotted
shamed Judah and Ephraim into a more
equitable division of their spoils
and led to the well-known partition of
Canaan into nine lots
instead of the original two (Joshua 15:1-63; Joshua 16:1-10; Joshua 17:1-18; Joshua 18:2-7). But about one hundred
years later the old dual division reappeared in more pronounced and permanent
form. The seceding kingdom of Israel was established through the union of eight
tribes or fragments of tribes under Ephraim
who now for the second time ruled
over the whole northern half of the Promised Land; whilst Judah retained
dominion over the south
in which part of the country Benjamin
Simeon
and Dan
had found settlements under the wing of their stronger brother. From that time
forth the name of ¡§Jew¡¨ (that is
¡§man of Judah¡¨) was given to every subject of
the kingdom of David¡¦s house
whether he belonged to the tribe of Judah or not.
The second clause of this blessing may seem at first sight a little obscure;
but the traditional Jewish interpretation will probably commend itself to
everyone who bears in mind that peculiar position of Judah among his brethren which
has been already described. The royal tribe was also the ¡§champion¡¨ tribe
bound to go before all the rest in the path of warfare and of danger. The third
and fourth clauses of the blessing bring out
on the one hand
Judah¡¦s valiant
and unselfish discharge of the honourable task assigned him; and
on the other
hand
they contemplate the serious hindrances which would oppose his work. He
would have many adversaries
not only from among the surrounding Gentile
nations
but also from amongst his own brethren
some of whom would envy him
and set up a rival kingdom and championship to his. But if God would be his
helper
these rivalries and oppositions would only serve to make his glorious
destiny more manifest. The Lord would set His anointed One king upon His holy
hill of Zion; there He should rule in the midst of His enemies. The opening
words of Judah¡¦s blessing are
however
the most suggestive in regard to the
actual history of the tribe and to the typical application of that history to
our own circumstances. Judah¡¦s triumph and rest and help were to come from God
in answer to the uplifting of Judah¡¦s voice. Distinct as was God¡¦s purpose to
bless him and to make him a blessing
He would yet be inquired of for this:
prayer and supplication on the part of His chosen people were to be the
condition of their effectual blessing. The Apostle Paul has taught us that ¡§in
everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving¡¨ our ¡§requests¡¨ should
¡§be made known unto God¡¨ (Philippians 4:6). This oft-forgotten but
Important truth is forcibly suggested in the wording of Judah¡¦s blessing:
¡§Hear
Lord
the voice of Judah¡¨; for
as already explained
that name was
given by Leah in token of the debt of praise which was owing on Judah¡¦s account
to God. The history of the reign of Jehoshaphat furnishes a notable commentary
upon the point which is thus suggested. Moab
and Ammon
and Edom had become
confederate against that prince; and in his fear ¡§he set himself to seek the
Lord; and all Judah gathered together to seek help from the Lord¡¨ (2 Chronicles 20:1-4). The answer
which was given to this cry for help required from the king and from the people
no ordinary display of faith
and no easy sacrifice of praise. But Judah was
strengthened to stand the test (2 Chronicles 20:21-28). Perhaps this
hint from the meaning of Judah¡¦s name may be the most needed and the most
profitable teaching of the blessing of Judah for someone who now reads it. It
is no unfrequent experience when a Christian¡¦s prayer fails to be answered from
God
simply because it was conceived in a querulous
ungrateful
and
complaining spirit. No element of praise mingled with its petitions. It was
wholly occupied with requests for something that seemed lacking; whilst God was
expecting a thankful acknowledgment of countless mercies which His selfish
servant had received in silence
or even with discontented depreciation. Let
not the offerer of such defective prayers expect any share in the blessings
which Moses invoked on Judah. The voice of rejoicing and of thanksgiving was in
his tabernacles; therefore the right hand of the Lord did valiantly for him.
For thus saith the Hope of Israel
the Lion of the tribe of Judah (Psalms 50:23). (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Verses 8-11
And of Levi he said.
Levi
Levi was the third son of Jacob and Leah
and his name
commemorated the desire and hope of his mother
that her husband¡¦s heart would
be ¡§closely joined¡¨ to her now that she had borne him three sons (Genesis 29:34). The Hebrew word from
which ¡§Levi¡¨ is derived means ¡§to adhere
¡¨ or ¡§to be closely joined.¡¨ An
undesigned prediction lay hid in the name thus given; for Levi was ordained by
God to be the official link of union betwixt the whole nation of Israel and its
spiritual Head. Through the Levitical priesthood the descendants of Jacob were
to be joined unto God in a peculiar covenant; and this fact is distinctly
connected with the meaning of Levi¡¦s name by an inspired utterance recorded in Numbers 18:2. Yet
during the lifetime of
Levi himself
this high spiritual destiny of his tribe could scarcely have been
guessed; for this third son of Jacob was joined to his elder brother Simeon in
deeds of violence and cruelty that drew upon them a common curse
which in
Simeon¡¦s case
as we have seen
made every ¡§blessing¡¨ of the tribe impossible.
The dying patriarch Israel
speaking by the spirit of prophecy
formally
disinherited both these men from their natural share in the promised land of
Canaan. They were to be ¡§divided¡¨ and ¡§scattered¡¨ (Genesis 49:7). And this curse was never
recalled in its terms
nor abolished in the case of Levi any more than it was
in the case of Simeon; only the wonder working providence of God converted it into
an occasion of blessing and honour for the one tribe
whilst leaving it in its
original force of a punishment for the other tribe. The exclusion of the
Levites from a landed inheritance
and their dispersion amongst the other
tribes of Israel
became the highest tokens of the Divine favour towards them
and the means by which they were recognised as the channels of heavenly grace
to all the nation. This remarkable change of a curse into a blessing deserves
to be studied and remembered by those who are conscious of having brought
themselves under the inevitable penalties of past wrong-doing. Those penalties
cannot perhaps be recalled
but they can be converted into marvellous
opportunities of good in a circle far wider than has been affected by the former
evil. And for such a miracle of grace to be accomplished
it is only needful
that human repentance and self-consecration should work together with the
providence of heaven. (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Urim and Thummim
In the blessing of Levi by Moses
the usual order of these two
mysterious words is reversed
and Thummim is put before Urim. There is probably
a reason for this
namely
to suggest that Levi¡¦s zeal for the ¡§right and
perfect way¡¨ of God
amid the general defection at Horeb
was his real title to
the honourable office of interpreting God¡¦s ¡§light¡¨ and God¡¦s ¡§truth¡¨ from His
holy oracles. This supreme devotion of himself to ¡§right¡¨ was indeed the sole
condition of his blessing and of the Divine election which it declared. (T.
G. Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 12
Of Benjamin he said
The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safety
by Him.
The safety of the Lord¡¦s beloved
I. He was the
special object of the Divine affection. God especially loves His spiritual
children with a love of--
1. Approbation.
2. Manifestation.
3. Distinction.
II. He was to dwell
near to the Lord.
1. By grace.
2. In providence.
3. In reference to His ordinances.
4. With regard to the prevailing impressions of the mind.
III. He was to abide
in perfect security. God¡¦s chosen dwell in safety from--
1. The curses of the Divine law.
2. The powers of darkness.
3. The perils of life.
4. The terrors of death and the judgment day. (J. Burns
D. D.)
Benjamin
The blessing of the tribes by Moses consisted largely in a
prophetic foreshadowing of the lots which these tribes were severally to occupy
in the conquered territory of Canaan. The first distinct example of this fact
meets us in the case of Benjamin
who
although he was the youngest of all the
sons of Jacob
stands fourth in this significant enumeration which the man of
God was inspired to make before his death. It has been suggested that the
spirit of prophecy caused Moses to look far beyond the merely temporal aspect
of the history of Israel
and to recognise its typical relations with the
spiritual kingdom of Messiah; and that the peculiar arrangement of the names
was partly meant to indicate certain of these hidden mysteries. Such an opinion
would be fully confirmed by a review of the order in which the tribes have been
marshalled thus far. Reuben is mentioned first
not so much by courtesy and in
remembrance of his birthright
as to mark with emphasis the mournful lessons of
his fall. The real leader and head of Israel is Judah
and the blessing makes
haste to rest on him with the first of its utterances in which no ambiguity
lies. But the royal destinies of Judah are incomplete if separated from the
priestly destinies of Levi. Messiah
that seed for whose sake Abraham
Isaac
and Jacob had received their divine election
was to be a ¡§priest upon his
throne¡¨; and therefore the blessing of the third son is made by Moses to follow
immediately upon the blessing of his sceptred brother. So the keynote of the
entire prediction is struck in a spiritual rather than in a temporal sense;
remembering which fact
we cease to wonder at finding the name of Benjamin next
in the enumeration to that of Levi. For the local centre of Jehovah¡¦s spiritual
kingdom in Israel was fixed in the lot of Benjamin. The famous temple of
Solomon was built upon the hill between the city of David and the Mount of
Olives; and was wholly in the territory of Benjamin
though
according to the
Rabbins
a part of its outer courts fell within the lot of Judah. This fact
furnishes the most exact and beautiful explanation of all the peculiar
expressions which meet us in Benjamin¡¦s blessing. For the God and King of
Israel may be said literally to have thus dwelt between the two mountain
ridge¡¦s which formed the extremity of the lot of this tribe
and Benjamin dwelt
¡§alongside¡¨ the holy spot; not ¡§around¡¨ it
but stretching out from it as from
the point where his safety and honour had their origin; all which is implied in
the preposition which Moses uses when he says
¡§The beloved of the Lord shall
dwell in safety by Him.¡¨ Further
the phrase
¡§He will cover him all the day
long
¡¨ may very fairly be taken as referring to the cloud of glory which was
inseparably associated with the earthly dwelling place of Jehovah
and which in
the wilderness had been spread for a covering over all the tribes. That sign of
the Divine protection was now to rest specially over Benjamin; and beneath the
shadow of the Almighty he was to abide securely day and night. The history of
the tribe of Benjamin from the time when the Temple was built upon his frontier
hill of Moriah yields a very complete commentary upon the splendid promise of
his blessing. This member of the Hebrew commonwealth did dwell in safety that
was all the more noteworthy by contrast with the calamities which befell not
only the tribes which cast in their lot with Ephraim
but also the outlying
portions of the kingdom of Judah. A kind of charmed circle of peace and
security was drawn around the towers of Salem
and all the land of Benjamin
seemed to be within that happy region. Egypt might come up against Israel from
the south
and Syria might invade his territory from the north; the tents of
Edom and the Ishmaelites
Moab and the Hagarenes
might be confederate to
assault it from the east; and these hostile floods more than once filled all
the breadth of Immanuel¡¦s land; but the tableland of Benjamin was ever the last
to be overflowed
and often escaped even the spray of the angry tide. The
spiritual application of this blessing must be self-evident to everyone who has
received the assurance of God¡¦s love toward himself in Jesus Christ. The
Christian has joined himself to the Lord¡¦s anointed King
even as Benjamin
chose to unite his lot with Judah
and to acknowledge the right of David¡¦s
house to rule over him. He has accepted Christ to be his head
and has prepared
Him a dwelling place in a nobler house than that of Moriah
even in his own
renewed and adoring heart. Therefore does the Spirit of Christ bear witness to
him of his adoption as God¡¦s well-beloved child. He has found a dwelling place
under the shadow of the Almighty; Jehovah¡¦s truth has become his shield and
buckler. (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Benjamin as a figure of the true Church
1. In his birth--hard travail
sorrow
pain
and death
preceded and
accompanied his birth. So in the spiritual birth
in the regeneration of the
soul
there is great pain
sorrow
and anguish of mind
and even the death of
all self-righteousness and legal hope in bringing the soul to spiritual birth.
2. In his name. The believer
in his moments of conviction
humiliation
and sorrow for sin
calls himself Benoni
the son of sorrow
but
the Lord calls him Benjamin
the son of my right hand; witness Ephraim
bemoaning himself
and the Lord¡¦s declaration concerning him (Jeremiah 31:18; Jeremiah 31:20).
3. In the description given of him
¡§the beloved of the Lord¡¨; loved
from eternity
freely
indissolubly
everlastingly.
4. In his security. He shall dwell in safety by Him
or through His
protecting hand and power; in battle the Lord shall cover him
as a hen
covereth her chickens--as with a shield
and he shall dwell
his resting place
shall be
between the shoulders
in the heart of his covenant God. (A.
Hewlett
M. A.)
Safety near God
1. There is no safety like that which comes of dwelling near to God.
For His best beloved the Lord can find no surer or safer place. O Lord
let me
always abide under Thy shadow
close to Thy wounded side. Nearer and nearer
would I come to Thee; and when once specially near Thee
I would abide there
forever.
2. What a covering is that which the Lord gives to His chosen! Not a
fair roof shall cover him
nor a bomb-proof casement
nor even an angel¡¦s wing
but Jehovah Himself. Nothing can come at us when we are thus covered. This
covering the Lord will grant us all the day long
however long the day. Lord
let me abide this day consciously beneath this canopy of love
this pavilion of
sovereign power.
3. Does the third clause mean that the Lord in His temple would dwell
among the mountains of Benjamin
or that the Lord would be where Benjamin¡¦s
burden should be placed
or that we are borne upon the shoulders of the
Eternal? In any ease
the Lord is the support and strength of His saints. Lord
let me ever enjoy Thy help
and then my arms will be sufficient for me. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
Verses 13-17
Of Joseph he said
Blessed of the Lord be his land.
Joseph
The character of Joseph is not often correctly apprehended
although it comes out very distinctly in the picture which Scripture has given
us of the boy
the youth
and the man. Its most conspicuous quality was firm
resolution and indomitable strength of will. There was nothing weak or
undecided in him; and from this sterling root of character
sanctified as it
was by true piety
sprang the virtues which all can recognise in Joseph¡¦s
behaviour throughout his chequered experiences; a master sense of duty
cheerful courage
and perseverance under misfortune
rigid justice
and
indefatigable diligence in all to which he set his hand. Ephraim was evidently
the true son of Joseph in all his natural force of character; and
in the
history of the Hebrew nation
we find him practically absorbing the
individuality of his elder brother Manasseh. But
unlike his father
Ephraim
seems to have been proud and selfish and overbearing
asserting his claim to
supremacy without regard to the feelings or the rights of others
and angrily
resenting every sign of resistance to
or questioning of
his right to the
chief place among his brethren. Such a character is sure to secure its
ambitious ends
at least
for a time
if only it is backed by the ability to
rule; and in this way alone we might account for the tacit submission of all
Israel to Ephraimitish dictation from the days of Joshua
the greatest hero of
the tribe
and a man who reproduced all the spotless virtues of Joseph himself
until the disastrous ¡§day of battle
¡¨ when ¡§the glory departed from Israel
¡¨
and when Shiloh
the former centre of Joseph¡¦s dominion and of the religious
worship of all his brethren
ceased to be God¡¦s chosen dwelling place
and was
turned even into ¡§a curse to all the nations of the earth.¡¨ But something more
than the mere ancestral force of the Ephraimitish character explains this
long-continued supremacy of the tribe in Israel. The distinction which Joseph
claimed among his brethren seemed to be invested with an almost sacred
authority by the traditions of his father¡¦s express appointment
which
moreover
Moses appears to acknowledge in the blessing which is now before us.
His richly coloured phraseology is reproduced in part by Moses in Deuteronomy
whilst the thought which underlay the words of the older prophecy is manifestly
present to the mind of the later seer. Now what that thought really was is
revealed in a brief incidental passage of 1 Chronicles. We are told by the
author of these annals that Jacob transferred from Reuben to Joseph the
birthright of the first-born son; that birthright consisting of a double
portion of the patrimonial estate
as well as of titular headship in the
family
such as the father himself exercised until his death. Jacob assumed the
liberty to take away this high distinction from his eldest son
who had justly
forfeited it by gross misconduct
and to confer it upon the latest-born but
one
whom he had already singled out for other peculiar privileges when the
lads were young and living together at home. And further
as if to emphasise
the liberty of preference which he thus assumed
the dying patriarch singled
out the younger of Joseph¡¦s two children as the special inheritor of this
transferred birthright. But some will very naturally doubt whether he did not
go beyond other limits which his recognition of the Divine decrees ought most
distinctly to have set before his mind. For God had assigned the headship of
His chosen people to Judah
and Jacob was not ignorant of this arrangement
but
had given utterance to it in his prediction concerning the royal sceptre which
his fourth son was to stretch forth over his enemies and his father¡¦s sons
alike. Perhaps he may have drawn some subtle distinction in his thoughts
between this regal honour
which also had a certain spiritual aspect
and the
temporal substance of the birthright which he desired to transmit to Joseph.
And this theory was very likely present to the mind of Moses when he adopted so
much of Jacob¡¦s former blessing
and seemingly confirmed it absolutely to
Joseph. But this was a judgment after the flesh
and not after the spirit; and
in Jacob¡¦s case the assumption of a right to judge at all in such a matter was
specially unwarrantable
and is all the more surprising because he had been so
often punished for former acts of similar self-willed interference with the
course and directions of God¡¦s providence. Could the patriarch have foreseen
all the evil consequences of what he did
he would surely never have attempted
to advance the tribe of Joseph into the place of preeminence which God had
reserved for Judah. It was in the death chamber of Jacob in Egypt that birth
was first given to that disastrous rivalry which for more than a thousand years
weakened the house of Israel
and which still points a mournful proverb for the
Church of the living God. One is tempted to linger over the very serious
lessons which are suggested by this striking instance of the conflict which may
arise between Divine election and human self-will
and of the well-marked
differences in the fortunes and character of those whose inheritance is chosen
of God
and of those whose inheritance is derived from men. How often do we
think to do good to our friends or to our children by setting apart for them
special gifts or asking specific requests for them from God
when
in truth
we
are only procuring them evil and a curse; whereas
if we had left them in faith
to God
and taught them to submit cheerfully in all things to His sovereign
will
they would indeed have been blest more richly than we could have desired
or conceived! And how often do we congratulate ourselves upon the proud
advantages which human affection or policy has conferred
forgetting that there
is only one inheritance which avails eternally and truly--that which pertains
to the children of Divine election
¡§who were born
not of blood
nor of the
will of the flesh
nor of the will of man
but of God¡¨ (John 1:13). (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
By the fountain
(with Genesis 49:22):--
I. This figure
describes Joseph¡¦s character.
1. He was in clear and constant fellowship with God
and therefore
God blessed him greatly. How can we fail to be fruitful if we draw our life and
all its vigour from the Lord Jesus?
2. Because Joseph lived near to God
he received and retained gracious
principles. We need an instructed people if we are to have a fruitful people.
3. Joseph showed his character throughout the whole of his life.
Always the Lord his God is the star of Joseph.
4. This abiding near to God made Joseph independent of externals. If
you are not living in God on your own account
your religion may as well fail
you at once; for it will ultimately do so.
5. Joseph was very conscious of his entire dependence upon God. Take
the well away
and where was the fruitful bough?
II. This is of
itself a great blessing. It is a high favour to know the deep things of God
and to enjoy the far-down securities
enjoyments
and privileges of the
children of heaven.
1. In deep union with God are to be found the very truth and life of
godliness. A man may possess the catalogue of a library
and yet be without a
book; and so may you know a list of doctrines
and yet be a stranger to truth.
2. When a man like Joseph can be compared to a fruitful tree by a
well
because he is rooted in fellowship with God
he has the blessedness of
drawing his supplies from secret
but real
sources. His life is hid
and the
support of his life is hidden too. The world knoweth him not; but the secret of
the Lord is with him. There is the tree
and there is the fruit
these can be
seen by all; but none can see the roots which are the cause of the clusters
nor the deep that lieth under
from which those roots derive their supply.
3. The supplies of such a man are inexhaustible. Infinite mercy is a
storehouse for a starving world.
4. The man who dwells near to God has supplies which can never be cut
off. We have heard of cities which have been surrounded by armies
and were
never captured by assault
but were compelled to surrender because the
besiegers cut off the water courses
broke down the aqueducts
and so subdued
them by thirst. Jerusalem was never thus captured
for there were deep wells
within the city itself which never ceased to flow. Ah
he that hath a well of
living water within him is beyond the enemy¡¦s power.
5. Supplies gained by nearness to God Himself are constant. Grace is
not a landspring
but a well. I do not say that your root can always take in
the same measure of water from the well of life; but I do say that it will
always be there for you to take; and I think
also
that to a large extent you
will be able to partake of it with constancy.
6. The supplies of the believer who dwells deep are pure as well as
full. Draw your supplies at first hand.
III. This brings
with it other blessings.
1. If you are by the well
sending your roots into waters
you will
obtain fruitfulness.
2. Unselfishness.
3. Fixedness.
4. Safety.
5. Enrichment.
Notice how Moses puts it: he mentions quite a treasury of jewels.
The best pearls come out of deep seas. He mentions the precious things of
heaven
the precious fruit brought forth by the sun
the precious things put
forth by the moon
the chief things of the ancient mountains
the precious
things of the earth
and the fulness thereof
and the goodwill of Him that
dwelt in the bush. All these blessings came upon the top of the head of him who
was a fruitful bough by a well. The best wines in God¡¦s house are in the
cellar. Those who never go downstairs have no idea of the secret sweetness. A
deep experience is a precious experience. The Lord fills certain of His people
with pain and grief
that they may know His choicer consolations. We are too
apt to let our roots run along just under the surface
and so we get no firm
rootage; but trouble comes
and then we grow downward
rooted in humility; then
we pierce the treasures of darkness
and know the deep things of God. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The precious things of
heaven.
Things that are precious
Happy is the mall who aspires to possess precious things. We need
not be poor
blind
miserable
naked. There is available for us a hoard of
precious things--things earthly and heavenly
present and future
temporal and
eternal.
I. The gift of
life. Are you using it well? Is yours a sanctified life
fruitful of wise
thoughts and worthy deeds? Do not say that if you were somewhere else
or in
some other employment
or in an entirely different condition of life
you would
then live a truer and more splendid life. ¡§The trivial round
¡¨ etc.
II. The promises of
God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. There are more than three thousand of these.
Promises of guidance
food
raiment
defence
consolation
mercy
peace
health
prosperity
honour
glory
immortality
eternal life
endless joy in
heaven
etc. Rest
then
in the Lord. Be quiet
be patient. He is faithful that
promised. The Scripture cannot be broken. All the promises of the heavenly
Father are yea and amen in Christ Jesus.
III. Real
personal
blessed communion with God
our Father
through the mediation of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Remember the Divine method of prayer. There is the way
and it is
written plainly in the Scriptures. Listen
and be glad: ¡§For thus saith the
high and lofty One
¡¨ etc. Listen and learn: ¡§If any man sin
¡¨ etc. Listen and
obey: ¡§If I regard iniquity
¡¨ etc. Listen and trust: ¡§The Spirit itself
helpeth
etc. Listen and rejoice: ¡§Be careful for nothing
¡¨ etc.
IV. A good name.
¡§Rather to be chosen than great riches.¡¨ They flourish like the palm tree.
Think of the names of Martin Luther
George Washington
David Livingstone
Richard
Cobden
and the Prince Consort. They are like pillars of white marble
to
remind us that we may be great and good. Yes
the names of the saints are
immortal.
V. The beauty of
earth and heaven. Make this use of eternal beauty and grandeur. Look at the mountains
and think of God¡¦s strength; the flowers
and think of His love; and the sun
and think of His glory. Go into the fields to find God
to the sea to worship
Him. In the rich emblazonment and embroidery of nature
see the vesture of the
Almighty
and know Him as thy Father in heaven
and thou shalt feel a sense of
dignity and blessedness unknown before. (G. W. McCree.)
The precious things of the
earth.--
The precious things of the earth
It is the poetic sense which perceives beauty in the things of the
natural world
where the purely prosaic mind would see nothing to attract or
impress. What we call the ¡§poetry of nature¡¨ is
in fact
that view of nature
which is in the eye of the poet observer. Dr. Shairp has
indeed
claimed that
poetry itself is as true a form of thinking as is science in its estimate of
external nature; and that the place of poetry in the present order of things in
our universe was not made by the conceit of man
but was intended by the Maker
of this order. He is sure that
as Wordsworth claims
poetry is ¡§the breath and
finer spirit of all knowledge
¡¨ and ¡§immortal as the mind of man.¡¨ The poetic
spirit invests the things of nature with the emotions of the human heart;
looking down through that which is seen
into that which is thought and felt.
There are associations of scenery which grow out of the lessons of history; and
just in proportion as the man of poetic soul is informed in these lessons is
the scenery about him transfused with their glory and imbued with their
inspirations. The arid wastes of desolated Egypt have fullest meaning to him
who reads in the mighty monuments which tower above these wastes the story of
the Pharaohs and the shepherd kings; of the priests of Isis and Osiris; of all
the legendary rulers of the land of Mizraim from Menes to the Ptolemies. The
fields of Marathon and of Marston Moor and of Waterloo have a meaning in the
light of their history which makes the scenery about them vocal with the praise
of noble deeds. And who could look upon the scenery of Palestine but in the
glow of its sacred history? But history is never so dear to us as memory. No
associations with those of whom we know only in story can so vocalise the
poetry of our surroundings as do the recollections of our own former days of
joy or sadness in that locality
and of our fellowship there with those whom we
loved
and from whom we are now separated. But
after all
the best
associations of natural scenery are the associations of truth; the
associations
not of history or of memory merely
but of truth--of immutable
truth that takes hold of the past
the present
and the future. There is truth
pictured in all nature
even in the commonest phases of nature; and poetry is
the heart¡¦s view of truth. There are associations of God¡¦s presence with every
phase of natural scenery; and he who looks at mountain
or forest
or ocean
or
plain
without recognising and rejoicing over these associations
lacks the
true poet¡¦s soul and the true poet¡¦s eye. On the contrary
he who notes and
heeds them finds comfort
as well as poetry
in them everywhere. (H. G.
Trumbull.)
The goodwill of him that
dwelt in the bush.--
The goodwill of Christ the best of blessings
I. What this
goodwill is and whose it is. It is the love and free favour of Christ to all
His covenant people: that grace of His
in which there is continuance
which He
ever bears towards them that are His.
1. Christ ever bears a goodwill towards His people. They are precious
and honourable in His sight
they are highly favoured; His thoughts towards
them are thoughts of peace
and so they were from eternity (Micah 5:2). The Church is His spouse
His
body
His fair one. Every dispensation of Providence is for our good; the
sorest strokes that befall us come in love; when persecuted
forsaken
made a
shame of before men
His heart stands towards us the same as ever; underneath
are His everlasting arms: we endure the fire
and come purged and refined out
of it. 2 This favour and goodwill Christ is pleased to discover to His people
for their edification and comfort (Song of Solomon 2:4).
II. Why this
goodwill is thus particularly described as ¡§the goodwill of him that dwelt in
the bush¡¨ (Exodus 3:12).
1. Because the fire in the midst of the bush was a type of the
incarnation and sufferings of Christ. For man¡¦s nature is a poor
despicable
thing
like a dry bramble bush that would be soon fired
as it were
and
utterly consumed by the approach of God; but the Son of God dwells in this
bush
and though the flame is seen
the bush is not burnt.
2. Because God revealed His covenant to Moses at the time of His
glorious appearance. God is a fire to consume
not to enlighten
warm
and
refresh ungodly sinners
such as have not made a covenant with Him by
sacrifice.
3. This appearance of the angel in the bush sets forth the love and
care of Christ to His Church
even in their greatest troubles and dangers. All
Christ¡¦s mercy
wisdom
power
love
and grace are for us; yea
His very life
is on our behalf (John 14:19). It is good to remember
former deliverances even in the want of present mercies.
4. Because Moses had at this season the most special experience of
the love and goodwill of Christ; it is one of the top manifestations of the
Redeemer¡¦s fulness and grace to his own soul. There is a great deal of emphasis
in my text
¡§And for the favourable acceptation of my dweller in the bush.¡¨ As
if Moses had said
¡§Then He revealed Himself to be mine
I saw His glory as my
Surety
my Redeemer
my God manifest in the flesh
and to my soul He sealed all
the love and grace of the everlasting covenant.¡¨ Our first views of God and
Christ are often exceeding precious ones. This was Christ¡¦s first visible
appearance to Moses that we read of; now the visions of God began; and what so
sweet an introduction to his after-communion with Him as a sight of the second
person in the Godhead united to flesh
and in our nature transacting all the
concerns of salvation?
III. How or in what
manner this goodwill is to be sought.
1. Seek this goodwill of Christ
His free grace and favour
as a
blessing distinct from and over and above what God the Father hath promised on
His own part in the everlasting covenant.
2. This goodwill of God-man mediator is to be sought
as what alone
can give life and liberty to the believer in all acts of Gospel worship. Take
away the person of Christ as God-man
and the object of worship is as it were
lost
for there is no going to the Father but by Him. What can sinners do with
an absolute God? Take away Christ¡¦s sufferings
merit
righteousness
and
intercession
what plea can there be for faith? And believers
when they go in
Christ¡¦s name
yet if their spirits are not taken up in the exercise of faith
on His goodwill
grace
and acceptation
there is no nearness to God. Christ¡¦s
presence is our life
we have none in ourselves; Gospel liberty is Christ¡¦s
purchase and gift.
3. This goodwill is to be sought with great expectation and hope.
Jesus loves a fear which produces watchfulness in the soul
but He hates those
fears which breed torment. The goodwill of my dweller in the bush
says Moses;
the goodwill of my Lord and God
say thou. Keep in view the sense thou hast had
of past brace and favour under thy burden
and grieve for want of present
tokens of it.
4. This goodwill is to be sought in its higher manifestations
and a
sweeter experience of it from day to day. Moses leaves the decree wherein this
goodwill should be shown to Joseph
to the sovereignty of Him in whom it
dwells; but withal
the manner of expression he uses shows that it was no small
portion he asks of it for him
the goodwill of my dweller in the bush.
IV. Wherein
consists the greatness of the blessing
which renders it so well worthy of all
our seeking.
1. The goodwill of Christ
who of old dwelt in the bush
lies at the
foundation of every other blessing. The day is coming when none but Christ
an
whole Christ
will be deemed a portion sufficient for an immortal soul. Seek
first the kingdom of God and His righteousness: this is the one thing needful.
2. Every other blessing is comprehended in this. If Christ be thine
all is thine.
3. This is needful to make our other blessings blessings indeed. The
whole world cannot satisfy a soul without this: men may be in straits in the
abundance of their possessions; have
and never enjoy; be crying
Who will show
me any good? They see nothing worth calling so in what they have already. Now
whence is this? It arises from a want of God
and Christ
and covenant love
and goodwill
to put a sweetness and relish into creature comforts
and to make
up all creature deficiencies.
4. This is a blessing infinitely better than all outward blessings
and makes up the loss of all. (John Hill.)
At the bush
I think this is the only reference in the Old Testament to that
great vision which underlay Moses¡¦ call and Israel¡¦s deliverance. There seems a
peculiar appropriateness in this reference being put into the mouth of the
ancient lawgiver
for to him even Sinai
with all its glories
cannot have been
so impressive and so formative of his character as was the vision granted to
him solitary in the wilderness. It is to be noticed that the characteristic by
which God is designated here never occurs elsewhere than in this one place. It
is intended to intensify the conception of the greatness
and preciousness
and
all-sufficiency of that ¡§goodwill.¡¨ If it is that of Him that dwelt in the
bush
it is sure to be all that a man can need. So then here
first
is a great
thought as to what for us all is the blessing of blessings--God¡¦s goodwill
¡§Good
will¡¨--the word
perhaps
might bear a little stronger rendering.
¡§Goodwill¡¨ is somewhat tepid. A man may have a good enough will
and yet no
very strong emotion of favour or delight
and certainly may do nothing to carry
his goodwill into action. It is more than ¡§goodwill¡¨; it is more than ¡§favour¡¨;
perhaps ¡§delight¡¨ would be nearer the meaning. It implies
too
not only the
inward sentiment of complacency
but also the active purpose of action in
conformity with it on God¡¦s part. If I might dwell for a moment upon scriptural
passages
I would just recall to you
as bringing up very strongly and
beautifully the all-sufficiency and the blessed effects of having this delight
and loving purpose directed toward us like a sunbeam
the various great things
that a chorus of psalmists say it will do for a man. Here is one of their
triumphant utterances: ¡§Thou wilt bless the righteous; with favour wilt Thou
compass him as with a shield.¡¨ That crystal battlement
if I may so vary the
figure
is round a man
keeping far away from him all manner of real evil
and
filling his quiet heart as he stands erect behind the rampart
with the sense
of absolute security. That is one of the blessings that ¡§the favour
or
goodwill
will secure for us.¡¨ Again
we read: ¡§By Thy favour Thou hast made my
mountain to stand strong.¡¨ He that knows himself to be the object of the Divine
delight
and who by faith knows himself to be the object of the Divine activity
in protection
stands firm
and his purposes will be carried through
because they
will be purposes in accordance with the Divine mind
and nothing needs to shake
him. So he that grasps the hand of God
not because of his grasp
but because
of the hand that be holds
can say
¡§the Lord is at my right hand; I shall not
be greatly moved.¡¨ And again
in another analogous but yet diversified
representation
we read: ¡§In Thee shall we rejoice all the day
and in Thy
favour shall our horn be exalted.¡¨ That is the emblem
not only of victory
but
of joyful confidence
and so he that knows himself to have God for his friend
and his helper can go through the world keeping a sunny face
whatever the
clouds may be. So the goodwill of God is the chiefest good. Now
if we turn to
the remarkable designation of the Divine nature which is here
look what rivers
of strength and of blessedness flow out of the thought that for each of us ¡§the
goodwill of Him that dwelt in the bush¡¨ may be ours. What does that pregnant
designation of God say? That was a strange shrine for a God. That poor
ragged
dry desert bush
with apparently no sap in its grey stem
prickly with thorns
with no beauty that we should desire it
fragile and insignificant--yet that is
God¡¦s house. Not in the cedars of Lebanon
not in the great monarchs of the
forest
but in the forlorn child of the desert did He abide. ¡§The goodwill of
Him that dwelt in the bush¡¨ may dwell in you and me. Never mind how small
never mind how sapless
never mind how lightly esteemed among men
never mind
though we make a very poor show by the side of the oaks of Bashan or the cedars
of Lebanon. It is all right; the fire does not dwell in them. ¡§Unto this man
will I come
and with him will I dwell who is of a humble and a contrite heart
and who trembleth at My word.¡¨ Let no sense of poverty
weakness
unworthiness
ever draw the faintest film of fear across our confidence
for even with us He
will sojourn. Again
what more does that name say? He that ¡§dwelt in the bush¡¨
filled it with fire
and it burned ¡§and was not consumed.¡¨ Our brethren of the
Presbyterian Churches have taken the Latin form of the words in the incident
for their motto--Nec Tamen Consumebatur. But I venture to think that is
a mistake; and that what is meant by the symbol is just what is expressed by
the verbal revelation which accompanied it
and it is this: ¡§I am that I am.¡¨
The fire that did not burn out is the emblem of the Divine nature which does
not tend to death because it lives
nor to exhaustion because it energises
nor
to emptiness because it bestows
but after all times is the same; lives by its
own energy and is independent. ¡§I am that I have become
¡¨ that is what men have
to say. ¡§I am that I once was not
and again once shall not be
¡¨ that is what
men have to say. ¡§I am that I am¡¨ is God¡¦s name. And this eternal
ever-living
self-sufficing
absolute
independent
unwearied
inexhaustible God is the God
whose favour is as inexhaustible as Himself
and eternal as His own being.
¡§Therefore the sons of men shall put their trust beneath the shadow of Thy
wings.¡¨ What more does the name say? He that dwelt in the bush dwelt there in
order to deliver; and
dwelling there
declared ¡§I have seen the affliction of
My people
and am come down to deliver them.¡¨ So
then
if the goodwill of that
eternal
delivering God is with us
we too may feel that our trivial troubles
and our heavy burdens
all the needs of our prisoned wills and captive souls
are beknown to Him
and that we shall have deliverance from them by Him. The
goodwill
the delight of God
and the active help of God
may be ours
and if
it be ours we shall be blessed and strong. Do not let us forget the place in
this blessing on the head of Joseph which my text holds. It is preceded by an
invoking of the precious things of heaven
and ¡§the precious fruits brought
forth by the sun . . . of the chief things of the ancient mountains
and the
precious things of the lasting hills
and the precious things of the earth and
the fulness thereof.¡¨ They are all heaped together in one great mass for the
beloved Joseph. And then
like the golden spire that tops some of those
campaniles in Italian cities
and completes their beauty
above them all there
is set
as the shining apex of all
¡§the goodwill of Him that dwelt in the
bush.¡¨ That is more precious than all the precious things; set last because it
is to be sought first; set last as in building some great structure the top
stone is put on last of all; set last because it gathers all others into
itself. So the upshot of my homily is just this--Men may strive and scheme
and
wear their fingernails down to the quick
to get lesser good
and fail after
all. You never can be sure of getting the little good. You can be quite sure of
getting the highest. You never can be certain that the precious things of the
earth and the fulness thereof will be yours
or that if they were
they would
be so very precious; but you can be quite sure that the ¡§goodwill of Him that
dwelt in the bush¡¨ may be like light upon your hearts
and be strength to your
limbs. And so I commend to you the words of the apostle: ¡§Wherefore we labour
that
whether present or absent
we may be well-pleasing to Him.¡¨ (A.
Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 18-19
Rejoice
Zebulun
in thy going out.
The blessing of Zebulun and Issachar considered
I. The different
circumstances and occupations in which men are placed. It is owing to God¡¦s
directing the inclinations of men that some are fond of the country and some of
the town; that some love the noise and bustle of cities and seaports
the
fatigue and hazard of navigation and travelling; while others prefer the
retiredness and silence of the country. Some choose to dwell with Zebulun at
the haven for ships; others with Issachar in the tents of the country
among
the bleatings of the flocks. Nor is this different choice entirely owing to
education and habit
since it is frequently seen that young people choose a
different occupation from their fathers; and some are uneasy till they have
changed that to which they were brought up. This diversity of inclination is by
appointment and influence of God
the supreme sovereign of every community.
Further
His hand is to be owned and adored in giving men ability and skill to
pursue their several occupations
in giving them the use of their limbs and
senses
health of body
and capacities of mind.
II. The duties
incumbent upon men
however different their occupations be.
1. To be content and cheerful with their lot and calling. Every
calling hath its conveniences and inconveniences. A dislike to the business to
which a man hath been brought up generally ariseth from pride
ignorance
or an
inordinate love of wealth or ease; and if the discontented person were to have
his wish
and change with the person he envies
in all probability he would
repent it speedily
and wish he had continued as he was. But prudence
diligence
and good economy will gradually lessen the difficulties of any
employment
and piety and humility reconcile the mind to them. We are to guard
against that excessive application
hurry
and fatigue
on the one hand
which
men of ambitious and covetous spirits impose upon themselves
so that they can
have no real pleasure in the enjoyment of life. On the other hand
we are to
guard against a trifling
indolent
extravagant disposition
by which men first
lose their trade
and then complain of the deadness or unprofitableness of it.
2. To make religion their chief business and greatest concern. Those
who pretend that they cannot find time for religion can find time for pleasure
and spend more in unnecessary sleep
idle chat with their neighbours
or other
amusements than would be necessary for the acts of religious worship
secret
and social. Where a person¡¦s disposition is serious and spiritual
and when his
great aim is to please God and save his soul
there will be no difficulty at
all to find time for religion.
3. To endeavour to promote religion in others. Thus it is said in the
text
¡§They
¡¨ that is both Zebulun and Issachar
¡§shall call the people to the mountain¡¨;
to the house of God
which Moses foresaw
by a spirit of prophecy
would be
built upon a mountain. The tribes spoken of in the text
though their
employments were so different
were to unite in promoting the interests of
religion. Thus
though Christ hath appointed pastors and teachers in His
Church
yet it is the duty of every one of His disciples to ¡§do good to all
men¡¨ as they ¡§have opportunity
¡¨ to ¡§seek the things of Jesus Christ
¡¨ and to
¡§exhort one another daily.¡¨ Let merchants and tradesmen
then
improve their
commerce to spread the knowledge of God and religion
and to promote piety
justice
and charity. Let farmers improve their business and connections with
others to the same good purpose. Let those of you whose labours God hath prospered
honour the Lord with your substance
and cheerfully concur in any good design
for promoting the happiness of all around you
supplying the needy
and
relieving the afflicted; and thus
according to that expression of the prophet
¡§consecrate your gain unto the Lord and your substance unto the Lord of the
whole earth¡¨ (Micah 4:13). But the great thing you are
to be solicitous about is to promote the salvation of one another¡¦s souls. (Job
Orton
D. D.)
Joy in going out
The blessings of the tribes are ours
for we are the true Israel
who worship God in the spirit
and have no confidence in the flesh. Zebulun is
to rejoice because Jehovah will bless his ¡§going out¡¨; we also see a promise
for ourselves lying latent in this benediction. When we go out we will look out
for occasions of joy. We go out to travel
and the providence of God is our
convoy. We go out to emigrate
and the Lord is with us both on land and sea. We
go out as missionaries
and Jesus saith
¡§Lo
I am with you unto the end of the
world.¡¨ We go out day by day to our labour
and we may do so with pleasure
for
God will be with us from morn till eve. A fear sometimes creeps over us when
starting
for we know not what we may meet with; but this blessing may serve us
right well as a word of good cheer. As we pack up for moving
let us put this
verse into our travelling trunk; let us drop it into our hearts
and keep it
there; yea
let us lay it on our tongue to make us sing. Let us weigh anchor
with a song
and jump into the carriage with a psalm. Let us belong to the
rejoicing tribe
and in our every movement praise the Lord with joyful hearts.
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
Zebulun and Issachar
Two tribes are joined together in this common blessing and
prediction; and there was a long-established reason for close community of
interest between them. Their ancestors were sons of the same mother
Leah
and
were born
in close succession of time
under circumstances which made it
almost inevitable that
as they grew up
they should form a little group by
themselves. Yet the two brothers were far from being alike. Both in character
and in personal appearance they presented contrasts that were strongly marked.
The Rabbinical traditions on these points simply confirm the hints which we
gather from Scripture
and which lead us to picture Issachar as a large made
heavy
and sluggish man
not over bright in intellect
but honest
good-natured
and full of plodding industry; whilst Zebulun is distinctly
mentioned as one of the five ¡§men of activity¡¨ whom Joseph selected from among
his brethren and brought before Pharaoh
to give the best possible idea of
their intelligence and cleverness. Issachar was the elder
yet Zebulun is
almost invariably named before him: a clear sign that the younger had taken
precedence of the elder by virtue of his natural superiority in energy. The
characters of Zebulun and of Issachar seem in many respects to have been
complementary
and
with the wisdom which springs from true affection
they
seem to have made all their possessions and resources complementary also
holding their lots in Canaan as a sort of partnership estate
by which each
should be benefited alike. Zebulun gave himself mainly to the exciting tasks
for which his adventurous nature fitted him
and sought to win the harvests of
that capricious field
the broad salt sea. Issachar
more stolid by his tastes
held contentedly by the tamer toils of one who tills the bosom of mother earth;
but both brothers rejoiced in common over the gains of each
and each grew
richer because his labour and his chosen employment nourished the other¡¦s
store. This idea is concealed in the ¡§parallelism¡¨ of Deuteronomy 33:18
which
in its poetic
way
describes the united life of the two linked tribes in the mutually helpful
aspects of work and rest; and
lest any superficial reader should imagine that
one tribe was to monopolise active toils and the other the comforts procured
thereby
the next verse significantly mingles both sides of the common picture
saying
¡§they
¡¨ i.e. both of them and all of them
without distinction
of private property or of original right to the gains--¡§they shall stink of the
abundance of the seas
and of treasures hidden in the sand.¡¨ Thus also it ought
to be with Christian brethren in their handling of the diverse opportunities
and gifts which God may have severally bestowed. True Christian count it a holy
duty to combine their talents; and when gain accrues from their united efforts
they rejoice together
and no one member grudges another his praise or his
honour in the result
even though he himself has no share therein. (T. G.
Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 19
They shall call the people unto the mountain
there they shall
offer sacrifices of righteousness.
The seaman¡¦s return
I. Their
privilege. To ¡§suck the abundance of the sea¡¨ is a metonymical expression
signifying as much as to be enriched with the wares and merchandise imported by
sea to them. The sea
like an indulgent mother
embraces those that live upon
it in her bosom
and with full flowing breasts nourisheth them
and feeds them
as a mother doth the infant that sucks and depends for its livelihood upon her
breasts. And these breasts do not only afford those that hang upon them the
necessaries of life
bread
raiment
etc.
but the riches
ornaments
and
delights of life also. This was the blessing of the tribe of Zebulun
whose
cities and villages were commodiously situated upon the seashore for
merchandise (Joshua 19:11).
II. Their duty to
which these mercies and privileges obliged them: ¡§They shall call the people to
the mountain
¡¨ etc. By the ¡§mountain
¡¨ we are here to understand the temple
which Moses
by the spirit of prophecy
foresaw to be upon Mount Sion and Mount
Moriah; which two were as the shoulders that supported it (Deuteronomy 33:12). Here was the worship
of God; the sacrifices were here offered up to Him. And hither Zebulun
in the
sense of God¡¦s mercies to them
should call the people
i.e. say some
their own people
their families
and neighbours; or as others
the strangers
that were among them for traffic; saying
as Isaiah 2:3. And here they shall ¡§offer
the sacrifices of righteousness.¡¨ By which we are to understand their thank
offerings for the mercies they had received of the Lord.
1. The nature of the duty needs opening; for few understand what it
is. Alas! it is another manner of thing than a customary
formal
cold God be
thanked. Now
if we search into the nature of this duty
we shall find that
whoever undertakes this angelic work
must--
2. The grounds and reasons of this duty; why you are obliged after
the reception of mercies to such a thankful return of praises.
Use
1. Is it your unquestionable duty to return praises upon every
receipt of mercies? Then
in the first place
bear your shame and just reproof
for your manifest unthankfulness. Mourn heartily for thy unkindness to thy best
friend
¡§The God that hath done thee good all thy life long
and deserves other
returns from thee than these.¡¨
2. It calls upon you all to be thankful for your mercies. Chrysostom
once wished for a voice like thunder
that all men might hear him. O that I
could so call you to this duty
that some of you might effectually hear God¡¦s
call in this exhortation!
Argument
1. How freely have all your mercies streamed to you from the Fountain
of grace! There was nothing in you to engage it.
2. How seasonably your mercies have been bestowed upon you in the
very point of extremity and danger I
3. How special and distinguishing have some of your mercies been! God
hath not dealt with everyone as He hath with you.
4. Did not your mercies find you under great guilt? Surely such
mercies have a constraining power in them
upon all sensible souls.
5. To conclude; if all the goodness of God which hath passed before
your eyes does indeed prevail upon you to love the Lord
and fear to offend
Him; if it really constrains you to give up yourselves
and all you have
to be
His; then all this is but the beginning of mercies
and you shall see yet
greater things than these. God hath more mercies yet behind
and those of a
higher kind and more excellent nature than these temporal mercies are. Happy souls
if these deliverances do in any measure prove introductive to the great
salvation. (John Flavel.)
Verse 20-21
Blessed be He that enlargeth Gad.
Gad
We are able to form a more than usually distinct idea of the
personal character which pertained to Gad
and which he transmitted to his
descendants. Scripture hints and Jewish traditions bear one another out in
suggesting that this man was wild and turbulent and headstrong above his
brethren; and that
being by no means content with the peaceful occupations of
pastoral life which belonged to his family
he threw himself with ardour into
the fierce forays which then
as now
kept the land of Canaan in a state of chronic
warfare and unsettlement. It was to this feature that Jacob probably referred
in his dying prophecy
in which he introduces a characteristic play upon the
name which Leah had bestowed--
¡§Gad
a plundering troop is plundering him
But
he is plundering at their heels.¡¨
-- Genesis 49:19.
When the children of Israel went out of Egypt
Gad marched and
encamped
not as we might have expected with his whole brother Asher
but with
Reuben and with Simeon
two tribes which closely resembled his own in character
and occupation. All these three retained the nomad habits of their father¡¦s
earlier life in a marked degree
and had not
like some other Hebrew tribes
settled down in Egypt into the ways of an organised and civilised nation. They
still preferred to live in tents as did the unreclaimed Ishmaelites of the
desert. All their wealth consisted in huge flocks and herds of cattle. All
their sympathies were with the freebooting mode of life which lies on the
border line between civilisation and barbarism. Thus
when Canaan was settled
although Simeon parted from his former companions and sought his fortunes alone
in the dry south land of Judah
Gad and Reuben kept their alliance fast
and took
possession of the country east of Jordan
where alone there was room for their
immense flocks
and opportunity for predatory raids. In this alliance Reuben
seems to have willingly yielded the first place to his younger brother
whose
character was evidently stronger than his own; and it is curious to notice how
invariably Gad speaks and acts as the leader in all the transactions that
attended this settlement. We recognise the same masterful character in all the
men who rise up before us in the after history of the Bible as members of the
tribe of Gad; namely
Jephthah
the eleven heroes who joined David at the most
critical period of his fortunes
and Elijah the Tishbite
in whose rude
strength and fearlessness we seem to behold the Gadite type in its best
development
and to recognise the noblest aspect of the comparison which Moses
had instituted in his blessing between this tribe and the shaggy forest lord
¡§which is mightiest among beasts
and turneth not away for any.¡¨ (T. G.
Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 22
Dan is a lion¡¦s whelp.
Dan; or activity in conflict
1. The section in Moses¡¦ blessing devoted to Dan offers three
significant points of contrast with all the other sections of the poem.
2. Nor does the history of the tribe do ought but confirm the unhappy
suggestion which flows from all these features of brevity and of omission in
Moses¡¦ words. That history is exceedingly meagre
and records very little to
the credit of the Danites. The character of their ancestor
which seems also to
have been transmitted to the tribe
was crafty
deceitful
and cruel. In the
Book of Judges this tribe has no small space appropriated to its doings
but
the narrative is one of shame and of inexcusable sin against both universal
laws of justice
humanity
and truth
and the special obligations of the Hebrew
nation. Moreover
two incidental notices which we find in the later historical
books suggest that the Danites disregarded the law of Moses
which forbade
intermarriages with heathens
and that they fell very early into the idolatrous
practices of their Phoenician and Philistine neighbours (2 Chronicles 2:14; 1 Kings 12:28-31; Judges 18:1-31; Judges 14:1-5).
3. When we have noted the uniform tenor of these glimpses into the
character and conduct of the tribe of Dan
we can hardly be surprised to find
that no members of that tribe cared to return with Judah into the land of
promise when the captivity in Babylon ended. No Danite name occurs in the lists
which Ezra and Nehemiah compiled in reference to the returned exiles of Israel;
and the only conclusion which can be drawn from that omission is
that all the
tribe of Dan despised or neglected the opportunity of temporal redemption which
God had given to His people as the earnest of a better spiritual blessing when
Messiah should appear. How sad in its inferences is this single fact! But the
sadness of the omen is increased when we read the list of the sealed in the
Book of Revelation and find no mention in it of the tribe of Dan. The only
interpretation which can be put upon it is
that Dan had somehow forfeited his
right to the blessings of Israel¡¦s covenant
and that
for his special
unfaithfulness and sin
his very name had been blotted out of the Lamb¡¦s book
of life (Exodus 32:33). (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 23
And of Naphtali he said.
Naphtali
It may seem to anyone who looks upon a map of Canaan as divided
amongst the tribes
that this definition of locality is far enough from
corresponding with the facts. Simeon¡¦s lot would better answer to the
description here
for he did occupy the southwest corner of the Promised Land;
whilst Naphtali¡¦s territory was in the extreme north
and had another tribe
Asher
on its western border. Hence it is probable that the Hebrew word
translated ¡§west¡¨ should have here another meaning which very frequently
belongs to it
and should be rendered ¡§sea
¡¨ referring to the well-known sea of
Chinnereth
or Gennesaret. This interpretation would agree very happily with
the actual boundaries of Naphtali upon the map; for by far the greater portion
of this famous lake belonged to the tribe
and its southern border stretched in
a right line westward from the sea until it met the frontier of Asher¡¦s lot.
The most ancient Jewish interpreters adopt this explanation of the blessing
and point out how well the appearance and resources of Naphtali¡¦s portion
justify the enthusiastic language of congratulation which Moses has employed.
In the days when they wrote
the plain of Gennesaret and the great inland
district of Galilee which stretched northward to the roots of Lebanon
were the
most populous and flourishing parts of Palestine. The first fruits were brought
to the temple at Jerusalem from Mount Naphtali before they were ripe for
gathering anywhere else; so that the men of this tribe were always the first to
receive the benediction of Jehovah¡¦s priests upon each new harvest. Solomon
drew from this same region the largest supplies of food for the expensive
entertainment of his court; and in David¡¦s time
Naphtali
with Zebulun¡¦s aid
was able to feast all Israel abundantly for three days with stores which they
brought up to Hebron ¡§on asses
and on camels
and on mules
and on oxen.¡¨ This
was an ample fulfilment in temporal things of the blessing which Moses pronounced
upon the tribe. But there is a passage in Isaiah (Isaiah 9:1-2; comp. Matthew 4:1) which seems to intimate that
there was a hidden spiritual reference in the lavish outpouring of ¡§favour¡¨
from the Lord of which Naphtali is here assured. The first fruits of Messiah¡¦s
ministry were to be vouchsafed to this same highly-favoured region
a city of
which
Capernaum
was indeed chosen by the Lord Jesus as His dwelling place for
one whole ¡§acceptable year.¡¨ Too little
indeed
did the men of Galilee
understand their high privilege; and though they might have been satiated with
the spiritual blessings which were thus brought to their door
they suffered
the day of visitation to pass by them unused. Therefore the failure of their
blessing in its highest sense serves now as a warning to the men who have
received still better promises from God through Christ. Many of these are ready
to boast that they are ¡§full
¡¨ and that they ¡§reign as kings
¡¨ being ¡§rich
and
increased with goods
and in need of nothing¡¨; yet is there only one
substantial ground on which to build these confident professions. In Christ are
hid all treasures of spiritual blessing. He who has Christ is more than
satisfied
but he who rejects Christ
or who lets Christ dwell near him
unrecognised and unappropriated in His great salvation
is empty and beggared
though all riches of corn and wine may be increased to him (1 Corinthians 3:21-23; 1 Corinthians 4:8; Revelation 3:17-20). (T. G. Rooke
B.
A.)
Verse 24-25
Let Asher be blessed.
Asher
¡§Asher¡¨ signifies ¡§happiness
¡¨ or ¡§prosperity
¡¨ and was given by
Leah to the son of her handmaid Zilpah
in token of the joy which this new gift
of God had brought to her wounded heart (Genesis 30:13). In this blessing of Moses
there is manifestly a play upon the name thus given. It is treated as a good
and true omen concerning Asher¡¦s temporal lot. The next line
¡§Let him dip his
feet in oil
¡¨ is a prediction of the exceeding richness and fertility of
Asher¡¦s territory in the promised land. Jacob had already foretold the same
thing in his dying prophecy (Genesis 49:20). Fatness is to an Oriental
the quality which chiefly recommends any viand. Olive oil
¡§butter of kine
¡¨ and
the animal fat which is lodged in the curiously overgrown tail of a Syrian
sheep
are to this day the peculiar dainties of Eastern cookery
and all of
these were produced in abundance on the land which fell by lot to this favoured
tribe (Deuteronomy 8:7-9). The figure by which
Asher is here said to ¡§dip his foot in oil¡¨ is a familiar Eastern idiom to
describe the overflowing abundance of all these natural productions of the
soil. Job uses it in precisely the same way (Job 29:6). The fourth line of the
blessing is certainly meant to be parallel with the third line in its reference
to some natural feature of the territory reserved for Asher in Canaan; but the
exact force of the reference is still a matter of dispute amongst the learned.
Some would read the line as it stands in the margin: ¡§Under thy shoes shall be
iron and brass (i.e. copper)
¡¨; and this would be a perfectly the description of the mineral wealth of a
part of the mountain range which Asher ought to have occupied
but which he
abandoned to the Zidonians
who very diligently dug out the metals above named
from their subterranean veins. Moses had noted this feature of the soil of
Canaan (Deuteronomy 8:9). But in all likelihood
the notion of ¡§shoes¡¨ is quite foreign to the true interpretation of this part
of the blessing; and the Hebrew word which suggested it alike to the Septuagint
and English translators should properly be rendered ¡§thy bars
¡¨ or
¡§thy
bolts.¡¨ Here
again
we find a very graphic poetical description of Asher¡¦s lot
in the promised land. His boundary is traced on its landward side by
strongly-marked mountain ridges; and on the west these barriers run out into
the sea in successive capes
that resemble the traverses of some titanic
fortification
and which are as rugged and ironbound in aspect as the inland
region which they protect is smiling and soft. If this allusion be recognised
in Moses¡¦ blessing
the intention will plainly be to suggest the security of
Asher in the portion which God was about to bestow upon him. There he should be
fenced in
as it were
by bolts of iron and bars of brass
which no envious foe
should be able to break through with hostile or thievish intent. This
interpretation of the fourth line in the blessing would almost lead us to
prefer the following amongst the many renderings that have been given of the
fifth line: ¡§According to thy life shall be thy rest¡¨; that is
Asher¡¦s repose
from warlike labours and alarms should continue as long as his tribal
existence. But the associations which long attached to the rendering as given
in the English Bible will probably make most readers reluctant to give up the
thought which many a sermon and hymn will have endeared and familiarised: ¡§As
thy days shall be thy strength¡¨--that is
the strength of him whom God favours
shall always be in proportion to his need (1 Corinthians 10:13; 2 Corinthians 12:9). One could wish
that the actual history of Asher furnished a happy comment upon
and
illustration of
his blessing as thus interpreted; but in truth the comparison
of prophetic poetry and prosaic fact in this particular instance is full of
suggestive disappointment. Asher did dwell securely for a certain period within
his mountain barriers
and his sons seem to have enjoyed a long season of
material prosperity; but this was not through their trust in Divine protection
but through their own subtle worldly policy
which involved
alas
the
faithless surrender of their highest duty to God. The men of Asher deemed it
too hard a task to drive out the Phoenicians and Canaanites whom they found in
possession of the strong cities and fat valleys of their portion. God would
indeed have helped them utterly to exterminate their heathen rivals; but they
preferred to make a cowardly truce and compromise
by virtue of which they
dwelt peaceably ¡§among the Canaanites
the inhabitants of the land¡¨ (Judges 1:31-32). Nor did Asher from that
time forward ever redeem the shame of his dishonourable compact with foes whom
he ought to have destroyed. The very name of the tribe almost vanishes from the
page of Hebrew history
and it had better have been absent altogether than
conspicuous as it is in the bitterly scornful allusion of Deborah (Judges 5:17-18). Yet the name of Asher is
not
like that of Dan
blotted with hopeless ignominy from the list of God¡¦s
redeemed. A woman of this tribe
Anna
the centenarian prophetess of Jerusalem
was among the first to hail the infant Saviour
and to give thanks for His
salvation unto the Lord (Luke 2:36-38). Though the majority of the
tribe perished through worldly conformity and ease-loving apostasy from the
covenant of God
yet the blessing of Moses upon Asher was not wholly forfeited
nor unfulfilled. Let the lesson of this story be for our instruction in the
dangers of temporal prosperity
even for the Lord¡¦s elect
and no less in the
meaning of those reverses of earthly fortune by which the backslidings of the
chosen people are continually chastised. When Asher forgets the covenant of his
Redeemer
¡§the Lord
the Lord of hosts
will send among his fat ones leanness
and under his glory He will kindle a burning like the burning of a fire¡¨; but
even in those experiences of well-deserved
correction and adversity
the soul
that God has favoured and pronounced ¡§blessed¡¨ shall not be abandoned to utter
ruin. As his days
so his strength shall be (Isaiah 10:16-21). (T. G. Rooke
B. A.)
Verse 25
Thy shoes shall be iron and brass.
Shoes of iron
and strength sufficient: a new year¡¦s promise
I. Thy shoes shall
be iron and brass. The passage has several translations
which may serve as
divisions in opening up the meaning. The Lord¡¦s promises are true in every
sense they will fairly bear. A generous man will allow the widest
interpretation of his words
and so will the infinitely gracious God.
1. That Asher should have treasures under his feet--mines of iron and
copper.
2. R.V. ¡§Thy bars shall be iron and brass¡¨--there shall be protection
around him. Peace from all assaults
safety under all alarms
shutting in from
all attacks--this is a priceless boon.
3. He shall have protection for his feet. It is no objection that
shoes of iron and brass would be unusual
for the protection which God gives
His people is unusual. Theirs are no common equipments
for they are no common
people. You have peculiar difficulties
you are a peculiar people
you traverse
a peculiar road
you have a peculiar God to trust in
and you may therefore
find a peculiar consolation in a peculiar promise. We want to have shoes of
iron and brass--
II. As thy day
so
shall thy strength be. The words carry a tacit hint
that we have no strength
of our own
but have need of strength from above. Come down from your
self-esteem: stoop from the notion of your own natural ability: divest yourself
of the foolish idea that you can do anything in and of yourself
and come now
to the Strong for strength
and ask your Lord to fulfil this promise in your
experience.
1. Strength to abide through days. Not for today only
but for
tomorrow
and for every day as every day
shall come.
2. Strength to be given daily. A day¡¦s burden and a day¡¦s help
a
day¡¦s sorrow and a day¡¦s comfort. A storage of grace would turn into
self-sufficiency.
3. It will be given to us proportionately. A day of little service
little strength; a day of little suffering
little strength; but in a
tremendous day--a day that needs thee to play the Samson--thou shalt have
Samson¡¦s strength.
4. Our strength continuing as our days continue. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Iron shoes for rough roads
Turning this old-time word into a promise for ourselves as we set
out on a new year¡¦s journey
it suggests to us that we may have some rugged
pieces of road before we get to the end. If not
what need would there be for
iron shoes? If the way is to be flower strewn
velvet slippers would do. No one
can live nobly and worthily without struggle
battle
self-denial. Then we may
have special trials or sorrows this year. We shall need our iron shoes. It is
said there was a compensation in Asher¡¦s rough portion; his rugged hills had
iron in them. This law of compensation runs through all God¡¦s distribution of
gifts. One man¡¦s farm is hilly and hard to till
but deep down beneath its
ruggedness
buried away in its rocks
are rich minerals. One person¡¦s lot in
life is hard
with peculiar obstacles
difficulties
and trials
but hidden in
it there are compensations of some kind. One young man is reared in affluence
and luxury. He never experiences want or self-denial
never has to struggle
with obstacles or adverse circumstances. Another is reared in poverty
and has
to toil and suffer privation. The latter seems to have scarcely an equal chance
in life. But we all know where the compensation lies in this case. It is in
such circumstances that grand manhood is grown
while
too often
the petted
pampered sons of luxury come to nothing. In the rugged hills of toil and
hardship life¡¦s finest gold is found. Shoes of iron are promised only to those
who are to have rugged roads. There is a comforting suggestion here for all who
find peculiar hardness in their life. God will provide for the ruggedness. There
is a most delicate connection between earth and heaven¡¦s grace. There is yet
another suggestion in this old-time promise. The Divine blessing for every
experience is folded up in the experience itself
and will not be received in
advance. The iron shoes would not be given until the rough roads were reached.
There was no need for them until then
and besides
the iron to make them was
in the rugged hills themselves
and could not be gotten until the hills were
reached. Some people are forever unwisely testing themselves by questions like
these: ¡§Could I endure sore bereavement? Have I grace enough to bow in
submission to God if He were to take away my dearest treasure? Or could I meet
death without fear?¡¨ Such questions are unwise
because there is no promise of
grace to meet trial when there is no trial to be met. Grace for dying is
nowhere promised while death is yet far off and while one¡¦s duty is to live.
There is a story of a shipwreck which yields an illustration that comes in just
here. Crew and passengers had to leave the broken vessel and take to the boats.
The sea was rough
and great care in rowing and steering was necessary
in
order to guard the heavy-laden boats
not from the ordinary waves
which they
rode over easily
but from the great cross seas. Night was approaching
and the
hearts of all sank as they asked what they should do in the darkness when they
would no longer be able to see these terrible waves. To their great joy
however
when it grew dark
they discovered that they were in phosphorescent
waters
and that each dangerous wave rolled up crested with light which made it
as clearly visible as if it were midday. So it is that life¡¦s dreaded
experiences when we meet them carry in themselves the light which takes away
the peril and the terror. The night of sorrow comes with its own lamp of
comfort. The hour of weakness brings its secret of strength. When we come to
the hard
rough
steep path we find iron for shoes. ¡§How can I get shoes
and
where?¡¨ one asks. Do you remember about Christ¡¦s feet
that they were pierced
with nails? Why was it? That we might have shoes to wear on our feet
and that
they might not be cut and torn on the way. Dropping all figure
we cannot get
along on this year¡¦s pilgrimage without Christ; but having Christ
we shall be
ready for anything that the year may bring to us. (J. R. Miller
D. D.)
And as thy days
so shall
thy strength be.
Strength according to the days
1. It is not the design of these words to suppress forelooking and
foreplanning in secular things.
2. It is not designed to teach men that God will maintain a
providence of miracles in their behalf.
3. We cannot know beforehand what help will spring up from our
circumstances.
4. Anxiety for the future is labour lost.
5. Application--
Thy strength as thy days
What a picture of boundless variety is called up by ¡§thy
days¡¨--even the days of a single life! Who shall delineate the manifold
chequered
ever-changing lights and shadows of the days of man? Yet amidst all
the varieties
there is a general unity. There are great interests that are
common to all lives
and which bind up in unity all the days of each individual
life
weaving all its parts into one texture. This opens to us a plain
distinction among the days. ¡§Thy days¡¨ may be viewed collectively
as the sum
of thy life--all the days of thy life
--or they may be viewed distributively
as special days
distinctive days.
I. Thy days are
all the days of thy life
having great relations
purposes
or interests
to
which the strength is adjusted.
1. Thy days are for salvation
and thy strength shall be proportioned
to thy days¡¦ task. The days of life are the steps of the ladder by which we are
to ascend the skies.
2. Thy days are for spiritual progress
and thy strength shall be
proportioned to the task. Days are given to us on earth to educate us for
heaven
for the acquisition of suitable excellence. Let us therefore go on to
larger acquisitions. We shall never have cause
like the world¡¦s conqueror
to
sit down and weep that there are no more worlds to conquer.
3. Thy days are for service and duty
and thy strength shall be
proportioned to thy service.
II. Thy days are
special
distinctive days
demanding special strength. Thy days maybe special
as affected by events which can only be met by strength from the Fountain of
strength
and the strength shall be proportioned to the emergency. That is not
an assurance which man of himself could give. For life is so full of startling
events
that we dare not
from all we see and experience
promise ourselves strength
to cope with all possible events. No doubt some lives
in comparison of others
are tranquil to outward appearance
without almost any change
like some
mountain tam
now bright
now clouded
but showing the same features through
all the seasons; and others are like the ocean
never resting
often tossed by
terrible tempests; but to all the promise applies--¡§As thy days
so shall thy
strength be.¡¨
1. There are days dark with care
not merely selfish
but generous
care. ¡§Cast thy burden on the Lord
¡¨ etc.
2. Then there are days dark with sorrow
when a man must sit alone
under God¡¦s hand. And the strength is not mere endurance. There is a kind of
dogged endurance of all the trials and ills of life
to which a man can
accustom himself. He may not die under them
but he comes out of them with no
increased capacity for action
for comfort
for hope. But we cannot suppose the
Divine promise fulfilled in such a case. The strength promised will not only
turn off the edge of calamities
but will make us more than conquerors over
them
and turn their power into a tributary to our own enlargement.
3. Last of all
there is the day of our death. Not only in stormy
seas or devouring fires does it need strength to master one¡¦s self
but on the
most ordinary commonplace deathbed. Ah! it needs God-given strength to enable
the father or mother dying to leave their little helpless children in a cold
and wicked world. (J. Riddell.)
Strength proportioned to the day
I. To whom is this
promise made? Some of the promises in God¡¦s Word are of universal application (Genesis 3:15; Genesis 8:21-22; Genesis 22:17-18). But there are promises
which are special
and have regard to separate and distinct classes of persons:
e.g.
to the wicked (Isaiah 55:7); to the poor (Isaiah 41:17); to the penitent (Psalms 51:17); to the young (Proverbs 8:17); to the aged (Isaiah 46:4). In the text
Asher is the
person to whom the promise is made; and if your character is similar to that of
Asher
the promise is to you.
1. Asher received Christ
and believed the oracles of God. Do you
answer to this description?
2. Asher attended the Divine ordinances. God will strengthen us in
His sanctuary. It is in the Lord¡¦s house
on the Lord¡¦s day
that we receive
light
instruction
and vigour.
3. Asher must have been diligent in his proper vocation; else he
would not have dipped his foot in oil. We are to be diligent in business
fervent in spirit
actively serving our generation
according to the will of
God.
4. Asher desired the lot of the inheritance. He looked for his place
in the promised Canaan. So we are to look for our place in the inheritance
which is incorruptible
undefiled
and that fadeth not away. There is eternal
life in the promise.
II. What is the
meaning of this promise? There are ordinary days
which have in them no signal
event
no remarkable calamity or disaster
no striking prosperity or success.
They roll round in the even tenor of their course. Perhaps the great majority
of our days are of this character. But in all the ordinary days
have we not
found corresponding resources of help
and strength
and mercy
and supplies
according to our need? There are days of prosperity
and seasons when
everything goes well with us. Then
too often
our goodness is like the morning
cloud and the early dew. But if even then a man is kept humble and conscious of
his responsibility; if he wishes to do good
and is concerned to be a blessing;
where all this is accomplished
moral and spiritual resources are supplied
according to our day. You may think the difficulty to be deeper in adversity;
when the tide ebbs; when there are changes
overturnings
bereavements
desolation
etc. To pass through the rivers
and say
I am not overflown; to
pass through the furnace
and say
I am not burned; this is by the secret
sustaining hand of the Almighty. If we are humble and patient when He seems
severe
it is by the grace of God. There may be days of personal temptation
when the adversary cometh in like a flood. The dark and evil day may arrive
when we have to stand in the firmness of opposition. If we triumph
it is by
the grace of God. There are days of duty
which seem to be beyond our strength;
as when the scholar has to pass through his examination; or when the minister
ascends the pulpit and asks
¡§Who is sufficient for these things?¡¨
III. Where is our
security?
1. It is in the power and faithfulness of God. Remember that one of
His titles is
¡§The Strength of Israel¡¨; then it follows
¡§He will not lie¡¨;
here is power and faithfulness in its loftiest form. God is able to keep us
from falling; and He has sworn by two immutable things
that we might have
strong consolation. No conjuncture shall arise
in which the strength of heaven
shall not make us victorious.
2. We are also assured by the word and sympathy of Jesus. ¡§The
promises are yea and amen in Christ Jesus¡¨; that is
they are ratified in His
blood
and established in His mediation; and He is a High Priest touched with
the feeling of our infirmities.
3. There is our own experience in the past. Hitherto the Lord hath
helped us.
IV. If we receive
the promise of our text
what should be the effect upon our lives? We answer
Dismiss all anxieties and fears. (J. Stratten.)
Strength as the days
I. What this
promise is not.
1. It has no direct relation to the past--no power of retrieval and
recovery. Negligence is negligence
and no spiritual alchemy can change
it into diligence. This only may be done: precious lessons may be drawn out of
that which has been; and thus the moral continuity of the results of what was
evil may be in a measure interrupted
and good drawn out of the evil.
2. It does not bring us into any immediate connection with the
future. No doubt there is what may be called grace in stock; in capital if you
will
in the existence and operation of gracious principles and dispositions.
You may reckon with certainty on getting large interest from these. But even
that is on condition of continued faithfulness
and in order to secure that God
gives by the day. It is only in the day itself--in the dispensation--in the
duty--in the melting of the heart grief; in the bitterness of the
disappointment
or in the fierceness of the temptation
that you can fully know
what strength you will require--and only then
in the nature of things
can you
receive it.
II. What this
promise is. You are going some distance to a banquet. It will
of course
be
pleasant if the sun shines by the way
and all the world looks fair. But if the
clouds hang heavy
and the air is cold
you will go to the banquet just the
same. You are going across the sea to claim a property
and you are to sail in
a ship that cannot sink. It will be pleasant if there is only the ripple of
quiet waters from the prow of the ship
and the flashing of the sunlight from
the scarcely crested waves. But if even there should come the roar and burly of
the storm
and the dash of the angry waves against the sides of the vessel
until the very masts are white with spray
you will none the less
and probably
even none the later
see and claim your good estate. If a man lives well each
day--die well he must
whatever his feeling be. Death will be to him a very
chariot of fire to take him to the banquet of heaven; or a ship that turns back
for no weather
nor ever strikes sail till she enters the harbour. Lessons--
1. Do not be managing and masterful over circumstances and
providence; hammering and hewing at the ¡§days¡¨ to compel them into a certain
shape. Take them as they come; for they come as they are sent
arrayed darkly
or brightly by the hand of God
and filled with such elements as His wisdom and
goodness have put into them.
2. Do not be timorous and fearful and full of anxious care; you see
how little need there is for it
how well you are provided for!
3. Such a subject
and such a promise is surely a call to diligence.
For here you see is an unlimited promise of strength--strength to match the
¡§days¡¨--that is God¡¦s side of it. Our part is to try to raise the ¡§days¡¨ to
match the strength. (A. Raleigh
D. D.)
As thy days
so shall thy strength be
When we have seen the hills clad with verdure to their summit
and
the seas laving their base with a silver glory; when we have stretched our eye
far away
and have seen the widening prospect full of loveliness and beauty
we
have felt sad that the sunlight should ever set upon such a scene
and that so
much beauty should be shrouded in the oblivion of darkness. But how much reason
have we to bless God for nights! for if it were not for nights how much of
beauty never would be discovered. Night seems to be the great friend of the
stars: they must be all unseen by eyes of men
were they not set in the full of
darkness. It is even so with winter. Much of God¡¦s marvellous miracles of hoar
frost must have been hidden from us
if it had not been for the cold chill of
winter
which
when it robs us of one beauty
gives us another
--when it takes
away the emerald of verdure
it gives us the diamond of ice--when it casts from
us the bright rubies of the flowers
it gives us the fair
white ermine of
snow. Well now
translate those two ideas
and you will see why it is that even
our sin
our lost and ruined estate
has been made the means
in the hand of
God
of manifesting to us the excellencies of His character. If you and I had
been without trouble
we never could have had such a promise as this given to
us--¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨
I. The
self-weakness hinted at in the text. To keep to my figure
if this promise be
like a star
you know there is no seeing the stars in the daytime when we stand
here upon the upper land; we must go down a deep well
and then we shall be
able to discover them. Now
as this is daytime with our hearts
it will be
necessary for us to go down the deep well of old recollections of our past
trials. We must first get a good fair idea of the great depth of our own
weakness
before we shall be able to behold the brightness of this rich and
exceeding precious promise.
1. Ye children of God
have ye not proved your own weakness in the
day of duty? The Lord has spoken to you
and He has said
¡§Son of man
run
and
do such and such a thing which I bid thee¡¨; and you have gone to do it
but as
you have been upon your way
a sense of great responsibility has bowed you
down
and you have been ready to turn back even at the outset
and to cry
¡§Send by whomsoever Thou wilt send
but not by me.¡¨ Reinforced by strength
you
have gone to the duty
but while performing it
you have at times felt your
hands hanging exceeding heavy
and you have had to look up many a time and cry
¡§O Lord
give me more strength
for without Thy strength this work must be
unaccomplished; I cannot perform it myself.¡¨ And when the work has been done
and you have looked back upon it
you have either been filled with amazement
that it should have been done at all by so poor and weak a worm as yourself
or
else you have been overcome with horror because you have been afraid the work
was marred
like the vessel on the potter¡¦s wheel
by reason of your own want
of skilfulness.
2. We prove our weakness
perhaps more visibly
when we come into the
day of suffering. There it is that we are weak indeed. Ah! people of God
it is
one thing to talk about the furnace; it is another thing to be in it. It is one
thing to look at the doctor¡¦s knife
but quite another thing to feel it. That
man has never been sick who does not know his weakness
his want of patience
and of endurance.
3. Again
there is another thing which will very soon prove our
weakness
if neither duty nor suffering will do it--namely
progress. Let any
of you try to grow in grace
and seek to run the heavenly race
and make a
little progress
and you will soon find
in such a slippery road as that which
we have to travel
that it is very hard to go one step forward
though
remarkably easy to go a great many steps backward.
4. See what thou art in temptation. I have seen a tree in the forest
that seemed to stand fast like a rock; I have stood beneath its wide-spreading
branches
and have sought to shake its trunk
to see if I could
but it stood
immovable. The sun shone upon it
and the rain descended
and many a winter¡¦s
frost sprinkled its boughs with snow
but it still stood fast and firm. But one
night there came a howling wind which swept through the forest
and the tree
that seemed to stand so fast lay stretched along the ground
its gaunt arms
which once were lifted up to heaven lying hopelessly broken
and the trunk
snapped in twain. And so have I seen many a professor strong and mighty
and
nothing seemed to move him; but I have seen the wind of persecution and
temptation come against him
and I have heard him creak with murmuring
and at
last have seen him break in apostasy and he has lain along the ground a
mournful specimen of what every man must become who maketh not the Lord his
strength
and who relieth not upon the Most High. We have all our tender
points. When Thetis dipped Achilles in the Styx
you remember she held him by
the heel; he was made invulnerable wherever the water touched him
but his heel
not being covered with the water
was vulnerable
and there Paris shot his
arrow
and be died. It is even so with us. We may think that we are covered
with virtue till we are totally invulnerable
but we have a heel somewhere;
there is a place where the arrow of the devil can make way: hence the absolute
necessity of taking to ourselves ¡§the whole armour of God
¡¨ so that there may
not be a solitary joint in the harness that shall be unprotected against the
arrows of the devil.
II. The great
promise--¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨
1. This is a well-guaranteed promise. There is enough bullion in the
vaults of Omnipotence to pay off every bill that ever shall be drawn by the
faith of man or the promises of God. Now look at this one ¡§As thy days
so shall
thy strength be.¡¨ God has a strong reserve with which to pay off this promise;
for is He not Himself omnipotent
able to do all things? Remember what He did
in the days of old
in the former generations. Remember how He spake
and it
was done; how He commanded
and it stood fast. He hangeth the world upon
nothing; He fixed the pillars of heaven in silver sockets of light
and thereon
He hung the golden lamps
the sun and the moon; and shall He that did all this
be unable to support His children? Shall He be unfaithful to His word for want
of power in His arm or strength in His will? Remember again
thy God
who has
promised to be thy strength
is the Cod who upholdeth all things by the word of
His hand. Who feedeth the ravens? Who supplies the lions? Doth not He do it?
And how? He openeth His hand and supplieth the want of every living thing. He
has to do nothing more than simply to open His band. Who is it that restrains
the tempest? Doth not He say that He rides upon the wings of the wiled
that He
maketh the clouds His chariots
and holds the water in the hollow of His hand?
Shall He fail thee?
2. It is a limited promise. ¡§What!¡¨ says one
¡§limited! Why it says
¡¥As thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¦¡¨ Ay
it is limited. I know it is
unlimited in our troubles
but still it is limited. First
it says our strength
is to be as our days are; it does not say our strength is to be as our desires
are. Oh! how often have we thought
¡§How I wish I were as strong as
So-and-so¡¨--one who had a great deal of faith. Ah! but then you would have
rather more faith than you wanted; and what would be the good of that? ¡§Still
¡¨
says one
¡§if I had faith like So-and-so
I think I should do wonders.¡¨ Yes
but you would get the glory of them. God does not want you to do wonders. That
is reserved for God
not for you
--¡§He only doeth wondrous things.¡¨ Once more
it does not say
our strength shall be as our fears God often leaves us to
shift alone with our fears
--never with our troubles. The promise is ¡§As thy
days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨ ¡§When your vessel gets empty then will I fill
it; I will not give you any extra
over and above. When you are weak then I
will make you strong; but I will not give you any extra strength to lay by:
strength enough to bear your sufferings
and to do your duty; but no strength
to play at matches with your brethren and sisters in order to get the glory to
yourselves.¡¨ Then
again
there is another limit. It says
¡§As thy days
so
shall thy strength be.¡¨ It does not say
¡§as thy weeks
¡¨ or ¡§months¡¨ but ¡§as
thy days.¡¨ You are not going to have Monday¡¦s grace given you on a Sunday
nor
Tuesday¡¦s grace on a Monday. No; ¡§as thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨
3. What an extensive promise this is! ¡§As thy days
so shall thy
strength be.¡¨ Some days are very little things; in our pocket book we have very
little to put down
for there was nothing done of any importance. But some days
are very big days. Ah! I have known a big day--a day of great duties
when
great things had to be done for God--too great
it seemed
for one man to do;
and when great duty was but half done there came great trouble
such as my poor
heart had never felt before. Oh! what a great day it was! there was a night of
lamentation in this place
and the cry of weeping
and of mourning
and of
death. Ah! but blessed be God¡¦s name
though the day was big with tempest
and
though it swelled with horror
yet as that day was
so was God¡¦s strength.
4. What a varying promise it is! I do not mean that the promise
varies
but adapts itself to all our changes. ¡§As thy days
so shall thy
strength be.¡¨ Here is a fine sunshiny morning; all the world is laughing;
everything looks glad; the birds are singing
the trees seem to be all alive
with music. ¡§My strength shall be as my day is
¡¨ says the pilgrim. Ah! pilgrim
there is a little black cloud gathering. Soon it increases; the flash of
lightning wounds the heaven
and it begins to bleed in showers. Pilgrim
¡§As
thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨ The birds have done singing
and the world
has done laughing; but ¡§as thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨ Now the dark
night comes on
and another day approaches--a day of tempest
and whirlwind
and storm. Dost thou tremble
pilgrim?--¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength
be.¡¨
5. What a long promise this is! You may live till you are never so
old
but this promise will outlive you. When thou comest into the depths of the
river Jordan
¡§as thy days
so shall thy strength be¡¨; thou shalt have
confidence to face the last grim tyrant
and grace to smile even in the jaws of
the grave. And when thou shalt rise again in the terrible morning of the
resurrection
¡§as thy days so shall thy strength be¡¨; though the earth be
reeling with dismay thou shalt know no fear; though the heavens are tottering
with confusion thou shalt know no trouble. ¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength
be.¡¨ And when thou shalt see God face to face
though thy weakness were enough
to make thee die
thou shalt have strength to bear the beatific vision: thou
shalt see Him face to face
and thou shalt live; thou shalt lie in the bosom of
thy God; immortalised and made full of strength
thou shalt be able to bear
even the brightness of the Most High.
III. What inference
shall I draw except this? Children of the living God
be rid of your doubts
be
rid of your trouble and your fear. Young Christians
do not be afraid to set
forward on the heavenly race. You bashful Christians
that
like Nicodemus
are
ashamed to come out and make an open profession
don¡¦t be afraid: ¡§As your day
is
so shall your strength be.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Kept of God
1. If God prosper His people He will still keep them humble. He ever
plants some thorn in the flesh
sends some messenger of Satan to buffet them
that thus they may be kept mindful that the present life is not their home
nor
the present enjoyments their heaven. An unpolished partner
or a vicious son
or a sickly constitution
or some other unpropitious circumstance
has ever
preyed upon the spirits of the prosperous believer. And these mixtures of
bitter ingredients in his cup of blessings
have kept him from selling his
birthright for the perishing and contemptible objects of sense.
2. If God afflict His people
He will bestow those comforts which
will keep them happy
and make them thankful. Hope is a grace which God is as
much resolved to cherish in His people as humility. Hence
if He pain them
He
is sure to preserve them from despair. While there is the deep conviction that
His strokes are fewer than their crimes
and lighter than their guilt
there
too
is clear discovery of a parental hand which wields the rod
and a parental
eye which smiles through every cloud that covers them.
Remarks--
1. How safe and happy are the Lord¡¦s people. They are not exempt from
trials
but are permitted to know that their strength shall be proportioned to
their burdens.
2. Their present strength and courage do not decide how they shall
appear in the hour of conflict
or what shall be their future condition. It is
absurd that the believer should yield his hope because he does not find himself
prepared for trials which have not yet come. He expects
in this case
a mercy
never promised. God will prepare him when He tries him
will give him strength
when He calls him to the onset. Our strength is not to be greater than our day
but equal. Should it be greater
we should become proud; should it be less
we
should be discouraged. If
then
we find our strength equal to our present
conflicts
we have nothing to fear. Our courage will kindle as the battle
thickens
and our strength increase as we march on to the more desperate onset.
If our present strength is sufficient for our present purpose
this is all that
God has promised
and is enough. Here is the test by which we are to try our
character. Do we submit cheerfully to present disappointments
and exhibit a
right temper under all the present little corroding incidents of this
conflicting world? (D. A. Clark.)
Seasonable strength
Dr. Doddridge was one day walking
much depressed
his very
heart desolate within him. But
says he
passing a cottage door open
I
happened at that moment to hear a child reading
¡§As thy days
so shall thy
strength be.¡¨ The effect on my mind was indescribable. It was like life from
the dead. And what does this word say to us? ¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength
be.¡¨ There is strength bodily. The continuance of this is a mercy. How easily
can it be crushed
so that we may be made to possess months of vanity; and
endure wearisome nights; and feel every exertion a difficulty
and every duty a
burden! But there is strength spiritual. This is very distinguishable from the
former
and often found separate from it. The Lord does not always give His
people a giant¡¦s arm
or an iron sinew; but His strength is made perfect in
weakness. This is the strength here spoken of. For two purposes His people will
find it necessary: service and suffering. Every Christian has a course of duty
common to him as a man; which is
to provide for his outward wants
and the
support of his family. And this is done by labour
in which he is required not
to be slothful. But there is a series of duties pertaining more immediately to
him in his religious character; to believe
to pray
to deny ungodliness and
worldly lusts
and to live soberly
righteously
and godly in the present evil
world. Suffering is commonly connected with service in the Divine life. It was
so invariably in the beginning of the Gospel. Then it was deemed impossible for
anyone to live godly in Christ Jesus and not suffer persecution. Therefore
no
sooner was Paul converted
than he was told how great things he had to suffer.
As real religion is always the same
some degree of the same opposition may be
always looked for; and the hatred of the world will be shown as far as they
have liberty to express it
and are not restrained by law
or the usages of
civilised life. But when the Christian has rest from such trials as these
God
can subserve their purpose
by personal and relative afflictions
which are
often severer than even the endurings of a martyr. They are called chastenings
and rebukes which he is neither to despise
nor faint under. Now the prospect
of all this
when he looks forward into life
is enough to awaken the
Christian¡¦s anxiety; and nothing can effectually encourage him but the
discovery of strength equal to his exigencies. And this he finds not in
himself. The natural man has no sensibility of his weakness
because he is not
earnestly engaged in those applications which require spiritual strength. The
Christian is. He knows that he is as destitute of strength as he is of
righteousness. He feels himself entirely insufficient for all the duties and
trials of the Divine life. And the consciousness
instead of diminishing
grows
with the experience of every day. And he need not be afraid of this. Rather
let him cherish it; for when he is weak
then is he strong. What he wants is
provided and ensured by the promise of a God who cannot lie. (W. Jay.)
Strength growing with days
We generally hear these words misquoted
and put into the shape
¡§As thy day
so shall thy strength be
¡¨ as if the substance of the promise was
strength proportioned to the special exigencies of each movement. That is very
beautiful
and may well be deduced from the words
but it fails to take into
account that little ¡§s¡¨ at the end of the word ¡§day
¡¨ which obliges us to
understand the promise as meaning: ¡§As thy days¡¨ (increase) ¡§thy strength
shall¡¨ (increase). The older a Christian is
the stronger Christian he Ought to
be. Then there is another thing to be noted
and that is that in their original
connection the words are a promise
not to an individual
but to a community.
It is the last of the series of promises to the various tribes of Israel which
occupy this chapter of Deuteronomy.
I. Increase of
strength with increase of age. In its application to the individual life. Here
is a promise dead in the teeth of nature
because all living things that belong
to the material universe come under the law of growth
which ultimately passes
into decay. The same sea of Time that flings up its spoils on some shores
and
increases the land
when you get round the promontory is eating away the coast.
And so
the years
which at first bring us strength
very soon begin to reverse
their action. Nor is it only the physical life which dwindles as the days increase
but also much of the inner life is modified by the external
so that the old
man¡¦s memory becomes less retentive
and the old man¡¦s impulses less strong.
But ¡§as thy days
so shall thy strength be
¡¨ and when the eyes become dim
it
is possible that they may be longer sighted
and see the things that are
just
in proportion as they begin to fail to see ¡§the things that do appear.¡¨ They
may be able to discern more clearly what is above them
as they see less
clearly the things on their own level. It is possible that as the days
increase
and the strength drawn from externals decreases
the power of the
Spirit
the maturity of the soul
the insight into the Eternal
the
Christ-likeness and assimilation to that which we more clearly behold
as the
clouds thin themselves away
may all increase. And so
in all that makes the
Christian life
it is possible that there shall be increase with the increase
of our days. Why so? Just because the Christian life is a supernatural life
that has nothing to do with dependence on physical conditions. If it were not
so
if my Christian vitality stood exactly on the same plane as my vigour of
intellect
my retentiveness of memory
my energy of purpose
or other
capacities
which make up the non-material part of my being--the ¡§soul
¡¨ as
people call it--then it
too
would share in the decrepitude and decay. We
sometimes see people
in the measure in which their physical strength decays
drawing into themselves more and more of that supernatural and Divine strength
which has nothing to do with the material or the external. Is that not a reason
for believing that that life which thus obeys a law
as I said
dead in the
teeth of nature
is a life altogether independent of this bodily existence
and
our connection with this material universe? There is no better proof of
immortality
if you except the fact of the resurrection
than the way in which
right up to the edge of the grave
and even when a man¡¦s foot is on its
threshold
there burns in his soul
brighter and brightening as the darkness
falls
all that makes the Christian life. But if this contradiction of nature
by a supernatural life is to be ours
as it may be
let us not forget that this
promise
like all God¡¦s promises
is a promise with conditions. They are not stated
here
but we know them. ¡§The youths shall faint and be weary; the young men
shall utterly fall; but they that wait on the Lord shall renew their
strength¡¨--they
and only they. God does not give gifts to men who He sees are
wasting them
and the gift of growing strength that is promised to us is
strength that is to be used for His service. Has my strength grown with years?
Let me say one word
and it shall be but a word
about the other application of
this great thought. As I said
it is a tribal benediction
and all the
benedictions of all the tribes have passed over to the great community of New
Testament believers. The Church is heir to the Divine promise that as its days
increase its strength increases. And though
of course
there have been fearful
instances to the contrary
and churches
like other institutions
are apt to
stiffen and decay in their old age
yet the only institution in the world that
has lasted so long
and kept up so much vitality through centuries
is the
Christian Church. Why? If there were not a supernatural life in it
it would
have been dead long ago. ¡§As the Church¡¦s days increase
so will her strength
grow.¡¨ But the promise of our text is susceptible of another application
though that is not its true signification
and may be taken as meaning the
necessities of the days shall determine the nature of the strength given. And
that adaptation of supply to need will be true in many directions. It will be
true if we consider the tasks imposed by each succeeding day. For God never sets
His servants to work or warfare beyond the limits of the strength which they
have or may have
if they will. Again
this adaptation will shape the day¡¦s
strength according to the day¡¦s wants. The ¡§matter of a day in its day¡¨ will be
given. There will be daily bread for daily hunger. God makes no mistakes
sending furs for June or muslin for December. His gifts are never belated
nor
arrive after the need for them is past. That adaptation takes effect for us on
the same condition as the increase does
of which we have been speaking
namely
on condition of our waiting on God. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Equipped
I. Man¡¦s
emergency.
1. Man¡¦s journey is along a rough and thorny road.
2. Conscious experience of wear and tear: ¡§As thy days
so shall thy
strength be.¡¨ Fresh obligations of unfolding life
and hence increasing
pressure. At first we only dream of bliss and peace from religion; at length we
realise in it fidelity
obligations
responsibilities
sacrifices
conflicts.
How real to every true man is the ¡§wear and tear¡¨ of a religious life
the
necessary exhaustion from duty. When the business and the bustle of life come
in conflict with religion and pious reflection. When the conflict for principle
leaves us consciously weaker
even if making us truer at heart. No conflict
however its success and triumph
without reaction. Such man¡¦s emergency.
II. God¡¦s
provision.
1. For the rough journey
the shoes of iron and brass. Equipment
proportionate to need. Thus in illustrations of the Christian life:
¡§Conflict¡¨--armour (Ephesians 6:12-17). ¡§Duty¡¨--conviction (2 Corinthians 1:12).
¡§Journey¡¨--¡§shoes of iron and brass¡¨ (Deuteronomy 8:2-4). With the same and yet
higher provision men make against emergency does God provide for His people:
The Arctic whaler is built for her voyage
no pleasure yacht for a summer¡¦s
day. The soldier is equipped for service
not decorated for a holiday parade.
Thus with God for us. Against every rough pebble there is a nail in the shoes
of grace.
2. For the ¡§wear and tear¡¨--the supply: ¡§As thy day
so
¡¨ etc.
Note--God¡¦s communications of grace never anticipative but always sufficient.
Men paralyse their energies in the anticipation of possible emergencies. ¡§What
shall I do
¡¨ says a man
¡§if so-and-so should happen?¡¨ and he forgets how he
does new--the once future of anticipated forebodings. God gives not to the
heart
unembarrassed by worldly cares and anxieties
and rejoicing in its
gladsomeness
the strength for the hour of care and worry that may or may never
come to it. God¡¦s provisions are economic. Waste has no part in the laws of
God¡¦s moral government. ¡§As thy days
so
¡¨ etc. But God¡¦s provision is in the
presence of man¡¦s emergency. God gives us our desires as fully in giving us
strength for the rough journey
as in smoothing the way for us and strewing the
path with flowers. And more. For the effort of manhood
assisted by grace
results in a bettering of manhood for ourselves; while the interpositions of
grace merely--kindly
gracious though they be--leave us as we were before
¡§afraid of that which is high
¡¨ and faltering in the presence of difficulties.
How a man that has overcome gains confidence. ¡§I have met a trouble before
¡¨
says he
when trouble lies ahead
¡§and by God¡¦s grace I can meet this one.¡¨
Results are more from efforts than helps. It is from ¡§the swing of the heavy
sledge
week in
week out
from morn to night
that the muscles of the brawny
arm are strong as iron bands.¡¨ And God assures us that the effort of our
manhood will have His support. ¡§As thy days
so shall thy strength be.¡¨ (W.
Henderson.)
Help for the hard places
1. Consider the width of the promise--thy days
that is
all thy
days.
2. Consider the specificalness of the promise--each one of thy days
3. Consider the adaptedness of the promise--for every sort of day.
For the day of dull routine. For the day of¡¨ weariness. For the day of
disappointment. For the day of sorrow. For the day of difficult duty. For the
day of death.
4. Consider the maker of the promise. He makes the promise who knows
all our days (Psalms 139:1-6). He makes the promise who
measures our days (Psalms 31:15). He makes the promise who
is with us through all the days (Matthew 28:20).
Therefore
1. Be sure of a specific and caring Providence.
2. Do not fear.
3. Make alliance with God. (Homiletic Review.)
Verses 26-29
There is none like unto the God of Jeshurun.
The God of Jeshurun
Are we to understand this passage as revoking all the threatened
judgments previously denounced against Israel? No. But Moses saw
amidst all
the rebellion with which Israel as a nation was to be chargeable
and amidst
all the reverses which they were consequently to experience
that the true
Israel would be preserved
defended
and cared for. That in these words Moses
addresses the true Israel
the spiritual seed of Abraham
is evident from the
name he gives them Jeshurun
¡§upright
¡¨ or ¡§righteous.¡¨ He begins by exalting
the God of Jeshurun above all other gods; and he does so in language fitted to
impress them with a conviction of the utter impotency of the gods of the
nations.
1. The description conveys the idea of glorious majesty
absolute
sovereignty
power infinitely beyond comprehension or resistance. But while
thus reminding them of this view of the Divine character
he introduces it in a
connection fitted to awaken confidence. He does not merely tell them that the
God of Jeshurun rideth on the heaven
but that He does so as Jeshurun¡¦s help;
and that if He revealed His own excellence and glory
it was in working out
their deliverance
and making bare His holy arm for their protection. There as
none like
etc. What peace should this truth inspire! What patience should it
inspire! What confidence should it awaken and keep alive
even in circumstances
the most gloomy and perplexing! If it does not produce this effect
must it not
be because they are remaining contentedly in doubt whether they have really
been justified and accepted with God
or are culpably insensible to the value
of their privileges in having all their best interests bound up with the
manifestation of His own glory?
2. The security of God¡¦s justified people is still further set forth.
God is declared to be their refuge
or rather dwelling place--not a temporary
but a perpetual refuge; and they are reminded that He is the eternal God
unchangeable in His being
and equally unchangeable in His purpose. They might
feel at times as if they were altogether unequal to any new conquest over the
adversaries which still remained to be subdued; but God Himself was to thrust
out the enemy from before them
and to say
¡§Destroy them.¡¨ So it is
and has
always been
in regard to the spiritual conflict of believers. The Scripture
saints
in relating their experience--their fears and hopes
dangers and
deliverances
seasons of depression and times of triumph
painful struggles
with temptation and the strength by which they successfully resisted it--employ
the very language which might have been appropriately used to describe the
conflicts and conquests of Israel in Canaan (Psalms 27:3; Psalms 72:5; Psalms 91:1-4). To all who know anything
experimentally of the spiritual warfare of the believer
such language will be
not only intelligible
but faithfully descriptive of what they have
experienced
and in so far as they have been enabled to contend successfully
with the risings of a corrupt nature within
the temptations of a sinful world
without
the suggestions of Satan--with everything that would have brought
their spiritual interests into jeopardy
everything that would have marred
their peace and robbed them of their comfort--and in so far as they can now
cherish the good hope of ultimately gaining the victory over all these
their
spiritual enemies
it is because they have experienced the faithfulness of this
declaration.
3. From this description of the conflict of God¡¦s people
Moses
proceeds to foretell their final and glorious triumph. ¡§Israel then shall
dwell
¡¨ etc. Viewing this prediction merely as referring to the settlement of
Israel in Canaan
it was
in the first instance at least
only partially
fulfilled. Israel did not so conquer the land as to dwell either in safety or
alone. Through their unbelief
the command
¡§Destroy
¡¨ which otherwise would
have been accompanied by a Divine power
was not fully carried into effect. But
even had Israel literally dwelt alone and in safety
yet it would have been but
a type of the still more glorious state of things to which Moses was instructed
to direct the faith and hope of the Church. Nothing short of the glory of the
latter day can exhaust the meaning of this passage. Many generations
indeed
have passed away
and we
too
may follow them
and still the prediction remain
unfulfilled. But we have in Moses an example of the satisfaction and delight
with which the saints of old contemplated the future prosperity of the Church
even when they should be gathered to their fathers; for though he was not to
enter on the promised land
or participate in the rich blessings which awaited
Israel there
yet could any one of them
even the man who had the prospect of
sharing the longest and the most largely in these blessings
have expressed
himself more joyously and with warmer gratitude in that prospect than Moses did
in his last words to Israel? (R. Gordon
D. D.)
Israel¡¦s God and God¡¦s Israel
I. Israel¡¦s God.
Truly
when Moses looked upon the gods of Egypt--a country so superstitious
that the satirist wrote of them
¡§O happy nation
whose gods grow in their own
gardens¡¨--when he heard the wild mythology of their idolatry
he might well
say
¡§There is none among them that is like unto the God of Jeshurun
¡¨ Perhaps
Moses had seen those vast catacombs of idolised animals which Egyptian
discoverers have lately opened
where the crocodiles
cats
and birds
which
had been worshipped in life
were afterwards carefully consigned. Wise as Egypt
professed to be
she preserved her dead gods in myriads. Truly
the fancies of
the most civilised nations have invented no deity comparable for a moment to
the living God who made the heavens and the earth. Moses
in the particular
words here used
seems to intimate that there is none like the God of Jeshurun
as the ground of our confidence
Now
ye who have trusted in God
remember
there is room for you to trust Him still more; and the more you shall confide
in Him
the more emphatically will you declare
¡§There is none like unto the
God of Jeshurun.¡¨ If we rely upon men
we put trust in fickleness itself. Fall
back upon yourselves
lean upon your fellow creatures
trust upon earth-born
confidences
and ye fall Upon a rotten foundation that shall give way beneath
you; but rest upon your God alone
and the stars in heaven shall fight for you
and things present and things to come
and heights
and depths
and all the
creatures subservient to the will of the omnipotent Creator
shall work
together for good to you seeing that you love God and are depending upon His
power.
II. Israel¡¦s
safety.¡¨ ¡§The eternal God is thy refuge
and underneath are the everlasting
arms.¡¨ Two sentences
with a little variation of expression
containing
essentially the same sense. God is first said to be the refuge of His people
that is
when they have strength enough to fly to Him He protects them; but it
is delightfully added
¡§underneath are the everlasting arms
¡¨ that is
when
they have not strength enough to flee to Him
but faint where they stand
there
are His arms ready to bear them up in their utmost extremity. I will mention
some times when a Christian needs these arms peculiarly. These are when he is
in a state of great elevation of mind. Sometimes God takes His servants and puts
them on the pinnacle of the temple. Satan does it sometimes; God does it
too--puts His servants up on the very pinnacle
where they are so full of joy
that they scarce know how to contain themselves
¡§whether in the body or out of
the body they cannot tell.¡¨ Well
now
suppose they should fall! for it is so
easy for a man
when full of ecstasy and ravishment
to make a false step and
slip. Ah! but
in such moments
¡§underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨ They are
safe enough
as safe as though they were in the valley of humiliation
for
underneath are the arms of God. Sometimes He puts a man in such a position in
service--there must be leaders in the Lord¡¦s Church
captains and mighty men of
war--and the Lord sometimes calls a man and says to him
¡§Now
be Moses to this
people.¡¨ Such positions are fraught with temptation; but is God¡¦s servant in
greater danger than an ordinary Christian? Yes
he is
if left to himself; but
he will not be left to himself
for God does not treat His captains as David
treated Uriah
and put them in the forefront of the battle
to leave them
that
they may be slain by the enemy. No
if our God calls a man to tread the high
places of the field
that man shall say with Habakkuk
¡§He will make my feet
like hinds¡¦ feet
and He will make me to walk upon mine high places.¡¨
¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨ Another period of great need is after
extraordinary exaltations and enjoyments
when it often happens that God¡¦s
servants are greatly depressed. In the wilderness
all alone
you hear Elijah
cry
¡§Let me die
I am no better than my fathers.¡¨ Yes
the man who never was
to die at all
prayed that he might die. Just so
high exaltations involve deep
depressions. But what was under Elijah when he fell down in that fainting fit
under the juniper tree? Why
underneath were the everlasting arms. So shall it
be with you who are called thus to fall into the depths of depression; the
eternal arms shall be lower than you are.
III. Israel¡¦s
future. You have seen a man in our streets with a telescope
through which you
may see Venus
or Saturn
or Jupiter. Now
if that gentleman
instead of
revealing the stars
could fix up a telescope
and undertake that everybody who
looked through it could see his future life
I will be bound to say he would make
his fortune very speedily
for there is a great desire amongst us all to know
something of the future. Yet we need not be so anxious
for the great outlines
of the future are very well known already. We have it on the best authority
that in the future as in the past
we shall meet with difficulties
and contend
with enemies. My text
like the telescope
reveals to those who trust in God
what will become of their difficulties
and we see that they are to be
overcome. God will work
and you will work. He shall thrust out your enemies
and He shall say to you
¡§Destroy them.¡¨ It is a grand thing to go straight on
in the path of duty
believing that God will clear the road. Like the priests
when they came to the edge of Jordan
and saw the billows rolling up
yet on
they went
and not so much as one of them was touched by the waves
for as they
put down their feet the waters receded. Oh
it must have been grand to be the
first man in that march--to see the waters flow away before your feet! So shall
it be with you: the water shall come up to where you are
yet it shall not
touch you; you shall find it disappear as you by faith advance.
IV. Israel¡¦s
blessedness.
1. ¡§Israel then shall dwell alone.¡¨ Dwelling with God in communion
having with Him one object
one affection
one desire
we dwell apart from the
rest of mankind
coming out daily more and more from them
and desiring to be
nearer and nearer to Christ
and farther and farther from men. Here we dwell
safely; nowhere safe except when alone with God
but always safe then.
2. Abundant provision. ¡§The fountain of Jacob shall be upon a land of
corn and wine.¡¨ God¡¦s people are to be supplied from a fountain
and around
that fountain there shall always be a superabundance of corn for their
necessities
and of wine for their comfort and their luxury. Those who come to
God receive no stinted allowance
they are gentlemen commoners upon the bounty
of God. There is a daily portion allotted to them
and it is measured on a
princely scale
equal to the dignity of the new birth. We drink from an ever
overflowing fountain.
3. Celestial unction. ¡§Also His heavens shall drop down dew.¡¨ How we
want this! How dry we get
how dull
how dead
unless the Lord visit us! The
Oriental knew the value of dew. When he saw the green pastures turn brown and
at last dry up
till they were nothing but dust and powder
how he sought for
the shower
and the dew; and when it came
how thankful was he! When that dew
of the Holy Spirit is gone from us
what dead prayers
what miserable songs
what
wearisome preaching
what wretched hearing! Oh
there is death everywhere when
the Holy Spirit is denied us; but we need not be without Him
for He is in the
promise--¡¨His heaven shall drop down dew.¡¨ The words read as if there were much
dew
superabundance of moisture. So
indeed
we may have the Holy Spirit most
copiously if we have but faith enough. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The God of Jeshurun
I. The appellation
given to Jehovah. The term Jeshurun is a collective term used
just as Israel
Jacob
etc.
to designate the covenant people--the people who
like Israel of
old
have received a Divine call to come out from the world and be separate;
who
in obedience to this Divine call
have separated themselves unto the Lord
and have entered into a solemn and public covenant with Him in which they have
engaged to be His
and in which He has been graciously pleased to receive them
so that they now constitute His peculium. Jeshurun is
in other words
a
symbolical designation of the Church. The text
therefore
represents God as
sustaining to those who are members of the Church a relation that He does not
and cannot sustain to one who is outside its fold. But there must be special
reason for using this particular term to designate the Church. Viewed
etymologically we find Jeshurun seems to be the plural diminutive of the word
upright. It may
therefore
probably be best translated the children of
uprightness. This is God¡¦s designation of the Church
indicative of its true
character and mission in the world. Its mission is through the power of Divine
grace to set upright that which has fallen. Its first work is to lift truth out
of the dust; to free it from the incubus of error and superstition under which
it has been borne down; to vindicate it
to defend it against all assaults of
error
and to preserve it pure from all the inventions and sophistries of men.
Broader
even yet
is the mission of the Church in establishing and maintaining
uprightness in the earth. It is designed of God to be the great conservator of virtue
the great bulwark of morality
the efficient safeguard of the rights and
liberties
of the intelligence and virtue
of the beneficence and charity that
now beautify and gladden the world.
II. The action
ascribed to Jehovah. ¡§Who rideth upon the heaven.¡¨ It is the same bold figure
so often used by the inspired Psalmist
as when he represents Jehovah as
¡§making the clouds His chariot
¡¨ or as ¡§riding upon the wings of the wind.¡¨ It
is the glory of natural law that it is the power which God wields
the chariot
upon which God rides. The more majestic modern science shows it to be
the more
do our hearts rejoice in it as a fitting vehicle for the triumphant progress of
our King. Let the agnostic blindly worship the material chariot if he will
his
eye dazzled with the effulgence of its glittering wheels
and his ear
fascinated with its music as it glides over the celestial pavement; be it ours
to pay our homage to Him who rides upon it
whose eye of intelligence looks
down into ours
whose heart of love beats in sympathy with ours
and whose firm
hand upon the rein assures us that all things are working together for our
eternal good.
III. The object of
Jehovah in thus doing. This riding of the God of Jesburun upon the heaven is
¡§in His people¡¦s help.¡¨ The chariot was the most formidable of all the
implements of ancient warfare. The celerity with which it swept across the
field of action; the momentum with which it crushed its way over the prostrate
forms of opposing hosts; the vantage it afforded to the warrior by its elevated
platform and protecting rail
and the carnage wrought by the sharp blades upon
its axles as they hewed their way through the masses like scythes through the
ripened grain: these made it of all engines of war the most effective and the most
terrible. The children of Israel fled in dismay as they heard the rumble of
Pharaoh¡¦s chariot wheels. When intercepted by the waters of the Red Sea they
stood cowering with affright as they saw the gleam of the chariots in the
sunlight. Moses
therefore
introduces an element of encouragement peculiarly
appropriate to the circumstances and experiences of the people when he
represents Jehovah as an infinite charioteer riding majestically forth upon the
heaven
keeping ever near His people in their wilderness journey
and ready in
the hour of their conflict and peril to appear for their relief and for the
discomfiture of their foes. It was just the assurance needed by a host who felt
the inferiority of their equipment and resources to those of the enemies with
whom they would have to contend. But without discarding from our view the
special symbolism of the text
what can be more inspiring to the Church in this
age
and in the midst of her present conflicts
than this thought of her
Jehovah-Jesus
sitting upon the circle of the heavens
holding in His hands the
reins of God¡¦s providential government; keeping pace in the march of His
providence with the progress of the Church; then always nearest when she is in
her times of greatest peril; holding all the powers of heaven
earth
and hell
in subjection to Himself
and plucking His grandest victories over the powers
of darkness out of the very jaws of apparent defeat? (T. D. Witherspoon
D.
D.)
God and the true
1. The last words of a truly great man.
2. Referring to subjects of the highest moment.
I. The
incomparable God of the good.
1. His activity. Never slumbers or sleeps. The universe moves because
He moves.
2. His grandeur.
3. His eternity.
II. The
incomparable blessedness of the good.
1. None are so well protected from the perils of life.
2. None are so well supported under the trials of life.
3. None are so certain of conquering the enemies of life.
4. None are so enriched with the enjoyments of life
These they shall possess--
The last words of Moses
Moses the man of God (who had as much reason as ever any mere man
had to know both) with his last breath magnifies both the God of Israel and the
Israel of God
They are both incomparable in his eye; and we are sure
in this
his judgment of both
his eye did not wax dim.
I. No God like the
God of israel.
1. This was the honour of Israel. Every nation boasted of its God
but none had such a God to boast of as Israel had.
2. It was their happiness that they were taken into covenant with
such a God. Two things he notes as proofs of the incontestable preeminence of
the God of Jeshurun--
II. No people like
the Israel of God.
1. Never was people so well seated and sheltered (verse 27).
2. Never was people so well supported and borne up. The ¡§everlasting
arms¡¨ shall support--
3. Never was people so well commanded and led on to battle.
4. Never was people so well secured and protected (verse 28). ¡§Israel
then shall dwell in safety alone.¡¨
5. Never was people so well provided for. The fountain of Jacob
i.e.
the present generation of that people
which is as the fountain to all the
streams that shall hereafter descend and be derived from it
shall now
presently be fixed upon a good land. The eye of Jacob (so it might be read
for
the same word signifies a fountain and an eye) is upon the land of corn and
wine
i.e. where they now lay encamped they had Canaan in their eye; it
was just before their faces
on the other side the river; and they would have
it in their hands and under their feet quickly.
6. Never was people so well helped (verse 26). They that are added to
the Gospel Israel are such as shall be saved (Acts 2:47).
7. Never was people so well armed. God Himself was the shield of
their help
by whom they were armed defensively
and sufficiently guarded
against all assailants; and He was the sword of their excellency
by whom they
were armed offensively
and made both formidable and successful in all their
wars. God is called the sword of their excellency
because
in fighting for
them
He made them to excel other people; or
because in all He did for them He
had an eye to His sanctuary among them
which is called the excellency of Jacob
(Psalms 47:4; Ezekiel 24:21; Amos 6:8). Those in whose hearts is the
excellency of holiness
have God Himself for their shield and sword
are
defended by the whole armour of God; His word is their sword
and faith in it
is their shield (Ephesians 6:16-17).
8. Never was people so well assured of victory over their enemies.
They shall be found liars unto thee
i.e. shall be forced to submit to
thee sore against their will
so that it will be but a counterfeit submission.
Yet the point shall be gained
for thou shalt tread upon their necks (so the
Seventy)
which we find done (Joshua 10:24). (Matthew Henry
D. D.)
Verse 27
The eternal God is thy refuge and underneath are the everlasting
arms.
Man¡¦s refuge and support
I. Man needs a
refuge and a support. ¡§We make mistakes
and men misunderstand and misinterpret
them
and a word or a look fans the flame and makes a foe
and our heart craves
for someone to fly to who knows our sincerity and will look kindly on our
error. We feel the din and bustle
the agitation
and anxiety
and restlessness
of active life; our spirits often are fretted by it
our hands hang down and
are weary
and we want One by our sides
ever present
ever powerful
and ever
loving
to cheer
uphold
and encourage us. We realise daily our own weakness.
Resolutions are made and broken. Where shall I find a refuge from self
a
refuge from sin
a refuge from an accusing conscience
a refuge from coming
wrath
in the hour of death
in the day of judgment
and through the ages of
eternity?
II. Just such a
refuge as man needs is provided for him by God.
III. What such a
need
and such an offer
demand of us.
1. Your first step is to fly to Jesus as your refuge. Do you ask how?
Have you not read or heard of the homeless poor in London
and the refuges
prepared for them? Numbers who have no home to cover their heads and no morsel
of food to sustain their fainting bodies
hasten all shivering amidst the
storm
night after night
and wait hours at the door of some rooms prepared by
Christian charity to receive them for a night¡¦s lodging and a night¡¦s food.
They have no recommendation but their poverty. Go thus to Jesus
realising your
spiritual poverty
and pleading your spiritual need.
2. Your next step is to rest in Him
as an everlasting support. (Canon
Morse.)
The everlasting arms
In one of the old classic fables of our schooldays
we used to
read of the giant Sisyphus
condemned to go on forever and ever
rolling a
mighty stone up a mountain
whose summit was forever becoming more distant and
out of reach. Can such a fable be in any wise emblematic of the task of human
life? Can it be that life is
after all
one long and meaningless rolling of an
eternal stone up an eternal hill? Let the venerable lawgiver make answer to our
questionings; let him teach us faith; let him show us the true meaning and
dignity of our life on earth.
I. The eternal God
is thy refuge. It is an impressive figure; one
moreover
we well can
understand
in the mouth of Moses. The idea is borrowed
doubtless
from that
wild and awful mountain scenery of which the aged lawgiver had seen so much in
his experience of the Sinai peninsula. There
amid those lonely and tremendous
heights
with here and there some majestic rock standing isolated from the
rest
like a solitary watchtower and frontier fortress of the desert; amid such
scenes as this
as all travellers can tell
the mind of man is over-mastered
with a sense of human insignificance. What more natural than that Moses should
draw from these Titanic battlements and buttresses a picture
however
inadequate
of the omnipotence of the Creator; a parable of the Rock of Ages;
an emblem of the Divine Power Himself; a similitude of that Tremendous and
Ineffable Being
who is indeed the only abiding Refuge and Stronghold of the
soul of man; the Rock
the Fortress
the Castle
the Tower of Strength
the
House of Defence
to which it may always resort?
II. ¡§And underneath
are the everlasting arms.¡¨ The idea suggested here goes much further than the
bare notion of protection from storms and troubles without; it suggests also
that God offers to the soul of man the comfort of His love
the welcome to a
Father¡¦s heart; it reminds us
irresistibly
of the unwearying pity of the Good
Shepherd
rescuing the sheep that was lost
bearing it in the strong arms of
His everlasting love
receiving the little ones into His enfolding embrace
gathering the lambs with His arm
carrying them in His bosom. (H. B. Ottley
M. A.)
The only refuge
¡§The Eternal God is thy refuge¡¨--from what? The word itself
implies the existence of peril and distress; and God
if we seek Him
will be
our refuge from every form of peril and distress--the only sure refuge from
every one of the many ills of which our life would otherwise be the helpless
prey.
I. From the
illusions
the disappointments
the inexorable weariness of life. ¡§Vanity of
vanities
¡¨ saith the Preacher
¡§all is vanity.¡¨ ¡§Few and evil have been the
days of the years of my pilgrimage.¡¨ Each man soon finds for himself that these
are not common places
but sad realities. God has two ways of leading men to
Him through the narrow gate of disappointment--one by refusing our desires
to
show us that they are not according to righteousness; the other
by granting
them
and sending leanness withal into our souls. I hardly know which of the
two experiences causes the most bitter disappointment. And yet to be led by
these facts into gloom or pessimism is entirely to misunderstand their nature
and would be the most fatal of all errors. For why does God deal thus with us?
It is simply His way of convincing us that this earth is not our home
that
here we have no abiding city
that if we are in any way to fulfil the true law
of our life we must set our affections on things above
and not on things on
the earth.
II. From the
insoluble mysteries of life. We cry aloud for surer knowledge
and while to the
froward and presumptuous there comes back no answer except the echo of their
own voice
even for humbler and faithful questioners there is only the whisper
¡§What I do thou knowest not now
but thou shalt know hereafter.¡¨ There is
silence and there is darkness. Our vaunted science cannot break that silence
and cannot dissipate that gloom. Yes; but faith can speak to us even though
there be neither voice nor language
and can shed upon our path a light which
is not of earth. We see not
nevertheless we believe. The mystery ceases to be
so oppressive when humility accepts it and hope enlightens it
for then we soon
realise that
after all
we know all that it imports us to know. Though the
walls of an impenetrable darkness are around us
the lamp of conscience is in
our hand
and it shines on the clear though narrow path of duty.
III. From sin
from
our evil selves
from the guilt of the past
from the weakness of the present
from the dread of the future. For each true penitent the handwriting of
ordinances that was against us is torn asunder and nailed to Christ¡¦s Cross
and there will be granted to us
not only pardon for the past
but also
strength and grace to help in time of need. And when
at last
each of us is
laid on the bed of death
and the moment has come when we must enter into the
presence of God and see our souls
with every mask of hypocrisy
conscious or
unconscious
torn away--what can help us then? ¡§The Eternal God is our refuge
and underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨ (Dean Farrar.)
Present privilege and future favour
I. The present blessing.
1. God is His people¡¦s shelter.
2. God is our mansion
our dwelling
our abiding place.
3. God is our support
and our support just when we begin to sink.
II. The future.
1. Here is a Divine work. Before yon get to your difficulties
your
God will have removed them.
2. A Divine word. Whatever sins we have
there is only one thing to
be done with them
and that is
to ¡§destroy them.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Underneath
The words are placed at the end of Moses¡¦ song
and they are its
crown and climax. He had wound himself up to the highest pitch of poetic
excitement and spiritual fervour
and this passage is the result. He had spoken
grandly before concerning the separate tribes
and the words which fell from
his lips are unspeakably rich; but now he is about to close
and therefore he
pours forth his loftiest strains and utters full and deep meanings
the ripest
and choicest fruit of a lifetime of communion with God. As our Lord ascended to
heaven blessing His disciples
so did His servant Moses
before climbing to
Pisgah
pour out a torrent of benedictions full and deep
inspired by the
Divine Spirit.
I. Where?
¡§Underneath¡¨ is a region into which we cannot see. We associate the
subterranean with all that is dark and hidden
and because of this it is often
regarded as terrible. Life will soon end: what is death? What is the immediate
result of death? What shall we feel when we are traversing those tracks
unknown
and finding our way to the judgment seat of God? Not knowing
except
that little which has been revealed to us
we are all too apt to conjecture
terrors and invent horrors
and so to begin trembling concerning that which we
do not understand. What a comfort it is to be told by the voice of inspiration
that ¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms¡¨! ¡§Underneath¡¨--the word arouses
thought and inquiry. Everything ought to be sound
solid
and substantial
there. ¡§Underneath¡¨ must be firm
for if that fails we fail indeed. We have
been building
and our eyes have been gladdened with the rising walls
and with
the towering pinnacles; but what if something should be rotten ¡§underneath¡¨?
Great will be the fall thereof
if we have built as high as heaven
if the sand
lie underneath
yielding and shifting in the day of flood. Let us look more
closely into this most important matter. ¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨
1. That is
first
as the foundation of everything. If you go down
down
to discover the basement upon which all things rest you come ere long to
¡§the everlasting arms.¡¨ The things which are seen are stayed up by the
invisible God. He is the foundation of creation
the fountain and source of
being
the root and basement of existence. ¡§Underneath¡¨ everything ¡§are the
everlasting arms.¡¨ Most true is this with regard to His Church. He chose her
and redeemed her to Himself: the very idea of a church is from the Lord alone.
2. ¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms
¡¨ in the sense of being the
bottom and end and object of everything. Underneath the best events are the
arms of love to make them good
and underneath the worst that can happen are
the selfsame everlasting arms to moderate and overrule them. As the design
and
object of all
¡§underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨
3. I take the text
¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms
¡¨ to mean
next that the arms of God are there as the preservation of His people.
Holiness
strength of faith
and ultimate perfection are the things which we
must daily aim at
but it is a blessed consolation that when through infirmity
or carelessness we do not fully maintain our consecrated walk we are not
therefore cast away forever
for it is written
¡§Though he fall
he shall not
be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholdeth him with His hand.¡¨ ¡§Underneath
are the everlasting arms.¡¨
4. The everlasting arms are the rest of His people. If these
everlasting arms are always outstretched to preserve me lest I totter in
weakness and fall into destruction
then on those arms let me lean my whole
weight for time and for eternity. That is the practical lesson of this choice
word.
5. The text gives a promise of exaltation. The merciful God is great
at a deadlift.
II. What is it
which is beneath us? The everlasting arms.
1. The arms of everlasting purpose. We have to deal with one whose
gifts and calling are without repentance.
2. The arms of everlasting love. Love has hands and arms with which
it draws us
and these are at this moment underlying all the dealings of God
with us.
3. The arms of power. Strength is needed to uphold the people of God
lest they fall to their confusion
and that strength is always ready
nay
it
is always in exercise. He is able to keep thee from falling and to present thee
faultless
and He will do it.
4. The arms of immutability.
5. The arms of everlasting blessing.
III. When? The only
answer is now and for evermore.
1. Now; at this moment
the everlasting arms are underneath us. The
life of a Christian is described as walking by faith
and to my mind walking by
faith is the most extraordinary miracle ever beheld beneath the sun. Walking on
the waves
as Peter did
is a type of the life of every Christian. I have
sometimes likened it to ascending an invisible staircase far up into the
clouds. You cannot see a step before you
but you wind up towards the light.
When you look downward all is dark
and before you lies nothing visible but
cloud
while beneath you yawns a fathomless abyss. Yet we have climbed
some of
us
now for years up this perpetually ascending stair
never seeing an inch
before us. We have often paused almost in horror
and asked in wonder
¡§What
next
and what next?¡¨ Yet what we thought was cloud has proved to be solid
rock; darkness has been light before us
and slippery places have been safe.
2. So it shall be forever and forever
for the arms are everlasting
in their position as well as their power. Now thou hast come to die; thou hast
gathered up thy feet in the bed; the death sweat stands upon thy brow: thou art
sinking so far as this life is concerned among the sons of men
but underneath
thee shall then be the everlasting arms. Beautifully has Bunyan described
confidence in death
when he pictures the pilgrims passing the river. Christian
cried out to young Hopeful
¡§I sink in deep waters
the billows go over my
head
all his waves go over me.¡¨ Then said Hopeful
¡§Be of good cheer
my
brother
I feel the bottom
and it is good.¡¨ Thus shall it be with you. You
shall feel the bottom of death¡¦s chill river
but you shall say ¡§it is good¡¨;
for underneath are the everlasting arms. Then comes the last plunge
and we
shall be as when a man stands on the edge of a precipice and leaps over into
the clouds below him. You need not fear to take your last farewell and drop
into your Father¡¦s arms
for underneath you shall be the everlasting arms; and
oh
how sweetly shall you be caught up together with the Lord in the air
pressed to the bosom of the great Father
and borne upward into the heaven of
heavens.
IV. What then?
1. Let us look underneath. It is well to look underneath an outward
providence when it frowns darkly upon you
for it conceals the eternal purpose
of love.
2. Let us lean heavily. God loves His children to treat Him with
entire confidence. Your load is no burden to Him.
3. Let us rise confidently. Be not afraid of high doctrines
or high
enjoyments
or high attainments in holiness. Go as high as you like
for
underneath you are the everlasting arms. It would be dangerous to speculate
but it is safe to believe.
4. Let us dare unhesitatingly
and be very courageous for our God.
Are you called upon to lose everything for Christ? Go on and leap like Curtius
into the gulf for your Lord Jesus
for underneath you are the everlasting arms.
Does your Master call you to an enterprise which seems impossible?
Nevertheless
if God has called you to it
attempt it
for He rendereth to
every man according to his work. Remember what the negro said: ¡§If Massa Jesus
say to me
¡¥Sam
you jump through that brick wall
¡¦ I jump. It is Sam¡¦s
business to jump. It is Massa¡¦s work to make me go through the wall.¡¨ So it is
with you. It is yours to leap forward when the captain gives the watchword
and
in confidence to attempt what mere nature cannot achieve
for the supernatural
is still with us. Underneath us are the everlasting arms. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The everlasting arms
This short passage is found in the midst of a mass of gold
sentences containing the richest treasures of truth. All this spiritual wealth
is the heritage of the people of God. Notice
in verses 26-29
how near God is
said to be to His people. Above
before
around
and in the text beneath us.
I. The quarter that
is thus honourably secured. ¡§Underneath.¡¨
1. The point of mysterious assault. You may be tempted by Satan
but
it shall only be in a measure; God will not let him put forth all his
diabolical strength.
2. The place of our daily pilgrimage. Some of you go forth to your
daily labours
and you find the place of your service to be a real wilderness
full of trial and everything that is unpleasant to you. Yet look again
with
eyes touched with heaven¡¦s eye-salve
and instead of seeing the bitter poverty
and the grinding toil
and the daily trial
you will begin to see that God is
in it all
and ¡§underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨
3. The place of perilous descent. You cannot go so low but that God¡¦s
arms of love are lower still.
4. A matter of intense concern. Examine your foundations.
5. The secret of singular discoveries that will yet be made. Perhaps
some of us are in sore perplexity; we cannot understand the Lord¡¦s providential
dealings with us. He does not always tell us the reason for His actions; we
might not understand if He did
but we may rest assured that He is working out
purposes of infinite love. He ceases not to care for us even when things appear
to be at their very worst. I bear my willing witness to the faithfulness of
God; I am not so old as some
but I am old enough to have gone through fire
and through water
and I am here to testify that I have not been burned by the
one
nor drowned by the other. Cannot many of you say the same? In your sorest
trials
and in your hottest furnaces
has He not been specially present with
you
and bestowed great blessings upon you?
II. The manner in
which this quarter is secured.
1. God Himself is close to us
guaranteeing the eternal safety of all
who trust in Him. Even the false prophet
Mahomet
had a strong faith in
God
--in Allah
--and when he fled for the first time
and hid in a cave with
only one friend
his companion said to him
¡§Our pursuers are after us
and
there are only two of us.¡¨ ¡§Stop
¡¨ exclaimed Mahomet
¡§there are three
for
Allah is here!¡¨ It was the utterance of a brave and grand faith; would that his
whole career had been in harmony with it! Wherever there are two of God¡¦s
people
there is Another with them
for God is there. Mr. Wesley said
as he
died
¡§The best of all is
God is with us¡¨; and that is the best of all
is it
not?
2. The Lord¡¦s immutable purpose is being fulfilled. Where God¡¦s arms
are
He is at work
and He is at work accomplishing His purposes of grace.
3. His inexhaustible patience is waiting its time. ¡§Underneath are
the everlasting arms
¡¨ bearing up thy load
sustaining it with long endurance
while He keeps on working for thee--invisible
yet active on thy behalf.
III. There are times
when this text is very precious to believers.
1. When we are very sick and very feeble. It is delightful to feel
that our feebleness impinges on Omnipotence; that
just when there is nothing
left to us
then God comes in with His fulness
and bears us up.
2. When burdened with sore trouble
or oppressed with heavy labours.
The most wonderful joys that ever were felt by mortal hearts
have been felt by
men who
on the morrow
were to be burned at the stake; but whose very souls
have danced within them because of the unspeakable delight which the presence
of God has given to them. I think it was Socrates who said that ¡§Philosophers
could be merry without music.¡¨ I take the statement from his mouth
and alter
it
and say
Christians can be happy without happy circumstances; they can
sometimes
like nightingales
sing best in dark nights. Their joy is not mere
outward mirth. Sorrows fall upon them; yet
from the deep that lieth
underneath
wells up yet more exceeding joy.
3. When trembling and shaking. Your wing feathers will grow by your
very attempt to fly; the possibilities of grace are boundless; leave yourself
to them. Be not always weak and trembling; God help you to become as a David
and you who are as David to become as an angel of the Lord!
4. The hour will come when everything will begin to melt away beneath
your feet. Earthly comforts will fail you
friends will be unable to help you;
they can wipe the clammy sweat from your brow
and moisten your lips with a
drop of water
but they cannot go with you on the great voyage upon which you
are about to be launched. When heart and flesh fail
then may the Lord speak to
you the sweet words before us
¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms¡¨! It will
be a sinking to the flesh
but a rising to the spirit. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Is the everlasting arms
There are two sides to a religious life. One is the active side.
We are urged to faithfulness in all duty
to activity in all service
to
victoriousness in all struggle
to work out our own salvation with fear and
trembling. But there is another side. We are to trust
to have quietness and
confidence
to repose on God. The picture suggested is that of a little child
lying in the strong arms of a father who is able to withstand all storms and
dangers. God comes to us first in our infancy
in our mothers
who bear us in
their arms. Yet they are only dim revealings of God for a time. They leave us
after teaching us a little of God¡¦s tenderness
but God Himself remains when
they are gone
and His arms never unclasp. The thought of the embracing arms is
very suggestive. The figure is to be interpreted by what it would mean in human
friendship.
1. One meaning is protection. A father puts his arm about his child
when it is in danger. God protects His children. ¡§Thou hast with Thine arm
redeemed Thy people.¡¨ ¡§Be Thou their arm every morning.¡¨ ¡§His arm brought salvation.¡¨
2. Another meaning is affection. The father¡¦s arm drawn about a child
is a token of love. The child is held in the father¡¦s bosom
near his heart.
The shepherd carries the lambs in his bosom. John lay on Jesus¡¦ breast. The
mother holds the child in her bosom because she loves it. This picture of God
embracing His children in His arms tells of His love for them. His love is
tender
close
intimate. He holds them in the place of affection.
3. Another thought suggested by an arm is strength. A mother¡¦s arm
may be frail physically
but love makes it strong. When it is folded about a
feeble child
all the power of the universe cannot tear the child away. We know
what it is in human friendship to have one upon whose arm we can lean with
confidence. There are some people whose mere presence seems to give us a sense
of security. We believe in them. In their quiet peace there is a strength which
imparts itself to all who lean upon them. Every true human friend is more or
less a strength to us. Yet the surest
strongest human strength is but a
fragment of the Divine strength. This is Omnipotence. ¡§In the Lord Jehovah is
everlasting strength.¡¨
4. Another suggestion is endurance. The arms of God are
¡§everlasting.¡¨ Human arms grow weary even in love¡¦s embrace; they cannot long
press the child to the bosom. Soon they lie folded in death. So pathetic is
human life with its broken affections
its little moments of love
its embraces
that are tom away in one hour. But these are everlasting arms--these arms of
God. They shall never unclasp.
5. There is another important suggestion in the word ¡§underneath.¡¨
Not only do the arms of God embrace the child
but they are underneath--ever
underneath. That means that we can never sink
for these arms will ever be
beneath us
wherever we may be east. We cannot sink below them or out of their
clasp. And when death comes
and every earthly thing is gone from beneath us
and we sink away into what seems darkness and the shadow of death--out of all
human love
out of warmth and gladness and sweet life
into the gloom and
strange mystery of death
still it will be only into the everlasting arms. (J.
R. Miller
D. D.)
The everlasting arms-a thought for the new year
¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms
¡¨--that was the repeated
burden of the great men of Israel. They lived in the midst of national
calamities and distresses. They were defeated
puzzled
baffled. The way looked
dark. Then they fall back on the one great reestablishing thought: after all
it is God¡¦s world. It is not going to ruin. Changes which seemed tremendous are
not fatal or final. Israel dwells in safety
for God holds us in His arms. We
need some such broad
deep confidence as we enter a new year. We get involved
in small issues and engrossed in personal problems
and people sometimes seem
so malicious
and things seem to be going so wrong that it is as if we heard
the noise of some approaching Niagara. Then we fall back on the truth that
after all it is not our world. We can blight it or help it
but we do not
decide its issues. In the midst of such a time of social distress
Mr. Lowell
in one of his lectures
wrote: ¡§I take great comfort in God. I think He is
considerably amused sometimes
but on the whole loves us and would not let us
go at the matchbox if He did not know that the frame of the universe was
fireproof.¡¨ That is the modern statement of the underlying faith and
self-control and patience which come of confessing that in this world it is not
we alone who do it all. ¡§Why so hot
little man?¡¨ says Mr. Emerson. ¡§I take
great comfort in God
¡¨ says Mr. Lowell; and the Old Testament
with a much
tenderer note
repeats
¡§Underneath are the everlasting arms.¡¨ (Prof. F. G.
Peabody.)
Verse 29
Happy art thou
O Israel.
The peerless nation
The word ¡§Israel¡¨ never grows old. It is a name that
though it
figures on the page of history as a name of long
long ago
still lives
and
lives to represent a living people at this day. When Daniel interpreted
Nebuchadnezzar¡¦s dream
he said (Daniel 2:44). That kingdom is the kingdom
of Immanuel It is composed of those who love and trust and serve the once
despised Jesus. These are the true ¡§Israel.¡¨ The true Israel
like the Israel
of old
have been saved out of Egypt. Egypt represents darkness
bondage
misery
idolatry
the whip of the taskmaster
the toilsome mockery of vain
labour--bricks without straw. Again Israel today
like the Israel of old
is a
separate and distinctive people. Those ancient people were altogether different
from the various nations who dwelt around them
and through whose territories
they passed. They were subjected to singular laws
such as none other people
would acknowledge or obey. They had a religion
had customs unlike those of any
other race or tribe. Their fashion of dress
their mode of speech
their manner
of worship
their acknowledgment of a King unseen
a sceptre superhuman--all
these proclaimed them to be peculiar
separate
distinct
alone. All the world
besides were Gentiles; they alone were Jews. That is the unchanging
characteristic of the real
spiritual Israel of God today. This distinction
does not now refer to any special external sign. It is not a matter of dress
of language
or of manners. It is a difference in moral allegiance
a
difference in heart
a difference in motives
a difference in aims and ends; a
difference made evident by a godly and a consecrated life. ¡§Come ye out from
among them!¡¨ says the Book
prompt and peremptory. Where it is so
then
¡§happiest is Israel
saved of the Lord.¡¨ Our Israel
like Israel of old
is a
pilgrim people. From the Egypt of bondage the former marched
without
long-abiding resting place
to the land of promise that lay beyond. So the
Saviour¡¦s Israel goes forward
forward towards holiness
forward towards
heaven. ¡§This is not their rest
¡¨ and they know it; and so they will not set
their affections on things of the earth; will not clog and trammel themselves
with aught that will hinder their march
or risk their ultimate inheritance.
Each one grips his staff
and girds his loins and goes on his pilgrim way
¡§Westward ho
¡¨ and often sees the distant hills of Canaan tinged with the glow
of the setting sun. Happy thus
I tell you
is Israel
for he is the saved of
the Lord
and the crowning glory of that salvation shines brightly on before.
Again
Israel
like the Israel of old
is a tried and tempted people. They had
hardships and sufferings
they had perils and pains. The more they were loyal
to God and their leader
the more they were plagued by the hostilities of men.
It is so with Israel still. They can buy a little transient ease
by cringing
to custom
toying with expediency
shirking duty and coquetting with the world;
but it is dearly bought; and as with the former Israel
such alliances bring a
harvest of thorns. ¡§In the world ye shall have tribulation
but in Me shall ye
have peace
¡¨ and with that compensation
the very trials of the way become
triumphs
and the crosses are transformed to crowns. ¡§Behold
we count them
happy that endure.¡¨ ¡§Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations.¡¨ O
yes
Moses speaks the simple truth
Israel
Immanuel¡¦s Israel is happy I He is
chosen of God. ¡§I have loved thee
¡¨ He says
¡§with an everlasting love.¡¨ ¡§With
loving kindness have I chosen thee
my jewel
my portion
my delight!¡¨ He is
redeemed! Out of what bondage
what darkness
what slavish toil his God hath
brought him! Out of what deadly peril He hath snatched him! Out of what dread
and doubt and fear and sad distress He hath uplifted
him! ¡§His own right hand
and holy arm hath gotten Him the victory!¡¨ Besides
Israel is led by His hand
guarded by His arm
cheered by His presence. He appoints Israel¡¦s every place
and circumstance. He marks out all their way. He keeps their foot from perilous
byways
and like Greatheart with the pilgrims
goeth with drawn sword before
them all the way. (J. J. Wray.)
The happiness of God¡¦s chosen people
I. The guidance of
a Divine Leader. Two elements here meet in the special knowledge which is
supplied for the guidance of the Christian Israel; elements which in knowledge
are of supreme value. There is the element of importance and the element of
certainty
Christ has not come into the world to lead His Israel
without the
need and the capacity to make the most important of all questions known. The
pardon of sin and the way in which it is to be secured; the standard of duty
and the means of being raised up to it; the existence of a life beyond the
grave and the possibility of reaching it; these
and all that is included in
these
are the points on which the God of Israel through His Son has showed His
people light; and therefore the glad strain is everywhere heard
¡§Blessed are
the people that know the joyful sound!¡¨ But the certainty of this knowledge is
equal to its importance. It is often said
How can a professed revelation which
deals with matters of history
and history too
now hundreds of years old
bring
with it certainty
original and soul satisfying certainty? Now I am prepared to
take up this challenge
and to show that Christians have an original and soul
satisfying certainty in regard to Christ and His salvation
such as men have
not in regard to many of the operations of their daily life. How much of your
most needful knowledge in ordinary life is second hand! But in regard to
salvation
the highest and saving knowledge must be repeated by everyone in
direct contact with the living God
who carries the testimony of His Word home
to the soul by the voice of conscience and of the Holy Spirit. Surely
then
those are blessed to whom a fountain of certainty is thus opened
which flows
with ever-increasing stream.
II. The memory of a
great deliverance. The Christian
awakened to the ruin of his state through
sin
has stood as on the brink of a Red Sea of guilt
formed by the swelling of
his own trespasses
with the avenger behind
and no possible escape before. But
behold
the Cross of Christ
stretched out with a mightier power than the rod
of Moses
has opened a way through the depths
and he has passed safely over
into the land where the ransomed and pardoned dwell
and shall never come into
condemnation. He sees his grand enemy and all his host defeated and destroyed
while the prey is taken from the mighty
and the lawful captive delivered. It
is a rescue not for time only
but for eternity; and
with unutterable joy
mingled with trembling
he sings
not the song of Moses
but of the Lamb: ¡§O
Lord
I will praise Thee with all my heart
and I will glorify Thy name
forever
for great is Thy mercy towards me
and Thou hast delivered my soul
from the lowest hell!¡¨ The rescue is once for all; but as Israel by
disobedience entailed repeated enslavement
so do Christians
alas! by renewed
sin
incur once and again the painful sense of loss and danger; and as
deliverance again comes
with the assurance of pardon:¡¨ ¡§I have blotted out as
a thick cloud thy transgressions
and as a cloud thy sins; return unto Me
for I
have redeemed thee!¡¨ the voice of penitent Israel renews the grateful strain:
¡§Sing
O ye heavens
¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 44:23).
III. The prospect of
certain victory. Our warfare is on God¡¦s side with rebellion against God
with
the temples of idolatry
superstition
and false religion
with the dark
embattled hosts of pride and lust
of avarice and cruelty from one end of the
world to the other. ¡§Wherever the Canaanite is still in the land; wherever
there is that within us or without us
that exalts itself against God
there
must our deadly strife¡¨ be to bring it down; and every high thought must be
brought ¡§into captivity to the obedience of Christ.¡¨ The range of our spiritual
geography is very limited. There remains much land to be possessed. But this is
our great
our arduous
our worldwide mission
impossible to ourselves
but
possible with God
and made by Him at once our duty and our happiness.
IV. A glorious
inheritance. The conquests of Israel became their own possessions. The warrior
was turned into the colonist. The army of invasion was turned into a peaceful
army of occupation
dispersed amidst the scenes of their exploits over hill and
valley
sitting each under his vine and fig tree with none to make him afraid.
In the centre was the tabernacle of Jehovah; and the pillar which had led them
to battle
and sent out its guiding light on their path
now diffused its mild
and gracious beams over the abodes of rest and worship to the extremities of
the land. Here was an emblem of the Christian Church translated to heaven. But
how feeble and defective a figure after all are these ¡§sweet fields beyond the
swelling flood
¡¨ of the heavenly Canaan! With the outward victory of Israel
redemption was still incomplete and waited for a higher stage; God was still
distant
dwelling in one selected spot
and leaving the rest in comparative
shadow; Canaan itself
the joy of all lands
might be deteriorated
as it has
been
to sterility and barrenness; and the people
them divinely settled
might
for their sins be rooted up and scattered among the nations! What a contrast
have we here to that inheritance
yet future
on which the hope of the
Christian rests
and by which all the toils and conflicts of earth are to be
crowned! Redemption has now reached its limit. The great Captain has come
temple. In conclusion
let me urge
that the blessedness of Israel
though
guarded and defined
is not exclusive. The question ¡§Who is like unto thee?¡¨
does not indicate anything restricted and unattainable. Even in ancient days
the sons of the stranger might come bending to take hold on Israel¡¦s God
and
claim the blessings of His covenant; and how much more in Gospel times
when
every wall of partition is broken down
and all
who see Christ with Abraham¡¦s
faith
¡§are Abraham¡¦s seed
and heirs according to the promise.¡¨ Yes l however
far off you may have been
you may now be made nigh by the blood of Christ! (John
Cairns
D. D.)
Happiness: the privilege and duty of Christians
When you praise a man¡¦s position
it is the next thing to
flattering the man himself
for most men do not divide between themselves and
their condition
but read a commendation of their condition as a commendation
of themselves
though it be not so. Hence one has sometimes to be very chary of
calling men happy; and all the more so because we cannot generally be sure that
they are happy; external circumstances being but a poor means of judgment. Yet
Moses speaks thus openly to Israel without a word of qualification. We are sure
he did not speak ignorantly or rashly. Israel was happy. The people were
favoured
and it was right for them to be told so. I think that Moses eulogised
the nation to console them for his departure. ¡§I climb the mount to go away to
God
but happy art thou
O Israel: whether Moses be with thee or not
God is
with thee. I think also that he had in his mind¡¦s eye the fact that they were
now about to face new difficulties. ¡§Happy art thou
O Israel: thou art about
to throw thyself into the midst of ferocious tribes who will all conspire to
cut thee off; but thou art a people saved of the Lord; thine enemies shall be
found liars unto thee
and thou shalt tread upon their high places.¡¨ So
then
it is right to commend a man¡¦s condition
if you have a wise motive for it
and
can either console him under trouble or inspire him for future service.
I. The happy
condition of God¡¦s people. If you have been born again and saved
you are the
pick and choice of all God¡¦s creatures
and He has indulged you with a measure
of love and kindness such as He has shown to none else. Would you barter grace
for gain? Gold cannot lighten the heavy heart or cool the burning brow; far
oftener it cankers the soul
and lies like a weight upon the spirit. Turn you
if you will
to those famous for knowledge
men of skill
and wit
and
research; yet among these there are none to be found comparable in happiness to
Christians. Wealth
rank
learning fame pleasure
and all else that man holds
dear
we would gladly renounce for the joy of our Lord. Israel knew what it was
to be saved in many ways
and so do we. We have been blessed with all spiritual
blessings in Christ Jesus
fed with the bread of heaven
and made to drink of
water from the Rock of Ages; and as for our adversaries
they have not been
able to harm us
for the Lord has saved us unto this day.
II. The result of
realising our blessed estate. Upon this subject there ought to be no need to
dilate
for each heir of heaven should live in the hourly enjoyment of his
divine inheritance; but
alas
few are doing so. Surely spiritual blessings are
the only ones men decline to enjoy. You should enjoy your privileges and be
happy
because--
1. It tends to keep our allegiance to God unshaken. It is because you
lose the sweet flavour of the waters of the flowing fountain that you dabble in
those muddy
stagnant gatherings which linger in the broken cisterns.
2. It will create enthusiasm and a grateful love within your bosom.
3. It will give you confidence to expect other blessings. Gratitude
for the past inspires with courage for the future.
4. It will give you strength for bearing all your burdens and courage
for facing all your enemies.
5. For Christians to be happy is one of the surest ways to set them
seeking the salvation of others. (C. H. Spurgeon.)