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Judges Chapter
Five
Judges 5
Chapter Contents
Praise and glory ascribed to God. (1-5) The distress and
deliverance of Israel. (6-11) Some commended
others censured. (12-23) Sisera's
mother disappointed. (24-31)
Commentary on Judges 5:1-5.
(Read Judges 5:1-5.)
No time should be lost in returning thanks to the Lord
for his mercies; for our praises are most acceptable
pleasant
and profitable
when they flow from a full heart. By this
love and gratitude would be more
excited and more deeply fixed in the hearts of believers; the events would be
more known and longer remembered. Whatever Deborah
Barak
or the army had
done
the Lord must have all the praise. The will
the power
and the success
were all from Him.
Commentary on Judges 5:6-11.
(Read Judges 5:6-11.)
Deborah describes the distressed state of Israel under
the tyranny of Jabin
that their salvation might appear more gracious. She
shows what brought this misery upon them. It was their idolatry. They chose new
gods
with new names. But under all these images
Satan was worshipped. Deborah
was a mother to Israel
by diligently promoting the salvation of their souls.
She calls on those who shared the advantages of this great salvation
to offer
up thanks to God for it. Let such as are restored
not only to their liberty as
other Israelites
but to their rank
speak God's praises. This is the Lord's
doing. In these acts of his
justice was executed on his enemies. In times of
persecution
God's ordinances
the walls of salvation
whence the waters of
life are drawn
are resorted to at the hazard of the lives of those who attend
them. At all times Satan will endeavour to hinder the believer from drawing
near to the throne of grace. Notice God's kindness to his trembling people. It
is the glory of God to protect those who are most exposed
and to help the
weakest. Let us notice the benefit we have from the public peace
the
inhabitants of villages especially
and give God the praise.
Commentary on Judges 5:12-23
(Read Judges 5:12-23)
Deborah called on her own soul to be in earnest. He that
will set the hearts of other men on fire with the love of Christ
must himself
burn with love. Praising God is a work we should awake to
and awake ourselves
unto. She notices who fought against Israel
who fought for them
and who kept
away. Who fought against them. They were obstinate enemies to God's people
therefore the more dangerous. Who fought for them. The several tribes that
helped are here spoken of with honour; for though God is above all to be
glorified
those who are employed must have their due praise
to encourage
others. But the whole creation is at war with those to whom God is an enemy.
The river of Kishon fought against their enemies. At most times it was shallow
yet now
probably by the great rain that fell
it was so swelled
and the
stream so deep and strong
that those who attempted to pass
were drowned.
Deborah's own soul fought against them. When the soul is employed in holy
exercises
and heart-work is made of them
through the grace of God
the
strength of our spiritual enemies will be trodden down
and will fall before
us. She observes who kept away
and did not side with Israel
as might have
been expected. Thus many are kept from doing their duty by the fear of trouble
the love of ease
and undue affection to their worldly business and advantage.
Narrow
selfish spirits care not what becomes of God's church
so that they can
but get
keep
and save money. All seek their own
Philippians 2:21. A little will serve those for
a pretence to stay at home
who have no mind to engage in needful services
because there is difficulty and danger in them. But we cannot keep away from
the contest between the Lord and his enemies; and if we do not actively
endeavour to promote his cause in this wicked world
we shall fall under the
curse against the workers of iniquity. Though He needs no human help
yet he is
pleased to accept the services of those who improve their talents to advance
his cause. He requires every man to do so.
Commentary on Judges 5:24-31
(Read Judges 5:24-31)
Jael had a special blessing. Those whose lot is cast in
the tent
in a low and narrow sphere
if they serve God according to the powers
he has given them
shall not lose their reward. The mother of Sisera looked for
his return
not in the least fearing his success. Let us take heed of indulging
eager desires towards any temporal good
particularly toward that which
cherishes vain-glory
for that was what she here doted on. What a picture does
she present of an ungodly and sensual heart! How shameful and childish these
wishes of an aged mother and her attendants for her son! And thus does God
often bring ruin on his enemies when they are most puffed up. Deborah concludes
with a prayer to God for the destruction of all his foes
and for the comfort
of all his friends. Such shall be the honour
and joy of all who love God in
sincerity
they shall shine for ever as the sun in the firmament.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Judges》
Judges 5
Verse 1
[1] Then
sang Deborah and Barak the son of Abinoam on that day
saying
Deborah —
The composer of this song.
Verse 2
[2] Praise ye the LORD for the avenging of Israel
when the people willingly
offered themselves.
The Lord-Give him the praise who hath done
the work. The people — Chiefly Zebulun and Naphtali.
Offered themselves —
When neither Deborah nor Barak had any power to compel them.
Verse 3
[3]
Hear
O ye kings; give ear
O ye princes; I
even I
will sing unto the LORD; I
will sing praise to the LORD God of Israel.
The princes —
You especially that live near
and have evil designs against Israel
know this
for your caution
and terror too
if you presume to molest them.
God of Israel —
Who
as you see by this plain instance
is both able and resolved to defend
them from all their enemies.
Verse 4
[4]
LORD
when thou wentest out of Seir
when thou marchedst out of the field of
Edom
the earth trembled
and the heavens dropped
the clouds also dropped
water.
Edom —
Seir and Edom are the same place; and these two expressions note the same
thing
even God's marching in the head of his people
from Seir or Edom
towards the land of Canaan: while the Israelites were encompassing mount Seir
there were none of the following effects; but when once they had done that
and
got Edom on their backs
then they marched directly forward towards the land of
Canaan. The prophetess being to praise God for the present mercies
takes her
rise higher
and begins her song with the commemoration of the ancient
deliverances afforded by God to his people
the rather because of the great
resemblance this had with them
in the miraculous manner of them.
The earth trembled —
God prepared the way for his people
and struck a dread into their enemies
by
earth-quakes as well as by other terrible signs.
Dropped water —
That is
thou didst send storms and tempests
thunder and lightning
and other
tokens of thy displeasure upon thine enemies.
Verse 5
[5] The mountains melted from before the LORD
even that Sinai from before the
LORD God of Israel.
Melted —
Or
flowed
with floods of water powered out of the clouds upon them
and from
them flowing down in a mighty stream upon the lower grounds
and carrying down
part of the mountains with it.
Sinai —
She slides into the mention of a more ancient appearance of God for his people
in Sinai; it being usual in scripture repetitions of former actions
to put
divers together in a narrow compass. The sense is
No wonder that the mountains
of the Amorites and Canaanites melted and trembled
when thou didst lead thy
people toward them; for even Sinai itself could not bear thy presence
but
melted in like manner before thee.
Verse 6
[6] In
the days of Shamgar the son of Anath
in the days of Jael
the highways were
unoccupied
and the travellers walked through byways.
Jael —
Jael
though an illustrious woman
effected nothing for the deliverance of
God's people
'till God raised me up.
By-ways —
Because of the Philistines and Canaanites
who
besides the public burdens
which they laid upon them
waited for all opportunities to do them mischief
secretly; their soldiers watching for travellers in common roads
as is usual
with such in times of war; and
because of the robbers even of their own
people
who having cast off the fear of God
and there being no king in Israel
to punish them
broke forth into acts of injustice and violence
even against
their own brethren.
Verse 7
[7] The
inhabitants of the villages ceased
they ceased in Israel
until that I Deborah
arose
that I arose a mother in Israel.
Ceased —
The people forsook all their unfortified towns
not being able to protect them
from military insolence.
A mother —
That is
to be to them as a mother
to instruct
and rule
and protect them
which duties a mother owes to her children.
Verse 8
[8] They
chose new gods; then was war in the gates: was there a shield or spear seen
among forty thousand in Israel?
Chose —
They did not only submit to idolatry when they were forced to it by tyrants
but they freely chose it.
New gods —
New to them
and unknown to their fathers
and new in comparison of the true
and everlasting God of Israel
being but of yesterday.
The gates —
That is
in their walled cities
which have gates and bars; gates are often put
for cities; then their strong holds fell into the hands of their enemies.
Was there a shield —
There was not
the meaning is not
that all the Israelites had no arms
but
either they had but few arms among them
being many thousands of them disarmed
by the Canaanites and Philistines
or that they generally neglected the use of
arms
as being without all hope of recovering their liberty.
Verse 9
[9] My
heart is toward the governors of Israel
that offered themselves willingly
among the people. Bless ye the LORD.
My heart is toward — I
honour and love those
who being the chief of the people in wealth and dignity
did not withdraw themselves from the work
as such usually do; but exposed
themselves to the same hazards
and joined with their brethren in this noble
but dangerous attempt.
The Lord —
Who inclined their hearts to this undertaking
and gave them success in it. As
she gives instruments their due
so she is careful the sovereign cause lose not
his glory.
Verse 10
[10]
Speak
ye that ride on white asses
ye that sit in judgment
and walk by the
way.
Speak —
Celebrate the praise of our mighty God.
That ride on white asses — That is
magistrates and nobles
who used to do so
chap. 10:4; 12:14.
That walk —
That is
you that can safely travel in those high ways
which before you durst
neither ride nor walk in: so great and mean persons are jointly excited to praise
God.
Verse 11
[11] They
that are delivered from the noise of archers in the places of drawing water
there shall they rehearse the righteous acts of the LORD
even the righteous
acts toward the inhabitants of his villages in Israel: then shall the people of
the LORD go down to the gates.
From the noise —
From the triumphant noise and shout of archers
rejoicing when they meet with
their prey.
Of drawing water — At
those pits or springs of water
which were precious in those hot countries
to
which the people's necessities forced them to resort
and nigh unto which the
archers usually lurked
that they may shoot at them
and kill and spoil them.
There —
When they come to those places with freedom and safety
which before they could
not
they shall with thankfulness rehearse this righteous and gracious work of
God
in rescuing his people.
Of the villages —
Whom she mentions
because as their danger was greater
verse 7
so was their deliverance.
Gates — Of
their cities
which were the chief places to which both city and country
resorted for public business and matters of justice
from which they they had
been debarred by their oppressors; but now they had free access and passage
either in or out of the gates
as their occasions required; and they who had
been driven from their cities
now returned to them in peace and triumph; so
the citizens deliverance is celebrated here
as the country-mens is in the
foregoing words.
Verse 12
[12]
Awake
awake
Deborah: awake
awake
utter a song: arise
Barak
and lead thy
captivity captive
thou son of Abinoam.
Awake —
Stir up thyself and all that is within thee
to admire and praise the Lord.
This work needs and well deserves the utmost liveliness and vigour of soul.
Lead captivity captive — How could this be done
when there was none of them left? chap. 4:16. 1. None were left to make head against
them. 2. None is often put for few
and those few might be taken after the
battle
and carried captive
and led in triumph.
Verse 13
[13] Then
he made him that remaineth have dominion over the nobles among the people: the
LORD made me have dominion over the mighty.
He made him
… —
Thus God did not only preserve the poor and despised remnant of his people
from the fury of the oppressor
and from the destruction which Sisera designed
but also gave them the victory
and thereby the dominion over the nobles of
Canaan
who were combined against them.
Me — Tho' but a weak
woman.
Verse 14
[14] Out
of Ephraim was there a root of them against Amalek; after thee
Benjamin
among
thy people; out of Machir came down governors
and out of Zebulun they that
handle the pen of the writer.
Ephraim —
Now she relates the carriage of the several tribes in the expedition; and she
begins with Ephraim.
A root — Of
the Ephraimites. By root she seems to mean a branch
as that word is sometimes
used. By which also she may note the fewness of those that came out of Ephraim
yielding but one branch or an handful of men to this service.
Amalek —
The constant enemy of the Israelites
who were confederate with their last
oppressors the Moabites
chap. 3:13
and in all probability took their
advantage now against the Israelites in the southern or middle parts of Canaan
while their main force was drawn northward against Jabin and Sisera. Against
these therefore Ephraim sent forth a party
and so did Benjamin.
Benjamin —
Benjamin followed Ephraim's example.
The people —
Among the people of Benjamin
with whom these few Ephraimites united themselves
in this expedition.
Machir —
That is
out of the tribe of Manasseh
which are elsewhere called by the name
of Machir
namely
out of the half tribe which was within Jordan; for of the
other she speaks
verse 17.
Governors —
Either civil governors
princes and great persons
who were as ready to hazard
themselves
as the meanest: or military officers
valiant and expert
commanders
such as some of Machir's posterity are noted to have been.
Writer —
That is
even the Scribes
who gave themselves to study and writing
whereby
they were exempted from military service
did voluntarily enter into this
service.
Verse 15
[15] And
the princes of Issachar were with Deborah; even Issachar
and also Barak: he
was sent on foot into the valley. For the divisions of Reuben there were great
thoughts of heart.
With Deborah —
Ready to assist her.
Issachar —
Heb. and Issachar
that is
the tribe or people of Issachar
following the
counsel and example of their princes.
Barak —
That is
they were as hearty and valiant as Barak their general; and as he
marched on foot against their enemies horses and chariots
and that into the
valley
where the main use of horses and chariots lies; so did they with no
less courage and resolution.
Divisions —
Or
separations
not so much one from another
(for they seem to be all so well
agreed in abiding at home with their sheep) as all from their brethren
from
whom they were divided no less in their designs and affections
than in their
situation by the river Jordan: and they would not join their interests and
forces with them in this common cause.
Great thoughts —
Or
great searchings
great and sad thoughts
and debates
and perplexities of
mind among the Israelites
to see themselves deserted by so great and potent a
tribe as Reuben was.
Verse 16
[16] Why
abodest thou among the sheepfolds
to hear the bleatings of the flocks? For the
divisions of Reuben there were great searchings of heart.
Why abodest —
Why wast thou so unworthy and cowardly
that thou wouldest not engage thyself
in so just
so necessary
and so noble a cause
but didst prefer the care of
this sheep
and thy own ease and safety
before this generous undertaking?
Reuben thought neutrality their wisest course; being very rich in cattle
Numbers 32:1. They were loath to run the hazard
of so great a loss
by taking up arms against so potent an enemy as Jabin: and
the bleatings of their sheep were so loud in their ears
that they could not
hear the call of Deborah and Barak.
Verse 17
[17]
Gilead abode beyond Jordan: and why did Dan remain in ships? Asher continued on
the sea shore
and abode in his breaches.
Gilead —
Sometimes taken strictly for that part of the land beyond Jordan which fell to
the half-tribe of Manasseh
and sometimes both for that part of Manasseh's
and
for Gad's portion
as Joshua 13:24-25
29-31
and so it seems to be
understood here; and the land Gilead is here put for the people or inhabitants
of it
Gad and Manasseh.
Beyond Jordan — In
their own portions
and did not come over Jordan to the help of the Lord
and
of his people
as they ought to have done.
In ships —
Dan
whose coast was near the sea
was wholly intent upon his merchandise
and
therefore could not join in this land expedition.
Sea-shore —
Where their lot lay.
His breaches —
Either in the creeks of the sea
or
in their broken and craggy rocks and
caves.
Verse 18
[18]
Zebulun and Naphtali were a people that jeoparded their lives unto the death in
the high places of the field.
Jeoparded —
Heb. despised
comparatively; they chose rather to venture upon a generous and
honourable death
than to enjoy a shameful and servile life.
High-places —
That is
upon that large and eminent plain in the top of mount Tabor
where
they put themselves in battle array
and expected the enemy; though when they
saw they did not come up to them
they marched down to meet them.
Verse 19
[19] The
kings came and fought
then fought the kings of Canaan in Taanach by the waters
of Megiddo; they took no gain of money.
The kings —
There were divers petty kings in those parts who were subject to Jabin.
Megiddo —
Taanah and Megiddo were two eminent cities
not far from mount Tabor
nor from
the river Kishon.
No gain —
They fought without pay
whether from mere hatred of the Israelites
and a
desire to be revenged upon them: or from a full hope and confidence of paying
themselves abundantly out of Israel's spoils.
Verse 20
[20] They
fought from heaven; the stars in their courses fought against Sisera.
From heaven —
Or
they from heaven
or the heavenly host fought
by thunder
and lightning
and hail-stones
possibly mingled with fire.
The stars —
Raising these storms by their influences
which they do naturally.
Courses —
Or
from their paths
or stations. As soldiers fight in their ranks and places
assigned them
so did these.
Verse 21
[21] The
river of Kishon swept them away
that ancient river
the river Kishon. O my
soul
thou hast trodden down strength.
River of Kishon — Which
though not great in itself
was now much swelled by the foregoing storm and
rain
and therefore drowned those who being pursued by the hand of God
and by
the Israelites
were forced into it
and thought to pass over it
as they did
before.
Ancient river — So
called
either
first
in opposition to those rivers which are of a later date
being made by the hand and art of man. Or
secondly
because it was a river
anciently famous for remarkable exploits
for which it was celebrated by the
ancient poets or writers
though not here mentioned.
Trodden down —
Thou
O Deborah
though but a weak woman
hast by God's assistance subdued a
potent enemy. Such abrupt speeches are frequent in poetical scriptures.
Verse 22
[22] Then
were the horsehoofs broken by the means of the pransings
the pransings of
their mighty ones.
Horses hoofs —
Their horses
in which they put most confidence
had their hoofs
which are
their support and strength
broken
either by dreadful hail-stones
or rather
by their swift and violent running over the stony grounds
when they fled with
all possible speed from God and from Israel.
Pransings — Or
because of their fierce or swift courses.
Mighty ones — Of
their strong and valiant riders
who forced their horses to run away as fast as
they could.
Verse 23
[23]
Curse ye Meroz
said the angel of the LORD
curse ye bitterly the inhabitants
thereof; because they came not to the help of the LORD
to the help of the LORD
against the mighty.
Meroz — A
place then
no doubt
eminent and considerable
tho' now there be no
remembrance of it left
which possibly might be the effect of this bitter
curse; as God curseth Amalek in this manner
that he would utterly blot out
their remembrance. And this place above all others may be thus severely cursed;
because it was near the place of the fight
and therefore had the greatest
opportunity and obligation to assist their brethren.
The angel
… —
She signifies
that this curse proceeded not from her ill-will towards that
place
but from divine inspiration; and that if all the rest of the song should
be taken but for the breathings of a pious soul
but liable to mistake
yet
this branch of it was immediately directed to her by the Lord
the angel of the
covenant.
Of the Lord — Of
the Lord's people: for God takes what is done for
or against his people
as if
it was done to himself. The cause between God and the mighty
the
principalities and powers of the kingdom of darkness
will not admit of a
neutrality.
Verse 24
[24]
Blessed above women shall Jael the wife of Heber the Kenite be
blessed shall
she be above women in the tent.
Blessed —
Celebrated
and endowed with all sorts of blessings more than they.
In the tent — In
her tent or habitation
in her house and family
and all her affairs: for she
and hers dwelt in tents. The tent is here mentioned as an allusion to the place
where the fact was done.
Verse 25
[25] He
asked water
and she gave him milk; she brought forth butter in a lordly dish.
Butter —
Or
cream
that is
the choicest of her milk: so the same thing is repeated in
different words.
Lordly dish —
Which you are not to understand of such a costly dish as the luxury of after
ages brought in
which is not agreeable to the simplicity either of this
family
or of those ancient times; but of a comely and convenient dish
the
best which she had
and such as the better sort of persons then used. Probably
Jael at that time intended him no other than kindness
'till God by an
immediate impulse on her mind
directed her to do otherwise.
Verse 28
[28] The
mother of Sisera looked out at a window
and cried through the lattice
Why is
his chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of his chariots?
Looked out —
Expecting to see him returning: for she concluded
that he went forth not so
much to fight
as to take the spoil.
Verse 30
[30] Have
they not sped? have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two; to
Sisera a prey of divers colours
a prey of divers colours of needlework
of
divers colours of needlework on both sides
meet for the necks of them that
take the spoil?
Have they not
… —
That is
it is certain they have got the prey
only they tarry to distribute
it
according to every man's quality and merit.
Verse 31
[31] So
let all thine enemies perish
O LORD: but let them that love him be as the sun
when he goeth forth in his might. And the land had rest forty years.
So let —
That is
so suddenly
so surely
so effectual and irrecoverably. Deborah was a
prophetess and this prayer was a prediction
that in due time all God's enemies
shall perish.
In his might —
When he first riseth
and so goeth on in his course
which he doth with great
might
even as a strong man that runneth a race
and so as no creature can
stop
or hinder him; even so irresistible let thy people be. Such shall be the
honour and such the joy of all that love God in sincerity
and they shall shine
for ever as the sun in the kingdom of their father.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Judges》
05 Chapter 5
Verses 1-11
Then sang Deborah and Barak.
Leaders who lead
This is far better given in the Revised Version: “For that the
leaders took the lead in Israel
for that the people offered themselves
willingly
bless ye the Lord.” The poetess gives two reasons why her enterprise
was successful.
I. The first
reason of success was that the leaders took the lead. They were not engaged
elsewhere; they did not linger; they were not too excessively modest. They were
in the forefront of the enterprise in resource and enthusiasm and execution.
The leaders in those days in Israel were the heads of the tribes. In ancient
society there was always an arrangement which provided natural leaders to whom
the people could look. In spite of what some people may say to the contrary
there is a great deal of loyalty still in the people to what might be called
their natural leaders
and I may say this
that our aristocracy have immense
advantages on their side if only they have the heart to give themselves to
public work. It is the man with the biggest and clearest and keenest brain that
is the leader in modern times. The thinker
the orator
the author
the
journalist
the inventor
the scientist--these are the men to whom we now look
to give the watchword and lead us in public work. I think it is vain to deny
that money is great power in modern times
and the making of it is a rough test
of ability
although it is a very humble illustration of my text. In politics
and in reforms in the Church and the municipality we should get quit of those
awful wrongs and abuses which disfigure our life
and we could raise our people
to higher and nobler life if only the leaders would take the lead.
Unfortunately they do not do it. Very often the best causes have to do without
those that should be the leaders. They do not get the people with ten talents
and have to struggle along as best they can with the people who have one
talent
and who use it for the glory of God and the good of men. This may be
due to the fact that those who should be leaders are occupied with their own
affairs
and have no heart for the public interest. Those who have most of this
world’s means and influence
are often living a life of frivolity and selfishness. Those who are engaged in
the struggle of life are often thinking of nothing but enriching them selves.
Those who have the finest culture often keep aloof from the profane multitude.
Or the fact that the leaders do not take the lead may be due to timidity and
over-caution. Any change that alters the status quo must give annoyance
and cause loss to somebody. When once a reform is matter of history
and is put down in books
of history
all men praise it
but while it is being accomplished few men
praise and many oppose. I remember a few years ago there was hardly a newspaper
in the country in which there was not a leader in praise of Wilberforce and the
noble men who co-operated with him in that great reform. But in his own day
Wilberforee and his coadjutors were not praised at all. They were even exposed
to personal violence. Every evil name was flung at them. Drunkenness is
inflicting on our country evils so vast and potent that any considerable
diminution of it
say the reduction of it by half
would be a reform infinitely
greater than those reforms by which our statesmen are at present winning their
laurels. But if a statesman of the first mark
a man of the calibre of Mr.
Balfour or Mr. Chamberlain or Mr. Morley
were to take the lead on this
subject
he would simply be shrieked at by all who are engaged in that traffic.
II. The other
reason given by this ancient heroine for her success was that the people
willingly followed. Leaders cannot win a cause; it is won by the followers. Now
sometimes the people do not follow even when the leaders take the lead.
1. Instead of that
they wish themselves to take the lead. Many a
cause has been wrecked by the jealousies and suspicions of those who have
thought they were fit for positions greater than were assigned to them. We
often hear of the need of first-class leaders
but I sometimes think what the
world needs most is great numbers of men who are willing to take the second
place
or the third place
or the fourth place
and to work as heartily there
as if they were in the first place. That requires even more heroism. The man
who is in the first place attracts the eyes of all
and may receive his reward
in fame
but the man who works well in an obscure place only receives the
reward of the cause itself.
2. Another reason why the people do not always follow is that they are
criticising instead of following. Now I should not like to conclude without
referring to the last words of my text
“Bless ye the Lord.” Deborah attributed
the success to the leaders taking the lead and the people following willingly
but she went beyond these means
and traced all to the Lord. (J. Stalker
D.
D.)
Leaders
Now in this text we are called upon to celebrate our leaders
“for
that the leaders took the lead in Israel.” Deborah
with a fine instinct
perceived the singular value of great and heroic leaders. In some directions
to-day there is a disposition to obscure greatness
to deny
I was going to
say
the supreme value of splendid talents. Oh
let us recognise the rights of
the people. We must never forget in this world the wonderful importance of the
man as against the multitude. The Roman soldier was a master in his art and
profession
but what would all the Roman soldiers have been but a rabble
without Caesar? I dare say those sailors four centuries ago were brave and
skilful Italians and Spaniards
but they would have done very little with that
barque on the Atlantic without Columbus. You may have fine masons and painters
but if St. Peter’s is to be built in Rome or St. Paul’s in London you must have
Michael Angelo in one place and Sir Christopher Wren in the other. Oh
no
let
us acknowledge the multitude
and all the rights that pertain to them
but that
need not for a moment obscure our mind as to the appreciation of men of supreme
genius. “For the leaders that took the lead bless ye the Lord.” The great
architects
the great navigators
the great captains; they are all great gifts
of God to humanity. Outside a great leader is the architect of civilisation
and in the Church a great leader is the organiser of victory. (W. L.
Watkinson.)
Deborah: a mother in Israel
Deborah was an extraordinary woman. In strength of understanding
in strength of will
in soundness of judgment
in splendid courage
in warmth
of heart
and
withal
in what we would nowadays call literary genius
Deborah
was an absolute miracle of many sides. There was neither king
nor captain
nor
judge
nor prophet
nor psalmist
nor a man to be called a man in all Israel in
those evil days till Deborah arose with all those things in herself. To begin
with
Deborah’s name came to be known outside of her own house by her strong
sense and her open
fair
masculine mind. Her neighbours were constantly
falling into disputes and quarrels
and the way Deborah dealt with all those
disputes and quarrels
soon made her name famous. Her house in Mount Ephraim was a refuge to all the
oppressed. Her palm tree was a strong tower to which all the afflicted people
continually came up. At the same time
with all that
Deborah’s name would
never have come down to us had it not been for the terrible oppression that lay
on all Israel from their enemies round about. But while all this went on
Deborah was only walking all the closer with her God at Bethel. Deborah does
not put it into her song--she cannot put everything into one song--but how she
would go out to meditate and to pray under Jacob’s ladder after her day’s work
was done! How she would seek wisdom and direction at that House of God. What
was it that made Deborah arise at last and come forth from her own house to be
the mother in all Israel she was and is? Was it the death of Lapidoth
her
husband
that made her a widow indeed
and set her free to fellow out her
mighty hopes for the house of Israel? Had her sons been carried into captivity
of the King of Canaan; and had it been better for her daughters that they had
never been born? It was some of these things
it was all these things taken
together that at last roused up the slumbering lioness in Deborah’s bosom
and
made her swear beside the sacred stone in Bethel that Israel should be set
free. But
after all
Deborah was only a woman. And to discomfit Sisera and his
nine hundred chariots of iron demanded a man at the head of ten thousand men;
while in all the tribe of Ephraim there was nothing but women. And Deborah
sent
says her history
and called Barak the son of Abiuoam out of
Kadesh-Naphtali
and said unto him
Hath not the Lord God of Israel commanded
saying
go
and draw toward Mount Tabor
and I will draw out Sisera the captain
of Jabin’s army
and I will deliver him into thine hand. Arise
Barak
and lead
captivity captive
thou son of Abinoam. In what is perhaps the most beautiful
volume of sermons that has been published in England since Dr. Newman came down
from the English pulpit
though a very different volume in many ways
the late
Master of Balliol says that the first of Christian duties in our day is the
removal of the evils of our great towns. Now one of the two worst evils of all
our great towns will never be removed till a mother like Deborah arises in our
Israel. There is one evil in all our great towns that our Barak-like men may
and must remove. And my heart is toward the governors of Israel that offered
themselves willingly among the people. But the other great evil is one that the
women
and more especially the mothers
of our great towns must take into their
own hands. It will need Deborah and Barak too. It will need all Deborah’s
strength of understanding
and all her strength of will
and all her soundness
of judgment
and all her warmth of heart
and all her splendour of courage
and
all her wholeness of devotion
as well as all her genius
to speak it home and
to write it home to our slow and selfish hearts. But you are not a queen
or a
princess
or a peeress
and because you cannot do everything you sit still and
do nothing. No. But have you not a fire-side
and a lady friend or two
and a
spare hour on a Saturday or a Sabbath night? Have you no imagination? Have you
no heart? Have you no apprehension? Have you no son or nephew? (A. Whyte
D.
D.)
National mercies and national sins
I. The grounds of
thankfulness which Deborah thought she and the whole nation had.
1. She insists
first
upon the cheerful willingness of the people
their ready alacrity in obeying the call of the Lord their God
when by her
voice He summoned them to arms. Oh! that there were such a heart in each one of
us! Spiritual readiness is the attitude and the grace of angels. God desires
and will have
from us all
hearty service. Whether as regards our substance or
our time
our talents or our affections
the Word declares
“God loveth a
cheerful giver.”
2. Deborah notices gratefully the interference of God Himself in
behalf of the nation. What could Israel
in their enslaved and enfeebled state
have done against Jabin’s nine hundred chariots? Of what avail would have been
the willingness of the people or the valour of the chiefs if the Lord had
provided no succours? But the Lord had provided them. And like mercies have
been vouchsafed to us with regard to our personal and individual conflicts with
sin and Satan. Satan is especially called the “prince of the power of the air
“; what would the rude implements of earthly warfare avail against such an
antagonist? No; God puts the spiritual against the spiritual; He brings the
arms of an invisible providence to bear upon the spiritual fortunes of a child
of God
and to keep him from falling. Angels are ministering to us whilst we
sleep; the elements are combining for our good
even when we know not the very
existence of evil; and never till we are beyond the reach of evil and sin shall
we know how the Lord “fought” for our souls “from heaven
” or how “the stars in
their courses fought against Sisera.”
3. Deborah finds matter of thankfulness in the peaceful and happy
state of the country contrasted with its condition under the oppressions of
Jabin; and to this part of Deborah’s song I entreat your special attention. Her
picture of two countries
or at least of the same country under two different
governments
will be found to have such an astonishing parallel that I hope
every heart amongst us will be lifted up to God with silent thankfulness.
Observe
then
first
Deborah speaks of a country where all trade was stopped:
“In the days of Shamgar the son of Anath
in the days of Jael
the highways
were unoccupied.” The great public thoroughfares were all closed; the caravans
could no longer convey their merchandise from city to city; the merchants found
their occupation gone. Then
secondly
she says that in this country travelling
had become unsafe: “The travellers walked through byways.” The complete
lawlessness of the people and the bold effrontery of the robber made those who
had occasion to travel seek the
most lonely and unfrequented byways. Every step they took was
taken with fear; they saw death or danger at every turn. Then
thirdly
she
says that there was no tilling of the ground: “The inhabitants of the villages
ceased.” The constant incursions of lawless hordes had driven the villagers
from their peaceful employments; the cessation of commerce throughout the land
had closed the market for their grain; whilst for the sake of personal safety
the poor villagers were obliged to leave their humble abodes and take refuge in
walled and fenced cities. Fourthly
she says that there was no administration of
justice. The “people of the Lord” could not “go down to the gates”--“the gates”
signifying
as you are aware
in the Jewish language
the courts of justice. In
the eighth verse she gives the reason why all judicial proceedings were
suspended: “Then was war in the gates.” The courts of justice resounded with
the noise of arms; the gravity of the judge was merged in the zeal of the
soldier; the magistrates had lost all dignity and the people all respect for
law. Lastly
she says that no dependence could be placed on the military
strength of the country: “Was there a shield or spear seen among forty thousand
in Israel?” All energy was now gone; all public spirit had decayed; anarchy and
misrule held sovereign away
and order and good government were banished from
the land. I need not stay to tell you where this awful picture of national
misery and misrule has but a too faithful counterpart. I pass on to another
picture
which
God be praised
hath its counterpart also. “What is the state
of our country now?” asks Deborah. “Why
our nobles ride secure on white asses;
our judges
without fear
sit in judgment at the gates
undisturbed by the
noise of archers in the places of drawing water; and the people
as they walk
by the way
rehearse the righteous acts of the Lord. Now all is peaceful among
us; our ships ride upon the sea; our caravans throng the highways; our villages
revive amid the busy industry of pruning-hook and ploughshare; and now all that
remains for us is to testify
by a song of thankfulness
our gratitude to God.”
Neither should there be lost upon us Deborah’s invitation to different classes
of society to join in this song of gratitude. First
you will perceive
she
calls upon the noble and the wealthy: “’Speak
ye that ride on white asses.’
Who gave you your wealth? Who has preserved to you your wealth? To whom alone
is the praise due that your substance has not been wrested from you by bands of
marauders; that you have not been driven from your country by the insecurity of
property; that
under the protecting shadow of equal laws
you can now lie down
with safety
none making you afraid?” Then
secondly
she speaks to magistrates
and judges. “’Speak
ye that sit in judgment.’ Who has preserved your office in
all its reverence? Who has continued your lives in all their sacredness? Who
has kept your authority in all the respect in which the people hold it?” Then
thirdly
she addresses herself to those who are engaged in the ordinary
occupations of life. “‘Speak
ye that walk by the way’; following your peaceful
employments without fear of the public robber
without dread of lawless
assemblages
reposing under your own vine and your own fig-tree; rehearse the
wonderful works of God. Yes
‘high and low
rich and poor
’ rehearse the
righteous acts of the Lord
even His righteous acts towards the inhabitants of
the villages of Israel.” And have we no part to bear in Deborah’s song? Oh!
shall there be a British heart cold or British tongue dumb while we think of
our signal
eminent--I might almost say solitarily enjoyed blessings? “Awake
awake
” England; “awake
awake
utter a song.” Let us
while we bewail her sins
and confess her pride
mourn over her luxurious living when thousands are
starving for the bread of life--let us also bless God for His mercies to this
our land. Let us bless Him that blood hath not yet stained our streets; that
our ears tingle not with the sound of artillery; that the file and the hammer
are yet heard in our shops; and that our churches are still open
where we may
praise and worship God.
II. Some causes of
sorrow and stern rebuke. The Lord’s cause had triumphed
as triumph it ever
will
whether we “come to the help of the Lord” or not. Still the names of
those shall be told up who come to the Lord’s help
in order that it may be
seen who are to be shutout from the triumph
who are to have no part in the
joy
who are to have no mention in God’s book of remembrance
save to their
dishonour and their shame.
1. First
some are noticed reprehensibly by Deborah because of the
contentions and strifes among them: “For the divisions of Reuben there were
great searchings of heart.” Oh! take ye good heed; for if at this moment you
are cherishing an unkind feeling towards any human being
you are cherishing
that which is an eternal foe to godliness; you are cherishing that which may
drive the Spirit of God from your souls; you are cherishing that which in your
dying hour will cause you bitter searchings of heart.
2. But another sin which Deborah notices
as excluding the parties who had committed
it from all part in Israel’s triumph
is the sin of slothfulness--the love of
ease
an unwillingness to endure the hardships and encounter the difficulties
of the Christian life: “Why abodest thou among the sheepfolds
to hear the
bleatings of the flocks?” Are there not many who never make a sacrifice
never
impose on themselves any form of restraint
who are conscious of nothing worthy
of the name of effort
whose life is one of gilded
cushioned
luxurious ease
without one struggle or one act of self-denial?
3. But another occasion of unfaithfulness to the Lord’s cause is an
absorbing interest in worldly engagements: “Dan remained in ships
” and “Asher
continued on the sea-shore.” Oh! be not deceived by that refined artifice of
Satan which tempts you to persist in the pursuit of that which he persuades you
is lawful. Heaven has fixed its own law of preferences
has determined which of
two interests shall be sacrificed if an occasion arise in which we must
sacrifice one. What amount of “corn and wine and oil” will compensate us for
the loss of the “light of God’s countenance”? What emergency or extremity in
our domestic affairs could ever supersede that imperative law
“Seek first the
kingdom of God and His righteousness
and all other things shall be added unto
you”?
4. There is one more excluding sin mentioned by Deborah
the sin of
religious indifference--the sin of a Gallio-like
uncaring
unthinking
spirit--the sin of a Loadicean lukewarmness about the things of God. “Curse ye
Meroz
said the angel of the Lord
curse ye bitterly the inhabitants thereof.”
Why? For any positive sin which they had committed? For any great scandal which
they had brought on the Lord’s name and cause? No
but “because they came not
to the help of the Lord
to the help of the Lord against the mighty.” It seems
as if God were speaking from the thick cloud to each one amongst us
and
asking
not “What have you left undone?” but “What have you done?”--done for
God
done for eternity
done for “the help of the Lord against the mighty”? And
think not to escape with the plea that opportunity is wanting for thus serving
God. I tell you that every relation in life affords scope for this pious
activity. As masters
you may counsel; as parents
you may teach; as friends
you may speak “a word in season”; as rich
you may give of your substance to
promote good works; as poor
you may promote benevolent objects by daily and
earnest prayer. But if in none of these ways you are conscious of helping the
Lord
if neither by your counsel
nor by your encouragement
nor by your
example
nor by your prayers
you come to the Lord’s help
then are you
included among “the inhabitants of Meroz
” and the curse of Meroz abides upon
your souls. (D. Moore
M. A.)
I
even I--
The big “I”
Archdeacon Hare tells us that of all peoples
so far as he knows
the English people are the only people who write the first personal pronoun in
one capital letter
“I.” He further tells us that this fact lets in a good deal
of light upon the English character
much that is favourable to the Englishman
and perhaps a good deal that is unfavourable. Now I will dwell--
I. Upon two of the
favourable things he mentions.
1. He says that the letter “I
” that stands up by itself
expresses
the freedom and independency of the Englishman. It is a good thing to be free
and independent. But I don’t want you children to be independent in the wrong
sense. You are very dependent little creatures
and have all been very
dependent ever since you were born--so dependent upon your mother’s care and
your father’s love. I want you to feel that you are very dependent indeed
and
above all that you are very dependent upon God. But yet there is a sense in
which we ought to be independent and free. The boy who does not insist upon
exercising his own freedom and independency is very soon despised
and he very
soon goes to the bad.
2. The letter “I” also denotes the Englishman’s firmness. It is
wonderful how firm we can be if we have planted our foot in the right place. No
one is so firm as the man who has planted his foot upon the Rock of Ages
or
the Truth as it
is in Jesus. When a man has learnt what the Saviour expects of him
and says
“God helping me
I will do it
” he puts down his foot upon a foundation which
can never give way.
II. I will mention
now two of the unfavourable things referred to by Archdeacon Hare.
1. He tells us that the letter “I” shows a certain amount of
arrogance. He says that the proudest word in English
to judge by its way of
carrying itself
is this “I.” There it is
lifting its head up above everybody
else
and looking down with contempt upon its little neighbours. Now theft is
not a good thing. That is utterly unlike the Lord Jesus. He was meek and gentle
in spirit: He never looked down upon any one
but welcomed poor broken-down
sinners to His presence
and ever spoke a kind word to the world’s outcasts.
2. The capital “I” represents the Englishman’s reserve and isolation.
It loves to stand alone
and does not believe in mixing up with others. Let us
no longer hold ourselves aloof
but be kind and gentle to all. Whenever you
meet another
do not gather yourself up in your little coat
and conclude that
you must be better than he; but be ready to draw near and shake hands with
another little boy; and
if he is poorer than you
there is a special chance
for you to do him a little kindness. Remember that it is the will of Jesus that
we should be very kind to each other
and in His name
yea
and for His sake
bless all. (D. Davies.)
They chose new gods; then
was war in the gates.
The soldier’s honour
Here is--
1. The apostasy of the people: “They chose new gods.” This I call the
alarm; for ungodliness calls to war. If we fight against God
we provoke God to
fight against us. Then--
2. A laying on of punishment. God meets their abomination with
desolation; the hand of justice against the hand of unrighteousness: “Then was
war in the gates.” This I call the battle. Then--
3. A destitution of remedy: “Was there a shield or spear seen among
forty thousand in Israel?” Sin had not only brought war
but taken away
defence--sent them unarmed to fight. And this I call the forlorn hope.
I. The alarm:
“They chose new gods.” Their idolatry may be aggravated by three circumstances
or degrees. They are all declining and downwards: there is evil
worse
and
worst of all.
1. “They chose.” Here is a frank choice
no compelling. They
voluntarily took to themselves
and betook themselves to
other gods. There is
evil
the first degree.
2. “Gods.” What! a people trained up in the knowledge of one God:
“Jehovah
I am; and there is none besides Me.” The bees have but one king
flocks and herds but one leader
the sky but one sun
the world but one God.
3. “New gods.” Will any nation change their gods? No; the Ekronites
will keep their god
though it be Beelzebub; the Ammonites will keep their god
though it be Melchom; the Syrians will stick to their god
though it be Rimmon;
the Philistines will not part with their god
though it be Dagon. And shall
Israel change Jehovah
the living God? This is worst of all.
II. We come now to
the battle: “Then was war in the gates.” If Israel give God an alarm of
wickedness
God will give them a battle of desolation. Idolatry is an extreme
impiety; therefore against it the gate of heaven is barred (1 Corinthians 6:9). Let us view the
punishment as it is described: “Then was war in the gates.”
1. The nature of it: “War.” War is that miserable desolation that
finds a land before it like Eden
and leaves it behind it like Sodom and Gomorrah
a desolate
and forsaken wilderness. Let it be sowed with the seed of man and beast
as a
field with wheat
war will eat it up. In itself it is a miserable punishment.
2. The time: “Then.” When was this war? In the time of idolatry.
“They chose new gods; then.” When we fight against God
we incense Him to fight
against us. Yet if timely repentance step in
we escape His blows
though He
hath not escaped ours. But if Israel’s sins strike up alarm
Israel’s God will
give battle. If they choose new gods
the true God will punish. “Then was war.”
It is a fearful thing when God fights.
3. The place: “In the gates.” This is an extreme progress of war
to
come so near as the gates. If it had been in the land of their enemies
a preparation of war
a great way off
the noise of war--yea
if it had come but to the coasts and
invaded the borders
as the Philistines did often forage the skirts of Israel
yet it had been somewhat tolerable
for then they had but seen it only. “Thou hast
shewed Thy people grievous things” (Psalms 60:3)--shewed
but not inflicted;
shaken the rod
but not scourged us. But here war is come to their thresholds
yea
to the heart of the land
to defy them in the very gates. And now they
more than hear or see it; they feel it. You now see the punishment. Happy are
we that cannot judge the terrors of war but by report
that never saw our towns
and cities burning
our houses rifled
our temples spoiled. We have been
strangers to this misery in passion
let us not be so in compassion. Let us
think we have seen these calamities with our neighbours’ eyes
and felt them
through their sides.
III. We now come to
the forlorn hope: “Was there a shield or spear seen among forty thousand in
Israel?” Was there? There was not.This question is a plain negative. Here is
the want of help; great misery
but no remedy; not a spear to offend
no
not a
shield to defend. War
and war in the gates
and yet neither offensive nor
defensive weapon! It takes away all
both present possession and future
possibility; help and hope. You see now all the parts of the affliction: the
alarm in sin
the battle in war
and the forlorn hope in the want of remedy.
Two useful observations may hence be deduced--
1. That war at some times is just and necessary; indeed
just when it
is necessary: as here. For shall it come to the gates
and shall we not meet
it? Yea
shall we not meet it before it come near the gates? There is
then
a
season when war is good and lawful. Now there are two cautions observable in
the justness of wars--
(a) The peace of the people; for we must aim by war to make way for
peace. We must not desire truce to this end
that we may gather force for an
unjust war; but we desire a just war that we may settle a true peace.
(b) The health and safety of our country: some must be endangered that
all may not be destroyed.
(c) The glory of the kingdom; and that is
the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Wars for God are called God’s battles. The destruction of their cities that
revolt from God to idols
and the whole spoil
is for the Lord; it is the
Lord’s battle and the Lord’s spoil (Deuteronomy 13:16).
2. The other inference that may hence be deduced is this
that
munition and arms should at all times be in readiness. Wise men in fair weather
repair their houses against winter storms; the ant labours in harvest that she
may feast at Christmas. Be long in preparing for war
that thou mayest overcome
with more speed. A long preparation makes a short and quick victory. I have
held you long in the battle; it is now high time to sound a retreat. But as I
have spoken much of Israel’s affliction
so give me leave to speak one word of
the prophetess’s affection
and of this only by way of exhortation: “My heart
is set on the governors of Israel
that offered themselves willingly among the
people. Bless ye the Lord.” Here is the subject in which this affection resides
and the object on which this affection reflects. The subject wherein it abides
is the heart--a great zeal of love. Not only the affection of the heart
but
the heart of affection: “My heart is set.” The object on which it reflects is
double
man and God; the excellent creature
and the most excellent Creator;
the men of God
and the God of men. Upon men: “My heart is towards the
governors of Israel
that offered themselves willingly among the people.” Upon
God: “Bless ye the Lord.” Among men two sorts are objected to this love:
superiors in the first place
inferiors in the latter. To the commanders
primarily
but not only; for if they offered themselves willingly among the
people
as we read it
then certainly the people also willingly offered
themselves
as the other translations read it
“Those that were willing amongst
the people.”
1. To the governors of our Israel; that they offer for themselves
willingly to these military designs
not on compulsion. His brows deserve no
wreathed coronet that is enforced. Come with a willing mind. In every good work
there must be cheerfulness in the affection and carefulness in the action. God
loves a cheerful giver; so thou gainest no small thing by it
but even the love
of God. “Whatsoever good thing thou doest
” saith Augustine
“do it cheerfully
and willingly
and thou doest it well.” You that have the places of government
offer willingly your hands
your purses
yourselves
to this noble exercise.
Your good example shall hearten others.
2. Now for you that are the materials of all this
let me say to you
without flattery
Go forth with courage in the fear of God
and the Lord be
with you. Preserve unity among yourselves
lest as in a town on fire
whilst
all good hands are helping to quench it
thieves are most busy to steal
booties; so whilst you contend
murmur
or repine one at the honour of another
that subtle thief
Satan
through the crack of your divisions
step in
and
steal away your peace. Offer yourselves willingly; and being offered
step not
back. Remember that it is base for a soldier to fly. And remember always the
burden of this song
which everything that hath breath must sing
“Bless ye the
Lord.” (T. Adams.)
Delivered from the noise
of archers in the places of drawing water.--
Songs of deliverance
I. Our text tells
us of wells cleared from the foe
and speaks of those who “are delivered from
the noise of archers in the places of drawing water.”
1. We thank God that we who are children of the Most High have wells
to go to. The world is a wilderness
say what we will of it. “This is not our
rest; it is polluted.” Our great inexhaustible well is the Lord Jesus Christ.
He is
indeed
the great “deep that lieth under
” the “deep that coucheth
beneath
” the secret spring and source from which the crystal streams of life
flow
through the wells of instrumentality and ordinance. “All my fresh springs
are in Thee.” Whenever we come to the Lord Jesus Christ
we drink and are
refreshed. No thirst can abide where He is. Arising out of this greatest
fountain
we have wells from which we draw the waters of comfort. First there
is this book
this golden book
this book of God
the Word of God
with its
thousands of promises
suitable to every case
applicable to all seasons. So it
is also with the well of ordinances--baptism and the Lord’s Supper. I must not
forget the mercy-seat. What a well that is to the Christian when he can draw
nigh unto God with true heart! It is a glorious thing to have such a well as
that in the family
where
in prayer with the children
you can bring all the
necessities of the household before God. Let us never give up that well. But
as for private prayer
this world were drear indeed if we could not pour out
our sorrows into our Father’s ear. Over and above this
every form of fellowship
with Jesus
wrought in us by the Spirit
is a well of salvation. He is our dear
companion
our ever present help in time of trouble.
2. Thus have I mentioned some of the wells. Now
concerning them all
it may be said
that they can never be stopped up by our foes. If outward
ordinances be stopped
yet the great deep that lieth under will find a vent
somewhere.
3. Moreover
as they cannot be stopped
so neither can they be taken
away from us. They are ours by covenant engagements; they are guaranteed to us by
the solemn league of the Eternal Three; and none of these covenant blessings
shall be wrested from the heirs of life
who are heirs of all things in Christ
Jesus.
4. Though these fountains cannot be stopped up or taken away
yet we
can be molested in coming near to them. It seems that archers and wells
frequently go together. It was the blessing of Joseph.--“Joseph is a fruitful
bough
even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the wall.” But
what next? “The archers have sorely grieved him
and shot at him
and hated
him.” And so in the text: here are wells
but there is the noise of archers
which greatly disturbs those who go to draw water. I think you know what the
noise of archers has been to you when you have tried to draw water. Years ago
with some of us
our sins were the archers that shot at us when we would fain
come to Christ and drink of His salvation. When we bowed the knee in prayer a
fiery arrow would dart into our hearts--“How dare you pray? God heareth not
sinners!” When we read the Word of God another barbed shaft would be shot
against us”--What hast thou to do with God’s Word? There can be no promise
there for such as thou art.” I thank God
when our faith is in exercise
and
our hope is dear
we can see our interest in Christ; we come to Him just as we
came at first
and cast ourselves wholly upon him. Then we no longer fear the
archers
but are rid of every fear. I should not wonder if another band of
archers has sometimes attacked you when you have been at the wells
namely
your cares. Dear mother
the thought of the children at home has frequently
disturbed your devotions in the assembly of the saints. Good friend
engaged in
business
you do not always find it easy to put a hedge between Saturday and
Sunday. The cares of the week will stray into the sacred enclosure of the day
of rest
and thus the cruel archers worry you. It is well to be able to cast
all our cares on Him who careth for us
and thus
by an act of faith in our
heavenly Father
to be delivered from the noise of these archers.
II. The songs by
the well. As when the people came to the wells of old they were wont to talk
with one another if all was peaceful
so when we come up to the ordinances of
God’s house
and enjoy fellowship with Jesus
we should not spend our time in
idle chat
but we should rehearse the works of the Lord. Around all the wells
whichever they may be
of which we drink
let our conversation be concerning
Christ and His dying love; concerning the Holy Spirit and His conquering power;
concerning the providence of God and its goodness and its faithfulness; and
then
as we wend our way to our different homes
let us go with music in our
hearts
and music on our lips
to take music to our household
each man and
woman magnifying the name of the Lord. Did you observe carefully what it was
they sang of?--“The acts of the Lord.” But there is an adjective appended
“The
righteous acts of the Lord.” Righteousness is that attribute which the
carnal man fears
but he who sees the righteousness of God satisfied by the
atonement of Christ is charmed even by the severe aspect of God dressed as a
judge. Then
if you observe
it was “the righteous acts of the Lord toward His
people.” Yes
the very marrow of the gospel lies in special
discriminating
distinguishing grace. Note with care that the works which are to be rehearsed
are done towards the inhabitants of the villages of Israel. Does not this
suggest that we ought frequently to magnify the Lord’s choice favour and tender
indulgence towards the least and feeblest of His family?
III. The text says
“Then shall the people of the Lord go down to the gates
” by which several
things may be intended.
1. When the people of God are altogether delivered from their sins
and their cares
and their troubles
by the great redemption of the Lord Jesus
and the power of His Spirit
then they enjoy great liberty. The liberty of the
man of the world is liberty to commit evil without restraint; the liberty of a
child of God is to walk in holiness without hindrance. When the believer’s ways
are enlarged
he delights to run in the statutes of the Lord; obedience is
freedom to the Lord’s servant. It is a most glorious liberty which a man
possesses when he is no longer in bondage to men
to smart under their threats
or to fatten in their smiles. Glorious was that ancient father who threw back
the threatenings of his enemies
and laughed them to scorn.
2. To go down to the gates
however
means something else
for
citizens went down to the gates to exercise authority and judgment. He that is
in Christ discerneth spirits
and separateth between the excellent and the
reprobate. “The spiritual judgeth all things
yet he himself is judged of no
man.” Instead of being judged and following others
they who love God become
the leaders in right
and are as God’s mouth rebuking iniquity.
3. To go down to the gates signified also to go forth to war. When a
Christian man is saved
he is not content with his own safety
he longs to see
others blessed. He can now go out of the gates to attack the foe who once held
him in bondage
and therefore he girds on his weapon. When will the Church of
God be inflamed by the sacred desire of carrying the war for Christ into the
enemy’s territory? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The noise of archer’s in the places of drawing water
I. These words
make intelligible what has been called the savage act of jael in killing
sisera
and the fierce words with which deborah praises the act. We see the
place of drawing water--the well belonging to some little town or village.
Thither in the still summer evening come the women and children. The men are
absent at the wars. The women come to draw water for household and flock. As
they wait their turn
the elder women talk together of their common cares and
interests. The fair young maidens group together apart for the merry jest or
confidential intercourse. Amongst them
moving in and out
are the laughing
bright-eyed children. What a pretty picture it makes--pretty
peaceful
glad!
And then suddenly the whole is changed. The cruel
hated Canaanite is at hand.
“The noise of archers” is heard. The mothers fly to guard the little ones
some
of whom are laid low by the arrows. In the confusion the band sweeps down upon
the group of fair maidens. The brightest and youngest and most beautiful are
taken to be the slaves of the tyrant conquerors. Oh
who wonders now at Jael’s
cruelty and Deborah’s vindictive triumph? It was not because the fair gardens
were laid waste
the homes burned
the cattle and household treasures carried
off
that these women so hated the oppressors; but because in the division of
the spoil there would always fall “to every man a damsel or two
” each the
bright
sweet flower of some home
to be degraded
spoiled
trampled down
and
brought to shame. We from our lofty standpoint
in the very midst of the full
light of Christ’s gospel--we who have learned to be patient
long-suffering
forgiving
tender-hearted--may be able to condemn them. They lived in a darker
age; they had not our advantages. And yet I sometimes think that if we fully
realised what that twenty years of mighty oppression must have been
how the
hearts of the people will have burned with indignation at the cruelties and
abominations they had to witness
we should be forced to acknowledge that Jael
and Deborah would have been either more or less than women if they had acted
otherwise. Deborah’s song is a thanksgiving to God for deliverance. The one
point she wishes to be ever remembered is that the victory was of God alone.
II. There is ever
going on around us the great battle of good against evil
in which each of us
is called to take our part. He who does not hate the evil with earnest hatred
who rests in selfish indolence like Asher
who lets his searchings of heart and
all his religious purpose end in talk like Reuben
who is indifferent and
lukewarm like Meroz
he must needs fall under the scathing curse of those who
come not to the help of the Lord against the mighty. We are all bound to range
ourselves on the side of the good; to fight bravely for it; if need be
to
suffer or to die for it. Again
as Sisera fell at last
so will all God’s
enemies fall for ever one day.
III. “The noise of
archers in the places of drawing water”--that is to say
the attack of the
enemy upon those who only seek for peace
as they go about the innocent
employment of daily life. How this makes us think of one great mystery of
temptation. How depressing and terrifying to many a poor soul! “I began the day
with prayer not to be led into temptation; I resolved to be so careful. I was
careful
and then all at once in my work it came. I was not thinking of it
till I found myself wounded with the poisoned arrows of temper
lust
selfishness
sloth
avarice
or pride.” More mysterious still
even amid our
religious duties
the enemy can make his deadly onslaught--the distraction
the
vain thought
the cruel doubt
even the blasphemous suggestion
come whistling
like the deadly arrow
striking us back and wounding us
and marking us
as we
think
for death. Well
all this is at least no difficulty to us who believe.
The arrows do not come by chance. An enemy has done this. Whilst the war lasts
he is to be hated
avoided with watchful care. But there is deliverance. Even
now the victory has been won
and protection assured
and none need fear the
arrows who are willing to dwell under the defence of the Most High. And there
shall be a hereafter
when the noise
of archers shall be no longer heard; when we shall have our noble work assigned
to us
such work as God has for His saints to do; when we shall go about the
work in perfect security; when we shall rehearse one to another the righteous
acts of the Lord who has wrought mightily for the deliverance of His people. (R.
H. Parr
M. A.)
Verses 12-22
Awake
awake
Deborah: awake
awake
utter a song: arise
Barak
and lead thy captivity captive.
Magnificat
I. First
then
a
stirring up
of all our powers to praise God
according to the words of the holy
woman in the text
“Awake
awake”--repeated yet again--“Awake
awake.”
1. What is there that we need to awaken if we would praise God? I
reply
we ought to arouse all the bodily powers. Our flesh is sluggish; we have
been busy with the world
our limbs have grown fatigued
but there is power in
Divine joy to arouse even the body itself
to make the heavy eyelids light
to
reanimate the drowsy eye
and quicken the weary brain. We should call upon our
bodies to awake
especially our tongue
“the glory of our frame.” Let it put
itself in tune like David’s harp of old. Surely we should call on all our
mental powers to awake. Wake up
my memory
and find matter for the song. Tell
what God has done for me in days gone by. Awake
my judgment
and give measure
to the music. Come forth
my understanding
and weigh His loving-kindness in
scales
and His goodness in the balances. See if thou canst count the small
dust of His mercies. See if thou canst understand the riches unsearchable which
He hath given to thee in that unspeakable gift of Christ Jesus my Lord. Awake
my imagination
and dance to the holy melody. Gather pictures from all worlds.
Bid sun and moon stay in their courses
and join in thy new song. But
especially let us cry to all the graces of our spirit--“Awake.” Wake up
my
love
for thou must strike the keynote and lead the strain. Wake up
my hope
and join hands with thy sister--love; and sing of blessings yet to come. Sing
of my dying hour
when He shall be with me on my couch. Sing of the rising morning
when my body shall leap from its tomb into her Saviour’s arms! Sing of the
expected advent
for which thou lookest with delight! And oh
my soul
sing of
that heaven which He has gone before to prepare for thee. And thou
my faith
awake also. Sing of the promise sure and certain. Then let us wake up the
energy of all those powers--the energy of the body
the energy of the mind
the
energy of the spirit. You know what it is to do thing coldly
weakly. As well
might we not praise at all. You know also what it is to praise God
passionately--to throw energy into all the song
and so to exult in His name.
So do ye
each one of you
this day.
2. But you say unto me: “Why and wherefore should we this day awake
and sing unto our God?” There be many reasons; and if your hearts be right
one
may well satisfy. Come
ye children of God
and bless His dear name; for doth
not all nature around you sing? If you were silent
you would be an exception
to the universe. But
believer
shall not thy God be praised? I ask thee. Shall
not thy God be praised? When men behold a hero
they fall at his feet and
worship him. Garibaldi emancipates a nation
and lo
they bow before him and do
him homage. And Thou
Jesus
the Redeemer of the multitudes of Thine elect
shalt Thou have no song? Shalt Thou have no triumphal entry into our hearts?
Shall Thy name have no glory? Thou sayest
believer
“Why should I praise Him?”
Let me ask thee a question too. Is it not heaven’s employment to praise Him?
And what can make earth more like heaven than to bring down from heaven the
employment of glory
and to be occupied with it here! Besides
Christian
dost
thou not know that it is a good thing for thee to praise thy God? Mourning
weakens thee
doubts destroy thy strength; thy groping among the ashes makes
thee of the earth
earthy. Arise
for praise is pleasant and profitable to
thee. “The joy of the Lord is our strength.” But I ask you one other question
believer. Thou sayest
“Why should I awake this morning to sing unto my God?” I
reply to thee
“Hast thou not a cause? Hath He not done great things for thee
and art thou not glad thereof?”
3. “But
” saith one
“when shall I do this? When shall I praise my
God?” I answer
“Praise ye the Lord
all His people
at all times
and give
thanks at every remembrance of Him.”
4. Yet once more
you reply to me
“But how can I praise my God?” I
will be teacher of music to thee
and may the Comforter be with me. Wilt thou
think this morning how great are thy mercies. Thou art not blind
nor deaf
nor
dumb; thou art not a lunatic; thou art not decrepit; thou art not vexed with
piercing pains; thou art not going down to the grave; thou art not in torments
not in hell. And is not this a theme for praise? Oh
must not you praise him
ye chief of sinners
whose natures have been changed
whose hearts have been
renewed!
II. “Arise
Barak
and lead thy captivity captive
thou son of Abinoam.” You understand the exact
picture here. Barak had routed Sisera
Jabin’s captain
and all his hosts. She
now exhorts Barak to celebrate his triumph. This is a picture which is often
used in Scripture. Christ is said to have led captivity captive when He
ascended on high. He led principalities and powers captive at His
chariot-wheels. But here is a picture for us--not concerning Christ
but
concerning ourselves. We are exhorted to-day to lead captivity captive. Come
up
come up
ye grim hosts of sins once my terror and dismay. Come up
ye sins
come up
for ye are prisoners now; ye are bound in fetters of iron
nay
more
than this
ye are utterly slain
consumed
destroyed; you have been covered
with Jesus’ blood; ye have been blotted out by His mercy. Arise
celebrate your
triumph
oh ye people of God! Arise
my trials; ye have been very great and
very numerous; ye came against me as a great host
and ye were tall and strong
like the sons of Anak. Oh
my soul
thou hast trodden down strength; by the
help of our God have we leaped over a wall; by His power have we broken through
the troops of our troubles
our difficulties
and our fears! Arise
and let us
lead captive all our temptations. You have been foully tempted to the vilest
sins. Satan has shot a thousand darts at you
and hurled his javelin multitudes
of times; bring out the darts and snap them before his eyes
for he has never
been able to reach your heart. Come
break the bow and cut the spear in sunder;
burn the chariot in the fire. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
God’s cause carried on by human agency
I. The cause of
true religion is eminently and emphatically the cause of God.
1. It was His cause; for--
2. We have in view
under the blessing of God
the evangelisation of
all mankind; and this is unquestionably the cause of God.
II. In carrying on
this great work God has been pleased to demand and to bless human efforts. In
the case before us the power of God was supernaturally exerted. The stars in
their courses
the swelling of the river
the thunder and the tempest
were all
effects of supernatural interposition. But
even in that age of miracles
these
supernatural means were not intended to supersede those means which were
ordinary. Deborah and Barak exerted themselves to the utmost; and
with many
others
were required to come up to the help of the Lord
to the help of the
God of miracles. And similar is the case as to the conversion of the world to
Christianity. God “gave some
apostles; and some
evangelists; and some
pastors and teachers; for the work of the ministry
for the edifying of the
body of Christ.” It was by the instrumentality of holy
enlightened
zealous
missionaries that our own country first received the glad tidings of salvation;
it was through their agency that our rude ancestors were induced to change Thor
and Woden
and all their bloody rites and awful abominations
for the simple
and holy truths of the gospel. And the work we have to do must be done by the
same agency. Ambassadors must be sent to the heathen
and they must declare
God’s message
trusting in His power and help. This is the established order of
God
that they who love His cause should help it by their various
instrumentality.
III. The calls of
God to engage in this cause experience a very various reception from those to
whom they are addressed.
1. Some are hearty in the cause of God.
2. Others cherish a spirit of indolence and carelessness.
IV. God takes
especial notice of the conduct of His people in reference to the demand made
upon them for this cause; and He makes an important distinction in His conduct
towards those who come forward
or refuse to come forward
in His cause. Those
who refused to come forward are recorded as infamous
and are covered with
everlasting disgrace; those who came forward are mentioned with distinguished
honour
and were no doubt blessed ever afterwards. For God will be no man’s
debtor; He may make us wait for payment
but
such is His condescension and
grace
He will be in no man’s debt. Come up to the help of the Lord
and you
shall have the approbation of Almighty God. Come up to the help of the Lord
and you will gain the esteem and good wishes of your fellow-Christians and
ministers
who
when they see their humble efforts are not unfruitful
but that
you are becoming complete in every good word and work
will gladly spend and be
spent in your service. Come up to the help of the Lord against His enemies
and
you shall have the increasing influence of God to render beneficial all the
means you enjoy. Come up to the help of the Lord
and your happiness shall
increase
your consolations shall abound--you shall be blessed in the Lord.
Come up to the help of the Lord against the mighty
and you shall have the
satisfaction of knowing that your labour is not in vain. For the Word of the
Lord shall not return unto Him void. You shall reap in due season
if you faint
not. (J. Bunting
M. A.)
By the watercourses of
Reuben there were great resolves of heart.
The apology of the non-fighters
On account of their unfaithfulness the children of Israel
were oppressed by Jabin for twenty years; then the oppressed people cried unto
God
and Deborah and Barak were called to lead them to freedom. In this great
song Deborah brings out the characteristics of the several tribes at the
national crisis. She sets forth how some of them promptly entered upon the
struggle for liberty; how others were miserably indifferent and unpatriotic;
and in the text a vivid stroke or two shows that whilst Reuben was deeply
interested and agitated by what was transpiring
he refrained from taking any
part in the actual fight. “By the watercourses of Reuben there were great
searchings of heart
” and that was all. “Great were the debates
” “great were
the resolves”; but they never proceeded to action.
I. The text is a
rebuke to the theorist. The Reubenites were the thinkers of their age. They
were not indifferent to public questions; they recognised the problems of their
day
and mentally wrestled with them; but they drew the line at action. All
action seemed so unsatisfactory that they could not persuade themselves to
reduce their splendid patriotic theories to experiment. So to-day there is a
tribe of idealists. They are full of thought
rich in ideas
masterly in
systems; but they find it impossible to pass from reflection to effort. Thought
is large
action is insignificant; thought is swift
action is tardy; thought
is triumphant
action is full of interruption
shortcoming
and failure; and so
the theorist abides in his arm-chair watching pictures in the fire. To follow
the facts and movements of the world as a supreme game of chess delights the
philosophic mind
but to interest ourselves in any commonplace practical
endeavour to aid the needy is voted a belittling vulgarism. Amiel says
“Reverie is the Sunday of the mind”; and the whole life of some men is a
Sunday
they know no working-days. They deplore personal defects
yet they do
not bravely take themselves to task and struggle into a better life; they
ponder social evils
but nothing comes of the intellectual agitation; they have
their ideas and aspirations concerning the heathen world
yet they take no part
in missionary enterprise. Their whole life is spent in observation
reasoning
and soliloquy. This will not do. Deborah scorns the idle theorists
and their
position is always ignoble. We account men meritorious as they master the
difficult conditions of human life; society has no prizes for mere dreamers. He
who gives a cup of cold water to a thirsty soul is infinitely better than the
idealist whose sparkling fountains and flowing rivers are mere mirages of the
brain. We must have thought
theory
programme; we must have the dreamer
the
philosopher
the debater
only the pondering of the mind must be succeeded by
the labour of the hands. When Cavour died
Elizabeth B. Browning wrote: “That
noble soul who meditated and made Italy has gone to the diviner country.”
“Meditated and made.” It is all there. We must meditate and make. Not that we
can by any means realise all our dream
but we must strive thereunto. Some hit
of reality must testify to the genuineness of our great thought and purpose.
II. The text is a
rebuke to the critical. The Reubenites were the critics of the age. “Great were
the debates.” They read the minutes of the last meeting; they submitted a
resolution as to what might be done; then they ably discussed the whole
situation; the ornaments of debate shone out; an amendment was proposed that
nothing be done
the vote was taken
the amendment was declared to be carried by a large majority
and the assembly
retired to lunch. And one can easily imagine the course of the debate. Some
would object to a movement led by a woman; others would question the
qualifications of Barak; many would think that it was not the psychological
moment; and those with a flavour of military genius would doubt the plan of
campaign. The critical tribe is with us still. We have a host of people who are
interested in the great struggle of light and darkness
but whose interest ends
with information
discussion
and opinion. We have such critics outside the
Church. They are prepared
at five minutes’ notice
to discuss any religious
moral
social
or political question; yet they make no practical effort
whatever to grapple with the evils they dissect. Especially do these critics
love to scourge the Church. How well they can describe the evil! How clearly
they can see what ought to be done! How rough they are upon the blunders of
philanthropists and evangelists! But all ends there; they spend no time
or
gold
or blood in any form of practical amelioration. How false is the position
of the critic
and how ignoble the whole spirit of barren criticism! How
contemptible the carpet knight lecturing the scarred heroes of the battlefield!
How ridiculous the musical amateur exposing the faults of Handel and Mozart!
How despicable the scribbler of a day making merry over the shortcoming of
literary masterpieces! “Why abodest thou among the sheepfolds?” is the derisive
question of Deborah. The Reubenites thought themselves superior persons
but
the singer suggests a cutting contrary. A love of ease partly explained their
conduct. They liked the shepherd’s lute better than the war-trumpet with its
toils and sufferings. The love of gain also explained the absence of the
Reubenites from battle. And they were cowards. There was not a spear in Israel
and Jabin had thousands of chariots of iron. Deborah pours scorn on the windy
orators. The day is coming
too
when God will pour scorn upon the
phrase-makers. He will laugh at the laughers
criticise the critics
scorn the
scorners. Let us act. “God’s words are things
” says Luther; and unless we
strive to make our words things they become falsities
vanities
mockeries. One
of the great heroes of to-day is the hero of the paper-knife
the critic who
flourishes his wooden weapon as if it were some famous blade of victory. The
poorest plough that will scratch the ground
the most ramshackle basket that
will carry a little seed
the rustiest hook that will serve for a sickle
is
better than the paper-knife. A drop of blood is more than a vat of ink or a
world of talk. The poorest methods of service
the homeliest instruments of
practical endeavour
count for far more in the sight of God than a magazine of
polished and attenuated shafts which neither smite nor bite. Let us not waste
life in opinion
discussion
or criticism
but deny ourselves in daily efforts
seeking some real good. Our Master did not redeem us by words
but by tears and
blood; and the best thing for us is with fewest words to take up our cross and
follow Him.
III. The text is a
rebuke to the sentimentalist. There were “great searchings of heart.” The
Reubenites were men of fine feeling
of intense emotion; only the emotion
evaporated when the resolution was duly entered upon the minutes. A large
circle of these sentimentalists survive. They pride themselves on the depth and
tenderness of their feeling
yet their feeling never compels action and
sacrifice. They feel for the poor
the ignorant
the suffering
the fallen
and
most for themselves. In prayers
sermons
hymns
and sacraments the fountains
of the deep are broken up without leaving any fertilising stream. It is really
a fearful thing that sentiment should be so constantly wasted that the very
word itself comes at last to be regarded as expressing something unreal.
Sympathy is the richest element in the human heart
and it is an awful loss to
society that so much of it should be vainly lavished on unsubstantial scenes
and images
on airy nothings. We talk of the loss of force in Niagara
but
there is a far more terrible loss of precious energy in the unavailing stream
of feeling which passes away in imaginative moods. If we could harness the
Niagara of human sympathy
and set it to work in educating the ignorant
in
helping the helpless
in nursing the sick
in reclaiming the fallen
what
gracious revolutions would be worked in a day! Feeling is worth nothing if it
bear no tangible fruit. Our Master wept
but He also bled. (W. L. Watkinson.)
Why abodest thou among the
sheepfolds?--
On shirking duty
There is a touch of scorn
as well as of reproach
in the question
of the prophetess.
And the question is one which
in the spirit of it
may be addressed to
thousands to-day. There is a great battle now going on in the world--the battle
between truth and error
right and wrong
love and misery. The conflict
involves self-denial; and we have simply no right to “abide in the sheepfolds.”
I. We have no
right to sacrifice duty to comfort. We are all tempted thus to prefer our own ease to the doing
of our duty. There are multitudes
indeed
who will sacrifice comfort for the
sake of some selfish end: their love of money
or of fame
or of pleasure
will
lead them to take upon themselves a large amount of toil and trouble. But when
it is a question of simple duty there are many who will shirk such duties
rather than sacrifice their own personal ease. They would like to do good in
the world; but it is too much trouble! Many a man shirks the duties of
citizenship on the plea that he has no ambition to distinguish himself in
public life. He finds his fireside very comfortable; the bosom of his family is
his “sheepfold.” Others shirk their duty to the Church and the cause of Christ
simply through their love of selfish ease; they will not take the trouble to
“do good as they have opportunity.”
II. We have no
right to sacrifice duty to peace. It is right that you should shrink from the
din of controversy and strife
and that you should prefer to live in concord
with your neighbours; but it is wrong that
on this account
you should
withhold your testimony and your influence from the cause of truth and justice.
III. We have no
right to sacrifice duty to gain. When Christ calls you into the conflict
against the world’s evil
when He calls you to protest by your own example
against all dishonesty and falsehood
then you must be prepared to sacrifice
some of the profits which fall to the lot of less scrupulous men
and you must
be content
if necessary
with a smaller sheepfold. (T. C. Finlayson.)
The divisions of Reuben.--
The attitude of Reuben
Could such a thing as actual neutrality have been possible under
the circumstances
the men of Reuben would have represented such an attitude.
But under the circumstances it was impossible. No member of the favoured race
could be actually neutral when his brethren were struggling for liberty and
life. Not to assist was to oppose. To look on coldly was to help the foe. They
saw their brethren gathering on the opposite bank. They heard the sound of the
trumpet and the noise of war. Would they not arise and join them? Could they be
indifferent when the very existence of their nation was at stake? But against
this higher impulse had to be set considerations of worldly profit and loss.
“Why abodest thou among the sheepfolds
to hear the bleatings of the flocks?”
It was this fatal sound that decided them. It was with them as it so often is
with us--the nearer the temptation
the more powerful it becomes. Had they
marshalled themselves for war
and left their homes
the bleatings of the
sheepfold would never have reached their ears
and the higher impulse would
have prevailed; but as they lingered vacillating by the sheepfolds
the nearer
attractions of home and prosperity proved too strong. The great opportunity
passed away
leaving an indelible stain on the history of the tribe. “Unstable
as water
thou shalt not excel.” Were they happy? A double-minded man is never
happy. Unstable in all his ways
he can neither enjoy the world nor God. They
might escape danger
but they could not escape the “great searchings of heart.”
Their conscience smote them
even while their worldly prosperity continued.
They lost the power to enjoy what they had sacrificed their character to
retain. Ah
how many Reubens have we still in the Church of Christ!--men who
make fair promises under the influence of a momentary excitement or a higher
emotion
but whose hearts are not fully surrendered to God. They grasp after
the good things of the world
and love them. They seek the good opinion of
their fellow-men
and love it. If a Christianity can be discovered which shall
cost them nothing
which shall not even lower them in the estimation in which
men of the world hold them
such a Christianity they are ready to accept; but
the Christianity of the manger and of the Cross
of Gethsemane and Calvary
they shirk from with ill-concealed aversion. (W. Hay Aitken
M. A.)
Divisions should be avoided
How strong it makes a family when all the sisters and
brothers stand together
and what an awful wreck when they disintegrate
quarrelling about a father’s will and making the surrogate’s office horrible
with their wrangle! If you only knew it
your interests are identical. Of all
the families of the earth that ever stood together
perhaps the most
conspicuous is the family of the Rothschilds. As Meyer Anselm Rothschild was
about to die in 1812 he gathered his children about him
Anselm
Nathan
Charles
and James
and made them promise that they would always be united on
“‘Change.” Obeying that injunction
they have been the mightiest commercial
power on earth
and at the raising or lowering of their sceptre nations have
risen or fallen. That illustrates how much on a large scale
and for selfish
purposes
a united family may achieve. But suppose that
instead of a magnitude
of dollars as the object
it be doing good and making salutary impression and
raising this sunken world
how much more ennobling! Sister
you do your part
and brother will do his part. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Why did Dan remain in
ships?--
Why did Dan remain in ships
I dare say Dan could have given what might have seemed to
himself a very sensible answer. Surely it would never have done for Dan to lose
his commerce. Surely it was most important that he should retain his mercantile
position. To leave his ships and go to fight the Lord’s battle in the field
would have been to turn his back upon his most obvious interests. He had no men
to spare; no time to spare; no money to spare. Far too busy were the Danites to
think of their brethren in the field. It mattered not that national liberty and
religion might be lost so long as Dan retained his ships. Go to the streets of
one of our great towns
and you will see the same thing re-enacted. Men running
to and fro as though life were at stake in every effort
toiling at their
business all day long
and when night comes too wearied to think of spiritual
things. They have too much to do--are far too busy to think of the business of
life! . . . Why! does he not know that his ships are doomed sooner or later to
fearful shipwreck? Dost thou not know
O lover of the world
that the day must
come when thou and thy darling idols will have to part? What profit on thy dying
bed to remember that thou hast laboured here for that which thou canst not
carry with thee? Thou hast enlarged thy barns
increased thy merchandise
raised thy family in the world
and left thy children in prosperity; and now
the sentence falls upon thy trembling soul
“Give an account of thy
stewardship
for thou mayest be no longer steward.” Poor consolation under the
sentence of doom to remember that thy coffers are full while thy soul was
starved. (W. Hay Aitken
M. A.)
Why did Dan remain in ships?
Early in this century a minister in England
who has since spent
many years in the foreign missionary field
was requested to preach
at a
meeting of some of his brethren
on the too prevalent disposition among
professing Christians to inactivity in religion. Somewhat to their surprise
he
read as his text
“Why did Dan remain in ships?” After explaining the text in
its connection
and that the Danites resembled many Christians at present
he
showed their inactivity to be--
1. Unreasonable. They knew the state of the country
its dangers
and
the assurance of victory;--how unreasonable that a whole tribe should under
such circumstances remain inactive.
2. It was injurious. By their inactivity the hands of their brethren
were weakened
an opportunity was given to the enemy to triumph
and personal
injury was sustained.
3. It was sinful. The command of God was disregarded; they availed
not themselves of opportunities to be useful
and forbore to destroy their
enemies.
That jeoparded their lives
unto the death in the high places of the field.--
Life jeoparded in heroic service
The late Wilmot Brooke
the pioneer missionary to the Soudan
who
died on March 19th
anticipated his swiftly-approaching end. At the
Church Missionary House just before starting on his last expedition in May
1891
he remarked: “I have five times had African fever of the most deadly
kind. No one is ever known to have recovered seven times from this fever. You
must expect that some of us will fall; I shall not be surprised if my call
comes in six months. Still I am determined to go. Friends tell me what madness
it is to run such risks. But when men were called to storm Delhi and Lucknow
they cheerfully came forward
knowing that death was certain. The strongholds
of heathenism and Mohammedanism can only be stormed by acting for God in the
same spirit. My action is not the outcome of rashness on my part. I am going
after the calmest and fullest consideration.”
The stars in their courses
fought against Sisera.--
Sisera no match for the stars
All things
even the stars in their courses
fight against every
one who
like Sisera
puts himself in opposition to the plans of the Ruler of
the universe. If you co-operate with
and act according to the laws of God
then you will in the long run prove victorious; if you do not
why then these
laws will crush you. They are stronger than you. A man is powerful or powerless
just in proportion as he submits to God’s laws. And
first
to speak of
physical laws
or those relating to matter. It is by obeying nature that we
learn her secrets. A medical man in the kingdom of nature cures or kills
just
in proportion as he has carefully or carelessly studied the laws of health and
obeys them. By studying and making use of the physical laws of God’s universe
we can improve health and prolong life. On the other hand
there is no
favourite of nature who can be intemperate and not suffer from ill-health
or
live near bad drainage and escape fever. No matter how intellectual or even
religious you may be
if you hold your hand in the fire it will certainly be
burned. A Christian is as liable to losses in his business if he does not
conform to the laws of commerce
on which wealth depends
as an atheist is.
Transgress God’s physical laws
and even the stars in their courses fight
against you. Just so there are spiritual and moral laws
by compliance with
which we receive blessings
and which
if not obeyed
are as ready as the stars
to fight against us. Such laws are these: “If we love one another
God dwelleth
in us.” “If any man will do His will
he shall know of the doctrine.” Without
God we can do nothing. Let us conduct ourselves in every relation and
occupation of life as if we believed we were what we are--“workers together
with God”--and all things must work together for good. Let us put ourselves in
opposition to Him
and all things
even the stars in their courses
shall fight
against us. (E. J. Hardy
M. A.)
The stars fought against Sisera
I. The literal
sense.
1. This lesson is a song of thanksgiving. It reminds us at once of
the duty of gratitude to God at all times
but especially after any great
deliverance. The miracle of the cleansing of the lepers puts in a picture the
rarity of thanksgiving--when ten pray
but one gives thanks.
2. Then
this song was a spontaneous outburst of praise immediately
after the reception of the blessing. Thanksgiving was
as it should be
prompt.
3. The victory was ascribed to God: “Praise ye the Lord for the
avenging of Israel.” Thanksgiving is only possible when there is faith
when the
eye of the soul penetrates beyond what are called “second causes
” and traces
the events of this life to the providence of God.
4. But a particular instrument which God employed for carrying out
His purposes is recognised in the text: “the stars
” etc. Viewed literally
what is meant by this? It is the description of some wonder wrought by God in
the battle
which aided the overthrow of Jabin’s host and Jabin’s general.
II. The figurative
sense.
1. “The stars in their courses” have been supposed to represent the
angels of God.
2. Warfare against evil is one part of the angels’ functions. Holy
Scripture recounts their military operations (Revelation 12:7). St. Jude describes
another altercation (verse 9). Daniel relates a third (Daniel 10:13). And again
at the end of
the world (1 Thessalonians 4:16; 2 Thessalonians 2:8)
the angels
“shall sever the wicked from among the just
” and consign them to punishment (Matthew 13:49-50).
3. We may not know how these spiritual beings “fought against
Sisera
” any more than we can tell how the angel of the Lord caused the
pestilence in the days of David (1 Chronicles 21:15); but we do know
that angels are the ministers of God (Psalms 104:4)
and carry out His behests.
4. If the stars represent the angels of God
then
on the other hand
the victory over Sisera
and the instrument by which it was achieved
form an
apt image of the overthrow of Satan’s power by the Cross.
III. Lessons.
1. When this lesson is said to contain “praise of Jael’s perfidy
”
and that from the lips of an inspired prophetess
it may be urged in reply
that it is a commendation of the brave deed of Jael and her disinterested zeal
for the welfare of God’s people
whilst the treachery which accompanied it was
in keeping with the low moral condition of the age and person--with “the light
of the times.”
2. We may learn from the general subject the duty of thanksgiving
and that its fulfilment involves a belief in the doctrine of Divine providence.
3. According to the literal interpretation of the text
we are led to
the conviction that even such matters as the weather may be guided by God to
fulfil His purposes
and that His directing touch is effective in a region far
beyond the ken of human science
which can only extend to the proximate causes
of things.
4. The spiritual meaning should remind us that the angels of God
assist us in our conflict with the evil one
and by Divine appointment “succour
and defend us on earth”; so that
in our struggles with the power of darkness
we may take the words of the prophet as a ground of confidence
“Fear not: for
they that be with us are more than they that be with them” (2 Kings 6:16). (Canon Hutchings.)
O my soul
thou hast;
trodden down strength.--
Interposition and victory
I. The
interposition by which the soul treads down all opposition and gains the
victory. It matters not how weak the creature may be if the Lord interpose.
They had nothing to do but follow on: it was the Lord that took spirit out of
the enemy
and that caused the enemy to err. These things remind us of what an
awful thing it is to be an enemy to God--under sin
under the wrath of God
under the curse of the law
and under the powers of darkness; and all the time
we are there
we are reckoned enemies
and we are under judgment. What a
fearful position! and yet we are by nature unconscious of it
and unconcerned
about it. Let us
then
look at these interposing stars
by which we tread down
strength. But in so doing we must be careful not to forget one thing
and that
is the chief thing; and that is Jesus Christ
the Morning Star. He is that
interposing light
by whom we have the victory. But it says
“the stars in
their courses.” The people of God at large are called stars
but ministers
especially. Hence you read of His holding the seven stars in His right hand;
the seven stars are the angels or messengers of the Churches. And so I take the
stars
then
if I spiritualise it
fighting against Sisera
to mean the
prophets testimonially standing against the powers of darkness.
II. The vain
attempt of the enemy to escape The river Kishon swept the enemy away. Many
people say
“Well
I am no enemy.” You are
unless you are a friend. (James
Wells.)
Verse 23
Curse ye Meroz . . . because they came not to the help of
the Lord.
The doom of Meroz
I. The sin of the
men of meroz is described in very remarkable terms
although we have grown so
familiar with them as scarce perhaps to notice their strange character: “They
came not to the help of the Lord.” Everywhere we read of the Lord’s coming to
the help of man; but man coming to the help of the Lord seems strange. The Lord
employs instruments for the executing of His purposes
though He needs them
not. The tribes of Israel were summoned to this war
and the inhabitants of
Meroz declined the summons. Well; but God had entered into marriage covenant
with Israel. The kingdom of Israel was His kingdom. The interests of Israel
were His interests; and He had bound up with them the glory of His own name.
Accordingly it is not now said of the men of Meroz that they came not to
Deborah’s help
nor to Barak’s help
nor even to the help of Israel
but that
“they came not to the help of the Lord.”
1. A little more specifically
the sin of the men of Meroz had in it
unbelief--criminal distrust of the word and promise and power of the living
God. No doubt it was largely cowardice that led them to refuse their aid. But
whence the cowardice? They did not believe that the Canaanites could be
subdued. They would keep on good terms with the oppressors to save their own
heads.
2. But besides criminal unbelief--that root and strength of all other
iniquities--the sin of the men of Meroz had in it a vile preference of their
own ease
and fancied present interest before the authority and honour and
interest of the God of Israel.
3. And thus
further
their sin was nothing less than enmity
war
against the living God. Doubtless they would be fain to say
“What have we done
so much against Him? we have but sat still in our quiet homes.” Aye
and
therein fought against Him. Oh
there is no possible medium between the love of
the adorable God and the hatred of Him--between willing
active service
rendered to God and hostility
war
against Him--“He that is not with Me is
against Me; and he that gathereth not with Me scattereth abroad.”
4. It was to “the help of the Lord against the mighty” they refused
to come--against the mighty. Had the enemy
that is to say
been a feeble
contemptible one in numbers and strength
they might have had some plausible
pretext for leaving the struggle to others. But all was in reality at stake.
II. Notice the
judgment of the Lord against the men of Meroz for this sin. I think there can
be very little doubt that there must have been some special aggravation in the
case of Meroz which has not been placed on record--perhaps its having been in
the immediate neighbourhood of the field of action
together with some more
emphatic treachery of dealing in its refusal of aid. Lessons:
1. First
a lesson of duty--very urgent duty. It will help to bring
both the duty and the urgency of it better out if it is borne in mind that
from the fall of our race downwards
the Lord has had a controversy
so to
speak--a quarrel in this fallen world--a war with mighty adversaries
Satan
sin
the world that lieth in the wicked one--His gracious purpose having all
along been in that war to call a people out of the world for the glory of His
own name--an innumerable multitude of all kindreds and peoples and tongues
to
be “washed
and sanctified
and justified
in the name of the Lord Jesus
and
by the Spirit of our God.”
2. Observe a second lesson of a different character
one of precious
and varied encouragement to all such as are disposed humbly
yet resolutely and
prayerfully
to offer themselves to the help of the Lord against the mighty.
See
for example
how He will condescend to receive and welcome your aid (Judges 5:9). And see the grateful
mention
if I might so speak with reverence
which God makes of particular
services (Judges 5:14).
3. Once more
we have a lesson here of solemn warning--duty
encouragement
warning. For observe that it is by no means any and every kind
of help and service that will suffice to separate us from the class
and save
us from the curse
of the inhabitants of Meroz. A man may come
for example
with a help so stinted and grudging as to make it quite manifest that it is but
the covering up of a desire to be let alone altogether. Or he may come with a
help not so stinted in the simple amount of it
yet not offered to the Lord
Himself
which is the hinge
you will carefully observe
of this whole matter
“they came not to the help of the Lord”--“Ye did it
” or
“ye did it not
to
Me.” Assuredly
by how much the Lord has revealed His condescension and grace
in making offer to us of so marvellous a oneness of cause and interest and
blessedness with Himself
by so much the more aggravated a judgment and doom
must the contempt and rejection of that grace bring with it. (C. J.
Brown
D. D.)
Co-operation in God’s cause required of all
I. From the
earliest periods of time God has been graciously pleased to provide for the
deliverance of His people from the thraldom and bondage into which they have
been brought by sin.
II. In the
prosecution of this work Jehovah meets with much and mighty opposition.
III. The people of
God are required to co-operate with Jehovah in reference to His designs as to
the children of men.
IV. Among those who
are thus summoned to the help of the Lord
there are some who disregard the
call.
V. To withhold our
co-operative aid in reference to the designs of God to bring the world from the
bondage of sin to His own blessed service is most criminal and destructive. (W.
Roby.)
Why was Meroz cursed?
What had Meroz done to deserve the punishment of God? In the first
place
Meroz had omitted to do a positive and plain duty. They did not join
with the enemy
but they refused to help the people of God. Then again
the sin
of Meroz was a sin of lukewarmness
carelessness. Supposing England to have
been overrun by an hostile army. Supposing that at last
gathering all her
strength to repel her enemies from her fair country
one town in an important
position refused to join in the battle at a critical moment
so that the
enemies of England were not crushed as we desired to see them. Surely all
England would ring with words of hatred for the people that could so act. Meroz
was guilty of lack of patriotism
but a lack of patriotism in the case of the
children of Israel was also a lack of proper religious zeal. Well
then
in the
third place
Meroz let slip an opportunity; it neglected a crisis in its life.
The war led up to the gates of Meroz
the opportunity was given to them of
striking a blow for God against sinners. The opportunity was refused.
1. From the conduct of the people of Meroz
then
we may take three
great warnings; and in the first place a warning against sins of omission.
People are apt to think a very great deal too little about sins of omission. We
are all of us apt to slur over the good things which we have left undone
and
to think that the only thing hateful in the sight of God or offensive to Him
whom we call our heavenly Father are the gross sins which attract perhaps the
observation and hatred of others
and from which our own consciences do
naturally recoil. How very often do you hear a person say in a satisfied way
that they have never done harm to anybody. Such persons who say that are in
great danger. They seem to see no sins though there may be many in their lives;
but they have forgotten altogether that the object of their own crisis
the
very object of their coming into the world
was not to do no sin
but to
glorify God by their lives. Neglecting prayers. When we lift up our hands to
God on high and call Him our Father
when we have that mighty privilege and
that great duty accorded to us and yet neglect it
is it no sin
I say
to go
day by day with careless prayers
or neglected prayers
to God? Surely there is
some sin in neglecting our Church and our duties of public worship. And then
again
while we think of habits of evil and so forth
we are inclined not to
think half enough about encouraging habits of good
doing what is right as well
as avoiding what is wrong. Then again
faith--a great duty to us. Yet how many
go on through life without ever troubling themselves to look into the matters
of their faith
or how many dare to live on through life with a sort of lurking
or lingering doubt at their hearts
which chills all their acts of devotion and
makes their lives unlovely in the sight of God. The curse of God came down on
Meroz; doomed to judgment was the city
not because it did that which was wrong
in opposing the people of God
but because she neglected a plain duty that God
had put before her plainly.
2. Then we see
in the second place
that the sin of Meroz was a sin
of lukewarmness. We are warned very frequently and very earnestly in Holy
Scripture about the sin of lukewarmness
not being eager to take the part of
God
not being eager to proclaim ourselves His children and to show ourselves
worthy of the membership of His Church. There are many warnings to this effect
notably
the character of Esau in the Old Testament. And then you remember
surely
those awful denunciations in the Book of the Revelation against the
lukewarm Laodicea. We are inclined to be very hot and earnest and keen about
matters of business
or about matters of pleasure
or about matters of
politics
or perhaps we may even add about matters of Church partisanship. But
how about true religion? Oh
we say
“Let us take that easy. Our fathers did
perhaps
before us
why should not we? Do not let us take any trouble about
that. That will come all right in the end.”
3. And again
in the last place
we notice that the sin of Meroz was
neglecting to seize an opportunity
letting a crisis in its history pass by
without making use of it. The opportunity was given for striking a blow for
God
and it was let slip by. We are in danger in this way. There are crises in
every man and woman’s life
crises in the lives of all of us
which God gives
to us; some of very vital importance--opportunities
which may perhaps never
come again
of striking some blow for God
or of gaining some great spiritual
victory over the sins which beset us. It is very important to remember this. (Cecil
Hook
M. A.)
Coming to the help of the Lord
1. Meroz is never again mentioned in Scripture
and its exact site is
unknown. Its sin resulted in its extinction. What was that sin?
2. Meroz has perished; but did none of its inhabitants escape? Have they
not had a numerous progeny and become a great people spread over the face of
the earth? Their descendants are not unknown among ourselves. Is there nothing
in our life that corresponds to the sin of Meroz? Consider our position in
relation to the gospel of Christ
and we shall see. Our Lord has summoned us to
the conquest of the world. All souls are His--His by right of creation and
redemption
as they should also be by willing submission. That submission is
hindered by men’s ignorance and error
by reckless indifference and deliberate
sin
by calculating worldliness not less than by unbridled self-indulgence.
Against these foes the whole force of the gospel is directed. Every man
be he
learned or ignorant
an Englishman or a Hindoo
is interested in that fact
and
needs the help of which it is at once the pledge and the source. Christ
and
Christ only
is the Saviour of the world; even as
on the other hand
every man
belongs unto Christ
and is bound by the most stringent and absolute obligation
to Him who is Lord of all. Christ comes not to this conquest alone
but as
“Captain of the Lord’s host.” He summons His people to His side
gives them
spear and shield
and equips them for the fight. We have
of course
the power
of refusal. Our Lord asks for willing service
and will have no pressed men in
the ranks. You can escape this service if you are so minded
meeting Christ’s
call and your brother’s need with a flat denial.
Multitudes do so fail
and why?
1. Some are influenced by a false intellectualism. Let us
as far as
it is in our power
know the best that has been thought and said
come in
contact with master minds
understand their working
see things as with their
eyes
and catch the glow of their enthusiasm. To gaze on the fair forms of
truth and beauty
to listen to the harmonies of perfect music
is a pure
delight
and imparts an added charm to life. But such an aim touches only a
small part of our duty. The knowledge of Christ--the crown of all science--can
only be acquired by the obedience of faith and love; while no amount of
self-culture or of aesthetic worship will justify us in ignoring the sins and
sorrows of mankind
or in neglecting the opportunities we possess of meeting
the terrible pressure of human need.
2. Other men are absorbed in business. Their main aim is to get on in
the world
to become rich and prosperous
to make good bargains
and to ensure
at any rate a steady increase of their capital or their savings. Coal
steam
and iron have their devout
if not their disinterested
worshippers. Money
which is designed to be a means
becomes an end in itself--committed to men in
trust
it is hoarded or used as if it were their own
and they do nothing to
rescue the heathen
because they are themselves the slaves of “covetousness
which is idolatry.”
3. A third class make no response to the call of Christ because of
their love of pleasure. They care only for amusement
for sensuous excitement
or something to relieve the weariness and ennui of life
and to make it
bright
eager
and thrilling. Enslaved and befooled by passion
“all that is
within them doth condemn itself for being there.”
4. Yet others are prevented from joining us in our campaign because
of their theological laxity. One religion
they urge
is as good as another
and to convert the heathen is a superfluous
if it be not an impossible
task.
And similarly when men excuse their indifference to this great work on the
ground of the coldness
the worldliness
and the strife of the Churches at
home. The best of Christians are no doubt imperfect
the ideal of their life is
but inadequately realised
and many who profess to be Christ’s are sadly
inconsistent. We deplore the fact
but it does not exempt us from a plain duty.
Still the Saviour asks
“What is that to thee? follow thou Me.” (James
Stuart.)
Religious
indifference:--
I. The Lord’s
people identified with their Lord. Observe the bearing of this principle on--
1. Sympathy (Acts 9:4).
2. Power (Ephesians 1:22).
3. Life and grace (John 15:1-27.).
4. Reproach (Luke 10:16).
II. The sin of
Meroz. This disregard of God’s people implies--
1. Ignorance of God’s love to His children.
2. An imperfect sense of the scheme of Divine government. By human
means
etc.
3. An imperfect sense of personal responsibility--Cain (Genesis 4:9).
4. Indifference to God’s truth and honour--Pilate.
5. Selfishness--Balaam.
6. Indecision--Peter in the judgment hall.
III. The sin
remains. It is ever displaying itself in new forms.
1. The Church at home indifferent to the evangelisation of the
heathen.
2. Wealthy congregations indifferent to poorer localities.
3. Women of ease and leisure to their burdened and weary sisters.
4. Parents unwilling to give their sons for the ministry.
5. Indifference to the conversion of souls.
IV. The result is
that punishment comes upon the defaulters.
1. Of old it was
“If the Lord be God
” etc. (1 Kings 18:21). Not less solemn and
critical is the question now
“What think ye of Christ?” Not to confess Him is
to deny Him (Matthew 10:33).
2. So with our employment of gifts and opportunities. The buried
talent and the hidden pound
or their ill-using
involve the “darkness that is
without.”
3. So of the “brotherhood.” We are to love it
to promote and defend
it. There may be flaws
but this does not justify separation. It calls for
prayer and the active operation of faith
sincerity
and truth. “They shall
prosper that love thee.”
V. Shun
indifference and indecision. They bring men to perish
like Balaam
with the
ungodly. Be decided as Paul
though
it bring the loss of all things. What is
there so noble as to “fill up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ
for His body’s sake
which is the Church“? (Colossians 1:24). (H. W. Dearden
M.
A.)
The moral of the curse of Meroz
In a way that in some respects reminds us of the German prophetess
Velleda
of the British queen Boadicea
and of the French peasant girl Joan of
Arc
does Deborah revive the national spirit
and summon the people to repel
the national foes. In this verse she utters true scorn for those who were
inactive and self-contained in a time when the nation was in its throes for
liberty and independence.
I. Our work for
Christ is very analogous to war.
1. In its fierce opposition.
2. In its reverses of victory and defeat.
3. In its call for a sacrifice.
II. Neglect of such
work involves us in a curse.
1. The reproachful cry of the world’s sin and sorrow.
2. Conscious separation from God. Common aim and common work are
indispensable for true fellowship.
3. Loss of the rewards of true service.
4. Rebuke of Christ: “Ye did it not.” (U. R. Thomas.)
Inaction
Notice
first of all
that the sin for which Meroz is cursed is
pure inaction. There are in all our cities a great multitude of useless men and
of men perfectly contented with their uselessness. Consider some of the various
points which uselessness assumes.
I. The first
source of the uselessness of good men is moral cowardice. The vice is
wonderfully common. The fear is concentrated on no individual
but is there not
a sense of hostile or contemptuous surroundings that lies like a chilling hand
upon what ought to be the most exuberant and spontaneous utterance of life? Men
do not escape from their cowardice by having it proved to them that it is a
foolish thing to be afraid. Nothing but the knowledge of God’s love
taking
such possession of a man that his one wish and thought in life is to glorify
and serve God
can liberate him from
because it makes him totally forget
the
fear of man.
II. The second
cause of uselessness is false humility. Humility is good when it stimulates
it
is bad when it paralyses
the active powers of a man. If conscious weakness
causes a man to believe that it makes no difference whether he works or not
then his humility is his curse. Remember--
1. That man judges by the size of things; God judges by their
fitness.
2. That small as you think you are
you are the average size of moral
and intellectual humanity.
3. That such a humility as yours comes
if you get at its root
from
an over-thought about yourself
an over-sense of your own personality
and so
is closely akin to pride.
III. The third cause
of uselessness is indolence. There is only one permanent escape from indolence
and self-indulgence--the grateful and obedient dedication to God through
Christ
which makes all good work
all self-sacrifice
a privilege and joy
instead of a hardship
since it is done for Him. (Bp. Phillips Brooks.)
Zeal lacking
Take a heretic
a rebel
a person that hath an ill cause to
manage; what he is deficient in the strength of his cause he makes up with
diligence; while he that hath right on his side is cold
indiligent
lazy
inactive
trusting that the goodness of his cause will not fail to prevail
without assistance. So wrong prevails
while evil persons are zealous and the
good remiss. (Bp. Jeremy Taylor.)
Verses 24-27
Blessed above women shall Jael . . . be.
The blessing of Jael
And whose lips are they which pronounce this blessing? Indeed
it
is Deborah the prophetess who sings this song; it is Deborah
by whom God
spake
who gives utterance to this strain. It is clear that
revolting as her
action appears at first view
there must be a way of looking at it in which it
deserves all our sympathy and applause.
I. First
we would
observe that human actions are
in God’s holy Word
spoken of as good and
righteous
although at the same time it is certain that the best deeds of the
best men are alloyed with evil. It would not
therefore
be out of harmony with
the tenor of the inspired volume
that Jael should be called blessed for her
deed
that her deed should meet with commendation from the prophetess
without
it being thereby implied that she was quite undeserving blame. If her act
contained some elements of good
amidst much of evil
it might
if the good
preponderated
be esteemed and proclaimed as blessed. To this general
observation we would add another
namely
that under the Jewish dispensation
there was a lower standard of religious perfection than under the Christian.
Hence it is that you find the most renowned characters of the Old Testament
polluted with sins from which men of ordinary morality among ourselves would
recoil. So that Jael’s deed is to be judged
not by itself in the abstract
still less by the light of the gospel
but in reference to the code under which
she lived
in reference to the knowledge of the Divine will then published
among men; and so judged
it is not requisite that it should have been free
from all blame in order to obtain praise.
II. But what were
the elements of good in this famous act of the Kenite woman? Now we must here
remind you of the real character of the Israelitish warfare. It is of course
true that always the sword is God’s weapon
as much as the famine or the
pestilence. War is the scourge wherewith the Eternal lashes the nations when
they wax proud against Him. But the difference between the case of the
Israelites and every other conquering race is this
that the Israelites knew
their mission
and went forth to execute it at God’s bidding. And now
again
let us apply these principles to the case of Jael. The people of the Lord were
in arms against the enemies of the Lord. We do not know whether Jael was a
daughter of Israel; if not
her faith
as we shall see
is more remarkable. She
had heard of the violence of the Canaanite for twenty years; she had heard that
Deborah
in whom dwelt the spirit of prophecy
had aroused the men of Israel
against Sisera. To her mind it was not a mere struggle of hostile nations for
liberty and power. To her it was the battle of the Lord of hosts against the
heathen who refused to worship Him; it was as the mustering of the armies of
heaven against the armies of hell. We are aware that it is still open to you to
object
that even if the killing Sisera can be justified
the craft which
beguiled him must be reprehensible. In answer to this
we remind you of the
observations wherewith we started
namely
that we need not prove Jael’s act to
be free from all defect
we are only concerned to show that it had in it many
elements of good; and now we set it forth as an act evidencing strong faith in
the God of Israel (faith still more marvellous if the Kenite’s wife was not a
daughter of Israel)
as prompted by love for Him
and zeal for His cause. Such
love and such zeal
even when evinced by an action not perfectly faultless
might well earn praise. But we go further. It may be doubted how far the
treachery of the act
as it appears
was sinful. Is it wrong to use craft
against Satan? May we resist the devil only by open force? May we not use
prudence and tact and wiliness in avoiding temptation or in abating its force?
III. The whole
history of the Israelites is typical of the history of the redemption of
mankind by Jesus Christ. The delivery of the Jews from their enemies
often as
it occurs
is symbolical of the greater deliverance of all people from the
thraldom of Satan. And whilst the general history is thus broadly significant
the distinct parts of that history lead us almost irresistibly to the
remembrance of particular features in the history of Christ’s salvation. (Bp.
Woodford.)
The blessing of Jael by Deborah
I. The difficulty
is not to be surmounted by denying the inspiration of Deborah’s utterance. If
this were so--if it might be maintained that Deborah is wrong when she
pronounces Jael blessed--how are we to know that she is right in her other
statements? Upon what principle are we to draw the exact line of demarcation?
II. In what sense
are we to understand Deborah’s language
and how are we to reconcile it with
what would seem
at first sight
to be the true character of Jael’s action?
1. Sisera’s life was
in Deborah’s judgment
rightly forfeited. He
was the Lord’s enemy. He represented
in Deborah’s eye--
2. Deborah’s language about Jael is relative language.
III. Concluding
lessons.
1. Note the equitableness of Deborah’s estimate of Jael. How often do
we
in our judgment of others
measure their failures by some standard of which
they have never heard
and refuse them credit for excellences which in them are
even consummate! Their standard is a very poor and low one
it may be
but if
they have had no chance of learning something better
it is the standard by
which they will be judged. We do not risk loyalty to higher truth than any of
which they know if in judging them we are strong enough to be equitable.
2. This history would be sorely misapplied if we were to gather from
it that a good motive justifies any action that is known to be bad. Jael could
not have been pronounced “blessed” had she been a Jewess
much less had she
been a Christian. The blessings which the ignorant may inherit are forfeited
when those who know
or might know
more act as do the ignorant. (Canon
Liddon.)
Deborah’s praise of Jael
We need not weight ourselves with the suspicion that the
prophetess reckoned Jael’s deed the outcome of a Divine thought. No; but we may
believe this of Jael
that she is on the side of Israel
her sympathy so far
repressed by the league of her people with Jabin
yet prompting her to use
every opportunity of serving the Hebrew cause. It is clear that if the Kenite
treaty had meant very much
and Jael had felt herself bound by it
her tent
would have been an asylum for the fugitive. But she is against the enemies of
Israel; her heart is with the people of Jehovah in the battle
and she is
watching eagerly for signs of the victory she desires them to win. Unexpected
startling
the sign appears in the fleeing captain of Jabin’s host
alone
looking wildly for shelter. “Turn in
my lord; turn in.” Will he enter? Will he
hide himself in a woman’s tent? Then to her will be committed vengeance. It
will be an omen that the hour of Sisera’s fate has come. Hospitality itself must
yield; she will break even that sacred law to do stern justice on a coward
a
tyrant
and an enemy of God. A line of thought like this is entirely in harmony
with the Arab character. The moral ideas of the desert are rigorous
and
contempt rapidly becomes cruel. A tent woman has few elements of judgment
and
the balance turning
her conclusion was be quick
remorseless. Jael is no
blameless heroine; neither is she a demon. Deborah
who understands her
reads
clearly the rapid thoughts
the swift decision
the unscrupulous act
and sees
behind all
the purpose of serving Israel. Her praise of Jael is therefore with
knowledge; but she herself would not have done the thing she praises. All
possible explanations made
it remains a murder
a wild
savage thing for a
woman to do; and we may ask whether among the tents of Zaanaim Jael was not
looked on from that day as a woman stained and shadowed
one who had been
treacherous to a guest. Not here can the moral be found that the end justifies
the means
or that we may do evil with good intent; which never was a Bible
doctrine
and never can be. On the contrary
we find it written clear that the
end does not justify the means. Sisera must live on and do the worst he may
rather than any soul should be soiled with treachery or any hand defiled by
murder. There are human vermin
human scorpions and vipers. Is Christian
society to regard them
to care for them? The answer is that Providence regards
them and cares for them. They are human after all--men whom God has made
for
whom there are yet hopes
who are no worse than others would be if Divine grace
did not guard and deliver. Rightly does Christian society affirm that a human
being in peril
in suffering
in any extremity common to men
is to be
succoured as a man
without inquiry whether he is good or vile. What
then
of
justice
and man’s administration of justice? This
that they demand a sacred
calm
elevation above the levels of personal feeling
mortal passion and
ignorance. Law is to be of no private
sudden
unconsidered administration.
Only in the most solemn and orderly way is the trial of the worst malefactor to
be gone about
sentence passed
justice executed. (R. A. Watson
M. A.)
Verses 28-30
Why is his chariot so long in coming?
why tarry the wheels of his chariots?
The delayed chariot
The language of this hoping
yet half-despairing and disconsolate
mother
has been
I presume
the language of multitudes some time or other in
the stern fight of existence and the moral campaign of consecrated life. When
God has tarried in His pavilion of cloud
withholding both Himself and His
blessings
our hearts have struggled and our lips quivered with wondering
desire to know the reason “why
” until impatience has bubbled over in anxious
inquiry
“Why is His chariot so long in coming? why tarry the wheels of His
chariots?” God stays not from us because
like Sisera
He is a dismounted
general and a slain warrior: men fall
but He never. He always has a sublime
design in His tarrying
a good and satisfactory reason for His delay
which He
does not always make known
but leaves us to spell out as best we can for
ourselves. He tarries to do us good
and not to taunt; to check our impatience
and correct our hurrying spirit
and not to discourage or distress. He will
come to us if we only wait long enough: and His coming shall be as the
morning--fresh
fragrant
and radiant.
I. Let us look at
this text as the language of the universal church. The Church in the
wilderness
the Church militant
for nearly nineteen centuries has been
breathing fervently the prayer commanded by her Founder--“Thy kingdom come.”
And in her anticipation of the answer and the advent
in her longings after complete
victory
universal regeneration
when truth and peace shall sway her sceptre in
every land
and the Christ-King shall be enthroned in every heart--I say
in
her longings after this glorious era
she plaintively ejaculates
“Why is His
chariot so long in coming?” “Why does my Lord delay His coming?” The progress
of Christianity
the achievements and triumphs of truth
we are told
have been
so slow
so few
so limited
for the time in which it has been at work
that
our learned doubters and avowed foes have written upon it in big letters
“Failure!” Well
we are not surprised at that. Had there not been something
about it which largely savoured of success
they would not have been so hasty
to label it with failure! Moreover
slowness of progress
of growth
is no
proof of failure. Are not the greatest works of God and man the result of slow
processes? I would ask
must the corn be pronounced a failure because it does
not wave in golden harvests after a night and a day’s growth? Must the old sun
be pronounced a failure because it does not march instantaneously
but by
degrees
to the meridian? What if Christianity has been slow in its march?--it
has been sure. It has been moving in no circle of uncertainty
no region of
doubt and ill-based probabilities! It has been making solid headway. And if
other systems of religion--false and flashy--have sprung up with the rapidity
of the mushroom
they have been as fragile and unenduring.
II. Look at this
text as the language of the individual Church desiring and expecting a special
visit from heaven. The chilling winds of worldliness have swept over the
Church
or the mildew of indifference has fallen on some
and the cankerous
rust of idleness on others
while some have become intoxicated with pride
and
others poisoned with heresy
numbed with doubt
and wild with the delirium of
controversy. So that the Church is bordering on lifelessness
its strength low
its energies exhausted
its influence and glory almost gone. The few in her
that have not defiled their garments nor indulged in worldly ease
who are true
and loyal
and steadfast and earnest
tremble for the “ark of God
” and grieve
to see it drifting to the fatal rocks; and in agony of soul cry
“Why is His
chariot so long in coming to our help?” Hold on faith
hold on patience
hold
on pleading--loosen not your grasp of Omnipotence
your Jacob-like grip on
God--cease not to ask
to seek
to knock
to wait: in Jehovah’s own time the
golden gates will open
the flaming steed will rush out. He who speeds His way through
a wilderness of worlds
through untraversed solitudes of space
will steer His
glad “chariot” to your sanctuary and in the midst of the Church
and scatter
the gifts of His grace and the benedictions of His love.
III. Look at this
text as the language of the penitent sinner seeking and desiring Christ. A
penitent soul is one of earth’s grandest pictures. When the obdurate heart
melts and weeps
and the unwilling knees bend in lowly submission
and the
prayer uprises to heaven
“What must I do to be saved?” and the poor sinner is
passing through the sharp
ordeal of repentance
then it is we read in the mystic language of tears and
sighs the plaintive words of my text
“Why is His chariot so long in coming?
why tarry the wheels of His chariot?” Should there be one such penitent soul
waiting for the coming of Jesus
listening for the rumbling of His chariot
wheels to give him “beauty for ashes
the oil of joy for mourning
and the
garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness
” tarry on your knees
tighten
your grip of faith
wait! and He that will come shall come; and His arrival
shall be all the more welcome and blissful for the delay and the waiting.
IV. Again
we may
regard the text as the language of the consecrated but clouded child of God
mourning protracted delay of conscious communion. For a time God has seemed to
depart: He has withdrawn His light
His conscious presence. No voice speaks
no
face beams
no hands leads
no presence remains; the soul presses
as it
thinks
near to Him
but lie is not there; it speaks
but there is no response;
it gropes in the distressing darkness
but finds Him not. We should
however
never forget that the halting of Jehovah is not to tantalise
but to test; not
to inflict unneeded pain
but to produce great spiritual profit. The hiding of
His face is simply for the multiplying of His grace. Suspended communion is
intended to do for us what the storm does for the tree
what the fire does for
the silver and gold
what the lapidary’s wheel does for the jewel. Such absence
only makes the heart grow fonder. The longing desire for repossession and
renewed fellowship is a pledge of a consecrated heart
and a prophecy that
sooner or later He will return.
V. Again
look at
this text as the language of God’s afflicted child daily expecting his chariot
to take him home. Home
sweet home! what a precious monosyllable! God sometimes
keeps His chosen ones a long time in the final fires
in the finishing
process--a long time lingering between the two worlds--suffering
dying. With
what a “spirit of expectant hope” and holy calm did Francis Ridley Havergal
contemplate and wait for death. There was acute and continued suffering--at
times most severe; but the presence of “the King” was fully realised
and His
grace was sufficient for her. She startled her medical adviser on one of his
early visits by the emphatic inquiry
“Now tell me
doctor
candidly
is there
any chance of my seeing Him?” Later on she said
“Not one thing hath failed
tell them all round: trust Jesus: it is simply trusting Jesus.” “Spite of the
breakers
not a fear.” “I am just waiting for Jesus to take me in.” “I thought
He would have left me here awhile
but He is so good to take me so soon.” “I
have such an intense craving for the music of heaven.” Then
as if “longing to
depart and be with Christ
which is far better
” she said
“Why tarrieth His
chariot?” (J. O. Keen
D. D.)
Verse 31
So let all Thine enemies perish
O Lord.
The imprecations of the Old Testament
I have chosen this verse rather than any detailed
utterances from the imprecations that are found in the imprecatory Psalms
because I believe it contains the key that will enable us to solve the inner
meaning and the spiritual relations of these imprecations. It is always
I
think
a wise thing to get a principle
if possible
where it is clearly
stated
rather than where it is hidden by a mass of obscure material. Once we
get the principle--the key of the question--we can then use it to bring order
into what may appear at first sight to be disorder. I examine the modern theory
that asserts that these imprecatory passages were inspired by unholy personal
vindictiveness. The recoil from rigid theories of inspiration has caused some
to run riot. They make swift work of anything that offends their taste or that
they cannot immediately comprehend--they cut it out with the ready pen-knife.
This seems an easy way of getting over difficulties. Yet
theory or no theory
there is a living unity and congruity in the Scriptures which demands
recognition
and will revenge itself upon indiscriminate mutilation. But
someone may ask
is it not reasonable to suppose that even some of the Old
Testament saints
under a fit of provocation
may have indulged in fierce
imprecations
in such curses as these. I hesitate even to answer that in the
affirmative. But that is not all you have to suppose. You have not only to
suppose that one of these saints could lose his self-control and his spiritual
sense so far as to indulge in terrible curses
inspired by personal malignity
but you have also to suppose that he deliberately threw that vindictive
outburst into a high form of literary composition
bestowing upon it great
literary care and skill; that he put it into the form of a sacred psalm
and
deliberately designed that that furious outburst of evil and vindictive passion
should be preserved and perpetuated. You have yet further to suppose that that
man
inspired by the Satanic passion within him
having composed his psalm
was able to induce the elect nation
the people
whose religious and spiritual intuitions were so marvellous
whom God was
training in such a special manner
you have to suppose that that people adopted
into their sacred book some of the most Satanic utterances ever given
expression to by a member of their own or any other race. I would have you also
note this. The most terrible imprecations occur in the Book of Psalms
and the
Book of Psalms reaches the high water mark of spiritual thought and conception
among the Jews. Such a supposition reduces the spiritual history of Israel to
complete chaotic confusion. There is another consideration that is worthy of
notice. These imprecatory Psalms
especially the 69th
are quoted in
the New Testament more frequently perhaps than any other passage in the Old
Testament Scriptures
quoted as forming a true and legitimate part of the
sacred Scriptures of the Jews
quoted
mark you
not by fossilised and
prejudiced Jews
but by the apostles of Jesus Christ.
II. place these
utterances in their true setting in the writings of the Old Scriptures. You
will now understand why I have chosen these words as my text. “So let all Thine enemies perish
O
Lord.” “Thine enemies.” This is the key that unlocks the whole matter. The
ancient inspired writers never asked for the descent of judgment on their own
personal account simply
but always as a vindication and assertion of eternal
righteousness. There are two things we must remember
however
in considering these
prayers for the extermination of the ungodly. The first is that these prayers
refer primarily
almost
if not altogether
exclusively to the government of
God upon this earth. When the psalmist prays that the wicked may be “blotted
out of the book of life
” he is not speaking in the language of the New
Testament
but in that of the Old
and from the standpoint of the earth. He is
not praying for spiritual and eternal condemnation; he is praying that the race
of the ungodly may be exterminated from this world. We must remember
further
that it is the wicked
as such
upon whom these judgments are denounced. The
imprecation has force only in so far as the wicked continues in his wickedness.
III. Compare these
utterances with the New Testament standpoint. It is easy to see
first
that
the New Testament has a clearer view of the eternal scope of God’s government.
It does not trouble us as it did the Jew when we see the ungodly flourish here
because we know that this life is but a short time in the annals of human life.
We know that this earth’s history is only a speck in the history of the human
race. Then there is another advance. We have larger conceptions of the love and
forbearance of God. The ancient Jew could not understand the possibility of
salvation for all. The world was divided into two parts for him--the righteous
and the wicked; and they stood on each side of the moral line
and there was
scarcely any crossing over. And especially did the Jewish nation in its
entirety stand out in opposition to the other nations of the earth. The Jew had
very little hope of God’s loving them
and bringing them into the joy of His
grace. The ancient Jew desired righteousness to be vindicated by the victory of
the righteous over the wicked; we rather desire that righteousness may be
glorified by the victories of love
and that all men may be brought out of the
sphere of destruction into the life and glory of God. But do not forget that
that old principle of judgment was true. It is still in force
although it is now
subordinate to the principle of life and hope; but we must not lose sight of
it. Do not spurn these old solemn
terrible denunciations because Christ has
set them in a blaze of love. (John Thomas
M. A.)
Jewish zeal
a pattern to Christians
What a contrast do these words present to the history which goes
before them! Here is the picture of indolence and unfaithfulness leading to
cowardice
to apostasy
and to national ruin. On the other hand consider
by
way of contrast
the narrative contained in the chapter which ends with the
text. Here is a picture of manly obedience to God’s will--a short trial of
trouble and suffering--and then the reward
peace. What the Old Testament
especially teaches us is this: that zeal is as essentially a duty of all God’s rational
creatures as prayer and praise
faith and submission; and
surely
if so
especially of sinners whom He hath redeemed; that zeal consists in a strict
attention to His commands--a scrupulousness
vigilance
heartiness
and
punctuality which bears with no reasoning or questioning about them--an intense
thirst for the advancement of His glory; a shrinking from the pollution of sin
and sinners; an indignation
nay
impatience
at witnessing His honour
insulted; a quickness of feeling when His name is mentioned
and a jealousy how
it is mentioned; a fulness of purpose
an heroic determination to yield Him
service at whatever sacrifice of personal feeling; an energetic resolve to push
through all difficulties
were they as mountains
when His eye or hand but
gives the sign: a carelessness of obloquy
or reproach
or persecution
a
forgetfulness of friend and relative
nay
a hatred (so to say) of all that is
naturally dear to us
when He says
“Follow Me.” These are some of the
characteristics of zeal. Now
it has sometimes been said that the commands of
strenuous and stern service given to the Israelites
for instance
those
relative to their taking and keeping possession of the promised land
do not
apply to us Christians. There can be no doubt it is not our duty to take the
sword and kill the enemies of God as the Jews were told to do. But it does not
hence follow that the temper of mind which they presuppose and foster is not
required of us; else
surely
the Jewish history is no longer profitable for doctrine
for reproof
for correction
for instruction in righteousness. Man’s duty
perfection
happiness
have always been one and the same. What was the holiness
of an Israelite is still the holiness of a Christian
though the Christian has
far higher privileges and aids for perfection. It is impossible
then
that all
these duties imposed on the Israelites of driving out their enemies
and taking
and keeping possession of the promised land
should not in some sense or other
apply to us; for it is clear they were not in their case mere accidents of
obedience
but went to form a certain inward character
and as clear is it that
our heart must be as the heart of Moses or David if we should be saved through
Christ. This is quite evident if we attentively examine the Jewish history and
the Divine commands which are the principles of it. For these commands
which
some persons have said do not apply to us
are so many and varied
and repeated
at so many and divers times
that they certainly must have formed a peculiar
character in the heart of the obedient Israelite
and were much more than an
outward form and a sort of ceremonial service. Let us consider some of the
commands I have referred to
and the terms in which they are conveyed. For
instance
that for the extirpation of the devoted nations from the land of
Canaan (Deuteronomy 7:1-5; Deuteronomy 7:16). Next observe this
merciless temper
as profane people would call it
but as well-instructed
Christians say
this godly zeal
was enjoined upon them under far more
distressing circumstances
viz.
the transgressions of their own relations and
friends (Deuteronomy 13:6-9). Now
doubtless
we
at this day are not to put men to death for idolatry; but
doubtless also
whatever temper of mind the fulfilment of this command implied in the Jew
such
essentially
must be our temper of mind
whatever else it may be also;
for God cannot speak two laws
He cannot love two characters--good is good
and
evil is evil (Psalms 19:7-8; Psalms 19:10-11). A self-mastering
fearless obedience was another part of this same religious temper enjoined on
the Jews
and still incumbent
as I dare affirm
on us Christians (Joshua 23:6). It required an exceeding
moral courage in the Jews to enable them to go straight forward
seduced
neither by their feelings nor their reason. Nor was the severe temper under review
a duty in the early ages of Judaism only. The Book of Psalms was written at
different times
between David’s age and the captivity
yet it plainly breathes
the same hatred of Sin and opposition to sinners (Psalms 139:21-24). Further still
after
the return from the captivity
after the prophets had enlarged the compass of
Divine revelation
and purified and heightened the religious knowledge of the
nation
still this rigid and austere zeal was enjoined and enforced in all its
ancient vigour by Ezra. The Jews set about a reformation; and what was its most
remarkable act? Let us attend to the words of Ezra (Ezra 9:3-4). Now
I do not say that every
one ought to have done what Ezra did
for he was supernaturally directed; but
would the course he adopted have ever entered into the mind of men of this day
or can they even understand or acquiesce in it
now that they know it? for what
did he? He offered a confession and intercession in behalf of the people; then
at length he and the people came to a decision
which was no other than
this--to command all persons who had married foreign wives to put them away. He
undid the evil as well as hindered it in future. What an act of self-denying
zeal was this in a multitude of people! These are some out of many instances
which might be brought from the Jewish history in proof of the duty of strict
and severe loyalty to God and His revealed will. There was an occasion when our
Lord is expressly said to have taken upon Him the zeal which consumed David (Matthew 21:12-13). Surely
unless we had
this account given us by an inspired writer
we should not have believed it! To
put aside form
to dispense with the ministry of His attendant angels
to act
before He had spoken His displeasure
to use His own hand
to hurry to and fro
to be a servant in the work of purification
surely this must have arisen from
a fire of indignation at witnessing His Father’s house insulted which we
sinners cannot understand. But anyhow it is but the perfection of that temper
which
as we have seen
was encouraged and exemplified in the Jewish Church.
Such is the pattern afforded us by our Lord; to which add the example of the
angels which surround Him. Surely in Him is mingled “goodness and severity “;
such
therefore
are all holy creatures
loving and severe. We read of their
thoughts and desires in the Apocalypse (Revelation 14:7; Revelation 16:5-7; Revelation 18:5-6)
all which passages
imply a deep and solemn acquiescence in God’s judgments. Thus a certain fire of
zeal
showing itself
not by force and blood
but as really and certainly as if
it did--cutting through natural feelings
neglecting self
preferring God’s
glory to all things
firmly resisting sin
protesting against sinners
and
steadily contemplating their punishment--is a duty belonging to all creatures
of God
a duty of Christians
in the midst of all that excellent overflowing
charity which is the highest gospel grace and the fulfilling of the second
table of the law. And such
in fact
has ever been the temper of the Christian
Church
in evidence of which I need but appeal to the impressive fact that the
Jewish Psalter has been the standard book of Christian devotion from the first
down to this day. Now I shall make a few observations in conclusion
with a
view of showing how meekness and charity are compatible with this austere and
valiant temper of the Christian soldier.
1. Of course it is absolutely sinful to have any private enmities.
Not the bitterest personal assaults upon us should induce us to retaliate. We
must do good for evil
love those who hate
bless those who curse us
and pray
for those who despitefully use us. It is only when it is impossible at once to
be kind to them and give glory to God that we may cease to act kindly towards
them. We hate sinners by putting them out of our sight
as if they were not
by
annihilating them
in our affections. And this we must do
even in the case of
our friends and relations
if God requires it. But in no case are we to allow
ourselves in resentment or malice.
2. Next
it is quite compatible with the most earnest zeal to offer
kind offices to God’s enemies when in distress. I do not say that a denial of
these offices may not be a duty ordinarily
for it is our duty
as St. John
tells us in his second Epistle
not even to receive them into our houses. But
the case is very different where men are brought into extremity.
3. And
further
the Christian keeps aloof from sinners in order to
do them good. A true friend is he who speaks out
and
when a man sins
shows
him that he is displeased at the sin. (J. H. Newman
D. D.)
The enemies and friends of Jehovah
I. The true
character and certain doom of the ungodly.
1. The term “enemies” will apply to all the unrenewed portions of
mankind. The heart is positively hostile
etc.. “Carnal mind is enmity against
God
” etc.
2. Now as to the doom of the enemies of God they will all perish
except they repent; all have one
condemnation
sentence
woeful abode. It will include--
II. The illustrious
representation given of the friends of Jesus: “Them that love Him.” In the
enemy we look for hate; in the friend
love. Now love to Jesus is--
1. A Divine principle of God and from God. The result of
regeneration.
2. A pre-eminent principle. Above all
it has the centre
it reigns
it subordinates.
3. It is manifest. Lives
breathes
speaks
acts. Moves all the
springs of the heart. Affects all the machinery of life. Loosens the tongue
employs the hands and feet. Mark the representation--“Let them that love Him be
as the sun
” etc. Now
the metaphor will apply--
Application:
1. Let the subject be the test of character. Are we enemies? etc.
2. Learn the supreme excellence of true religion. Godliness leads to
honour
usefulness
blessedness
and glory.
3. Let the enemies of God consider. “Kiss the Son lest He be angry
”
etc.
4. Let the professed friends of Jesus exemplify their principles. (J.
Burns
D. D.)
The rival armies
I. the enemies of
the Lord.
1. Their character.
2. Their doom. They perish
II. The friends of
the Lord. “As the sun when he goeth forth in his might.” The figure refers not
to the period from sunrise to sun set but from sunrise to the meridian of his
splendour. It is a striking metaphor as setting forth the glorious ongoing and
enlivening influence of the Christian character.
1. Very quiet.
2. Gladdening.
3. Regular and sure.
4. Increasing in brightness. (H. G. Parrish
B. A.)
Rejoicing at the death of an oppressor
Hearing a whole choir of birds chirping merrily together
my
curiosity was excited to inquire into the occasion of their convocation and
merriment
when I quickly perceived a dead hawk in the bush
about which they
made such a noise
seeming to triumph at the death of an enemy. I could not
blame them for singing the knell of one who
like a cannibal
was wont to feed
upon their living bodies
tearing them limb from limb
and scaring them with his
frightful appearance. Over this bird
which was so formidable when alive
the
most timid wren or titmouse did not now fear to chirp or hop. This occurrence
brought to my mind the case of tyrants and oppressors. When living
they are
the terror of mankind; but when dead
they are the objects of general contempt
and scorn. “When the wicked perish
there is shouting” (Proverbs 11:10). The death of Nero was
celebrated by the Romans with bonfires and plays; birds ate the naked flesh of
Pompey; Alexander lay unburied thirty days; but a useful and holy life is
generally closed by an honourable and lamented death.
The victorious course of the Divine kingdom
The song closes with an apostrophe or prediction of a similar and
sure disappointment and fatal issue for every evil cause; while brighter and
brighter must wax the course of God’s kingdom on the earth
like the sun
shining forth in its strength towards the effulgence of perfect day. It is at
once a principle
a prediction
and a prayer.
1. A principle: for there is a Divine cause and interest of God in
the world
often
obscured by human passion
often clouded with sad disaster
like the sun wading
through mist and storm
but destined ever to re-assert itself and establish its
bright ascendancy.
2. A prediction. Every inimical interest must and shall give way and
succumb to His undying kingdom
with the seed Divine of immortal youth within
its bosom--
“And
the power of each foe
as if smote with the sword
Shall
melt like the snow in the glance of the Lord.”
3. A prayer. So is it
so it shall be: and so says the singer
let
it be. (A. H. Drysdale
M. A.)
Let them that love Him be
as the sun.
Christians like the sun
I. The character
of God’s people: “They love Him.”
1. This love has been implanted in their hearts by the Holy Spirit.
Formerly they hated Him and His service.
2. Their love is sincere. It must be so if the Spirit has created it
in the heart (Ephesians 6:24). The love of many
however
is merely professional.
3. This love is supreme: “Whom have I in heaven but Thee?” etc.
4. This love is practical. It dwells in the heart and shows itself in
the life.
5. It is self-denying.
II. The similitude
by which the character of God’s people is illustrated.
1. The sun receives its light from the creative energy of God (Psalms 136:8). So Christians have derived
their light from God Himself (2 Corinthians 4:6).
2. Christians resemble the sun in beauty: “Truly light is sweet
And
a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the sun.” So Christians are
beautiful in their individual spiritual character--in their associated
character.
3. The sun is a visible object; it excites attention and inspires
admiration. The course of Christians is not hidden; they are lights of the
world
cities set on a hill
living epistles (Matthew 5:16).
4. The Christian resembles the sun in usefulness. What a dark world
this would be if the natural sun were to cease its shining? What would the
world be without Christianity?
5. The light of the sun is irresistible. Who can say to it
“Hitherto
shalt thou come”? etc. No one can stop the work of the Church
for it is God’s
work (Isaiah 55:11). O Christians
like the
sun
shine more and more unto the perfect day. They grow in grace
in
knowledge
purity
peace
joy
till their course terminates in the meridian
noontide splendour of heaven. (Helps for the Pulpit.)
Love makes suns
If we think of the singer
of the age
and the occasion of the
song
such purely spiritual
lofty words must seem very remarkable.
I. Note
first
how here we have a penetrating insight into the essence of religion. This woman
had been nourished upon a more or less perfect edition of what we know as the
“Mosaic law.” Her faith had been fed by forms. She moved amidst a world full of
the cruelties and dark conceptions of a mysterious Divine power which torture
heathenism apart from Christianity. She had forced her way through all that
and laid hold of the vital centre. And there
away out amidst cruelty and
murder
amidst the unutterable abominations and terrors of heathenism
in the
centre of a rigid system of ceremonial and retaliation
the woman’s heart spoke
out and taught her what was the great commandment. Deborah had got as far
in a
moment of exaltation and insight
as the teaching of the apostle John
although
her thought was strangely blended with the fierceness of the times in which she
lived. Her approval of Jael’s deed by no means warrants our approving it
but
we may thankfully see that though she felt the fierce throbbing of desire for
vengeance
she also felt this--“Them that love Him; that is the Alpha and Omega
of all.” Our love must depend on our knowledge. Deborah’s knowledge was a mere
skeleton outline as compared with ours. Contrast the fervour of emotional
affection that manifestly throbbed in her heart with the poor
cold pulsations
which we dignify by the name of love
and the contrast may put us to shame.
II. Further
note
the grand conception of the character which such a love produces: “Let them be
as the sun when he goeth forth in his might.” Think of the fierce eastern sun
with “sunbeams like swords
” that springs up from the east and rushes to the
zenith
and “nothing is hid from the heat thereof”--a sun the like of which we
in our cloudy skies
know little about
but which
to the Oriental
is the very
emblem of splendour and of continuous victorious power. There are two things
here--radiance and energy
light and might. “As the sun when he goeth forth in
his strength.” Deborah was a “prophetess
” and people say
“What did she
prophesy? “Well
she prophesied the heart of religion in reference to its
essence
and
as one sees by this phrase
in reference to its effects. What is
her word but a partial anticipation of Christ’s saying
“Ye are the light of
the world”; and of His disciple’s utterance
“Ye were sometimes darkness
and
now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of the light”? “Is Deborah’s
aspiration fulfilled about me? “Let each of us ask that. “As the sun when he
goeth forth in his strength”--would anybody say that about my Christian
character? Why not? Only because the springs have run low within is the stream
low through the meadows. Only because the love is cold is the light feeble.
There is another thing here. There is power in sunlight as well as radiance. On
that the prophetess especially lays a finger. “As the sun when he goeth forth
in his strength.” She did not know what we know
that solar energy is the
source of all energy on this earth
and that
just as in the deepest analysis
“there is no power but of God
” so in the material region we may say that the
only force is the force of the sun
which not only stimulates vegetation and
brings light and warmth--as the pre-scientific prophetess knew--but in a
hundred other ways
unknown to her and known to modern science
is the author
of all change
the parent of all life
and the reservoir of all energy. And so we
come to this thought: the true love of God is no weak
sentimental thing
such
as narrow and sectional piety has often represented it to be
but it is a power
which will invigorate the whole of a man and make him strong and manly as well
as gentle and gracious; being
indeed
the parent of all the so-called heroic
and of all the so-called saintly virtues. If you love God you will surely be a
strong man as well as an emotional and affectionate Christian. That energy is
to be continuous and progressive. The sun that Deborah saw day by day spring
from his station in the east and climb to his height in the heavens and ray
down his beams
has been doing that for millions of years
and it will probably
keep doing it for uncounted periods still. And so the Christian man
with
continuity unbroken and progressive brilliance and power
should shine more and
more till the unsetting noontide of the day.
III. Here is a
prophecy of which the utterer was unaware. There is a contrast drawn in the
words of our text and in those immediately preceding. “So
” says Deborah
after
the fierce description of the slaughter--“so let all Thine enemies perish
O
Lord! but let them that love Thee be as the sun when he shineth in his
strength.” She contrasts the transiency of the lives that pit themselves
against God with the perpetuity that belongs to those which are in harmony with
Him
because the livers are lovers of Him. The truth goes further than she
probably knew; certainly further than she was thinking when she chanted these words.
Let us widen them by other words which use the same metaphor and say
“They
that be wise”--that is a shallower word than “them that love Thee”--“they that
be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many
to righteousness as the stars for ever and ever.” Let us widen and deepen them
by sacreder words still
for Jesus Christ laid hold of this old metaphor and
said
describing the time when all the enemies shall have perished and the
weeds have been flung out of the vine-yard
“Then shall the righteous blaze
forth like the sun in the kingdom of My Father.” A brilliancy that will fill
heaven with new galaxies
bright beyond all that we see here
amidst the thick
atmosphere and mists and clouds of the present life! (A. Maclaren
D.
D.)
Interposing power
I. The object:
“Them that love Him.”
II. The request:
“Let them be as the sun.” I think the chief doctrine here intended is that of
infallibility. First
the sun is a faithful witness in heaven. The sun has
never failed yet
and never can fail. “When He goeth forth in His might.” The
Scriptures are clear that the people are all predestinated to be conformed to
the image of Christ; that what He is they are to be. Did not Jesus Christ go
forth in His might in His humiliation; and doth He not also go forth in His
might in His exaltation?
III. The repose here
mentioned: “The land had rest forty years.” How is it that they had rest forty
years? Well
they had rest
liberty
and quiet
enjoying all the privileges of
the promised land during these forty years
by one of the most simple things.
It was by simply rejecting all false gods
and abiding by the God of Israel
and just bringing up a little of past history
and learning that this God
who
had delivered them from Egypt
this God
who had sustained them through the
wilderness
this God that brought them into the promised land and planted them
there
He
and He alone
was God; and the consequence was that their liberty
remained
their harvests were good
their vintage was good
their flocks and
their herds increased
and they were every way happy. Just so now; if we would
have spiritual rest
spiritual settlement
and real prosperity
it must be by
simply abiding by that truth that represents the great God to us as a Saviour
that represents Him in a covenant ordered in all things and sure--simply
abiding by that. Now how was it they had rest no longer than forty years? I can
hardly tell; but you do not get through the next chapter before you stumble
upon an altar
and say
“What altar is this?” This is not the Lord’s; no
it is
Baal’s. And here is a beautiful grove and gardens--everything made pleasant to
the flesh
a great display. Well
how in the world Baal got in again I do not
know
but I should not wonder if it was either by trade affairs
or else by
matrimonial affairs
or else by both. (James Wells.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》