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2 Kings Chapter
Eighteen
2 Kings 18
Chapter Contents
Good reign of Hezekiah in Judah
Idolatry. (1-8)
Sennacherib invades Judah. (9-16) Rabshakeh's blasphemies. (17-37)
Commentary on 2 Kings 18:1-8
(Read 2 Kings 18:1-8)
Hezekiah was a true son of David. Some others did that
which was right
but not like David. Let us not suppose that when times and men
are bad
they must needs grow worse and worse; that does not follow: after many
bad kings
God raised one up like David himself. The brazen serpent had been
carefully preserved
as a memorial of God's goodness to their fathers in the
wilderness; but it was idle and wicked to burn incense to it. All helps to
devotion
not warranted by the word of God
interrupt the exercise of faith;
they always lead to superstition and other dangerous evils. Human nature
perverts every thing of this kind. True faith needs not such aids; the word of
God
daily thought upon and prayed over
is all the outward help we need.
Commentary on 2 Kings 18:9-16
(Read 2 Kings 18:9-16)
The descent Sennacherib made upon Judah
was a great
calamity to that kingdom
by which God would try the faith of Hezekiah
and
chastise the people. The secret dislike
the hypocrisy
and lukewarmness of
numbers
require correction; such trials purify the faith and hope of the
upright
and bring them to simple dependence on God.
Commentary on 2 Kings 18:17-37
(Read 2 Kings 18:17-37)
Rabshakeh tries to convince the Jews
that it was to no
purpose for them to stand it out. What confidence is this wherein thou
trustest? It were well if sinners would submit to the force of this argument
in seeking peace with God. It is
therefore
our wisdom to yield to him
because it is in vain to contend with him: what confidence is that which those
trust in who stand out against him? A great deal of art there is in this speech
of Rabshakeh; but a great deal of pride
malice
falsehood
and blasphemy.
Hezekiah's nobles held their peace. There is a time to keep silence
as well as
a time to speak; and there are those to whom to offer any thing religious or
rational
is to cast pearls before swine. Their silence made Rabshakeh yet more
proud and secure. It is often best to leave such persons to rail and blaspheme;
a decided expression of abhorrence is the best testimony against them. The
matter must be left to the Lord
who has all hearts in his hands
committing
ourselves unto him in humble submission
believing hope
and fervent prayer.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on 2 Kings》
2 Kings 18
Verse 2
[2]
Twenty and five years old was he when he began to reign; and he reigned twenty
and nine years in Jerusalem. His mother's name also was Abi
the daughter of
Zachariah.
To reign — It
is not certain that Ahaz lived only thirty six years
for those sixteen years
which he reigned
may be computed
not from the first beginning of his reign
when he reigned with his father; which was at the twentieth year of his age
but from the beginning of his reigning alone.
Verse 4
[4] He removed the high places
and brake the images
and cut down the groves
and brake in pieces the brasen serpent that Moses had made: for unto those days
the children of Israel did burn incense to it: and he called it Nehushtan.
Serpent —
The most of them
or such as the people most frequented: for all were not taken
away
chap. 23:13
14
tho' his own father had set them up.
We must never dishonour God
in honour to our earthly parents.
Brazen serpent —
Which had been hitherto kept as a memorial of God's mercy; but being now
commonly abused to superstition
was destroyed.
To it —
Not doubtless as to a god
but only as to an instrument of God's mercy
by and
through which
their adoration was directed to God
and given to that only for
God's sake.
Nehushtan — He
said
this serpent
howsoever formerly honoured
and used by God as a sign of
his grace
yet now it is nothing but a piece of brass which can do you neither
good nor hurt.
Verse 5
[5] He
trusted in the LORD God of Israel; so that after him was none like him among
all the kings of Judah
nor any that were before him.
Trusted —
Without calling in foreign succours to establish or help him; which his father
Ahaz did; and before him Asa.
Before him — Of
the kings of Judah only; for David and Solomon were kings of all Israel. The
like is said of Josiah
chap. 23:25. Each of them
excelled the other in
several respects. Hezekiah in this
that he fell upon this work in the
beginning of his reign
which Josiah did not
and with no less resolution
undertaking to do that which none of his predecessors durst do
even to remove
the high places
wherein Josiah did only follow his example.
Verse 7
[7] And
the LORD was with him; and he prospered whithersoever he went forth: and he
rebelled against the king of Assyria
and served him not.
Rebelled — He
shook off that yoke of subjection
to which his father had wickedly submitted
and reassumed that full and independent sovereignty which God had settled in
the house of David. And Hezekiah's case differs much from that of Zedekiah
who
is blamed for rebellion against the king of Babylon
both because he had
engaged himself by a solemn oath and covenant
which we do not read of Ahaz;
and because he broke the covenant which he himself had made; and because God
had actually given the dominion of his own land and people to the king of
Babylon
and commanded both Zedekiah and his people to submit to him. And
whereas Hezekiah is here said to rebel; that word implies
only a defection
from that subjection which had been performed to another; which sometimes may
be justly done
and therefore that word doth not necessarily prove this to be a
sin. And that it was not a sin in him
seems certain
because God owned and
assisted him therein; and did not at all reprove him for it
in that message
which he sent to him by Isaiah
nor afterwards
though he did particularly
reprove him
for his vain-glory
and ostentation
2 Chronicles 32:25
26.
Verse 13
[13] Now in the fourteenth year of king Hezekiah did Sennacherib king of
Assyria come up against all the fenced cities of Judah
and took them.
Them —
Many of them; universal particles being frequently so used both in scripture
and other authors; and this success God gave him; to lift him up to his own
greater and more shameful destruction: to humble and chastise his own people
for their manifold sins
and
to gain an eminent opportunity to advance his own
honour by that miraculous deliverance which he designed for his people.
Verse 14
[14] And
Hezekiah king of Judah sent to the king of Assyria to Lachish
saying
I have
offended; return from me: that which thou puttest on me will I bear. And the
king of Assyria appointed unto Hezekiah king of Judah three hundred talents of
silver and thirty talents of gold.
Three hundred talents
… — Above two hundred thousand pounds.
Verse 17
[17] And
the king of Assyria sent Tartan and Rabsaris and Rabshakeh from Lachish to king
Hezekiah with a great host against Jerusalem. And they went up and came to
Jerusalem. And when they were come up
they came and stood by the conduit of
the upper pool
which is in the highway of the fuller's field.
Sent —
Having received the money
upon which he agreed to depart from Hezekiah and his
land
he breaks his faith with Hezekiah
thereby justifying his revolt
and
preparing the way for his own destruction.
Verse 19
[19] And
Rabshakeh said unto them
Speak ye now to Hezekiah
Thus saith the great king
the king of Assyria
What confidence is this wherein thou trustest?
Thus saith
… —
But what are the greatest men when they come to compare with God
or when God
comes to contend with them?
Verse 21
[21] Now
behold
thou trustest upon the staff of this bruised reed
even upon Egypt
on
which if a man lean
it will go into his hand
and pierce it: so is Pharaoh
king of Egypt unto all that trust on him.
This broken reed —
Whoever trusts in man
leans on a broken reed: but God is the rock of ages.
Verse 22
[22] But
if ye say unto me
We trust in the LORD our God: is not that he
whose high
places and whose altars Hezekiah hath taken away
and hath said to Judah and
Jerusalem
Ye shall worship before this altar in Jerusalem?
Is not
… —
Thus boldly he speaks of the things which he understood not
judging of the
great God
by their petty gods; and of God's worship by the vain fancies of the
Heathens
who measured piety by the multitude of altars.
Verse 25
[25] Am I
now come up without the LORD against this place to destroy it? The LORD said to
me
Go up against this land
and destroy it.
Am I
… — He
neither owned God's word
nor regarded his providence; but he forged this
to
strike a terror into Hezekiah and the people.
Verse 27
[27] But
Rabshakeh said unto them
Hath my master sent me to thy master
and to thee
to
speak these words? hath he not sent me to the men which sit on the wall
that
they may eat their own dung
and drink their own piss with you?
To the men — To
tell them to what extremities and miseries he will force them.
Verse 28
[28] Then
Rabshakeh stood and cried with a loud voice in the Jews' language
and spake
saying
Hear the word of the great king
the king of Assyria:
Jews language —
The tradition of the Jews is
that Rabshaketh was an apostate Jew. If so
his
ignorance of the God of Israel was the less excusable
and his enmity the less
strange: for apostates are usually the most bitter and spiteful enemies.
Verse 31
[31]
Hearken not to Hezekiah: for thus saith the king of Assyria
Make an agreement
with me by a present
and come out to me
and then eat ye every man of his own
vine
and every one of his fig tree
and drink ye every one the waters of his
cistern:
A present —
Upon which terms
I will give you no disturbance; but quietly suffer each of
you to enjoy his own possession.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on 2 Kings》
18 Chapter 18
Verses 1-37
Now it came to pass in the third year of Hoshea.
A striking reformation
a ruthless despotism
and an unprincipled
diplomacy
I. A striking
reformation (2 Kings 18:3-8).
1. The perverting tendency of sin. The brazen serpent was a
beneficent ordinance of God to heal those in the wilderness who had been bitten
by the fiery serpent. But this Divine ordinance
designed for a good purpose
and which had accomplished good
was now
through the forces of human
depravity
become a great evil. See how this perverting power acts in relation
to such Divine blessings
as
2. The true attributes of a reformer. Here we observe
3. The true soul of a reformer. What is that which gave him the true
insight and attributes of a reformer
which in truth was the soul of the whole?
II. A ruthless
despotism. There are two despots mentioned in this chapter--Shalmaneser and
Sennacherib
both kings of Assyria.
1. He had already invaded a country in which he had no right.
2. He had received from the king most humble submission and large
contributions to leave his country alone. Mark his humiliating appeal.
III. An unprincipled
diplomacy
1. He represents his master
the King of Assyria
to be far greater
than he is.
2. He seeks to terrify them with a sense of their utter inability to
resist the invading army. (David Thomas
D. D.)
Hezekiah’s good reign
The history of God’s ancient people is full of surprises. The
whole course of their national life was marked by wonderful Divine
interpositions. An public records
when carefully studied
disclose the fact
that God
through His providence
is acting as master of affairs
and though statesmen
and political economists refer the shifting events of national career to
natural causes
it is evident to the clear thinker that God is an uncalculated
factor
the explanation is meagre and faulty. But in the history of the elect
people
the Divine element was unmistakably prominent. In these particulars the
history of the Jews was unique
and sublime above that of any other nation. And
yet the behaviour of the people was quite as surprising. With only the thinnest
of veils separating them from God--their daily experience august with the
manifestations of His presence--the penalties of sin and the rewards of
righteousness
things tangible and perceptible
they went on in a mad career of
impiety and wickedness as recklessly as though they had never heard of Jehovah.
But there are lights as well as shadows to the picture. Now and then a man in
authority rose to the level of his responsibility and ruled in the fear of God
and the nation
as nations commonly do
catching inspiration from their leader
entered upon an era of prosperity. Notable among these faithful few was
Hezekiah
King of Judah.
1. Hezekiah “did that which was right in the sight of the Lord.” His
theory of government was a simple one; to make it as far as possible a
transcript of the Divine government. Statesmanship
in his conception of it
was no familiarity with human precedents
a mastery of the wiles and
contrivances by which men in power manage to make all events subserve their
purpose
a skilful sword-play in which some trick of fence is more highly
esteemed than truth and righteousness. With that one purpose sovereign and
constant
all details of administration grouped themselves about it
and in
harmony with it
as the atoms of the gem aggregate themselves about the centre
of crystallization
the value and lustre of the jewel
due to its unity. No
government of contradictions this
whose worth was to be ascertained by
averaging its failings and its merits
but an honest attempt on the part of the
king to make his rule an answer to the prayer
“Thy will be done in earth
as
it is in heaven.” It is the fatal defect in most forms of government that this
overrule of God is ignored. Men are dull scholars
slow to learn that to do
right is to do
well
in public affairs as well as in private conduct. To do “that which is
fight in the sight of the Lord” is the fundamental and unalterable principle in
all policies of government that vindicate themselves in history. Treasuries and
armies and the intrigues of cabinets may win temporary successes; but they are
short-lived.
2. Hezekiah “trusted in the Lord God of Israel.” That gave him
confidence and made him uncompromising in all his measures. He was no cautious
strategist
trying experiments
uncertain of their issue
advancing so slowly
that there would be opportunity to retrace his steps if the event seemed likely
to disappoint his expectation a He did not trust in his own shrewdness and
far-sightedness. He was not anxious about the signs of the times
a calculator
of popular weather probabilities. No one more well aware than he of the unreliability
of the tone and temper of public moods. He trusted in God
the eternal and the
unchanging
“a personal God
the Lord God of Israel
doing His pleasure in the
armies of heaven and among the children of men.” So he had no responsibility
except for duty; consequences were in higher and wiser hands than his. Like a
soldier under command
he had only to obey orders. And withal he had a serene
and satisfying assurance that he should be contented with last results. The
Divine wishes could not be thwarted
and whatever pleased God would please him.
When the first Napoleon came to the throne
and saw how unbelief was destroying
both the faith and the conscience of the French nation
he said to his
advisers
“If there is no God
we must create one.” No man can prosperously
direct the affairs of a great people without personal faith in God. There are
crises in affairs when he loses heart and hope unless he “endures as seeing Him
who is invisible.” There are hours when the policy of strict righteousness
threatens immediate disaster
and the temptation to slight concessions for
large apparent good is strong
and how can king or president resist it unless
they are able to look up through the obscurity and confidently say
“Clouds and
darkness are round about Him
but judgment and justice are the habitation of
His throne?” Religion is too often depreciated as the superstition of the
cloister and the Church
but all history shows that it has been the most
practical and powerful force in the administration of government.
3. Hezekiah “clave to the Lord and departed not from following Him.”
This religious faith was something more than an intellectual assent to certain
general truths
more even than the recognition that Divine Providence is the
operative factor in human history. His convictions had a personal force
and
caused him to see that he ought to be
and led him to endeavour to be
himself
a good man. Behind all the righteous measures he proposed
there was the weight
and push of a righteous character. It was not enough that the service due to
God had mention in public documents and on state occasions; he himself must
render that service in his private capacity. The people must see
in his
individual behaviour
the recognition of the sovereignty of those principles
that were embedded in the statutes
and gave shape and colour to the national
policy. Other things being equal
the better the character of king and governor
and legislator
the stronger the presumption that their administration of
affairs will be judicious
sound
and strong. The man who governs himself
rightly has taken the first step towards knowing how to govern others for their
good.
4. “And the Lord was with him
and he prospered whithersoever he
went.” This is the brief but significant summing up of the history of
Hezekiah’s reign. The account is notable for its omissions. There is no record
of new territory added to the kingdom
of armies organised
of treasuries
filled
of advance in industrial enterprise and business prosperity
the
specifications that figure so largely in the common description of national
growth. In the thought of the inspired writer
the enumeration of items like
these was of small importance in comparison with the great overshadowing fact
that the Divine presence was visible
and the Divine favour evident
in the
whole course of the people’s history. That of itself was sufficient to ensure
success and renown. Since God was for them
who or what could be against them?
(Monday Club Sermons.)
Hezekiah’s good reign
Heredity is fickle
or wicked Ahaz would not have had a son like
Hezekiah. The piety of the father does not necessarily involve the godliness of
the son
nor does the iniquity of the parent make virtue impossible in his
posterity. Judah had no worse king than Ahaz
and no better than Hezekiah.
There are surprises of goodness in bad families
and of wickedness in families
which bear an honoured name. There is also a sweet word of hope for the
offspring of bad people. Hezekiah and Josiah were sons of such evil monsters as
Ahaz and Amon. The surroundings and character of Hezekiah supply useful
lessons.
I. An evil
environment. Hezekiah’s life boldly challenged and denied the supremacy of
circumstances
and emphasised the truth that real manhood rules circumstances
and is not ruled by them.
1. Evil in the home. Ahaz contributed in the fullest measure
possible
both by precept and example
to the moral ruin of his family. Every
form of heathenism he found in the land he strenuously supported
and
introduced new varieties of sin from other lands. There is not a single
virtuous thing recorded of him during his whole life. The kindest thing he ever
did was to die
and even that service was performed involuntarily.
2. A corrupt nation. Evil was popular. The flowing tide of public
sentiment was with Ahaz
idolatry
and vice. The nation had lost its
conscience. The last restraints of decency and custom had been removed. There
was not an institution in all the land for the protection of youth
and the
young prince
and any other virtuous youth
might say with literal truth
No
man careth for my soul.
II. A splendid
character. Untoward circumstances develop brave men. Battles and storms make
heroes possible.
1. Unwavering decision. “In the first month of the first year of his
reign
” he set about the work of reform (2 Chronicles 29:3). He was only
twenty-five years of age. But his youth had been wisely spent
and when
opportunity of great usefulness came
he was ready.
2. Religious enthusiasm. He restored the purity and dignity of Divine
worship (verses 4-6). He went back to first principles; he dug down to the only
sure foundation of national strength. No nation can be strong whose temple
doors are closed.
3. Widespread success. His achievements were so great and complete
that he eclipsed all the kings who preceded and succeeded him (verse 5). His
trust was in the Lord (verse 5)
and his faith was honoured of God (verses 7
8). Truly character is above circumstances
and the history of this Jewish
prince is a lesson of hope for the young people of to-day. (R. W. Keighley.)
A just ruler a type of God
John Ruskin
in Stones of Venice
calls attention to
the pleasing fact that in the year 813 the Doge of Venice devoted himself to
putting up two great buildings--St. Mark’s
for the worship of God
and a
palace for the administration of justice to man. Have you ever realised how much God has
honoured law in the fact that all up and down the Bible He makes the Judge a
type of Himself
and employs the scene of a court-room to set forth the
grandeurs of the great judgment day? Book of Genesis: “Shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?” Book of Deuteronomy: “The Lord shall judge His
people.” Book of Psalms: “God is Judge Himself.” Book of the Acts: “Judge of
quick and dead.” Book of Timothy: “The Lord the righteous Judge.” Never will it
be understood how God honours judges and court-rooms until the thunderbolt of
the last day shall sound the opening of the great assize--the day of trial
the
day of clearance
the day of doom
the day of judgment. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
The spiritual scores successes
Remember that flesh dies and spirit lives: in the long run
it is
the spiritual that is mighty. Think of that insignificant-looking little
black-eyed Jew clanking his chains in Rome
and writing to “the saints that are
in Ephesus.” Think of Athanasius calmly facing the Arian rabble. Think of Leo
the Great consolidating a spiritual empire when the old Roman civilisation was
shattered and failing in ruins. Think of Augustine writing the City of
God in 410 when the world was thrilled with dismay because Rome had been
stormed by Alaric the Goth. “This is the victory that overcometh the world
even
our faith.” To be spiritual is to be already victorious.
The religious-the greatest of reforms
In his History of the Eighteenth Century
Mr. Lecky said: “Although the career of the elder Pitt and the splendid
victories by land and sea that were won during his ministry formed
unquestionably the most dazzling episodes in the reign of George II.
they must
yield in real importance to that religious revolution which shortly before had
begun in England by the preaching of the Wesleys and Whitefield.” Methodism was
the least result of Wesley’s efforts
for
as Green the historian had said
“the noblest result of the religious revival was the steady attempt which had
never ceased from that day to this to remedy the guilt
the ignorance
the
physical suffering
and the social degradations of the profligate and the
poor.” Wesley preached and taught in his class-meetings and in his journals the
true application of the great saying of burke
that “whatever is morally wrong
can never be politically right.”--
Verses 1-37
Now it came to pass in the third year of Hoshea.
A striking reformation
a ruthless despotism
and an unprincipled
diplomacy
I. A striking
reformation (2 Kings 18:3-8).
1. The perverting tendency of sin. The brazen serpent was a
beneficent ordinance of God to heal those in the wilderness who had been bitten
by the fiery serpent. But this Divine ordinance
designed for a good purpose
and which had accomplished good
was now
through the forces of human
depravity
become a great evil. See how this perverting power acts in relation
to such Divine blessings
as
2. The true attributes of a reformer. Here we observe
3. The true soul of a reformer. What is that which gave him the true
insight and attributes of a reformer
which in truth was the soul of the whole?
II. A ruthless
despotism. There are two despots mentioned in this chapter--Shalmaneser and
Sennacherib
both kings of Assyria.
1. He had already invaded a country in which he had no right.
2. He had received from the king most humble submission and large
contributions to leave his country alone. Mark his humiliating appeal.
III. An unprincipled
diplomacy
1. He represents his master
the King of Assyria
to be far greater
than he is.
2. He seeks to terrify them with a sense of their utter inability to
resist the invading army. (David Thomas
D. D.)
Hezekiah’s good reign
The history of God’s ancient people is full of surprises. The
whole course of their national life was marked by wonderful Divine
interpositions. An public records
when carefully studied
disclose the fact
that God
through His providence
is acting as master of affairs
and though
statesmen and political economists refer the shifting events of national career
to natural causes
it is evident to the clear thinker that God is an
uncalculated factor
the explanation is meagre and faulty. But in the history
of the elect people
the Divine element was unmistakably prominent. In these
particulars the history of the Jews was unique
and sublime above that of any
other nation. And yet the behaviour of the people was quite as surprising. With
only the thinnest of veils separating them from God--their daily experience
august with the manifestations of His presence--the penalties of sin and the
rewards of righteousness
things tangible and perceptible
they went on in a
mad career of impiety and wickedness as recklessly as though they had never
heard of Jehovah. But there are lights as well as shadows to the picture. Now
and then a man in authority rose to the level of his responsibility and ruled
in the fear of God
and the nation
as nations commonly do
catching
inspiration from their leader
entered upon an era of prosperity. Notable among
these faithful few was Hezekiah
King of Judah.
1. Hezekiah “did that which was right in the sight of the Lord.” His
theory of government was a simple one; to make it as far as possible a
transcript of the Divine government. Statesmanship
in his conception of it
was no familiarity with human precedents
a mastery of the wiles and
contrivances by which men in power manage to make all events subserve their
purpose
a skilful sword-play in which some trick of fence is more highly
esteemed than truth and righteousness. With that one purpose sovereign and
constant
all details of administration grouped themselves about it
and in
harmony with it
as the atoms of the gem aggregate themselves about the centre
of crystallization
the value and lustre of the jewel
due to its unity. No
government of contradictions this
whose worth was to be ascertained by
averaging its failings and its merits
but an honest attempt on the part of the
king to make his rule an answer to the prayer
“Thy will be done in earth
as
it is in heaven.” It is the fatal defect in most forms of government that this
overrule of God is ignored. Men are dull scholars
slow to learn that to do
right is to do
well
in public affairs as well as in private conduct. To do “that which is
fight in the sight of the Lord” is the fundamental and unalterable principle in
all policies of government that vindicate themselves in history. Treasuries and
armies and the intrigues of cabinets may win temporary successes; but they are
short-lived.
2. Hezekiah “trusted in the Lord God of Israel.” That gave him
confidence and made him uncompromising in all his measures. He was no cautious
strategist
trying experiments
uncertain of their issue
advancing so slowly
that there would be opportunity to retrace his steps if the event seemed likely
to disappoint his expectation a He did not trust in his own shrewdness and
far-sightedness. He was not anxious about the signs of the times
a calculator
of popular weather probabilities. No one more well aware than he of the unreliability
of the tone and temper of public moods. He trusted in God
the eternal and the
unchanging
“a personal God
the Lord God of Israel
doing His pleasure in the
armies of heaven and among the children of men.” So he had no responsibility
except for duty; consequences were in higher and wiser hands than his. Like a
soldier under command
he had only to obey orders. And withal he had a serene
and satisfying assurance that he should be contented with last results. The
Divine wishes could not be thwarted
and whatever pleased God would please him.
When the first Napoleon came to the throne
and saw how unbelief was destroying
both the faith and the conscience of the French nation
he said to his advisers
“If there is no God
we must create one.” No man can prosperously direct the
affairs of a great people without personal faith in God. There are crises in
affairs when he loses heart and hope unless he “endures as seeing Him who is
invisible.” There are hours when the policy of strict righteousness threatens
immediate disaster
and the temptation to slight concessions for large apparent
good is strong
and how can king or president resist it unless they are able to
look up through the obscurity and confidently say
“Clouds and darkness are
round about Him
but judgment and justice are the habitation of His throne?”
Religion is too often depreciated as the superstition of the cloister and the
Church
but all history shows that it has been the most practical and powerful
force in the administration of government.
3. Hezekiah “clave to the Lord and departed not from following Him.”
This religious faith was something more than an intellectual assent to certain
general truths
more even than the recognition that Divine Providence is the
operative factor in human history. His convictions had a personal force
and
caused him to see that he ought to be
and led him to endeavour to be
himself
a good man. Behind all the righteous measures he proposed
there was the weight
and push of a righteous character. It was not enough that the service due to
God had mention in public documents and on state occasions; he himself must
render that service in his private capacity. The people must see
in his
individual behaviour
the recognition of the sovereignty of those principles
that were embedded in the statutes
and gave shape and colour to the national
policy. Other things being equal
the better the character of king and governor
and legislator
the stronger the presumption that their administration of
affairs will be judicious
sound
and strong. The man who governs himself
rightly has taken the first step towards knowing how to govern others for their
good.
4. “And the Lord was with him
and he prospered whithersoever he
went.” This is the brief but significant summing up of the history of
Hezekiah’s reign. The account is notable for its omissions. There is no record
of new territory added to the kingdom
of armies organised
of treasuries
filled
of advance in industrial enterprise and business prosperity
the
specifications that figure so largely in the common description of national
growth. In the thought of the inspired writer
the enumeration of items like
these was of small importance in comparison with the great overshadowing fact
that the Divine presence was visible
and the Divine favour evident
in the
whole course of the people’s history. That of itself was sufficient to ensure
success and renown. Since God was for them
who or what could be against them?
(Monday Club Sermons.)
Hezekiah’s good reign
Heredity is fickle
or wicked Ahaz would not have had a son like
Hezekiah. The piety of the father does not necessarily involve the godliness of
the son
nor does the iniquity of the parent make virtue impossible in his
posterity. Judah had no worse king than Ahaz
and no better than Hezekiah.
There are surprises of goodness in bad families
and of wickedness in families
which bear an honoured name. There is also a sweet word of hope for the
offspring of bad people. Hezekiah and Josiah were sons of such evil monsters as
Ahaz and Amon. The surroundings and character of Hezekiah supply useful
lessons.
I. An evil
environment. Hezekiah’s life boldly challenged and denied the supremacy of
circumstances
and emphasised the truth that real manhood rules circumstances
and is not ruled by them.
1. Evil in the home. Ahaz contributed in the fullest measure
possible
both by precept and example
to the moral ruin of his family. Every
form of heathenism he found in the land he strenuously supported
and
introduced new varieties of sin from other lands. There is not a single
virtuous thing recorded of him during his whole life. The kindest thing he ever
did was to die
and even that service was performed involuntarily.
2. A corrupt nation. Evil was popular. The flowing tide of public
sentiment was with Ahaz
idolatry
and vice. The nation had lost its
conscience. The last restraints of decency and custom had been removed. There
was not an institution in all the land for the protection of youth
and the
young prince
and any other virtuous youth
might say with literal truth
No
man careth for my soul.
II. A splendid
character. Untoward circumstances develop brave men. Battles and storms make
heroes possible.
1. Unwavering decision. “In the first month of the first year of his
reign
” he set about the work of reform (2 Chronicles 29:3). He was only
twenty-five years of age. But his youth had been wisely spent
and when
opportunity of great usefulness came
he was ready.
2. Religious enthusiasm. He restored the purity and dignity of Divine
worship (verses 4-6). He went back to first principles; he dug down to the only
sure foundation of national strength. No nation can be strong whose temple
doors are closed.
3. Widespread success. His achievements were so great and complete
that he eclipsed all the kings who preceded and succeeded him (verse 5). His
trust was in the Lord (verse 5)
and his faith was honoured of God (verses 7
8). Truly character is above circumstances
and the history of this Jewish
prince is a lesson of hope for the young people of to-day. (R. W. Keighley.)
A just ruler a type of God
John Ruskin
in Stones of Venice
calls attention to
the pleasing fact that in the year 813 the Doge of Venice devoted himself to
putting up two great buildings--St. Mark’s
for the worship of God
and a
palace for the administration of justice to man. Have you ever realised how much God has
honoured law in the fact that all up and down the Bible He makes the Judge a
type of Himself
and employs the scene of a court-room to set forth the
grandeurs of the great judgment day? Book of Genesis: “Shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?” Book of Deuteronomy: “The Lord shall judge His
people.” Book of Psalms: “God is Judge Himself.” Book of the Acts: “Judge of
quick and dead.” Book of Timothy: “The Lord the righteous Judge.” Never will it
be understood how God honours judges and court-rooms until the thunderbolt of
the last day shall sound the opening of the great assize--the day of trial
the
day of clearance
the day of doom
the day of judgment. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
The spiritual scores successes
Remember that flesh dies and spirit lives: in the long run
it is
the spiritual that is mighty. Think of that insignificant-looking little
black-eyed Jew clanking his chains in Rome
and writing to “the saints that are
in Ephesus.” Think of Athanasius calmly facing the Arian rabble. Think of Leo
the Great consolidating a spiritual empire when the old Roman civilisation was
shattered and failing in ruins. Think of Augustine writing the City of
God in 410 when the world was thrilled with dismay because Rome had been
stormed by Alaric the Goth. “This is the victory that overcometh the world
even our faith.” To be spiritual is to be already victorious.
The religious-the greatest of reforms
In his History of the Eighteenth Century
Mr. Lecky said: “Although the career of the elder Pitt and the splendid
victories by land and sea that were won during his ministry formed
unquestionably the most dazzling episodes in the reign of George II.
they must
yield in real importance to that religious revolution which shortly before had
begun in England by the preaching of the Wesleys and Whitefield.” Methodism was
the least result of Wesley’s efforts
for
as Green the historian had said
“the noblest result of the religious revival was the steady attempt which had
never ceased from that day to this to remedy the guilt
the ignorance
the
physical suffering
and the social degradations of the profligate and the
poor.” Wesley preached and taught in his class-meetings and in his journals the
true application of the great saying of burke
that “whatever is morally wrong
can never be politically right.”--
Verses 3-7
And he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord.
Goodness and prosperity
It is impossible to read these words without some surprise. First
of all
we are surprised at the fact of a good king reigning over either of the
kingdoms of the Israelites
and secondly we are surprised at the assertion made
in the latter part of this verse
when the conclusion of the chapter appears to
give it a direct and absolute contradiction. So far from Hezekiah prospering
whithersoever he went
he is described as being assailed most bitterly by his
enemies
insulted and besieged
and
in fact
all but utterly destroyed. We
may
however
reconcile the statement
with the recorded facts by remembering that
after all
the Almighty did not
allow him to be utterly destroyed or entirely cast down. And not only so--the
afflictions which came upon him and the straits into which he was led were
really the results of his own folly
and only came to him when he forgot to
trust in the Lord his God
and relied on his own strength. And these thoughts
lead us back again to the fact brought before us in the text. We are taught
thereby--
I. That there is
an intimate connection between goodness and prosperity. When Hezekiah served
God he prospered
when he leaned on his own strength he did not. Real prosperity is
only to be obtained in the service of God. A false tinsel may
for a moment
gild the course of the sinful. A momentary glamour of unholy light may flicker
on their actions
but it soon will fade away. True stable advantage is only for
the righteous. This is shown us--
1. In history. What has become of the long list of mighty kings and
conquerors who have held the world in unrighteous sway? Their bodies have faded
and the kingdoms crumbled to dust. But those who have been servants of God are
now reigning in kingdoms of a brightness far exceeding any worldly kingdom.
This is shown us--
2. In the lessons and examples of Scripture. So numerous are these
that they will occur to all. Joseph is a striking instance of good
Ahab of
evil. In the history of the kings we find that whenever any king turned away
from his evil courses the kingdom prospered
to sink again to his lowest ebb
when an evil ruler ascended the throne. David is ever repeating the same
important truth. Our Lord tells us the same. “Seek ye first the kingdom of God
and His righteousness
and all these things shall be added unto you.” This is
shown us--
3. By our own personal experience. What does David say? “I have been
young and now am old
yet saw I the righteous never forsaken or his seed
begging bread.” The longer we live the more we may discover that those who love
God are no losers even in a worldly point of view. They not only have the
promise of good things to come
but also have the blessings of the life that
now is
far more often than is generally supposed.
II. That this
connection between good and prosperity is owing to the presence and influence
of God. God was with Hezekiah
and it was God who made him to prosper in all
that he did. We shall see the reasonableness of this fact if we remember--
1. That God is the only source of prosperity. He maketh rich and He
alone. The cattle upon a thousand hills are His. All the gold and silver in the
world are His. He can and will bestow them upon whom He will.
2. That God is the only source of protection. His knowledge and power
and resources can and will be bestowed by Him in the protection of His people.
It was so in the case of Hezekiah. How powerless were all the mighty hosts of
his enemies to injure even a hair of his head so long as the shield of the
Almighty was his protection!
3. That God is the only source of happiness. Even prosperity does not
always bring happiness. It may if it is sanctified. It is God alone who can
sanctify. And He can give happiness in this world and joy in the next. Thus
as
God Himself is good
He bestows rewards upon those who partake of His nature.
Righteousness itself is the highest form of prosperity
and the noblest
attainment of human nature
because it enlists infinite power on our behalf.
Conclusion.
What
a blessed lot is that of him who has the Lord for his God through Jesus Christ
our Saviour! May we all strive to do that which is right in His sight
and so
we shall reap the promised
reward. (Homilist.)
The good son of a bad father
Ahaz
King of Judah
is dead. At his death no tear was shed
except some down-trodden one wept for joy that the king was gone. Destitute of
true courage
of piety
of noble or elevating thoughts
he has fallen all
covered with shame and irreligion.
I. The worst of
fathers have sometimes left behind them the best of sons. It was so with Ahaz.
But no thanks are due to him. His influence
example
and life were all such as
seemed likely to fill the mind of his son with that which was not good. Yet the son was one of the
best of kings
and a good man.
II. The sons of bad
fathers suffer some loss through paternal wickedness and folly. This does not
need much illustration
for
unfortunately
we have too many instances before
our eyes almost daily. It is patent to us all that the iniquity of the father
is visited upon the children. This is true both in body
estate
and character.
We suffer for what our parents were and did
and can’t help it. I dare say many
of you have lived long enough to believe that many of your weaknesses and much
of your poverty are the result
not of your own profligacy and extravagance
but of those who have preceded you. Few of you will question the soundness of
my conclusions on these two. You may be disposed to do a little when I say that
the son suffers in character because of the bad father.
III. In the case of
Ahaz
we see how God sometimes sets aside the notions of men and selects from unlikely
schools the instruments with which He will accomplish great reforms and bring
great blessings. Hezekiah
reared in the house of Ahaz
became a reformer of
the abuses of his nation
restored prosperity to it
and brought the people
back to the neglected Temple and the all but forgotten God. The son of an
idolatrous king
he became the champion of true religion. Here we get a
principle of widest application and illustration. The Bible abounds with it
and our experience too.
IV. I Notice that
here we have a lesson of the mother’s influence. Did you notice with what care
the sacred writer tells us the name of the mother of Hezekiah
and whose
daughter she was? “Abi
” or Abijah
“the daughter of Zachariah.” It is not
often you find it so stated in the Scriptures. Are we to conclude that Hezekiah
was the good son mainly because he was the son of a good woman? Be that as it
may in this case
the mother’s influence is unbounded. It begins with the babe
and never ends. Beecher said
“A babe is a mother’s anchor. She cannot swing
far from her moorings.” And
we may add
the babe cannot swing far from its
mother. Her heart is a schoolroom. (C. Leach
D. D.)
Hezekiah
After a long journey underground we seem to have come suddenly
upon a sweet garden
and the sight of it is as heaven. The charm is always in
the contrast. If things are not quite so good as we supposed them to be
they
are all the better by reason of circumstances through which we have passed
which have made us ill at ease
and have impoverished or disheartened us; then
very little of the other kind goes a long way. A man comes up out of the
underground railway and says when he emerges into the light
How fresh the air
is here! What a healthy locality! How well to live in this neighbourhood! Why
does he speak so kindly of his surroundings? Not because of those surroundings
intrinsically
but because of the contrast which they present to the
circumstances through which he has just passed. Hezekiah was no perfect man. We
shall see how noble he was
and how rich in many high qualities
yet how now
and again we see the
crutch of the cripple under the purple of the king. It is well for us that he
was occasionally and temporarily weak
or he would have been like a star we
cannot touch
and at which we cannot light our own torch. Perhaps it is well
for him that we approach his case after such an experience. He thus gets
advantages which otherwise might not have been accorded to him: he looks the
higher for the dwarfs
that are round about him
the whiter because of the black population amidst
which he stands
at once a contrast and a rebuke. But from Hezekiah’s point of
view the case was different. Behind him were traditions of the corruptest sort.
He was as a speckled bird in the line of his own family. It is hard to be good
amidst so much that is really bad. (J. Parker
D. D.)
Verse 4
He removed the high places
and brake the images.
Iconoclast
The First Commandment instructs us that there is but one God
who
alone is to be worshipped; and the Second Commandment teaches that no attempt
is to be made to represent the Lord
neither are we to bow down before any form
of sacred similitude. The two commandments thus make a full sweep of idolatry.
I. We have much
idol-breaking for Christians to do. There is much to be done in the Church of
God
there is much more to be done in our own hearts.
1. There is much idol-breaking to be done in the Church of God. When
God gives a man to the Church
fitted for her enlargement
for her
establishment
and her confirmation
he gives to her one of the richest
blessings of the covenant of grace; but the danger is lest we place the man in
the wrong position
and look to him not only with the respect which is due to
him as God’s ambassador
but with some degree of--I must call it
so--superstitious reliance upon his authority and ability. In the Christian
Church there is
I am afraid
at this moment too much exaltation of talent and
dependence upon education
I mean especially in reference to ministers. Just
the same also may be said of human eloquence. Continuing still our remarks with
regard to the Christian Church
I will further remark that much superstition
may require to be broken down amongst us in reference to a rigid adhesion to
certain modes of Christian service. We have tried to propagate the truth in a
certain way
and the Lord has blessed us in it
and therefore we venerate the
mode and the plan
and forget that the Holy Spirit is a free Spirit. There are
persons in our churches who object very seriously to any attempt to do good in
a way which they have not seen tried before.
2. Now let us turn to the temple of our own hearts
and we shall find much
work to be done there.
II. Those who are seekers
of Jesus. There is some idol-breaking to be done for them. I pray God the Holy
Spirit to do it. The way of salvation lies in coming to Christ
in trusting in
Jesus Christ alone. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Religious reform
Hezekiah will now go to work and prove himself to be an energetic
reformer
He must have been a strong man. He had no colleague
no ally; no one
to say to him
Be brave
be true. He went straight against the hardest wall
that ever war built by the stubbornness and perversity Of man. It is not easy
to begin life by a destructive process of reformation. Who would not rather
plant a tree than throw down a wall? Who would not rather plant flowers
and
enjoy their beauty and fragrance
than give himself the severe toil
the
incessant trouble
of destroying corrupt and evil institutions? Whoever
attempts this kind of destructive work
or even a constructive work which
involves preliminary destructiveness
will have a hard time of it: criticism
will be very sharp
selfishness will be developed in an extraordinary degree.
If a man be more than politician--if he be a real born statesman
looking at
whole empires at once and not at mere parishes
and if in his thought and
purpose he should base his whole policy upon fundamental right
he will not
have an easy life of it even in a Christian country. In proportion as he bases
his whole policy on righteousness
temperance
and judgment to come
he will be
pelted with hard names and struck at with unfriendly hands. This holds good in
all departments of life
in all great reformations
in all assaults made upon
ignorance
selfishness
tyranny
and wrong of every name. (J. Parker
D.
D.)
.
A Jewish Iconoclast
Hezekiah was a very Iconoclast--a breaker of images. And in this
respect he develops three rare qualities that lift him a great distance above
his time and nation. He was clear-sighted--outspoken--prompt in action. He saw
it was nothing but a piece of brass
he said it was brass
and he brake it in
pieces.
I. Then Hezekiah
had the seeing eye. Let us mark that as a primary quality
essential both to
Hezekiah and all else who seek to free the people from slavish or debasing
customs. He saw clearly that what they accounted a god
and worshipped as such
was only a lifeless
senseless piece of brass--that
and nothing more. This
quality lifted the king an immeasurable distance above the people. They did
more than treasure it as a precious relic
a memento of Divine compassion in a
case of pressing need
or hand it down from sire to son as an heirloom of
priceless worth because of its associations and teaching--“they burned incense
to it.” So to-day
if a man would be a reformer
and stand out as a hero for
the truth
he must have this essential quality--broad and sweeping vision. He
must be able to see things in their true nature and tendency
to see correctly
and beneath the surface of things. Men look at things in different ways
and
many from peculiar standpoints. Some
for instance
never bring the object of
vision near
but contemplate it as through an inverted telescope
while others
look at things through tinted mediums
and all appear of uniform colour; some
again
never see only through another’s eye
and are incapable of independent
vision; a few are cross-eyed
and all things appear to them in an oblique form;
many are purblind
and men appear as trees walling; whilst a few will persist
in looking at all things through some distorted medium
which always gives the
wrong size
and a false shade of colouring; and others are stone blind to the
weightiest things in life
and can see nothing that needs touching
helping
renewing
or reforming. Such men can never be heroes
and do noble work in the
people’s cause. Others again
from motives of personal interest
love of ease
prejudice
ambition
or blind adherence to party
will wilfully close their
eyes; they will not see. And some
though they see clearly enough
yet are so
politic
or quiescent
or have become such slaves to popular opinion and usage
that they will not
or
what is worse
dare not
declare the vision. See the
next rare quality Hezekiah displayed in this transaction.
II. He was
outspoken. “Nehushtan”--a piece of brass. What a hard name to give to a god!
and what a frank and fearless honesty is here displayed! Might he not have
toned it down a little
and led them to the truth by degrees? “Nehushtan” tells
it all
fully
clearly
so at that it must stand. There were some very polite
people in that day who felt themselves shocked
and their feelings outraged by
hearing their darling god called a name so base. To-day
in some of the high
places of the land
when men venture upon what has come to be regarded as an
unfashionable and undesirable thing--calling things by their right names--what
pious horror! And what bitter invectives and scathing denunciations are hurled
against the poor delinquent who dares to use such speech! And yet
for all
this
we might not have far to seek to-day
and in the Church even
for things
quite as senseless as this serpent of brass--nay
worse
because devoid of its
precious memories and suggestive teachings
and yet held with as firm a faith and
regarded with as profound a reverence. Two or three thoughts are suggested by
this plain speaking of Hezekiah we shall do well to observe.
1. Here is honest candour. You will remember some passages in the
life of Luther not unlike the one under consideration. Take that historic
circumstance of the hawking through Germany of the famous certificate of
indulgence by Tetzel. Very wide and expressive that indulgence
promising to remit
the pains and penalties of purgatory
and grant to the purchaser an easy access
to paradise; an indulgence
too
that not only atoned for the past
but
provided for the future
by shifting from the culprit all the penal
consequences of sin
and granting a paradise to the most depraved--if only
money enough should be handed over for the sacred paper. All this the Pope
guaranteed in the parchment
in virtue of the power given to him as God’s
vicegerent on earth. How Luther met this infamous pretence all the world knows.
As Hezekiah looked upon the serpent-god
and found for it a name
so Luther at
once saw through the whole trick of this monstrous paper
and
holding it up
before the world
brands it as the “Pope’s emparchmented lie.”
2. That this announcement of Hezekiah’s assailed an established
article of Jewish faith
and overturned an ancient rite. That serpent-god was
blended with their religious life. Their fathers had worshipped it down through
the ages
and for seven centuries it had held a conspicuous place in their
services. Was it not now late in the day to call its divinity in question? To a
less bold and energetic man
these considerations would have had weight and
influence
but not so here. Now it is just here where the work of a reformer becomes
most stubborn
and where his valour will be tested most severely. It is not
nearly so difficult to set up a new god as to throw down an old one. People are
tenacious of old customs. The established order of things is difficult to move
and in time comes to be regarded as existing by Divine right. There is nothing
that men are more sensitive about than of matters touching religious usages.
3. This would provoke murmurs and secret opposition
if not open
dissent
and render him for the time unpopular among many. His “Nehushtan”
would ring in their ears as a most unpleasant sound; the word was very
unpalatable
and altogether too degrading. “What a thing to say of so good a
god! Only a piece of brass! Why
we and our fathers have burned incense to it
all these years
and we have had wise and good men among us who never disputed
its claims as a god! Brass only! it cannot be
it is a god notwithstanding his
statement!” But Hezekiah is unmoved
nothing daunts or turns him aside from his
purpose
it is Nehushtan still
just that
and nothing more. Let them murmur
oppose
reproach; let his popularity be jeopardised by throwing him into
conflict with priest and leader
all is nothing to him compared with the truth;
and here is truth touching the people’s highest interests; it will help to lift
them to freer
purer regions
and the people must have it at any cost.
III. Prompt and
energetic action. He “brake it in pieces.” What a thoroughness there is in this
determined encounter with popular error. Many can see
and do not hesitate to
give things their right names
but stop short of this third and grander
step--they raise no smiting hand to break in pieces anal destroy.
1. An act of determined prowess. He brake it. How short the history
of the transaction
but how eloquent of meaning! What a wide field of human
interest it covers
and how complete is the act! Like a true and trusty knight
of lordly chivalry
he smites with unerring aim
and the well-struck blow shivers to atoms
the brasen god. He brake it in pieces. Let us mark that. He did not bury it
nor have it removed to some secluded spot
nor content himself by passing a law
forbidding the people under pains and penalties to worship it.
2. This was an act of prompt decision. No waiting
or parleying with
the enemy; no deferring of the matter to a more opportune time
when the deed
might be done with less risk
or with greater ease.
3. Hezekiah had strong faith. Faith in what? Faith in God
faith in
the revelation
and faith in the truth. Doubt would have paralysed; faith made
him heroic. May the God of Hezekiah anoint our eyes that we may see clearly
and inspire us with a holy courage to speak the vision
and to strike boldly
for truth and freedom. One question of supreme importance presses upon us.
1. To what are we burning incense?
2. The subject suggests an admonition. The blessings of the Divine
Father should be used
and not abused by us. (J. T. Higgins.)
Destroying idols by royal command
The last of the persecuting monarchs of madagascar
Queen
Ranavalona I.
died on 16th July 1861
to the very last breathing out
threatenings and slaughter in her bitter hatred of the Christians. She was
succeeded by a king and a queen
both of whom
during their short reigns
allowed their subjects perfect liberty of conscience in religious matters.
After the death of these monarchs
Queen Ranavalona II. ascended the throne
the public recognition of her sovereignty taking place on 3rd September 1868.
As she took her seat on that memorable occasion
there were two tables placed
before her--on the one was the crown of Madagascar
and on the other the Bible
which had been sent to her predecessor by the British and Foreign Bible
Society. She had resolved to wear the crown in accordance with the teaching of
the Bible. In the following year the queen resolved that all the remaining
idols should be destroyed. Accordingly
she despatched officers on horseback to
the sacred village where was the great national idol
Kelimalaza. Great though
he was he was nothing more than a wooden insect wrapped about with red cloth.
As the officers rode up to the temple where the idol was
the priests became
greatly concerned
and their consternation was unbounded when these officers
demanded to see the idol. They demurred. “Is it yours or the queen’s?” asked
the officers. To this the only true answer was that it was the queen’s. “Very
well
” said the officers
“the queen has determined to make a bonfire of it.”
The priests insisted that it would not burn
but the officers showed a
determination to try the experiment. The priests then said they possessed
charms which would render the idol invisible
so that it could not be found.
Kelimalaza carried a scarlet umbrella in token of his rank
which alone would
have betrayed him. The officers
proof against the priests’ professed charms
went in
seized the god
with all its silver chains and trappings
and
submitted him to the fiery ordeal
which he never survived. Immediately orders
were issued that all idols in every temple throughout the island should be destroyed.
In every village and town idols were burned. Superstition received a shock
for
none of the feared disasters overtook the people
who after a while rejoiced in
being freed from baseless fears
such as they and their forefathers for
centuries back had been subject to.
And he called it Nehushtan.--
Nehushtan
“Nehushtan”--a mere “piece of brass”; thus Hezekiah named the
brasen serpent. What! this sacred relic of bygone times
the very sight of
which once saved so many from death; this image made by Moses at the bidding of
Jehovah Himself; this to be broken in pieces! this to be called a mere “thing
of brass”! Did it not rather become a pious king to preserve such an heirloom
amongst the treasures of the nation
as an abiding remembrancer of God’s care
for Israel in the olden time? Not so thought King Hezekiah. He was bent on the
work of national reformation. He saw that incense was being burnt to this
brasen serpent: that was enough for him. Whatever it may have been in the past
it was clearly a curse to the people now.
I. That a blind
veneration for the past is always an obstacle in the path of progress. An
intelligent regard for the past is
of course
a help and not a hindrance in
the direction of all true advance. But a clinging to customs
institutions
modes of thought and worship
and a refusal to surrender them for no other
reason than that they have existed for centuries--this is an unintelligent
attachment to the past
and has often obstructed progress. Right across the
path of Hezekiah
in his endeavours to purify the religious life of Ins people
stood this blind veneration for the brasen serpent. They could have given no
intelligent account of their burning incense to this image; only
it had long
ago been a medium of healing influence; and as
doubtless
their fathers had
burnt incense to it
why should not they? But Hezekiah rose above the
superstition which blinded his countrymen. A similar attitude was taken up by
Oliver Cromwell against the blind veneration which existed in his day for the
institution of monarchy. The doctrine of “the divine right of kings” was then
imperilling the liberties of England. We may not
perhaps
justify the
execution of Charles; and yet
we may feel that the time had come when it was necessary to strike a decisive
blow at the root of this superstitious doctrine. Sacred associations might
surround the person of the “Lord’s anointed”; it might be reckoned “sacrilege “
to touch a hair of his head; but Cromwell’s resolve was taken
that the
liberties of the country should not be sacrificed on the attar of this
king-worship; he was sure that (all sacred associations notwithstanding) the
king was
after all
just a man like other men. Cromwell had the courage to say
“Nehushtan.”
II. Even that which
has been ordained by God Himself for a blessing
may be so misused as to become
a curse. This brasen serpent was not merely a relic of antiquity. It had
originally been made by Divine appointment. By Divine appointment also it had
once been the means of saving many lives. And yet this very thing which had
been so great a blessing when used as Jehovah had directed
became a curse when
it was misused. It is thus that even a God-ordained help may be perverted into
a hindrance. Many similar illustrations might be given of this misuse of things
Divinely ordained. Art and science
for example
are intended by God to be
handmaids of true progress; but the worship of science tends only to
materialism
and the worship of beauty tends ultimately to sensuality. The
weekly day of rest: that
too
is a gift of God
and fitted to be a source of
blessing
But it may be so misused as to become a hindrance rather than a help.
It may be spent in an idleness or debauchery
which turns it into a source of
weariness or exhaustion. But it may also be misused by being idolised. See how
the Pharisees burnt incense to the Sabbath I And this is only a typical
instance of the manner in which the Pharisees misused the whole law. That law
was appointed by God as a blessing; but by their worship of the mere letter
they changed it into
a hindrance. The Bible
again;--what a blessed boon it
is--containing
as it does
a revelation of the character and will of God. But
the Bible will not bring us all the good which it is fitted to impart
if we
begin to worship itself instead of Him whom it reveals. The Bible is to be
used--not worshipped.
III. Every symbol
loses its significance and value
in proportion as it is converted into an
idol. The significance of a symbol lies in its pointing to something more
precious than itself
which it expresses or enshrines. And the practical value
of any symbol depends
not only on the importance of that which it symbolises
but also on the extent to which its significance is apprehended and realised.
Now
the brasen serpent
when it was lifted up in the wilderness
was not only
the means of bodily healing
but also a symbol of spiritual facts. It was a
material token of the pitying mercy of God.
1. Every creed is a symbol. It is an attempt to express the truth of
God in the words of man. Such words are valuable
only as pointing to that
which is more precious than themselves. And a creed or confession of
faith--thus regarded and thus used--may prove most helpful to the student of
theology
It may put him on his guard against many an error; it may often serve
as a finger post
directing him in the way of truth. But the moment a creed
begins to be worshipped
that moment its value is diminished.
2. The sacraments are also symbols. Our simple Christian feast of the
Supper is a most expressive emblem of the nourishment and enjoyment which are
to be found in our communion with Christ
and with one another in Christ. And
the sacrament of Baptism--symbolical of the cleansing power of the Gospel--is a
most fitting initiatory rite of the “new covenant.” Using these simply as
symbols--and looking through them to those spiritual facts to which they
point--our faith is strengthened and our spiritual life deepened
But
whenever
the sacraments begin to be in any way idolised
they lose much of their
significance and value.
3. Finally: the cross is the grandest symbol in all history. Jesus
Christ suffering and dying on Calvary: here is an actual event of the past
which
by an exercise of the imagination
we can bring before “the mind’s eye.”
But it is not intended that we should rest in the outward circumstances of the
Crucifixion. It is God’s purpose that we should use the cross as a symbol
not
worship it as an idol. (T. C. Finlayson.)
The fiery serpents and the serpent of brass
I. First of all
consider this serpent of brass as made by Moses.
II. Consider this
serpent of brass as worshipped by the Jews. We have no mention of it
after the
circumstances at which we have briefly glanced
for nearly eight hundred years.
We then come upon this passage
in the record of the life of King Hezekiah: “He
removed the high places
and brake the images
and cut down the groves
and
brake in pieces the brasen serpent that Moses had made: for unto those days the
children of Israel did burn incense to it: and he called it Nehushtan.” Though
no mention is made of the fact
yet it is evident that the Israelites treasured up this brasen serpent as a
sacred memorial or relic
kept it
perhaps
as a monument of God’s goodness
to
awaken their gratitude
and help them in future troubles to remember His Name.
They carried it with them during their subsequent journeyings in the
wilderness; and in after times
when they became a settled and great nation
it
appears to have been preserved with other memorials of historical and national
interest in Jerusalem. The fact that this serpent of brass became an object of
worship to the Jews is instructive in two or three ways. It suggests to us the
danger attendant on going beyond the Divine command in religious duty. God
ordered the serpent to be made
and to be used for the purpose and in the way
He named; but
so far as we have any record
He gave no command for its
preservation. As it was
the temptation was ever present; and in due time it
brought forth sin. Other memorials were preserved--“the golden pot that had
manna
and Aaron’s rod that budded
and the tables of the covenant”--but these
were preserved by Divine command. In all religious observances and duties it is
wise and safe to keep close to the Word of God. This serpent-worship of the
Jews shows us how forms may be abused. In its proper place
and for its proper
use
the place and use assigned it by God
this symbol was useful. But when the
invention of man stepped in
and began to employ it for another purpose
it
became hurtful. In all ages of the Christian Church we see illustrations of the
use and misuse
the helpfulness and mischief of forms. The conduct of the Jews
in relation to this brasen serpent is also an illustration of the growth and
development of evil. Possibly the persons who first began to worship the relic
reasoned thus: “Here we have an object made by Divine command. Our fathers were
delivered by it from a sore trouble. It represents to us the power and the
goodness of our God. Surely we may offer incense to it as the representative of
the unseen power and goodness.” This
perhaps
was the modified form which
their idolatry took in the first instance
before at a later stage it became
more gross and positive. This worship of the brasen serpent teaches us yet
another lesson we shall do well to remember; that is
the corrupting influence
of sinful associations and example. “He that walketh with wise men shall be
wise; but a companion of fools shall be destroyed.” “Evil communications
corrupt good manners.” In the conduct of the Jews we see the influence of their
neighbouring nations
the Egyptians and Phoenicians. They were continually
imitating the heathen around them
and importing into their midst the various
forms of surrounding idolatry.
III. Let us now mark
the destruction of this serpent of brass by Hezekiah. No sooner was this
monarch established on the throne of Judah than he began a great work of
national reformation. Idolatry covered the land. Ahaz
his father
was one of
the worst kings that had sat upon the throne
and
under his influence
the
nation had become utterly corrupt. Hezekiah knew the history of this
serpent--how it was made at first by Divine command
and for a most beneficent
purpose; and he
no doubt
could appreciate all proper feelings of veneration
for so sacred a relic. But he saw
the evil use to which the idolatrous tendencies of the nation had
put it; and
therefore
without any hesitation
he determined on its
destruction. The monarch’s conduct furnishes us with an example worthy of
imitation. Its principles should be our law in relation to the evils of social
and national life. We are surrounded by crying iniquities--iniquities that
affect not only individuals
but the life and interests of the nation at large.
Instead of sitting down in a spirit of indifference as to the existence and
tendencies of prevailing vices
we should resolve
in the strength of God
to
seek their destruction.
IV. We come
in the
last place
to consider the brasen serpent as employed in the ministry of the
Lord Jesus Christ. Nearly fifteen hundred years after it was made by Moses
and
seven hundred after it was destroyed by Hezekiah
Christ used it as a theme of
instruction. Our Lord here recognises the sinful and lost state of mankind. It
was the poisonous bite of the fiery serpent that made the brasen serpent
necessary; so it was the ruined character and condition of men that constrained
God to appoint Jesus Christ as their Saviour. (W. Walters.)
Nehushtan; or the idols of the Church
Seven centuries and a quarter--as long an interval
save a hundred
years
as that between our time and the time of the Norman Conquest--have
passed since the serpent was made and used for the healing of the people; and
now incense is burned to it
and has been for a long time; bow long we cannot
tell. Who first put that piece of brass away as a curiosity or an object of
reverence we do not
know; Eleazar
I should think
or one of his family. It was quite a natural and
inoffensive thing to do. And so
we may suppose
it passed into the possession
of the High Priest’s family
and was retained among their vestments and sacred
vessels. In their keeping it performed all the wilderness journey; crossed the
Jordan; located itself at Shiloh; was kept safe through the troubled times of the
Judges; escaped capture when the ark went down into Philistia; remained
untouched during the reigns of Saul
David
and Solomon; was secure when the
kingdom was rent in twain in the time of Rehoboam
and right on through corn
fusions and wars until Hezekiah determined to break it in pieces. How long the
piece of rubbish lasted! How safe oftentimes is the thing that a man and a
nation could best part with! Perhaps when Eleazar stowed it away in his chest
if he did it
he thought very feelingly of “the much people” who had turned
eagerly to it for relief from pain and deliverance from death
and thought that
it was a pity to break it up. He had done better if he had remembered the
golden calf and the mischief which it had wrought among the people. When the
brazen serpent was put away
it was probably preserved with an idea that it
might prove useful on some future occasion; for tile journey was long
and
there might be fresh plagues of a kind similar to the present one. A wonderful
power is there to some persons in the economical aspect of life. They heap up
old things until they have a very museum about them; but there is no life in it
all
no fitness for present times and circumstances. These people can see what has
been done
and are great on old methods and ways
but have no perception of
present needs
nor of how God’s wisdom
power
and love can as easily meet them
as they met the needs of earlier times. But whoever put away the brazen
serpent
and preserved it
and for whatever reason
it had grown to be a snare;
“the children of Israel did burn incense to it.” A curious interest
a kindly
affection
a forecasting care had become perverted
corrupted into a
superstitious reverence and an unholy trust. Reasoning and threatening and
promising would do nothing; the short sharp remedy was to destroy a thing which
had once and for ever done its work
and since then had been a too strong
temptation. To call and to treat things as they deserve is the safest way to
set all judgments right about them. To have called the serpent a “piece of
brass
” just like any other piece of brass
would have done no good had
Hezekiah allowed it to remain; for then it would have appeared as if he
retained some lurking respect for it
or feared to stand by his judgment in the
teeth of the prevailing feeling. Nor would it have been a complete rebuke had
he broken the serpent and added no reason for doing so. The true epithet
applied to things will often complete our labours. A folly or a superstition
can often be destroyed with a word when all our serious efforts against it have
failed. And yet the word would be only our own reproach
if we did not link it
with corresponding action. “‘Tis a piece of brass
” said the king
as he broke
the serpent in pieces; and when it could not resent the sacrilege
if
sacrilege it was
the people could not but allow that he was right. Among
things that are outgrown by men
or that
having served one or two generations
well
fail to be of any further use
nothing is more curious and instructive
than the popularity and the decline of books. To one age they are like the
brasen serpent--channels of life; to another they become almost sacred
and to succeeding
ages they are no more than a piece of common brass. In the history of the
religious life it is instructive to notice how institutions
missions
and
agencies of one kind and another spring up
do their work
die
and pass away.
Institutions are created to meet a contemporary need
and as long as the need
lasts they should last
but when it is gone they too should go. It is enough
either for a man or a thing to serve its own generation; to do that is to do
well. But you sometimes see an unwise and unhealthy attempt to prolong the
existence and operations of an agency which
having done its work
only serves
now to cumber the ground. The important matter is that we should intelligently
understand that the Church is a living body; that its forms should suit its
life at every stage of development; and that its agencies should be adapted by
it to the work it has to do. It is the life that must be held sacred
and not
the forms through which it expresses itself and the agencies by which it
operates upon the world around. (J. P. Gledstone.)
Nehushtan
I. Look at things
in their right light. Thus the king acted. He regarded “the brasen serpent”
from the true standpoint. Others beheld in it a god; he recognised nothing but
brass. To them it was supernatural; to him idolatrous. How true it is that what
we are we behold. The scene is in the seer. To no small extent the spectacle is
in the spectator. Nothing can be more accurate than the lines of the Poet Laureate--
But any man that walks the mead
In bud
or blade
or bloom may find
According as his humours lead
A meaning suited to his mind.
Cowper puts the same thought in another aspect--
And as the mind is pitch’d
the ear is pleased
With melting airs or martial
brisk or grave;
Some chord in unison with what we hear
Is touched within us.
A blacksmith hammers a piece of iron on his anvil “with measured
beat and slow.” Ordinary people hear in it only an ordinary sound. Not so the
great Handel. He listens
and it inspires him with one of the sweetest tunes in
existence. The sun is setting
and as it sinks the whole western horizon is
irradiated. Let three different men be called to witness it
and what
diversified effects it will have on them! The meteorologist sees in those
clouds before him signs of the weather
and confirmations of his theories
touching certain natural laws. The agriculturist sees in them the premise of a
good harvest or warning of a poor one. But the artist sees in them gorgeous
tints and graceful forms
which he seeks to impress on his memory that he may
reproduce them on the glowing convas.
II. Call things by
their right names. Hezekiah did so. He “called it Nehushtan
” which means
brass. Brass it was
and brass he called it. He spoke of it as he found it. A
rare virtue! Thorough honesty of speech is not by any means too common Dr.
South preached four fine discourses on The. Fatal Imposture and Force of
Words.” The title is a sermon in itself. There is
indeed
a “fatal imposture”
in some words. They are used to disguise sin and conceal the truth. No wonder
that the inspired seer should exclaim
“Woe unto them that call darkness light
and light darkness; that put good for evil
and evil for good.” The practice is
still a popular one. A prodigal is spoken of as “gay” or “fast.” A drunkard is
“the worse for liquor.” A dishonest tradesman is “unable to meet his
engagements.” The bad-tempered have “nervous irritability.” Notorious gambling
is “financiering.” An army that lays hold of all that it can pilfer is said to
“requisition.” An aggressive war is termed the “rectification of frontier.” A
rude and inquisitive intrusion on the privacy of a distinguished man is
“interviewing” him. A silly and wicked duel is “an affair of honour.” Slavery
is alluded to as “a domestic institution.” We repeat it
therefore--call things
by their right names. The common
colloquial caution is one which we may well
lay to heart. “Mind what you say.” It is wise to ask
“Let the words of my
mouth be acceptable in Thy sight.”
III. Give things
their right treatment. When John Knox was remonstrated with for sanctioning the
abolition of the monasteries he said
“While the rookeries stand the rooks will
return.” Hezekiah was evidently of the same opinion. He was not content with
condemning “the brazen serpent.” He first denounced
then destroyed it. He “
brake in pieces.” While the idol remained there was danger of a relapse into idolatry.
Its preservation could not be beneficial
and might be extremely injurious
therefore he demolished it. His conduct is the more justifiable when we
recollect a certain fact. Serpent-worship has
from early times
been a
favourite practice in the East. Both Africa and Asia bear witness to it. Whence
this singular custom arose it is not altogether easy to say
It is contrary to
what might have been antecedently expected. Possibly it grew out of the well-known
tendency in human nature to propitiate and coax a power which is felt to be
dangerous. Men often fawn on what they fear. Whatever the correct explanation
may be
however
there is the indisputable fact of serpent-worship. The writer
has himself seen Buddhists present their offerings of money before a hideous
image of a cobra di capello
the most poisonous snake in India and Ceylon. The
application of Hezekiah’s conduct to ourselves is clear enough. We also must be
iconoclasts. No idol is to be tolerated by us. What is your idol? To which of
the many false gods are you tempted to do homage? Break it in pieces
as the king
did the serpent. Let not any person
pursuit
or pleasure come between you and
your Maker. Whether your “brasen serpent” be Mammon or friendship
or influence
whatsoever it be
banish it from the temple of the soul
“and the King of
Glory
shall come in.” (T. R. Stevenson.)
“Nehushtan
” or means and ends in our spiritual life
The temple at Jerusalem was the national museum of the Jews. It
was fitting that it should be so
for the treasures of that God-governed nation
were all of a sacred kind. Among the most prized of all the objects contained
in that great sanctuary
there was the brazen serpent
that image which
belonged to the pilgrim-passage of their history
and which was connected with
a very striking incident in the experience of their fathers. The fact that it
was so long preserved
proves of itself that no slight feeling was entertained
about it. One generation handed it down to another through several centuries.
It might well have served the people of God as a kindly beacon
warning them
against rebellious murmurings
and also as a friendly token
attesting the
readiness and power of Jehovah to redeem them in the time of their calamity and
distress. But between what might have been and what was
how wide and deep the
gulf! That image of brass
instead of rendering an important spiritual service
became the occasion of idolatrous homage. Instead of leading the thoughts of
men’s minds to God
it drew them from Him; and instead of reverencing Him
they
worshipped it. So the brave and wise king brake it up before the eyes of the
people
and
in the act of
destruction
called it “Nehushtan
” i.e. a bit of brass. The principle
which lies at the root of this somewhat dating and very decisive act
is
this--that no good thing
however good it be
must be allowed to come between
our souls and God
to rob Him of His service; that
if anything does so come
a
strong hand must be used--if need be
a destructive one--to take it away: or
to put the truth in a more positive form
that whatever means we use for
worship or instruction
must not be turned into an end
but must be resolutely
and determinedly employed as a means to bring the mind into the presence of
God’s truth and the heart into communion with Himself. Let us apply our
principle to--
I. Our treatment
of the Bible. Wherein resides its virtue? There is nothing in the words which
are employed more sacred than in those which are found in any book of devotion.
There is no virtue or charm in the mere sound of the sentences which it
contains. If we suppose that we are any better for having a Bible on our
shelves
or on our tables
or in our hands
apart from the use we make of it;
or if we think that we are any better before God because we go regularly and
perhaps slavishly through an allotted portion of it
casting our eyes over it
or uttering in regular sequence the sounds for which the letters stand
whether
or not we take its truth into our minds
then are we making the same kind of mistake
which the children of Israel made in burning incense to the brasen serpent: we
are making an end of that which is only valuable as a means. We are putting our
trust in an outward observance
we are “having confidence in the flesh
” we are
assuring our hearts vainly
mistakenly
dangerously. This principle will apply
to--
II. The employment
of approved evangelical phraseology. Much might be said of--
III. Our attitude
toward the ministry of the Gospel. Open to a like abuse is--
IV. Our profession
of personal piety. Only too often is this regarded as the attainment of an end
rather than the employment of a means of good. Men are apt
having reached that
stage
to settle down into a slumberous state of spiritual complacency
instead
of feeling that
by taking this step
they have entered into a wider realm of
privilege and opportunity
where their noblest powers may engage in fullest
exercise. It becomes a haven of indolent and treacherous security
instead of a
sanctuary for intelligent devotion
a field for active Christian work
and thus
it is perverted from a blessing to a bane. (W. Clarkson
B. A.)
Nehushtan
We shall look at this instance of Hezekiah’s strict regard to
principle as one of those fine lessons which are continually found in the
exhaustless word of God; and shall remark--
I. That the
reverence and affections of the Jewish people towards the old brasen serpent is
very easily accounted for. In those days the people had few instructors
and
fewer books. As a nation the Jews were in a state of childhood
scarcely
capable of furnishing any materials for history. In such states of society
there is a natural and strong clinging to the past. So there was this serpent
of brass
which had been preserved from the days of Moses.
II. That the
burning incense to this serpent of brass was an indication of the people’s
forgetfulness of God’s purpose in its preservation.
III. That this
destruction of the brasen serpent derives much of its significance from the
fact that it was done by Hezekiah in his youth. Hezekiah came to the throne at
the age of twenty-five; and this appears to have been one of the first acts of
his reign. Lessons herein for young men.
1. None but young men know how hard it is to be religious. The other
sex are mercifully spared many of man’s perils
difficulties
and temptations.
2. On many things young men when they become religious will have to
write “Nehushtan”: on bad books; bad company; frivolous pursuits; and old
associations of evil.
3. Only a high order of principle will enable young men thus to act
independently of the world’s suffrage.
4. Only the resources of Almighty love and power will carry a religious young man
through the perils and temptations of his career. God will always tell young
men what Nehushtan to break in pieces
and He will give them strength to do it.
(W. G. Barrett.)
Truth’s old clothes
I. Truth itself
never wears out; but its dress does. Carlyle
in his never-to-be-forgotten Sartor
Resartus
has shown us how all truth takes to itself some form
or
dress
or skin. Life craves manifestation. Truth without a body is powerless.
Facts need words to describe them
and make them live and act. It is through
the words
or the expression
or the dress or body
that we come to get our
ideas of the truth or life these contain. The world itself is but God’s thought
put into form; the movements of the stars are the expressions of God’s delight
in the orderly; the flowers
His thoughts of beauty; the waves
the expression
of His might and gentleness; music
one of love’s voices
the expression of the
affections and emotions
as words express reasoning and intellectual processes.
Christ Himself is the completest expression in form of the invisible and
otherwise unknowable.
Truth
thought
spirit
deity we cannot know apart from form. All must clothe
themselves before we can recognise them and make them our friends and helpers.
The Incarnation of Christ is only the highest expression of a universal series
of similar experiences. This being so
it is easy to see how important form
clothing
may be. Mr. Ruskin
“in” the Ethics
boldly says: “You can always stand by form against force.
The philosophers say there is as much heat
motion
or energy in a tea-kettle
as in a sier-eagle. Very good; it is so. It requires just as much heat as will
boil the kettle to take the eagle up to his nest. The kettle has a spout
the
eagle a beak. The kettle a lid
and the eagle wings. But the kettle cannot but
choose sit on the hob
whilst the eagle can choose to recline on the air
sail
over the highest cliffs
and stare with undimmed eye at the full glory of the
sun.” The eagle’s glory is her form; the steam kettle’s force. Here we see the
beauty and use of form. The truth to be remembered about form is--that it dies
that it is often defective at the best
and that as it grows old it loses its
force. The body of the old eagle is not equal to the flights of its youth.
Words which are truth’s body are at best often a poor body
an inadequate
garment; and words grow old and lose their force.
II. At times we
need give truth a new dress. The very beauty of some forms is their danger. We
love them so much
we keep on using them
until familiarity robs them of their full force
and we
treat them as we should not--that is
with much less respect and attention than
we treat stranger sounds and forms. Splendid words
like grace
glory
blessing
mercy
faith
pardon
come to be tripped so lightly with the tongues
and so often
that hundreds never get to know their real meaning at all. Hence
it is that dear old tunes and texts may become idols. When we use words in song
or in prayer
and only use them because they have been so often used
and are
the correct thing
or were the correct thing
to say
then our worship is a
farce and a delusion
and the time for a change has come. It is impossible not
to know that we all often ask for blessing and grace with no clear definite
thought or purpose of what blessing and grace mean or involve; and when we do
so
then the words grace and blessing are become as the serpent of brass--a
delusion and danger
a mere Nehushtan. God Himself has had regard to this very
need in man; and for man’s sake He has condescended to use variety in giving
and expressing truth.
III. This need of
realness leads me to observe that we are prone to set an endue value on the
old
and we must guard against that danger. What history is the history of the
conflict which has raged ever when change has had to be made! If Galileo said
the world was not a fiat surface; if Walton said the Hebrew vowel points were
not inspired; if geology said the world was not made in six times twenty-four hours; if ever a new
view of the method of inspiration were suggested--nay
if the Church itself
undertook to revise the Bible translation--what a Babel of contention and
conflict arises; what gloomy prophecies of ruin and disaster are indulged in!
IV. This brings me
to notice our duty--that it may be wise and right sometimes to sacrifice the
clothing for the truth’s sake. The Bible
specially the New Testament
is a
wonderful example of this duty. It is said that there is only one spot in all
Palestine of which we can say
with absolute confidence
It was on this very
spot Christ must have been (so carefully have the New Testament writers guarded
against the worship of localities); except in the solitary case of Jacob’s
well.
V. Our last point
is this--in Christ alone (the truth) the clothing never wears out. That is a
marvellous statement about Christ--that “He is the same yesterday
to-day
and
for ever.” He
never needs revise His truth; He never has more experience or wisdom. We should
not think it a compliment to a man to say be thought at sixty just what he did
at thirty. We expect riper experience
larger views
and sounder judgments. But
Christ never needs thus grow; He is for ever perfect in form and spirit. The
Gospels are a wonderful illustration--in fact
the whole Bible is a wonderful
illustration--of this truth. The Book never grows old; it is always young and
in the front of life’s race and battle. (R. H. Lovell.)
Obsolete ceremonies
Ceremonies stand long after the thought which they express has
fled
as s dead king may sit on his throne stiff and stark in his golden
mantle
and no one come near enough to see that the light is gone out of his
eyes
and the will departed from the hand that still clutches the sceptre. (A.
Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 5-6
He trusted in the Lord God of Israel.
Three stages in the devout life
This is the writer’s summing up of the character of Hezekiah
before he enters on the details of his reign. It is a lofty and unconditioned
eulogium
making no reference to
faults. There are no shadows in the picture
and
of course
in so far it may
be taken to be a too favourable likeness. But that is the way that God judges
about men
by the general
drift of their lives
and He does not grudge to
praise them.
1. He “trusted in the Lord.” Now
people sometimes say that there is
nothing about faith in the Old Testament
and that it is only in the New that
we find such strong emphasis laid upon it
as the root and measure of all kinds
of goodness. But that is a pure delusion. There never has been but one way to
God
and the man that wrote the Epistle to the Hebrews
whoever he was
had
seen a great deal deeper into the genius of the Old Testament religion than
some very wise men of modern times
when he had not the smallest hesitation in
pointing his finger to all that army of witnesses in the past and saying
“These all died in faith.” One other remark may be made about this “trust
”
which is the basement story of Hezekiah’s character
and that is that the word
which is here employed
like all the Old Testament expressions for spiritual
and mental acts and things
has a very distinct material signification
and is
in itself a lesson and a picture. For the word employed
and rightly employed
here
for trusting in the Lord means
literally
leaning upon something
as one
might do upon a strong stay. We may also note that the Old Testament sometimes
speaks of trusting to
sometimes of trusting on
sometimes of trusting in
the
Lord
and sometimes simply of trusting the Lord
just as the New has a similar
variety of expression in reference to the act of faith. These variations indicate
varying aspects of that act
considered as a going forth of heart and will
towards their object
or a repose of heart and will upon
or an abiding of
heart and will in
God or Christ
which would prove profitable to dwell upon
but which I can only indicate here. If you will duly ponder the metaphor which
is inherent in the word of some feeble or lame man leaning upon a strong staff
or some tottering one leaning his hand upon a rock
and resting all his weight
upon that
I think you will understand a great deal more about faith
and what
it means
than if you had read a whole library of theological discussion. It is
not believing
but it is the act of leaning on what we believe in. It is not
your head but your heart and your will that trust. There must be
of course
knowledge before there can be faith
but there was never a greater or more
disastrous mistake in Christendom than that which says that the essential part
of Christian faith is correct belief. That is the beginning of it no doubt
but
there may be plenty of incorrectness in the belief
and yet if there is the
earnest reality in the leaning then that trust is fight. Only lean hard. A lame
man does not lay a light arm on his crutch. You are weak enough to need a very
strong support. Let us learn from Hezekiah when it is the time to lean hardest.
When Sennacherib’s insulting letter came to him he was sore troubled
but he
did not content himself with unavailing sorrow. He turned to his counsellors
but he did not content himself with bespeaking human advice and human help. He
had built the walls of Jerusalem anew
and made extensive and wise arrangement
in prospect of a siege
but he did not rely on these things. What did he do
with the letter? He went and spread it before the Lord. Is that what you do
with the disagreeable letters that come to yon
with the difficulties and
annoyances
great or small
with the perplexities and the burdens
whether they
be burdens of sorrow or of work that come to you? Take them into God’s house
and spread them out before Him. Sennacherib’s letter does not look half so bad
when it is spread out before the cherubim as it does when we read it in some
corner away from God. If a man will lean on God
the unseen Helper
he must
make up his mind to have plenty of scoffs and ridicule from people that have no
notion of a Helper that is not visible and material. Do you remember how the
messenger of the King of Assyria came to Hezekiah
or
rather
to his servants
and taunted them with the very fact that they were trusting? “Speak ye now to
Hezekiah
thus saith the great King
the King of Assyria. What confidence is
this wherein thou trustest? On whom dost thou trust that thou rebellest against
me? Now
behold! thou trustest on the staff of this bruised reed but if ye say
to me
We trust in the Lord our God . . . hath any of the gods of the nations
delivered at all his land out of the hand of the King of Assyria? Where are the
gods of Hamath?” and so on
and so on. Yes; and then “it came to pass that
night that the angel of the Lord went out . . . and when they arose early in
the morning
behold they were all dead corpses.” So was vindicated the faith
that looked so foolish
so presumptuous
with so little to build upon
and so
little to warrant it. Did
you ever notice the contrast between what came to Hezekiah when he prayed in
the house of his God
and what came to Sennacherib when he prayed in the house
of his God? “Hezekiah spread the letter before the Lord
” and he received the
triumphant answer from Isaiah’s lips which was the flash of the lightning
followed by the roll of the thunder in the death of the host. That was what
faith got when it prayed in the house of the Lord. What did the other man get
when he prayed in the house of his God? “It came to pass
as he was worshipping
in the house of Nisroch his god
that Adrammelech and Sharezer
his sons
smote
him with the sword.” That is what the man gets that bows down to idols
and
puts his trust in a refuge of lies.
3. “He clave unto the Lord;” that is the stage that follows on faith.
Now
that is another picturesque expression. Let me just run over in a sentence
or two
three connections in which it is employed in Scripture in order that
you may see what it means. It is the same word which is used to express the
adherence of the bone to the skin
or to express the way in which a
tightly-braced girdle sticks to the loins of a man
or to express the way in
which
when one is burning with thirst
the tongue adheres to the roof of the
mouth. And when you come into the region of its reference to men’s relation to
men
it is the word which is used for the closest
sweetest
sacredest of all
human relationships. “For this cause shall a man leave his father and his
mother
and shall cleave unto his wife.” It is the word that is employed to
express the loyalty of obedient subjects to their king. It is the word which is
used in that tenderest of all stories to contrast the clinging love of the one daughter-in-law
with the less self-abandoning affection of the other. “Orphah kissed her . . .
Ruth clave unto her.” Now
that is what faith should lead us to do. Loyalty as
of subjects to a king; love as of husband and wife; as of Ruth and Naomi
the
close adherence as of the girdle braced round the loins of a man. For in the
words there lie
not only these thoughts of close adhesion by mind and will and
heart
but also the thought of a vigorous resistance to all the separating
agencies
which are so busy in the lives of every one of us
and find their
allies in the hearts of us all. Now
lastly
the top-stone of the whole fabric
is obedience
which will follow upon such close communion with
and trust in
God. There are two great corruptions of Christianity; the one which attaches
all importance to the initial act of trust
and to the inward experience of the
devout soul
is strong in spiritual emotions and very Weak in daily
righteousness. There is a strange connection between fervent emotion of a
spiritual kind and a shady life in regard to common virtues. So do you take
care to avoid a Christianity which is all faith and fellowship
and not
obedience. And
on the other hand
do not try to begin at the roof of the
house
and build garrets and top-floor first--to have a righteous life without
the substratum
the faith which is the basement and the fellowship with God
which comes between faith and obedience. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Trust in God
1. Hezekiah was one of Judah’s best kings. He is classed with David
and Josiah. “All
except David and Ezekias and Josias
were defective” (Sirach 49:4). In his zeal for God he
“brake in pieces the brasen serpent” which had become an object of
superstition
and sought to carry into effect the Mosaic prohibition of heathen
sanctuaries (Exodus 23:24; Exodus 34:13). Moreover
“he removed the
high places
” thus showing the sweeping nature of his reformation. These “high
places” were “local sanctuaries
” which some good kings had tolerated
contenting themselves with uprooting the worship of false gods; for at these
local shrines there was
it is supposed
some sort of worship of Jehovah
carried on
which was to satisfy the religious instinct without going up to
Jerusalem. It shows Hezekiah’s thoroughness and determination.
2. But Hezekiah’s greatness shines out still more vividly in the hour
of trial. Jerusalem was threatened by Assyrian forces. Their generals were at
the gates
demanding submission. He stood alone
and yet not alone
for God was
his “Refuge and Strength
a very present Help in trouble”; “He trusted in the
Lord God of Israel
” and he did not trust in vain. Let us first note some of the
grounds upon which this confidence in God is based; and
secondly
mark some of
its features.
I. Some grounds
upon which trust in God is based.
1. The first is the goodness of God. Thus moral theology places trust
in God in connection with hope
and not directly with faith.
2. Another ground of trust in God is His faithfulness to His
promises. “He is faithful that promised” (Hebrews 10:23). In order to impress upon
us this truth
God confirmed His word “by an oath
” as men when they bind
themselves more strictly to a compact (Hebrews 6:1-20.). Goodness
when combined
with almightiness and fidelity
affords a triple basis upon which to rest.
3. Experience may be added to the former. Thus David
when he drew
near to the giant
recollected past deliverances. “The Lord
” he said
“that
delivered me out of the paw of the lion
and out of the paw of the bear
” etc.
(1 Samuel 17:37).
II. Some features
of this confidence must now be noted.
1. To have confidence in God
it must be entire. In foul weather as
well as fair
in the storm when Christ is asleep
as well as on the land when
He is awake. Christ tested this confidence in the case of His disciples
and He
does so still. It must extend both to temporal as well as spiritual things
as
we are reminded in to-day’s Gospel--to the necessaries of life
as well as to
graces and gifts from heaven. This was laid down clearly in the definition of
trust at the beginning. Such trust
it need hardly be said
must not be a cause
of idleness
but a stimulant of effort: “God helps those who help themselves.”
Hezekiah knew that; and so went into the house of the Lord
and spread “the
letter before the Lord” which the Assyrian foe had sent him
and prayed
earnestly to the Lord.
2. Trust
too
must be prompt. To ask for Divine help when all things
have been tried in vain
savours rather of despair than of confidence. “Seek ye
first the kingdom of God
” in point of time as well as order
and turn to all
else as means which are only of avail when they have the Divine blessing.
III. Lessons.
1. The whole subject is so eminently practical that the lessons are
obvious. All must have some object in which to confide. Our trust must be
not
in self
not in others
but in God. It was to Him Hezekiah at once turned in
his terrible need.
2. To kindle this spirit of confidence
let us meditate upon the
Divine goodness
the fidelity of God to His promises
and call up remembrances
of His past mercies.
3. Finally
let this trust extend to all circumstances and
difficulties whether of soul or body; and we shall find
like the good king
that “the salvation of the righteous is of the Lord
” and “He is their strength
in the time of trouble” (Psalms 37:39).
IV. Lessons.
1. To grasp still more firmly the fundamental truth of
Christianity--the union of the human nature with the Divine nature in the One
person of the Word
or Son of God
who for our sakes “became poor.”
2. To learn the lesson of detachment from all external possessions
after the pattern of His life on earth.
3. To seek by every means in our power to obtain the “true riches”
which Christ
“through His poverty
” has purchased for us.
4. So to use “the mammon of unrighteousness
” if we have it
as to
lay up “treasure in heaven”; for “where your treasure is there win your heart
be also” (Matthew 7:20-21). (W. H. Hutchings
M.
A.)
The foundation of a true life
The reign of Hezekiah was a halo of sacred glory to relieve the
gloom of the darkest period in Jewish history. So estimable a character was
Hezekiah’s that the sacred penman assigns to him the highest place among the
worthies of the covenant
“so that after him was none like him among all the
kings of Judah
nor any that were before him.” Of such a charactor we ask
What
was the secret of its power? What was the basis of its operation? Is such a
character possible to us? Our text is the answer: “He trusted in the Lord God
of Israel.”--Herein is the foundation; everything noble in life springs from
trust in God. This
we observe
is the source of all virtue
the correct
inspiration of every act
the unerring guide in moments of perplexity
and the
only satisfactory finality to human life.
I. Trust in God is
the virtuous source of character. A character of such sterling worth and
paramount influence
which
after the lapse of ages
is so immortal
drew its
vital force from the Divine source. The first trait in his life
and one which
claims the preeminence
is virtue. It is the undying element which gave
stability
vitality
and nobility to his deportment. Moral purity can only flow
from one source--trust in God. The language of that trust is
“Be ye holy
for
I am holy.” His thoughts
his motives
his desires
and his acts were pure
because he communed with God. You cannot build a character without virtue
and
virtue is impossible without faith. The brightest intellect without virtue is
only a meteor that will be lost in the darkness of its own sin-clouds. The most
loving heart without virtue is only an electric spark which kills where it
intended to give life. The highest endowments of life--birth
education
society
wealth
and friends--like the branches of a tree
will soon wither if
the worm of impurity is at the root. Lives
otherwise noble
have come to the
ground with a crash because there was no holiness in thought. The first act of
trust is to give our own hearts to God
to be washed from sin. The experience
which arises from this act leads us to seek
not a momentary discharge from
guilt
but a life of perpetual purity. The only character worth having is that
built on God.
II. Trust in God is
the true inspiration of character. When Hezekiah came to the throne the people
had no fixed religious views. Their hold upon the land was precarious
for they
owed a stricter allegiance to a foreign king than to their own
The court was
disorganised
the priesthood was neglected
and the people were intellectually
and morally degraded. Reform was difficult; to bring back the hearts of the
people to the God of their fathers was a great task. Trust in God as a source
of action is the universal experience of the Church. That faith is a receptive
medium of grace and power is evident
but it is power to be set forth in
action. As rest resuscitates the strength of the body
so faith derives fresh
supplies of grace from Christ Jesus. This state of comparative passivity
however
is but a link which unites the inner energies of the spiritual life to
the corresponding outward activities. Soul-refreshing meditation and prayer
result in wisdom and power; those who trust in God are partakers of the Divine
nature. Faith lifts them up into participation of infinite wisdom and strength.
III. Trust in God is
the soul’s stay in trial. Trials bear either directly on our persons or on our
circumstances.
IV. Trust in God is
the finality of character. Hezekiah slept with his fathers after he had
fulfilled his mission and finished the work the Lord had given him to do. His
life
like a graceful sentence
ended with a full stop. On what foundation are
you building? The best materials will not make a safe building if built on the
sand; your most sincere desires and efforts will not stand unless built on the
Rock. The rock is Christ. Character is everything
and Christ is everything to
character. Trust in God. (T. Davies
M. A.)
Trust in God
The late Rev. Hugh Stowell Brown of Manchester
at a public
meeting
related an incident which very touchingly illustrates this hymn of
Cowper’s: “God moves in a mysterious way.” One of the Lancashire mill-owners
who had struggled to keep his hands employed during the cotton famine
arising
from the American war in 1865
at last found it impossible to proceed; and
calling his workpeople together
told them he would be compelled
after the
usual notice
to close his mills. The news was received with sadness and
sympathy. To them it meant privation and suffering
to him it might be ruin.
None cared to speak in reply; when suddenly rose the voice of song from one of
the girls
who was a Sunday school teacher
and who
feeling it to be an
occasion requiring Divine help and guidance
gave out the verse of Cowper’s
hymn:
Ye
fearful saints
fresh courage take
The
clouds you so much dread
Are
big with mercy
and shall break
In
blessings on your head.
All the mill hands joined
in singing the verse
amidst deep emotion.
The secret of a successful life
Matthew Arnold’s description of God used to be “A power not
ourselves which makes for righteousness.” We need not have so vague a thought
of God as that
but God is a Power
not ourselves
making for righteousness;
and he who heartily thrusts himself into the sweep of this current will be
surely borne on by it
as a river bears a ship
into the success of
righteousness.
I. Hezekiah
availed himself of the force of the divine righteousness working in the world
and so struck the secret of a successful life
by a distinct choice of God.
“But he clave unto the Lord.” And he did it notwithstanding all sorts of
oppositions. His father
Ahaz
was one of the worst kings who ever sat upon the
throne of Judah. Hezekiah’s heredity was against him. Oriental and degrading
idolatry was the atmosphere enwrapping his earlier years. His father’s court
was abominably corrupt. But “he clave unto the Lord.” The first step in a
genuinely successful life is Hezekiah’s step--a distinct
self-surrendering
irreversible choice of God in the face of whatever oppositions.
II. Hezekiah
carried out his decision. Having decided to cleave to the Lord
he kept
cleaving to Him by constant action according to his decision (2 Chronicles 29:30.). Having come to
the throne
he immediately begins to rule in the fashion a man cleaving to the
Lord should. In every way he ranged his influence on the Lord’s side. There was
no waiting in Hezekiah; no putting off to a more politic or convenient season.
What action his decision for God called for
that action got quickly begun.
III. Hezekiah
maintained unwavering trust in the Lord to whom he clave. Read the account of Hezekiah’s
trust in the crisis of the Sennacherib invasion (Isaiah 36:1-22; Isaiah 37:1-38.). And the Lord to whom he
clave honoured his trust. To be sure Hezekiah made some slips. But it is no
wonder the Lord to whom he clave brought him to such shiningly successful end
as this. (W. Hoyt
D. D.)
Cleave unto the Lord
We may follow out the metaphor of the word in many illustrations.
For instance
here is a strong prop
and here is the trailing
lithe feebleness
of the vine. Gather up the leaves that are creeping all along the ground
and
coil them around that support
and up they go straight towards the heavens.
Here is a limpet
in some pond or other
left by the tide
and it has relaxed
its grasp a little. Touch it with your finger
and it grips fast to the rock
and you will want a hammer before you can dislodge it. There is a traveller
groping along some narrow
broken path
where the chamois would tread
cautiously
his guide in front of him. His head reels
and his limbs tremble
and he is all but over
but he grasps
the strong hand of the man in front of him
or lashes himself to him by the
rope
and he can walk steadily. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Adhesiveness
I have seen a heavy piece of solid iron hanging on another not
welded
not linked
not glued to the spot; and yet it cleaved with such
tenacity as to bear not only its own weight
but mine
too
if I chose to seize
and hang upon it. A wire charged with an electric current is in contact with
its mass
and hence its adhesion. But cut that wire through
or remove it by a
hair’s-breadth
and the piece drops dead to the ground
like any other
unsupported weight. A stream of life from the Lord
brought into contact with a
human spirit
keeps the spirit cleaving to the Lord so firmly
that no power on
earth or hell can wrench the two asunder. From Christ the mysterious
life-stream flows
through the being of a disciple it spreads
and to the Lord
it returns again. In that circle the feeblest Christian is held safely; but if
the circle be broken the dependent spirit instantly drops off. (W. Arnot.)
Weakness linked to power
The Rev. F. B. Meyer remarked that he wanted to be merely their
bigger brother--no shadow of “D.D.’s” between--only a little older
for he was
within a week of his 57th year. He continued: “We who live in this part of London
are very proud of our electric tramcars. They run heavily and swiftly. When in
my own massive church (Christ Church
Westminster) I feel a tremor as they
pass. I was riding in one with great composure the other day. It was five
o’clock in the afternoon
and
looking out
I noticed on the left-hand side a
young working-man
evidently on his way back from his day’s toil
his kit on
his shoulder
riding on a bicycle of a very antiquated character
without
tyres
and wobbling backwards and forwards. Presently the ticketcollector went
on top
and the young fellow saw his chance. He sidled his bicycle against the
swift
steady tram
caught the iron rail
and at once began to move along with
a velocity and smoothness that startled the bicycle itself. It was beautiful to
see how the massive strength of that huge tram was connected with the bicycle
by a touch. Presently we came to a curve and the man swept with it. As the tram
went round the curve the bicycle went too. And I said in my heart
to Christ
‘Lord
I have had a good deal of the wobbling motion about my life
but from
to-day I want to link myself for evermore with Thy mighty redemptive movement
that Thou and I may sweep on together’”
Nearness produces resemblance
The eye by gazing into the day becomes more recipient of more
light; the spirit cleaves closer to a Christ
more fully apprehended and more
deeply loved; the whole being
like a plant reaching up to the sunlight
grows
by its yearning towards the light
and by the light towards which it
strains--lifts a stronger stem
and spreads a broader leaf
and opens into
immortal flowers
tinted by the sunlight with its own colours. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 7
The Lord was with him; and he prospered whithersoever he went.
The secret of well-being
That is a grand summing-up of a life. It is Hezekiah’s experience
which is thus gathered together in a couple of clauses. It may be ours if we
like. Hezekiah fought his way to it
for his father was one of the worst kings
that ever sat on the throne of Judah; and he himself began to reign at a time
of national decadence and degradation. He struggled up from darkness that
covered the people into the clear light of fellowship with God. So may we.
I. The Divine Companionship
“The Lord was with him.” Of course
He is not far from any of us; for “in Him
we live and move and have our being
” as said Paul. But two people may be very
near each other and yet be infinitely far from one another. And it is
possible--and
alas! it is the experience of hosts of us--to be in fact all
compassed about
like a frond of seaweed in the sea
with that ocean of the
Divine presence
and yet to be at an infinite distance from God. His presence
with us does not depend upon our consciousness of it
thank Him for that; but
the blessing of His presence does depend on our being aware of it. But how many
of us go through life
day in and day out
and never feel that tie stands by
our side. God’s presence is not interrupted by any secularities of our
vocation; but our consciousness of it is interrupted by the secularisation of our
spirits. He may be with us in all daily duty.
II. What brings
God. I have remarked that my text
by the “and” at the beginning of it
is
hooked on
as being their consequence
to the previous words. These are very
instructive if we note their sequence as analysing for us the steps in what the
mystical teachers call the “practice of the presence of God.” They give three
stages. First comes “he trusted”--faith brings God. Then follows “he clave” to
Him-persistent adherence and desire bring God. Nature abhors a vacuum; God
abhors it more. When a man opens his heart
God rushes in to fill it
as surely
as when you dip an empty
pitcher into the sea you bring it up filled with
water; Whereas
if you put a bit of bladder over it you might dip it in a
million times
and bring it up as empty as when you let it down. Desire brings
God. Last of all
and consequences of the faith and persistent adherence
comes
he obeyed.
III. What the
presence of the Divine companion brings. “And the Lord was with him; and he
prospered whithersoever he went.” Christianity
real religion
which is nothing
more than this continuous consciousness of the Divine Presence
has a direct
tendency to promote even the lower kinds of prosperity which the world seeks
after. It is better
on the lowest grounds
to be good than to be bad. It is
better
on the lowest grounds
to carry the thought of God into life than to
live ungodly amidst the whirl of external events and duties. And we all know
that
though with many exceptions
as necessary for our discipline
still
on
the whole
the dispositions which are cultivated in the man who is ever aware
of God with him
are such as in the main
and on the general
and in the long
run
do contribute to the material well-being of individuals and of nations.
But
as we have to get rid of mere sensuous ideas when we talk about God being
with us
so we have to get rid of mere sensuous ideas when we talk about the
prosperity that comes from His Presence. Hezekiah had his own share of what
people call disasters. He was not always prosperous. There was once the
Assyrian camp outside the walls of Jerusalem
and he was reduced almost to
desperation. He had that great sickness
where he behaved in a very cowardly
and effeminate and selfish fashion. And yet
on the whole
“God was with him
and he prospered!” Yes; for the invasion drove him nearer to God
and he then
felt more of the Divine Presence. If we have God on board
and let Him take the
helm into His own hands
depend upon it
adverse winds will bear us to our haven. (A.
Maclaren
D. D.)
Verse 10
At the end of three years they took it.
The gains of perseverance
I do admire the perseverance of Shalmaneser and his successor. For
three years they battered at its doors and waited patiently for success.
Preaching the other night at Portsmouth
an unknown Christian came up to me
after the service with sad face and tearful eye and said
“I wanted a word with
you
Mr. Spurgeon. I have been working for two years in the London
lodging-houses and I have seen no result.” The people were crowding around me;
I wanted to have
a word with this one and the other
and yet others were pressing for a
handshake
so I could not say much
but I hope that the message that was so
casually delivered somewhat encouraged him. “For two years
” I said
“you have
been working and seen no result! Well
it does seem discouraging
but you must
keep on” “But
” he said
“there is not a solitary sign.” “Well
” said I in
parting with him
“perhaps they will all come in a lump.” Well
that was just
an off-hand and unpremeditated way of answering him
but I think I saw a sparkle
in his eye
and I hope he went away encouraged to believe that God was saving
up a blessing for him
and that when it did rain it would pour. God grant it
may be so here. “At the end of three years they took it.” If I had thought of
“this text when the friend greeted me at Portsmouth
I think I should have
spoken it.” ‘At the end of
three years they took it.’ You have only been labouring two; go on for at least
another twelve months and then
if not before
the hard hearts of men will open
and the brazen gates may yield.” (Thomas Spurgeon.)
Verses 13-37
Verses 13-16
Now in the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah.
The folly of defying God
As you stood some stormy day upon a sea-cliff
and marked the
giant billow rise from the deep
to rush on with foaming crest
and throw
itself thundering on the trembling shore
did you ever fancy that you could
stay its course
and hurl it back to the depths of ocean! Did you ever stand
beneath the laden
lowering cloud
and mark the lightning’s leap
as it shot
and flashed dazzling athwart the gloom
and think that you could grasp the bolt
and change its path! Still more foolish and vain his thought who fancies that
he can arrest or turn aside the purpose of God
saying: “What is the Almighty
that we should serve Him?
Let us break His bands asunder
and cast away His cords from us!” Break His
bands asunder! How He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh! (Guthrie.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》