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Song of
Solomon Chapter One
Song of Solomon 1
Chapter Contents
The title. (1) The church confesses her deformity. (2-6)
The church beseeches Christ to lead her to the resting-place of his people.
(7
8) Christ's commendation of the church
Her esteem for Him. (9-17)
Commentary on Song of Solomon 1:1
(Read Song of Solomon 1:1)
This is "the Song of songs
" excellent above
any others
for it is wholly taken up with describing the excellences of
Christ
and the love between him and his redeemed people.
Commentary on Song of Solomon 1:2-6
(Read Song of Solomon 1:2-6)
The church
or rather the believer
speaks here in the
character of the spouse of the King
the Messiah. The kisses of his mouth mean
those assurances of pardon with which believers are favoured
filling them with
peace and joy in believing
and causing them to abound in hope by the power of
the Holy Ghost. Gracious souls take most pleasure in loving Christ
and being
loved of him. Christ's love is more valuable and desirable than the best this
world can give. The name of Christ is not now like ointment sealed up
but like
ointment poured forth; which denotes the freeness and fulness of the setting
forth of his grace by the gospel. Those whom he has redeemed and sanctified
are here the virgins that love Jesus Christ
and follow him whithersoever he
goes
Revelation 14:4. They entreat him to draw them
by the quickening influences of his Spirit. The more clearly we discern
Christ's glory
the more sensible shall we be that we are unable to follow him
suitably
and at the same time be more desirous of doing it. Observe the speedy
answer given to this prayer. Those who wait at Wisdom's gate
shall be led into
truth and comfort. And being brought into this chamber
our griefs will vanish.
We have no joy but in Christ
and for this we are indebted to him. We will
remember to give thanks for thy love; it shall make more lasting impressions
upon us than any thing in this world. Nor is any love acceptable to Christ but
love in sincerity
Ephesians 6:24. The daughters of Jerusalem may
mean professors not yet established in the faith. The spouse was black as the tents
of the wandering Arabs
but comely as the magnificent curtains in the palaces
of Solomon. The believer is black
as being defiled and sinful by nature
but
comely
as renewed by Divine grace to the holy image of God. He is still
deformed with remains of sin
but comely as accepted in Christ. He is often
base and contemptible in the esteem of men
but excellent in the sight of God.
The blackness was owing to the hard usage that had been suffered. The children
of the church
her mother
but not of God
her Father
were angry with her.
They had made her suffer hardships
which caused her to neglect the care of her
soul. Thus
under the emblem of a poor female
made the chosen partner of a
prince
we are led to consider the circumstances in which the love of Christ is
accustomed to find its objects. They were wretched slaves of sin
in toil
or
in sorrow
weary and heavy laden
but how great the change when the love of
Christ is manifested to their souls!
Commentary on Song of Solomon 1:7
8
(Read Song of Solomon 1:7
8)
Observe the title given to Christ
O Thou whom my soul
loveth. Those that do so
may come to him boldly
and may humbly plead with
him. Is it with God's people a noon-time of outward troubles
inward conflicts?
Christ has rest for them. Those whose souls love Jesus Christ
earnestly desire
to share in the privileges of his flock. Turning aside from Christ is what
gracious souls dread more than anything else. God is ready to answer prayer.
Follow the track
ask for the good old way
observe the footsteps of the flock
look what has been the practice of godly people. Sit under the direction of
good ministers; beside the tents of the under shepherds. Bring thy charge with
thee
they shall all be welcome. It will be the earnest desire and prayer of
the Christian
that God would so direct him in his worldly business
and so
order his situation and employment
that he may have his Lord and Saviour
always before him.
Commentary on Song of Solomon 1:9-17
(Read Song of Solomon 1:9-17)
The Bridegroom gives high praises of his spouse. In the
sight of Christ believers are the excellent of the earth
fitted to be
instruments for promoting his glory. The spiritual gifts and graces which
Christ bestows on every true believer
are described by the ornaments then in
use
verses 10
11. The graces of the saints are many
but there is dependence upon each other. He who is the Author
will be the
Finisher of the good work. The grace received from Christ's fulness
springs
forth into lively exercises of faith
affection
and gratitude. Yet Christ
not
his gifts
is most precious to them. The word translated "camphire
"
signifies "atonement or propitiation." Christ is dear to all
believers
because he is the propitiation for their sins. No pretender must have
his place in the soul. They resolved to lodge him in their hearts all the
night; during the continuance of the troubles of life. Christ takes delight in
the good work which his grace has wrought on the souls of believers. This
should engage all who are made holy
to be very thankful for that grace which
has made those fair
who by nature were deformed. The spouse (the believer) has
a humble
modest eye
discovering simplicity and godly sincerity; eyes
enlightened and guided by the Holy Spirit
that blessed Dove. The church expresses
her value for Christ. Thou art the great Original
but I am but a faint and
imperfect copy. Many are fair to look at
yet their temper renders them
unpleasant: but Christ is fair
yet pleasant. The believer
verse 16
speaks with praise of those holy
ordinances in which true believers have fellowship with Christ. Whether the
believer is in the courts of the Lord
or in retirement; whether following his
daily labours
or confined on the bed of sickness
or even in a dungeon
a
sense of the Divine presence will turn the place into a paradise. Thus the
soul
daily having fellowship with the Father
the Son
and the Holy Spirit
enjoys a lively hope of an incorruptible
undefiled
and unfading inheritance
above.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Song of Solomon¡n
Song of Solomon 1
Verse 1
[1] The
song of songs
which is Solomon's.
The song ¡X
The most excellent of all songs. And so this might well be called
whether you
consider the author of it
who was a great prince
and the wisest of all mortal
men; or the subject of it
which is not Solomon
but a greater than Solomon
even Christ
and his marriage with the church; or the matter of it
which is
most lofty
containing in it the noblest of all the mysteries contained either
in the Old or the New Testament; most pious and pathetical
breathing forth the
hottest flames of love between Christ and his people
most sweet and
comfortable
and useful to all that read it with serious and Christian eyes.
Verse 2
[2] Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for thy love is better than
wine.
Let him ¡X
The beginning is abrupt; but is suitable to
and usual in writing of this
nature
wherein things are not related in an historical and exquisite order
but that which was first done is brought in
as it were accidentally
after
many other passages: as we see in Homer
and Virgil
and others. These are the
words of the spouse
wherein she breathes forth her passionate love to the
bridegroom
whom she does not name; because it was needless
as being so well
known to the persons
to whom she speaks
and being the only person who was
continually in her thoughts. By kisses
the usual tokens of love and good-will
she means the communications of his love and favour
his graces and comforts
breathed into her from the Spirit of Christ.
Thy love ¡X
This sudden change of the person is frequent
in pathetic discourses. First she
speaks of him as absent
but speedily grows into more acquaintance with him
and by ardent desire and faith
embraces him as present.
Wine ¡X
Than the most delicious meat or drink
or than all sensible delights
one kind
being put for all.
Verse 3
[3]
Because of the savour of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured
forth
therefore do the virgins love thee.
Ointments ¡X
Because of those excellent gifts and graces of God's Spirit wherewith thou art
replenished.
Thy name ¡X
Thy report
the very mention of thee
and all those things by which thou makest
thyself known to men
thy word
particularly thine offers of pardon and
salvation to sinners; and all thy works
especially that great work of
redemption is most acceptable
and refreshing.
The virgins ¡X
called the companions of the bride
Psalms 45:14
particular believers
who are
called virgins
2 Corinthians 11:2; Revelation 14:4
who have their senses exercised
to perceive this sweetness and fulness of Christ.
Verse 4
[4] Draw
me
we will run after thee: the king hath brought me into his chambers: we will
be glad and rejoice in thee
we will remember thy love more than wine: the
upright love thee.
Draw me ¡X By
thy grace and holy spirit.
We ¡X Both I
thy spouse
and the virgins
my companions. And this change of numbers teaches us that the
spouse is one great body
consisting of many members.
Run ¡X
Will follow thee readily
chearfully
and swiftly.
The king ¡X
Christ
the king of his church
hath answered my prayer.
Chambers ¡X
Where I may freely converse with him
and enjoy him. He hath taken me into
intimate communion with himself.
Remember ¡X
This shall be the matter of our thoughts and discourses.
Verse 5
[5] I am black
but comely
O ye daughters of Jerusalem
as the tents of
Kedar
as the curtains of Solomon.
Black ¡X I
confess
as to myself
I am contemptible and deformed. She alludes to the
complexion of Pharaoh's daughter.
Comely ¡X
Yet I am glorious within
and comely through the beauty which my husband hath
put upon me
by his graces conferred upon me
in justification and
sanctification.
Daughters ¡X By
which she understands particular believers
whose mother
Jerusalem is called
Galatians 4:26.
The tents ¡X Of
the wild Arabians
the posterity of Kedar
Genesis 25:13
who dwelt in tents
and were black
and uncomely.
The curtains ¡X As
the hangings wherewith Solomon's house was furnished
which none can doubt were
most beautiful and glorious. So these two last clauses answer to the two first
and that in the same order in which they lie.
Verse 6
[6] Look
not upon me
because I am black
because the sun hath looked upon me: my
mother's children were angry with me; they made me the keeper of the vineyards;
but mine own vineyard have I not kept.
Look not ¡X
With wonder and disdain.
Mother's children ¡X
False brethren
who pretend that the church is their mother
when their actions
demonstrate
that God
the husband of the church
is not their father;
hypocritial professors
who are
and ever were
the keenest enemies; false
teachers
and their followers
who by their corrupt doctrines
and divisions
and contentions
bring great mischief to the church.
Made me ¡X
Having prevailed against me
they used me like a slave
putting me upon the
most troublesome services
such as the keeping of the vineyards was esteemed
2 Kings 25:12; Isaiah 61:5; Matthew 20:1-7.
Not kept ¡X
They gave me such a full employment in the drudging work about their vineyards
that they left me no time to mind my own; they hindered me from doing my own
duty
and from minding my own concerns. And therefore it is no wonder if I be
uncomely and scorched by the sun.
Verse 7
[7] Tell
me
O thou whom my soul loveth
where thou feedest
where thou makest thy flock
to rest at noon: for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of
thy companions?
Tell me ¡X
Notwithstanding all these discouragements and afflictions which I suffer for
thy sake
and for my love to thee. Being reproached and persecuted by others
I
flee to thee
O my only refuge and joy.
Feedest ¡X
Thy flock
discover to me which is thy true church
and which are those assemblies
and people where thou art present. This is the request of particular believers.
At noon ¡X In
the heat of the day
when the shepherds in those hot countries used to lead
their flocks into shady places. Whereby he means the time of persecution
when
it is hard to discover the true church
because she is deformed by it
and
because she is obscured and driven into the wilderness.
That turneth ¡X
Or
a wanderer
or vagabond; like a neglected and forlorn creature exposed both
to censure and danger.
The flocks ¡X
The assemblies of corrupt teachers and worshippers. These he calls Christ's
companions because they profess the name of Christ
and their conjunction with
him in God's worship.
Verse 8
[8] If
thou know not
O thou fairest among women
go thy way forth by the footsteps of
the flock
and feed thy kids beside the shepherds' tents.
If ¡X This is Christ's
answer.
Go ¡X Observe and follow
the paths which my sheep have trodden before thee
my faithful servants
Abraham
and others. For the church in all ages is one and the same
and there
is but one way for the substance
in which all the saints from the beginning of
the world walk
Christ being the same yesterday
and to day
and forever.
Feed ¡X
Take care for the feeding of all
and especially young and weak Christians.
Beside ¡X
Under the conduct
and according to the instruction of my faithful shepherds
chiefly those who have gone before thee
the prophets and apostles
and in
subordination to them
and to their writings
and to others whom I shall raise
from time to time to feed my people.
Verse 9
[9] I
have compared thee
O my love
to a company of horses in Pharaoh's chariots.
Compared thee ¡X
For strength and courage
to overcome all thine enemies. For horses are famous
for that property
and the strength of the battle was then thought to consist
much in horses
and chariots
especially in a company or multitude of them. And
the church in this book is represented not only as fair and beautiful
but also
as terrible to her enemies.
Verse 10
[10] Thy
cheeks are comely with rows of jewels
thy neck with chains of gold.
Jewels ¡X
Which being fastened to the heads of brides
used to hang down upon their
cheeks
in those times. He mentions the cheeks
as the chief seat of beauty.
Chains ¡X
Whereby
as well as by the rows of jewels: he may seem to design all those
persons and things wherewith the church is made beautiful in the eyes of God
and of men
such as excellent ministers
and saints
righteous laws
holy
ordinances
and the gifts and graces of God's spirit.
Verse 11
[11] We
will make thee borders of gold with studs of silver.
We ¡X I and my father.
Will make ¡X
Beautiful and honourable ornaments.
Verse 12
[12]
While the king sitteth at his table
my spikenard sendeth forth the smell
thereof.
The king ¡X My
royal husband.
Sitteth ¡X
With me in his ordinances.
Spikenard ¡X
The graces of his spirit conferred upon me
here compared to those sweet
ointments
which the master of the feast caused to be poured out upon the heads
of the guests
Luke 7:38
in which ointments
spikenard was a
chief ingredient.
Sendeth ¡X
This denotes the exercise and manifestation of her graces
which is a sweet
smelling savour in the nostrils of her husband
and of her companies.
Verse 13
[13] A
bundle of myrrh is my wellbeloved unto me; he shall lie all night betwixt my
breasts.
Myrrh ¡X
Myrrh
was ever reckoned among the best perfumes.
Shall lie ¡X
This phrase may denote the churches intimate union with
and hearty affection
to Christ.
Verse 14
[14] My
beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi.
Camphire ¡X We
are not concerned to know exactly what this was; it being confessed
that it
was some grateful plant
and that it sets forth that great delight which the
church hath in the enjoyment of Christ.
Engedi ¡X A
pleasant and well-watered place in the tribe of Judah
where there were many
pleasant plants.
Verse 15
[15]
Behold
thou art fair
my love; behold
thou art fair; thou hast doves' eyes.
Behold ¡X This
is the speech of Christ. The words are doubled to manifest his fervent
affection for her.
Doves eyes ¡X
Which are mild and harmless
chaste and faithful. And by the eyes he seems to
design both her outward behaviour
and the inward disposition of her mind.
Verse 16
[16]
Behold
thou art fair
my beloved
yea
pleasant: also our bed is green.
Behold ¡X
The church here again speaks
and retorts Christ's words; thou
and thou only
art fair indeed.
Pleasant ¡X As
thou art beautiful in thyself
so thou art amiable and pleasant in thy
condescention to me.
Bed ¡X
This seems to denote the place where the church enjoys sweet fellowship with
Christ
by his spirit accompanying his ordinances.
Green ¡X Is
pleasant
as that colour to the eye.
Verse 17
[17] The
beams of our house are cedar
and our rafters of fir.
Cedar ¡X
Not only strong
but also fragrant and delightful.
Cypress ¡X
Which also was strong and fragrant
and therefore suits well with cedar.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Song of Solomon¡n
The Love of the Beloved
(Christ)
1.
The Expression of Love¡X
Kiss me¡XAffection (v.2)
Draw me¡XAttraction (v.4)
Tell me¡XInstruction (v.7)
The Instruction is obtained¡X
By the footsteps of the flock (v.8)
Beside the tents of the shepherds
(v.8)
2.
The Excellence of Christ¡¦s love¡X
Better than wine (v.2)
(Wine is of short duration and
man-made; Love is of God and eternal in duration)
3.
The Experience of Christ¡¦s Love¡X
His Name¡Xan unction (v.3)
His inner chambers¡XCommunion (v.4)
His remembrance-joy (v.4)
01 Chapter 1
Verses 1-17
The Song of Songs
which is Solomon¡¦s.
The Song of Solomon
The Song of Songs is Solomon¡¦s
as composed by the wisest
of men
under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
and Solomon¡¦s also as composed
concerning the true Solomon the Prince of Peace
of whom the son of David was
an eminent type. It belongs to the earthly Solomon
as the skilful work of his
hands; to the heavenly Solomon
as the utterance of his heart to the Church
and of the heart of the Church towards him. (A. Moody Stuart.)
Let Him kiss me with the kisses of His mouth: for Thy love is
better than wine.
Communion with Christ
1. Such as have the least taste of Christ¡¦s love
are impatient and
restless in their desires after the nearest fellowship and communion with Him.
The Church here desires Christ¡¦s manifestation in the flesh
that she might
enjoy him in a Gospel-dispensation
and have sweeter discoveries of His favour: so in like manner the
Church of the New Testament
who did enjoy all the privileges of the Gospel;
yet she goes higher in her affections
and desires Christ¡¦s last coming
that
so she might enjoy Him in that heavenly and everlasting communion
which the
saints shall enjoy hereafter.
2. Christ hath given more sweet and comfortable pledges of love and
reconciliation to His people under the Gospel
than He did under the Law (Luke 10:24; Hebrews 12:18-20; Hebrews 12:22; Ephesians 4:8).
3. The doctrine of the Gospel is very sweet and desirable (Hebrews 6:5; 1 Timothy 4:6; 2 Corinthians 5:19; Ephesians 1:13; Ephesians 2:17).
4. Those strong desires and earnest longings of the faithful after
Christ
flow from a principle of love (2 Corinthians 5:15; Jeremiah 31:3; Hosea 11:4). Christ is the ocean of
spiritual love
from whence we derive
and into which we return our love: so that our love
proceeds from Christ¡¦s love; His love is as a loadstone
attractive
drawing
our affections to Him; our love is as the reflecting back to Him again the
beams of His own love.
5. The love of God in Christ is an infinite and a manifold love.
Thy love is better than
wine.
Better than wine
I. Christ¡¦s love
is better than wine because of what it is not.
1. It may be taken without question. Many delightsome things
manor
of the pleasures of this world
are very questionable enjoyments. Christians
had better keep away from everything about which their consciences are not
perfectly clear; but all our consciences are clear concerning the Lord Jesus
and our heart¡¦s love to Him; so that
in this respect
His love is better than
wine.
2. It is to be had without money. Many a man has beggared himself
and squandered his estate
through his love of worldly pleasure
and especially
through his fondness for wine; but the love of Christ is to be had without
money. The love of Christ is unpurchased; and I may add that it is
unpurchasable. Christ¡¦s love is the freest thing in the world
--free as the
sunbeam
free as the mountain torrent
free as the air.
3. It is to be enjoyed without cloying. If ever there was a man on
earth who had Christ¡¦s love in him to the full
it was holy Samuel Rutherford;
yet you can see in his letters how he laboured for suitable expressions while
trying to set forth his hungering and thirsting after the love of Christ. He
says he floated upon Christ¡¦s love like a ship upon a river
and then he
quaintly asks that his vessel may founder
and go to the bottom
till that
blessed stream shall flow right over the masthead of his ship. He wanted to be
baptized into the love of Christ
to be flung into the ocean of his Saviour¡¦s
love; and this is what the true Christian ever longs for.
4. It is without lees. There is nothing in the Lord Jesus Christ that
we could wish to have taken away from Him; there is nothing in His love that is
impure
nothing that is unsatisfactory. Our precious Lord is comparable to the
most fine gold; there is no alloy in Him
; nay
there is nothing that can be
compared with Him
for ¡§He is altogether lovely
¡¨ all perfections melted into
one perfection
and all beauties combined into one inconceivable beauty.
5. It will never
as wine will
turn sour. He is the same loving
Saviour now as ever He was
and such He always will be
and He will bring us to
the rest which remaineth for the people of God.
6. It produces no ill effects. Many are the mighty men who have
fallen down slain by wine. But who was ever slain by the love of Christ? Who
was ever made wretched by this love?
II. Christ¡¦s love
is better than wine because of what it is. Let me remind you of some of the
uses of wine in the East.
1. Often
it was employed as a medicine
for it had certain healing
properties. The good Samaritan
when he found the wounded man
poured into his
wounds ¡§oil and wine.¡¨ But the love of Christ is better than wine; it may not
heal the wounds of the flesh
but it does heal the wounds of the spirit.
2. Wine
again
was often associated by men with the giving of
strength. Now
whatever strength wine may give or may not give
certainly the
love of Jesus gives strength mightier than the mightiest earthly force
for
when the love of Jesus Christ is shed abroad in a man¡¦s heart
he can bear a
heavy burden of sorrow.
3. Wine was also frequently used as the symbol of joy; and certainly
in this respect
Christ¡¦s love is better than wine. Whatever joy there may be
in the world (and it would be folly to deny that there is some sort of joy
which even the basest of men know)
yet the love of Christ is far superior to
it.
4. It is better than wine
once more
for the sacred exhilaration
which it gives. The love of Christ is the grandest stimulant of the renewed
nature that can be known. It enables the fainting man to revive from his
swooning; it causes the feeble man to leap up from his bed of languishing; and
it makes the weary man strong again.
III. The marginal
reading of our text is in the plural: ¡§Thy loves are better than wine
¡¨ and this
teaches us that Christ¡¦s love may be spoken of in the plural
because it
manifests itself in so many ways.
1. Think of Christ¡¦s covenant love
the love He had to us before the
world was.
2. Think next of Christ¡¦s forbearing love.
3. Aye! but the sweetness to us was when we realized Christ¡¦s
personal love
when at last we were brought to the foot of His cross
humbly
confessing our sins.
4. When you first felt Christ¡¦s forgiving love
I will not insult you
by asking whether it was not better than wine. That was a love that was
inconceivably precious; at the very recollection
our heart leaps within us
and our soul doth magnify the Lord.
5. Since that glad hour
we have been the subjects of Christ¡¦s
accepting love
for we have been ¡§accepted in the Beloved.¡¨
6. We have also had Christ¡¦s guiding love
and providing love
and
instructing love:
His love in all manner of ways has come to us
and benefited and enriched us.
7. And we have had sanctifying love; we have been helped to fight
this sin and that
and to overcome them by the blood of the Lamb.
8. The Lord has also given us sustaining love under very sharp
troubles. Some of us could
tell many a story about the sweet upholding love of Christ
--in poverty
or in
bodily pain
or in deep depression of spirits
or under cruel slander
or
reproach. His left hand has been under our head while His right hand has
embraced us.
9. Then let us reflect with shame upon Christ¡¦s enduring love to us.
Why
even since we have been converted
we have grieved Him times without
number! Yet He uses the most kind and endearing terms towards us to show that
His love will never die away. Glory be to His holy name for this! Is not His
love better than wine?
10. There is one word I must not leave out
and that is
Christ¡¦s
chastening love. I know that many of you who belong to Him have often smarted under
His chastening hand
but Christ never smote you in anger yet. Whenever He has
laid the cross on your back
it has been because He loved you so much that He
could not keep it off.
11. There are other forms of Christ¡¦s love yet to be manifested to
you. Do you not sometimes tremble at the thought of dying? Oh
you shall
have--and you ought to think of it now
--you shall have special revelations of
Christ¡¦s love in your dying moments. Then shall you say
like the governor of
the marriage feast at Cana
¡§Thou hast kept the good wine until now.
12. And then--but perhaps I had better be silent upon such a
theme
--when the veil is drawn
and the spirit has left the body
what will be
the bliss of Christ¡¦s love to the spirits gathered with Him in glory?
13. Then think of the love of the day of our resurrection
for Christ
loves. Our bodies as well as our souls; and
arrayed in glory
these
mortal bodies shall rise from the tomb. With a life coeval with the life of
God
and an immortality divinely given
we shall outlast the sun; and when the
moon grows pale
and wanes for ever
and this old earth and all that is therein
shall be burned up
yet still shall we be for ever with Him. Truly
His love is
better than wine
it is the very essence of Heaven
it is better than
anything that we can conceive.
IV. Christ¡¦s love
in the singular.--Look at the text as it stands: ¡§Thy love is better than wine.¡¨
1. Think first
of the love of Christ in the cluster. That is where
the wine is first. We talk of the grapes of Eshcol; but these are not worthy to
be mentioned in comparison with the love of Jesus Christ as it is seen
in old
eternity
in the purpose of God
in the covenant of grace
and afterwards
in
the promises of the Word
and in the various revelations of Christ in the types
and symbols of the ceremonial law. There I see the love of Christ in the
cluster.
2. Next
look at the love of Christ in the basket
for the grapes
must be gathered
and cast into the basket
before the wine can be made. Oh
the love of Jesus Christ in the manger of Bethlehem
the love of Jesus in the
workshop of Nazareth
the love of Jesus in His holy ministry
the love of Jesus
in the temptation in the wilderness
the love of Jesus in His miracles
the
love of Jesus in His communion with His disciples
the love of Jesus in bearing
shame and reproach for our sakes
the love of Jesus in bring so poor that
He had not where to lay His head
the love of Jesus in enduring such
contradiction of sinners against Himself!
3. But oh! if your hearts have any tenderness towards Him
think of
the love of Christ in the wine-press. What a crushing was that under the foot
of the treader of grapes when Christ sweat as it were great drops of blood
and
how terribly did the great press come down again and again when He gave His
back to the smiters
and Sis cheeks to them that plucked off the hair
and hid
not His face from shame and spitting! But oh! how the red wine flowed from the
wine-press
what fountains there were of this precious sweetness
when
Jesus was nailed to the cross
suffering in body
depressed in spirit
and
forsaken of His God! ¡§Eloi
Eloi
lama sabachthani?¡¨ These are the sounds that
issue from the wine-press
and how terrible and yet how sweet they are!
4. Now I want you to think of the love of Christ in the flagon
where
His precious love is stored up for His people;--the love of His promises
given
to you; the love of His providence
for He rules for you; the love of His
intercession
for He pleads for you; the love of His representation
for He stands
at the right hand of the Father as the Representative of His people; the love
of His union with His people
for you are one with Him
He is the Head
and you
are the members of His Body; the love of all that He is
and all that He was
and all that He ever shall be
for in every capacity and under all
circumstances He loves you
and will love you without end.
5. And then not only think of
but enjoy the love of Christ in the
cup
by which I mean His love to you. For this we have the declaration of inspiration;
nay
we have more even than that to confirm it beyond all question
for we have
His own death upon the cross. He signed this document with His own
blood
in order that no believer might ever doubt its authenticity. ¡§Herein is
love.¡¨ ¡§Behold what manner of love¡¨ there is in the cross! What wondrous love
is there! (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christ¡¦s love is better than wine
I. For its
antiquity. Good old wine is accounted the best (Luke 5:39). Now no wine is comparable to
this of Christ¡¦s love
for its antiquity; for it is a love which commences from
everlasting; it does not bear date with time
but was before time was.
II. For its purity.
It is wine on the lees well refined
free from all dregs of deceit
hypocrisy
and dissimulation; it is a love unfeigned
a pure river of water of life.
III. For its
freeness and cheapness.
IV. For the plenty
of it. In the marriage at Cana of Galilee
there was want of wine; but there is
no want thereof in this feast of love: this is a river
nay
an ocean of love
which flows forth in plentiful streams to poor sinners.
V. In the effects
of it.
1. Wine will revive and cheer a man that is of a heavy heart (Proverbs 31:6).
2. Wine may remove a worldly heaviness
or a sorrow on the account of
worldly things
the things of time; but not a spiritual heaviness
or a sorrow
on the account of the things of another world
the things of eternity; but the
manifestation of Christ¡¦s love to the soul
can remove this sorrow and
heaviness
and fill it with a joy unspeakable and full of glory
and give him
that ease
and comfort
and satisfaction of mind
he is wishing for.
3. If a man drinks never such large draughts of the wine of Christ¡¦s
love
it will never hurt him; when other wine
with excessive drinking of it
not only wastes the estates
but consumes the bodies
and destroys the health
of men; but of this a man may drink freely and plentifully
without doing
himself any hurt; nay
it will be of considerable advantage to him
and
therefore says Christ (Song of Solomon 5:1). (John Gill
D.
D.)
Because of the savour of Thy good ointments
Thy name is as
ointment poured forth
therefore do the virgins love Thee.
The preciousness of Christ
In Christ are contained all those attractive beauties--those
excellencies
which are adapted to win souls to Himself
and to God in Him. The
rose and the lily
every flower of the garden
and every tree of the forest
are brought together at once
to illustrate to us the rich and varied
excellence of Him who is ¡§altogether lovely.¡¨ The rays of the sun are sometimes
collected together by a burning-glass
and made to rest on a certain point
and
there to burn with great fervour. Oh! the rays of the Sun of Righteousness seem
to be gathered together here.
I. The Anointing
of the Lord Jesus Christ
with the Holy Ghost
--¡§Because of the savour of Thy
good ointment.¡¨ Now
this anointing of Christ implies two things
His call and
qualification
--His call to
and qualification for
all the offices
entrusted to Him by His Father. Christ
being set forth to us
as anointed by
the Holy Ghost to all His offices
invites and claims all our confidence that
we should come to God
through Him
and repose unlimited trust in Him as our
Prophet
Priest
and King.
II. Because of this
anointing
¡§His name is as ointment poured forth¡¨ because of His covenant
offices
His name is sweet and fragrant to the perception of all those who
believe in His name. The name of the Lord implies everything whereby God
is made known to us
even all the attributes of God. Before Christ became
incarnate
the ointment
as it were
was shut up in a box
it was not poured
forth; the only begotten Son was in the bosom of the Father
so that there was
not that full development of the gracious purposes of God to sinners which
afterwards took place in His incarnation. Even after His incarnation
and
during the days of His flesh
in this world
the fragrance of His name was little perceived
the ointment was
not fully discovered
some little perfume rejoiced the hearts of the few
disciples who had grace to wait upon Him. It was when Christ was lifted up on
the cross
when the vial which held the precious ointment was broken
that the
dying thief was quickened to newness of life by the fragrance of it
and acknowledged
his anointed King
in his expiring agonies. But there was a still further manifestation after the
resurrection
and the outpouring of the Spirit. That was the day indeed when
the name of Jesus was as ointment poured forth. The apostles are now filled
with its sweetness
and ravished with its fragrance
and now
their own souls
being possessed with the unspeakable preciousness of the Lord Jesus as the
Saviour of sinners
they show forth that knowledge to others
they proclaim the
name of Jesus.
III. ¡§therefore do
the virgins love thee.¡¨ Virgin souls are attracted to Christ by the fragrance
of Christ¡¦s sweet name
so that they love Christ. Now what is signified by the
expression
virgins? You have the same word in Psalms 45:14
where the Church as a bride
is brought to the bridegroom. Individual believers are called by that name of
virgins which indicates purity
holiness
¡§Blessed are the pure in
heart
for they shall see God.¡¨ And how shall their hearts be purified? You
have it in Acts 15:1-41. that God purifies their
hearts by faith; they believed in the Son of God
and their hearts were
purified; their hearts
which before were like ¡§a sepulchre full of dead men¡¦s
bones
and all uncleanness
¡¨ are cleansed. Now
where the heart is purified by
faith in Christ
that heart will embrace Christ and love Him. (H.
Verschoyle
M. A.)
As ointment poured forth
1. First
it may be taken to intimate the greater discoveries of the
riches of His grace which have been made to us under the Gospel. Adam had a
savour of the ointment in the promise made to him of ¡§the seed of the woman¡¨;
Abraham had
as it were
drops of the precious unguent granted to him when
rejoicing in the day of Christ
he saw it and was glad. But now
in these
Gospel times
the box containing the ointment is broken. As bees to a garden of
spices
all nations flow to this Divine compound of myrrh
aloes
and cassia.
2. Again
the expression seems to intimate that a right apprehension
of Christ in His work
character
and offices
will conduce to religious
cheerfulness and joy. The use of ointments in the East
on account of their
cooling and refreshing properties
often furnishes the sacred writers with an
expressive image for all that is bright
and beautiful
and happy. To know
Christ
then--what He is
what He says
what He has done for us
what He is
doing now; to know Him as our Shepherd to guide
our Staff to uphold
our Rock
to flee to
¡§from storms a Shelter
and from heat a Shade¡¨;--to know Christ in
all these beneficent and happy relations
should make the heart glad
and the
hands strong
and the tread firm.
3. Another reflection arising out of this passage is the obligation
which lies upon us to make Christ known to others. ¡§The savour of Thy name is
as ointment; ¡§but then not ointment as it is pent up
hoarded
not suffered to
escape from its case of alabaster
but ointment as it is ¡§poured forth
¡¨
diffused far and wide
reviving all who come near to it with the odour of its
perfumes
and having life and healing on its wings. (D. Moore
M. A.)
Draw me
we will run after Thee.
Divine drawings
I. Man needs to be
divinely drawn to God.
1. He is far away from God in heart
life
and purpose.
2. Has no inclination to return.
3. Is every moment wandering farther.
4. His understanding needs to be enlightened
his affections to be
won
his will changed
and his whole life and being drawn God-ward.
II. God is ever
seeking to draw men to himself.
1. By loving words.
2. By merciful deeds.
3. By gracious revelations of Himself and of His purposes
as in Christ
His Son.
4. By the influences of His Holy Spirit.
III. Man¡¦s proper
attitude in relation to the divine drawings. Here is--
1. A sense of need.
2. Candid acknowledgment of it.
3. Earnest prayer--¡§Draw me.¡¨
4. A spirit of obedience--¡§and we will run after Thee.¡¨
5. Eager desire to come to God with all possible diligence--¡§we will
run after Thee.¡¨ (Thomas Haynes.)
Divine drawings
I. A humble
admission.
1. Of ourselves we cannot come to God. Need to be drawn (John 6:44). Disposition to procrastinate
(Acts 24:25).
2. What holds us back?
3. Yet
over against this reluctance to come
see God¡¦s gracious
promise (John 12:32; Jeremiah 31:3; Hosea 11:4).
II. An earnest
request. Appeal to God to ¡§draw¡¨ the soul.
1. Christ draws by silence--woman of Canaan.
2. By a look--Peter.
3. By a word--Mary of Magdalen at sepulchre.
4. By afflictions--the two sisters at Bethany.
III. An eager
promise. If drawn
¡§we will run after Thee.¡¨ What does this promise imply?
1. We will lead a new life. Instead of after sin
now ¡§alter Thee.¡¨
2. We will lead an active life--¡§run.¡¨
3. We will lead a useful life. Not ¡§I
¡¨ but ¡§we
¡¨ will run
etc.
Drawn myself
I will induce others to run with me in the way of
Thy commandments. Conclusion:
Two drawing powers are plying us. Satan is draw ing. Christ is drawing. How
different the two drawings! Satan¡¦s downward. Christ¡¦s upward. Which of the two
prevails in your case? (Preacher¡¦s Assistant.)
The Church¡¦s prayer for nearer communion and fellowship with
Christ
1. Let us note
first
what it is the Church desires--what every
pious soul must desire who would make a prayer to Christ at all: ¡§Draw me
allure me
bring my soul under the power of a holy and Divine captivity. It is a prayer of
the believer that he may feel all the oppositions of the unregenerate nature
giving way; that
by the spell of some holy fascination resting upon him
he
may feel his will drawn into absolute and entire concurrence with the Divine
will. ¡§Draw me
¡¨ says the Church
¡§with lovingkindness
and compassions
and
mercies. Allure me to Thee by Thy Word--its promises drawing me after them
like the sweet strains of distant music; or by Thy Spirit
His holy and gentle
compulsions leading me onwards
by an influence the methods of which I know
not
save that thereby I am brought nearer to Christ
by having Christ brought
nearer to me. Many are the things I have need to be drawn from. Draw me from
the bondage of sin
which holds me; from the allurements of the world
which
entangle me; from the infirmities of a fleshly nature
which still cleave to
me. Draw me from my enemies
which are too many for me; from my temptations
which are too strong for me; from my fears of being forsaken
and overmastered
and finally falling away.¡¨
2. ¡§And we will run after Thee.¡¨ ¡§Run;¡¨ being so drawn we could not
be content with a slower pace
and the speed of the running is proportioned to
the intensity of the drawing. ¡§I made haste
¡¨ said the psalmist
¡§and delayed
not to keep Thy commandments. Hence the expression may be taken to denote the
alacrity with which
after an experimental acquaintance with Christ and the
power of His grace
we shall persevere in our Christian course. None run so fast
as those whom Christ draws. Thus the believer ¡§follows on to know the Lord¡¨; he
becomes more vehemently and intensely earnest the nearer he gets to the heart
of Christ. Led and lured as by some secret magnaetism--by ¡§a sweet omnipotence
and an omnipotent sweetness
¡¨ as one of old describes it--he feels as if he
could follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth. ¡§Draw me
and we will run after
Thee.¡¨ The change of person should not be passed over
for it illustrates the
germinating property of Divine influences. One convert makes many. He who runs
well does much to quicken others¡¦ speed. Grace is communicative
it cannot but
speak. ¡§Come
see a Man that told me all that ever I did.¡¨
3. But mark
next
the grounds on which the Church presumes to hope
for these near manifestations of Christ¡¦s love to her. ¡§The King hath brought
me into His chambers ¡§-that is
He has recognized the lawfulness of my
espousals; He has initiated for me this covenant relation of protection
and
peace
and mercy. It is on the authority of the King Himself that we and the
whole Church ¡§have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand.¡¨ We may
take the words ¡§bringing into the chambers¡¨ in two senses; that is
either as
implying an admission to the ordinances of religion
or a more privileged
insight into the truth of its doctrines. Either interpretation would fall in
with the national custom which is supposed to be the source of the
allusion--that of a bride being conducted to her lord¡¦s home
both to inspect
all his household treasures
and to have her future part and possession in them
formally made over and acknowledged. Thus
assuming ordinances to be the chief
point of the reference
how truly may we
as Christians
say
¡§The King hath
brought me into His chambers.¡¨ Or adopting the other supposition
that by
¡§chambers¡¨ here are meant the tuner recesses of God s truth--the deep things of
the Sprat
hidden mysteries
kept secret from the foundation of the world
and
which even ¡§angels have desired to look into¡¨--this privilege is ours also.
Ours
the more we love Christ and the nearer we keep to Him. A knowledge of the
things of the kingdom is reserved for the children of the kingdom. As the
bridegroom would lead his affianced bride from chamber to chamber
to show his
wealth
to display his treasures
to unlock his cabinet of choicest gifts
so
does Christ
by His Spirit
delight to lead His people into all truth
to
conduct them from knowledge to knowledge
and from promise to promise
and from
glory to glory. (D. Moore
M. A.)
The believer¡¦s prayer
I. The earnest
petition. ¡§Draw me.¡¨
1. This is a petition which the very best of us need continually to
offer. We have these three enemies ever plotting
ever drawing us--drawing us
from salvation towards destruction--the world
the flesh
and the devil. We
need
therefore
the magnet of God¡¦s love to overcome these adverse ¡§drawings
¡¨
and to guide us at last to a happy and holy heaven.
2. To whom is your petition addressed? The three Persons of the
ever-blessed Trinity are employed in drawing you from earth to heaven.
He takes of the things of Jesus
and shows them to you
making you
willing converts in the day of Christ¡¦s power.
3. But in the passage before us
the prayer
I conceive
is rather
addressed to God the Son.
4. But the Lord Jesus uses means.
II. The decided
promise. ¡§We will run after Thee.¡¨
1. This is not the voice of nature
but of grace. Nature
unconverted
nature
says
¡§I will run from Thee.¡¨ ¡§I will hide myself
as did Adam
in the
trees of the garden.¡¨ I will forsake the fountain of living waters
and I will
hew me out other cisterns. I will say to the Lord
¡§Depart from me; for I
desire not the knowledge of Thy ways.¡¨ But grace
grace in your heart
says
¡§Lord
when wilt Thou come unto me? Lord
I will run after Thee. I will follow
Thee whithersoever Thou goest.¡¨ It is the large-hearted obedience of one who
feels that all he has belongs to Christ; who confesses that he is not his own
but that he has been bought with a price.
2. You are not content to ¡§run¡¨ alone. You wish your fellow-men to
enjoy what you are looking for; and
therefore
you promise your Divine Lord
that if He will only draw you by His grace and free Spirit
you will bring
others with you. ¡§Draw me
and we will run after Thee.¡¨ (C. Clayton
M. A.)
Predestination
We have to investigate what is taught us herein of the Church and
her Lord. He is to draw her; she is to hasten after His steps. This is the
statement in its simplest form; but it will lead us across deep mysteries
and
doctrines which have ministered food for much controversy.
I. The text brings
us across the great mystery of God¡¦s predestination. The cry of man to God is
¡§Draw me
and I will follow Thee.¡¨ In the New Testament we have our
Blessed Lord declaring
¡§No man cometh unto Me
except the Father draw him.¡¨ It
is asserted that God must call
before there can be any access of the creature
to Him. St. Paul has accurately traced the order of Divine providence in this
respect; ¡§those whom He did predestinate
them He also called; and whom He called
them He also justified; and whom He justified
them He also glorified.¡¨ The act
by which the Almighty draws
or calls
His people
is a consequent of His
predestination. Now
wherever predestination is spoken of
it is a
predestination which concerns not our final salvation or condemnation
but
simply our call to the knowledge of Christ Jesus. ¡§Whom He did foreknow
¡¨ says
St. Paul
¡§He did predestinate--to what? why--¡§to be conformed to the likeness
of His Son
that He might be the first-born among many brethren.¡¨ And again in
the Epistle to the Ephesians we read
¡§God predestinated us unto the adoption
of the children
by Jesus Christ.¡¨ These are the only two places in which the
apostle speaks of predestination; and it is
you observe
a predestination to
the knowledge of the Gospel
to incorporation into the Christian Church
to
which he alludes. He to whom the future is as the present
fixed by His high
decree that some kingdoms should immediately be instructed in the truth as it
is in Jesus; that others should only after the lapse of years be enlightened;
that others should not be summoned to enter the fold until the thunder-clouds
of the last tempest should be seen gathering in the sky. The whole history of
the propagation of the Gospel
in short
the relation of the fulfilment by
man¡¦s agency of the determinate counsel of God
which in the morning of
creation
whilst the first dew was yet upon the hills
traced out across them
the path of evangelists and teachers
and decreed who should be called and who
passed by
while yet all the generations of human kind were in the loins of
Adam. And this is the predestination of the Bible; and it has
you see
nothing
whatever to do with the salvation of individuals. A predestination to eternal
ruin would be hopelessly irreconcileable to the Divine attributes of justice
and mercy; but there is nothing so hard in accepting the doctrine of a
predestination to the knowledge of Christ and His Gospel here upon the earth.
We would not have you then recoil from the doctrine of God¡¦s predestination
as
from something too hard for flesh and blood. It is the alone doctrine which
will explain why one is taken and another left; one people adopted into the
Church
and another passed by. I cannot tell what moves the Eternal King in His
dispensation of the Word of Life; but I am prepared to believe that He has a
reason for all He does
and believing this
I take the doctrine of His absolute
predestination as a most marvellous proof of His infinite nature. Who but God
could thus comprehend in His counsels thousands of years
and myriads of living
things? Even now there are millions of our race to whom the name of Christ is
an unknown thing. But not according to man¡¦s eagerness
but His own ancient
counsel
does the Lord reveal Himself to those that sit in darkness: their day and their
hour was predestined long since. But this predestination touches not their
free-will to live soberly
righteously
and godly; and therefore do I hear but
a tribute to His greatness and omniscience in the cry that floats upward from
the dim waters to Him who arranges the times and seasons for every islet that
sleeps upon the wave
¡§Draw me
we will run after Thee.¡¨
II. Let us now
consider the words as the utterance of the bride after her union with christ.
Let us examine in what way they may be used by us
who have already been
grafted into the family of Christ. Now with respect to ourselves
the Divine
acts of predestination
justification
and sanctification
are past and gone.
We are of those who were predestined to be early adopted into God¡¦s household.
So far
then
He has drawn us to Him
and we have hastened after Him; we have
believed in Christ
we have taken up the sign of the Cross to be our banner; we
have
in a word
accepted the Gospel
and are members of the Church
the
mystical bride of the Lamb. Is there
then
no further application of the
language of the text? no further drawing by the Lord God? Indeed the entire
life of man is a period during which there is perpetually being exerted upon
the soul a gentle violence
alluring
tempting it to follow the footsteps of
Christ. The life of every man is
we believe
arranged by God in such a manner
as will best conduce to his salvation. The details of our existence are so
planned as to lead us unto heaven. Do you ask why any of us fall short of the
promised reward? Oh! is it not because
though God draws
we hasten not after
Him? We thwart God¡¦s purposes; we resist His impulses; we counteract His
designs. If we would surrender ourselves into His hands unreservedly
He would
bring us safe to the eternal city. And there is yet a further truth involved in
the text. It implies
that the course of the servant of God is one of constant
progress and active advance. Christ is ever
as it were
moving onward; He
leads us from one height of moral excellence to another. There is no rest in
store for us on this side the grave. We dare not look for ease; we dare not
fancy that the time shall ever come on earth when our discipline for eternity
shall be over
or the lessons of our schoolhouse be learnt. He that looketh
back is not fit for the kingdom of God. Whatever ye are
ye may be better;
whatever ye have done
ye may do more. (Bp. Woodford.)
The soul¡¦s delight in God
When the fields are clothed with fruithfulness
and the
flowers bloom in beauty
we know that the rains and the dews have descended
and the sun has sent forth his rays of light and heat; so
when in the soul of
man the fruits of holiness abound
when aspirations of faith and prayer bind
him to the throne of the Eternal
it is because there has been unveiled to that
soul
as existing in the heart of God
a gentleness which makes us great; the
gracious and omnipotent love
which sought us when we were lost
welcomes us
when we return
and leads us into the King¡¦s own banqueting-house
where
in
His presence
we make merry and are glad. Of the salvation of the Church
and
of every man in it
Christ is the Alpha and Omega
the first and the last
the
beginning and the end.
I. The attractions
of the Divine love by which we are brought nigh to God. ¡§Draw me
and we
will run after Thee.¡¨ It is the language of devout aspiration
the expression
of the soul¡¦s desire for closer
holier fellowship with its Saviour King; and
by the very fact that it takes the form of prayer
we are reminded of the
inborn helplessness of the soul either to enter upon or to continue in the life
whereunto we are called. The best of men are open to powerful temptations; the
strongest are often weary and dispirited; and if any of us are to be kept safe
unto the heavenly kingdom
we must indeed pray
¡§Draw me
draw me unto
Thyself.¡¨ And if the prayer be sincerely offered
it will assuredly be
answered. God will draw you as with the cords of a man and the bands of love.
By the power of His Spirit
He will illuminate your mind
and whisper to your
hearts the mysteries of His love. By sweet and gentle persuasives will He win
for Himself your deepest trust. The image of Christ will be so imprinted on
your memory
that no succeeding waves of worldly thought or sensuous impression
shall be able to erase it. The joy of living unto Him shall be so true and
keen
that all lower choice shall be as poison to your soul. Duty and pleasure
inclination and delight
sacrifice and reward
shall be transmuted into one;
and
unseen by others
the Son of Man shall be ever at your side to counsel
to
direct
to sustain you.
II. The exalted
privileges to which that love introduces us. ¡§The King hath brought me into His
chambers
¡¨ beyond the outer courts and entrance halls of His palace
and the
rooms in which His servants abide
into the inner and more secluded apartments
reserved for His own use; where He receives no casual visitors
but those only
who possess His full confidence
who are entrusted with the most responsible
tasks of his government
and are honoured with marks of His special regard. We
are the Lord¡¦s free men; not servants merely
but friends
who have the
continued right of access to His presence
receive direct communications of His
will
and are entrusted with tasks of highest moment. We arc brought into the
King¡¦s chambers
and can there tell out to Him the sorrows of our heart
and
seek His help in every form of need. The plea of the penitent and aspiring
suppliant
the adoration of the reverent worshipper
and the song of the victor
arc alike welcome to His ear. It is the King¡¦s chamber into which we have been
introduced
and there we have perfect freedom. (James Stuart.)
The King hath brought me
into His chambers.
The Kingship of Christ
Clear as a knell of pure silver
rang out the words of the
strange man of Pethor
amid the goodly tents and tabernacles of Israel (Numbers 24:17). With the most captivating
frenzy
Israel¡¦s greatest bard gave grand
dramatic exhibitions of the coming
Saviour--as the enthroned King (Psalms 2:1-12.); as the conquering King (Psalms 45:1-17.); as the righteous King (Psalms 72:1-20.); as the Priest King
made after the order of Melchizedek (Psalms 111:1-10.). The weeping Jeremiah
wiped away his tears
as visions of a new hope broke upon him (Jeremiah 23:5-6). Gathering up the choice
music of the centuries
Zechariah bursts forth into the loftiest of refrains (Zechariah 9:9). To the Virgin
the angel
came ringing joy-bells
because of the Kingship of her expected Child (Luke 1:33). The Magians--those
star-guided strangers--thought only of the sovereignty of the world¡¦s Redeemer
(Matthew 2:2). As soon as the guileless
eyes of Nathaniel rested upon Jesus Christ
he exclaimed: ¡§Thou art the King of Israel¡¨ (John 1:49). Coronation Day being passed
and the newly crowned potentate having entered into glory
how the subsequent
disclosures that Jesus made of Himself
in the visions of Parinos
were radiant
with His own royal light:
We read that He is ¡§the Prince of the kings of the earth¡¨ (Revelation 1:5); ¡§the King of saints¡¨ (Revelation 15:3); ¡§the King of kings (Revelation 17:14)!
I. The elements of
the Divine Kingship.
1. Christ¡¦s Personality. A king is a man of high birth--noble
ancestry--pure
good blood. Royalty is the blossom on the Tree of Humanity--the
ripened fruit of the race. The Kingship of Christ calls attention
first of
all
to His lofty personality--that is
to the exclusiveness of His ancestral
line: the
nobility of His immediate parentage
and the dignity and grandeur of His own
inborn substance.
2. Christ¡¦s Authority over His people. This is the second idea
involved in His Kingship. ¡§Him hath God exalted with His right hand to be a
Prince and a Saviour!¡¨ O
this is the new and startling lesson the Gospel
brings to every man to learn:
¡§Christ a Prince first--then a Saviour!¡¨ Submission of will
before redemption
from sin! Make a whole-hearted self-surrender to Jesus
as your Lord and
Master. Then will your sins be for given and you will be a child of God. But
what is meant by a surrender of self to Jesus Christ? I reply
we must make Him
the King of Life; the King of Truth; and the King of Money.
3. Christ¡¦s protection of His people. This is the third element involved
in His Kingship. When things seem dark for the Church
for the ultimate success
of the Gospel and the triumph of Christianity
bear in mind that this glorious
work is in the hands of an infinite Potentate. Glorious King! He will conquer
all our enemies. He will protect His people.
II. Behold
in view
of the facts stated
the high spiritual teaching of my text. Just read the
second verse of this wonderful Song of Redeeming Love. There we find the
awakened soul praying for reconciliation. In the third verse we find a burst of
praise to the Saviour. Then comes the text
with its prayer of humility and
submission: ¡§Draw
me; we will run after Thee.¡¨ We are only saved when we ¡§run¡¨ after Jesus
Christ. It is His own sovereign command; ¡§Follow thou Me!¡¨ In the next clause
behold this saved soul¡¦s protection--absolute safety
as to every foe: ¡§The King hath
brought me into His chambers
¡¨ i.e. into the inner
private compartment
of the palace
from which the world is excluded and where no enemy can enter.
This is the sacred place of the Most High
where all dwellers abide under the
shadow of the Almighty (Psalms 91:1). This is the pavilion
where
in the time of trouble
Jesus Christ hides His people--the secret of His
tabernacle
giving safety to all (Psalms 27:5); ¡§The strong tower into
which the righteous
run and are safe¡¦ (Proverbs 18:10). But this part of my text
is rich beyond all we have yet seen. Truly we see Protection standing before us
in all the calm dignity and infinite power of Divine sovereignty. But you know
that the ¡§chambers¡¨ of an Eastern monarch were those secluded and gorgeously
furnished apartments of his palace
into which no male friend ever entered; nor
yet a concubine--only the King¡¦s most cherished wife. In these ¡§chambers
¡¨
therefore
behold the dwelling-place of Love. That is
Christ is King of Love!
Who would not exclaim:
We will be glad and rejoice in Thee
seeing that Christ¡¦s work is love- first
last and evermore! Behold this truth and go forth
from this hour
to make your
religion a grand chorus-song--a sweet harp of a thousand chords--an immortal
flower
ever beautiful
ever fragrant--a life spent in willing
joyful service!
III. The Kingship of
Christ must be cherished in sacred memory. ¡§We will remember Thy love more than
wine; the upright love Thee.¡¨ ¡§Wine
¡¨ here
means the world¡¦s most desirable
things: gold;
learning; pleasure; power; fame; ease; human affection. But what are all these
as compared with Him who is the King of all wills
all hearts
all knowledge
all possessions
of righteousness
and of love--the Christ of God who has saved
us with His own precious blood! (A. H. Moment
D. D.)
We will be glad and
rejoice in Thee.--
Rejoicing and remembering
It is a very blessed habit of saints who have grown in grace to
enter into actual conversation with the
Well-beloved.. Our text is not so much
speaking of Him as speaking to Him: ¡§We will be glad and rejoice in Thee
we
will remember Thy love more than wine.¡¨
I. We have here a
double resolve:
¡§We will be glad and rejoice in Thee
we will remember Thy love more than
wine.¡¨--
1. It is
first
a necessary resolve
for it is not according to
human nature to rejoice in Christ
it is not according to the tendency of our
poor fallen state to remember His love. There must be an act of the will with
regard to this resolve; let us will it now.
2. It is also a right and proper resolve. Should we not be glad and
rejoice in Christ? Why should the children of the bride-chamber fast while the
Bridegroom is with them? With such a Husband as we have in Christ should not
the spouse rejoice in Him?
3. Do you not think also that this resolution
if we carry it out
will be very helpful to ourselves? There is no way of getting right out of the
Stygian bog of the Slough of Despond like rejoicing in the Lord.
4. Certainly
it will also be for the good of others. If you Can get
right out of your sorrow
and can actually rejoice in the Lord
and if you Can
so remember Him as to be glad and rejoice in Him
you will allure many to the
fair ways of Christ
which else will be evil spoken of if you go mourning all
your days.
5. We cannot carry out that resolve without the help of the Holy
Spirit. Therefore
let us breathe it unto the Lord in prayer; and
as we tell
Him what we mean to de
let us each one add
¡§Draw me
O Lord; then I will run
after Thee. Help me to come to Thee; manifest Thyself to me
and then I will be
glad and rejoice in Thee.¡¨
II. The resolve of
the text is a suitable resolve for this occasion: ¡§We will be glad and rejoice in Thee
we
will remember Thy love more than wine.¡¨
1. We are most of us coming to the communion table
to eat of the
bread and to drink of the cup in remembrance of our Master¡¦s dying love.
Surely
now is the hour
if ever in our lives
to be glad and rejoice in Him
and to remember Him
for the object of this supper is to commemorate His dying
love. It is idle
and worse than idle
to come to Christ¡¦s table if you do not
remember Him; what good can it do you?
2. Recollect
next
that in coming to this communion table
we also
commemorate the results of Christ¡¦s death. One result of our Lord¡¦s death is
that He gives food to His people; His body broken has become bread for our souls
yea
it is meat indeed. His blood
which was shed for many for the remission of
sins
has become drink indeed. So
dear friends
if we come to this table in a
right spirit
we must rejoice in our Lord
and we must remember His love.
3. I think also that there is this further reason why we should
rejoice in our Lord
and remember His love
because at this table the
commemoration is made by our Lord to be a feast. What! will ye come to the
King¡¦s table with sorrowful countenances? Will ye come sadly to see what He has
brought you?
4. Let us also recollect that
when we come to the table of our Lord
we commemorate a very happy union.
5. It does not become us to gather at this communion table with a
heavy heart when we recollect that it is not only a commemoration
but an
anticipation. We are to do this ¡§till He come.¡¨ Let us leap up at the
remembrance of this gladsome hope.
III. I must dwell
for a brief space upon what I meant to make my third point concerning this
double resolve
--let us carry it out. ¡§We will remember Thy love. Dear Saviour
what we have to remember is Thy love
--Thy love in old eternity
or ever the
earth was
Thy prescient love. We remember the love of Thine espousals when
Thou didst espouse Thy people unto Thyself
and didst resolve that
whatever
might be the lot of Thine elect
Thou wouldst share it with them. ¡§We will
remember Thy love
¡¨--that love which
having once begun
has never wavered
never diminished
never stopped. We remember the love which Jesus bore in His
heart right up into the glory at the right hand of the Father; that love which
is still as great as when He hung on Calvary to redeem us unto Himself. Next
let each one of us say to Christ
¡§I will remember Thy love to me.¡¨ Still
even
that is not all. The text does not merely speak about Christ¡¦s love
and
Christ¡¦s love to me
but it talks about Christ Himself. ¡§We will be glad and
rejoice in Thee
¡¨--not only in His love
but in Himself
Do try
dear friends
to let your thoughts dwell upon Christ
His complex person
God and man
and
all the wonders which lie wrapped up in Immanuel
God with us. Thy work
Lord
is fair; but the hand that wrought the work is fairer still. Come
then
beloved
and let us be glad and rejoice in Him
and let us remember His love
more than wine. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
We will remember Thy love
more than wine.--
A refreshing canticle
The Hebrew word for ¡§love¡¨ here is in the plural: ¡§We will remember Thy
loves.¡¨ Think not
however
that the love of Jesus is divided
but know
that it hath different channels of manifestation. All the affections that
Christ hath
He bestows upon His Church; and these are so varied that they may
well be called ¡§loves¡¨ rather than ¡§love.¡¨ We will remember
O Jesus
that love
of Thine which was displayed in the council chamber of eternity
when Thou
didst
on our behalf
interpose as the Daysman and Mediator; when Thou didst
strike hands with Thy Father
and become our Surety
and take us as Thy
betrothed! We will remember that love which moved Thee to undertake a work so
burdensome to accomplish
an enterprise which none but Thyself ever could have
achieved. We will remember the love which suggested the sacrifice of Thyself;
the love which
until the fulness of time
mused over that sacrifice
and
longed for the hour of which
in the volume of the Book it was written of Thee
¡§Lo
I come.¡¨ We will remember Thy love
O Jesus
as it was manifested to us in
Thy holy life
from the manger of Bethlehem to the garden of Gethsemane! We
will track Thee from the cradle to the grave
for every word and every deed of
Thine was love. And especially
O Jesus
will we remember Thy love to us upon
the cross! Nor is this all the love we have to remember. Though we ought to
recollect what we have heard
and what we have been taught
I think the spouse
means more than this. ¡§We will remember Thy loves
--not only what we have been
told
but what we have felt. Let each one of you speak for yourselves; or
rather
do you think of this for yourselves
and let me speak of it for you.
I. Here
then
we
have a resolution positively expressed: ¡§We will remember Thy love.¡¨ Why
does the spouse speak so positively? Because she is inspired; she is not like
Simon Peter when he said
¡§Although all shall be offended
yet will not I.¡¨ She
is speaking the truth for she will not forget the love of her Lord. Why is
that? For one very good reason
because she cannot. The virtue was not in her
own constancy
but in the tenacity of his affection
wherefore she could not
help remembering it. What is there
in the love of Christ
that will compel us
to remember it? The things that we recollect best are of certain kinds. Some
that we remember best have been sublime things. When we have stood
for the
first time
where we could see a lofty mountain
whose snowy summit pierced the
thick ebon clouds
we have said
¡§We shall never forget this sight.¡¨ The
Sublimity of what we have seen often causes us to remember it. So is it with
the love of Christ. How it towers to heaven! And mark how brightness succeeds
brightness
how flash follows after flash of love unspeakable and full of
glory! There is no pause
no interval of darkness or blackness
no chasm of
forgetfulness. Its sublimity compels us to remember its manifestation. Again
we are pretty sure to recollect unusual things. Many people do not notice the
stars much
but who forgets the comet? So it is with the love of Christ. It is
such an extraordinary thing
such a marvellous thing
that the like was never
known. That constellation of the Cross is the most marvellous that is to be
seen in the spiritual sky; the eye
once spellbound by its charms
must retain
its undying admiration
because it is the greatest wonder of wonders and
miracle of miracles which the universe ever saw. Sometimes
too
things which
are not important in themselves are fixed on the memory because of certain
circumstances which happen in association with them. If something particular in
politics should happen on our birthday
or our wedding day
or on some other
notable occasion
we should say
¡§Oh
yes! I recollect that; it happened the
day I was married
or the day So-and-So was buried.¡¨ Now
we can never forget
the love of Christ
because the circumstances were so peculiar when
for the
first time
we knew anything at all about it. We were plunged in sin and ruin;
we were adrift on the great sea of sin
we had no hope
we were ready to sink
and no shore was near; but Jesus came and saved us. I think I might give you
twenty reasons why it would be impossible for the children of God to forget the
love of Christ to them; but above and beyond every other reason is this one
Christ will not let His people forget His love. If
at any time
He finds them
forgetful
He will come to them
and refresh their memories. If all the love
they have ever enjoyed should be forgotten by them
He will give them some
fresh manifestations of love.
II. Now let us look
at the comparative resolution:
¡§We will remember Thy love more than wine.¡¨ Why is ¡§wine¡¨ mentioned here? I
take it to be used here as a figure. The fruit of the vine represents the
chiefest of earthly luxuries. ¡§I will remember Thy love more than the choicest
or most exhilarating comforts which this world can give me.¡¨ The fact is
the
impression which the love of Christ makes on the true believer is far greater
and deeper than the impression which is made by anything earthly. Mere mortal
joys write their record on the sand
and their memory is soon effaced; but
Christ¡¦s love is like an inscription cut deeply into marble
the remembrance of
it is deeply engraven in our hearts. Earthly comforts
too
like wine
leave
but a mingled impression. In the cup of joy there is a dash of sorrow. There is
nothing we have here below which is not somewhat tainted with grief. But in
Christ¡¦s love there is nothing for you ever to regret; when you have enjoyed it
to the full
you cannot say that there has been any bitterness in it. True
there is the remembrance of your sin
but that is so sweetly covered by your Lord¡¦s forgiveness
and graciousness
that His love is indeed better than wine. It has had all the
good effects of wine
and none of its ill results. Equally true is it that the
remembrance of earth¡¦s comforts
of which wine is the type
must be but
transient. If the sinner could live many days
and have much wealth
would he
remember it when he entered the unseen world? Ah I he might remember it
but it
would be with awful sighs and sobs. But we can say
of the love of Christ
that
it is better than wine
for we shall rejoice to remember it in eternity.
III. The practical effects
of remembering Christ¡¦s love.
1. If we remember the love of Christ to us
the first practical
effect will be that we shall love Him.
2. Another practical effect of remembering Christ¡¦s love will be
love to the brethren. Christ has many very unseemly children; yet if we can but
see that they are Christ s
if they have only a little likeness to Him
we love
them directly for His sake
and are willing to do what we can for them out of
love to Him.
3. The next effect will be
holy practice. When we remember the love
of Christ to us
we shall hall sin.
4. Another effect of remembering the love of Christ will be
repose
of heart in time of trouble. A constant remembrance of Christ¡¦s love to us will
make us always cheerful
dutiful
holy. Dear Lord
grant us this boon; for if
Thou wilt enable us to remember Thy love more than wine
Thou wilt give us all
good things in one. Let Thy good Spirit but keep us up to this good resolution
and we shall be both holy and happy
honouring Thee and rejoicing in Thee.
IV. A few practical
suggestions as to preserving a deeper and more sincere remembrance of Christ¡¦s
love than you have hitherto done.
1. One of the first things I would recommend to you is
frequent
meditation. See if you cannot more often get a quarter of an hour all alone
that you may sit down
and turn over and over again the love of Christ to you.
Our old proverb says
¡§Prayer and provender hinder no man¡¦s journey¡¨; and I
believe that prayer and meditation hinder no man¡¦s work. Do try to get a little
time to think about your soul.
2. Take care that you are not content with what you knew of Christ¡¦s
love yesterday. You want to know a little more about it to-day
and you ought
to know still more about it to-morrow. If you learn a little more about Christ
every day
you will not be likely to forget what you already know of Him.
3. Then
again
as another way of keeping in your heart what you do
know
--take care
when you have a sense of Christ¡¦s love
that you let it go
down deeply. If there were a nail so placed that it would slacken its hold a
little every day for six days
if I had the opportunity of driving it in the
first day
I would try to drive it in right up to the head
and to clinch it.
So
if you have not much time for fellowship and communion with Christ
if you
have only a short season for meditation
try to drive the nail well home. Do
not be content with merely thinking about Christ
seek to see Him before your
eyes as manifestly crucified. Realize your fellowship with Him as He rises from
the tomb
for this will help very much to keep you right.
4. When any of you meet together
it is always a good thing to make
Christ the theme of your conversation. Whenever you have the opportunity
tell
out the marvellous story of His great love to you; so will your own memory be
refreshed
and others
listening to your testimony
will also get a large
and
it may be
an everlasting blessing. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Remembrance of the love of Christ
I. Inquire into
the nature of the Saviour¡¦s special love.
1. This love is everlasting; that is to say
it did not commence in
time
but existed from eternity; and it will not terminate while eternity
endures: like its
Divine source
it has neither ¡§beginning of days nor end of years.¡¨
2. The love of Christ
is most generous; since it was undeserved
unsolicited
and disinterested.
3. This is an efficient and powerful love. If conscience condemn us
His peace speaking blood can assure us
and enable us to shout with the
apostle
¡§Who shall lay anything to the charge of God¡¦s elect?¡¨ If our
corruptions rage and struggle
His Spirit can subdue them
and render us more
than conquerors over them. If the curses of the broken covenant hang over us
and hell gape to receive us
yet sheltered in His wounds
no curse can smite
us
no flames kindle around us. If we be called to pass through the gloomy vale
of death
this Sun of Righteousness can enlighten it
and cause us even there
to ¡§lift up our heads
knowing that our redemption draweth nigh.¡¨ If we
go into a strange and unknown world
He can there fill our souls with joys far
above all our thoughts or desires. Then
and not till then
shall we be able to see the power of
that love
which strained and vanquished our obstinate hearts.
4. To crown all these properties
this love was painful and
suffering.
II. It is the duty
of believers to remember the love of Christ.
1. All those circumstances which tend to produce permanent and firm
impressions upon the memory
are to be found in this love.
2. We are bound to remember the love of Christ
because the
remembrance and sense of this love is the fountain whence all holy actions and
good desires proceed. It is this love which animates the Christian to
obedience; it is this love which
in the strong language of the apostle
¡§constraineth him¡¨ to labour for his Master.
III. Our remembrance
must be accompanied with gratitude in the heart. This duty is not painful; this
duty is the source of the highest joy; dost thou fly from pleasure
my soul!
Then let thy transports and thy rapture testify that thou feelest the value of
a Saviour¡¦s love.
1. If this remembrance be thus accompanied by gratitude in the heart
it will manifest itself by the praises of the lips; it will shine in our
discourse.
2. To these emotions of the heart
to these words of the mouth
must
be added the actions of the life
if we would manifest a true remembrance of
the love of the Saviour. (H. Kollock
D. D.)
The memory of Christ¡¦s love
This is a night for remembering Christ¡¦s love. The communion table
spread before us
the sacred feast to which we are about to come
is meant to
recall to our minds our Saviour¡¦s words
¡§This do in remembrance of Me . . .
This do ye
as oft as ye drink it
in remembrance of Me.¡¨
I. First
I would
remind you of the preparations for this holy memory. Here they are.
1. The first word is
¡§Draw me. Lord
I would fain come at Thee; but
like Mephibosheth:
I am lame in both my feet. I would fain fly to Thee; but my wings are broken;
if
indeed
I ever had any. I cannot come to Thee. I lie inert
and dead
and
powerless.¡¨ So the first preparation is
¡§Draw me.¡¨ It is a sweet
gracious
efficacious exercise of Divine power that I need and entreat . . . I pray this
for myself
and I trust that you will pray with me
Come
Sacred Spirit
and
draw us nearer to Christ; enliven our hopes; incline our hearts; arouse our
desires and then help us to yield our whole being to Thy gracious influences!¡¨
2. Notice
next
that this verse says
¡§Draw me
we will run after
Thee.¡¨ I like the change in the pronouns
as though I should pray to-night
¡§Lord
draw me
I am the most weighted
the heaviest of all Thy children in
this congregation; but draw me
we will run after Thee if Thou dost draw the
most burdened one towards Thyself
all the rest will come to Thee at a rapid rate.¡¨
Oh
that we might every one attain the running pace to-night! Oh
that we might
speed along towards our Lord with that strong
impetuous desire which will not
let us rest till we are close to Him: ¡§Draw me
we will run after Thee.¡¨
3. Now
in the further preparation
if you read the verse through
you Will find that an answer comes to the prayer directly it is uttered: ¡§The King hath
brought me into His chambers.¡¨ I know
and some of you know
unhappily
what it
is to feel very cold and lifeless; but I also know
and some of you know
what
it is to become full of life
full of love
full of joy
full of heavenly
rapture
in a Single moment.
4. There is only one more preparation for remembering Christ
and
that is to feel gladness and joy in Him: ¡§ We will be glad and rejoice in Thee.¡¨
Come
take those ashes from thy head
thou that art sighing by reason of
affliction! Come unbind that sackcloth
and throw it aside
thou that hast lost
fellowship with God
and art consequently in the dark! Christ is yours if you
believe in Him. He has given Himself to you
and He loves you. Rejoice in that
blessed fact.
II. I Would like to
speak about the Divine subject of this Holy memory: ¡§¡¥We will remember Thy love.
1. First
we will remember the fact of Christ¡¦s love What it is for
God to love
God only knows. We faintly guess
by the love that burns in our
bosom towards the objects of our affection
what the love of God must be. The
love of God must be a mighty passion. I use the word because I know no better;
I am conscious that it is not the right one
for human language is too feeble
to describe Divine love.
2. But we will remember
also
the character of Christ¡¦s love. What a
love it was! He loved us before the foundation of the world. With the telescope
of His prescience
He foresaw our existence
and He loved us when we had no
being. It was unmerited love
which had no reason in us for it to light upon.
He loved us because He would love us. It was the sovereignty of His love that
made Him love those whom He chose to love. He loved them freely
without
anything in them
or that would ever be done by them
to deserve His love. But
He loved fully as well as freely; He loved intensely
divinely
immeasurably.
3. We will also remember the deeds of Christ¡¦s love.
4. I would like you
to-night
to remember the proofs of Christ¡¦s
love. You were far off
but He sought you
and brought you back. You were deaf
but He called you
and opened your ear to His loving call.
III. The Divine
product of this holy memory:
¡§The upright love Thee.¡¨
1. So it seems
then
that if we remember Christ
we shall have a
respect for His people. His people are the upright; and she
who speaks in the
sacred Canticle
here looks round upon them
and says
¡§The upright love Thee.¡¨
¡§That commends Thee to me; for if they who are of a chaste spirit love Thee
much more should I.¡¨
2. In remembering Christ¡¦s love as the upright do
we shall grow
upright. I believe that God blesses trouble to our sanctification
and that He
can bless joy to the same end; but I am sure of this
that the greatest
instrument of sanctification is the love of Jesus. If you will remember
Christ¡¦s love
you will be lifted up from your crookedness
and made straight
and put among the upright
who love the Lord. (C. H. Spurgeon)
Love of Jesus
The spouse has been singing the praise of her Beloved. The Church
has been chanting to the honour of the Church¡¦s Head. There is nothing gives
the spouse so much delight as to be able to set forth the glory of her Husband
and her King. She cannot find words sweet enough to express her admiration of
Him. She loves Him better than all else
and her love is better than a banquet
of wine. She is happy in the song
but just while she is at her happiest
there
seems to float across her sky clouds
dark and heavy clouds. She remembers
for
a moment at all events
that all do not love Him as she does. ¡§Oh
¡¨ she seems
to say
¡§I love Thee
yet all do not share in my affection.¡¨ But the cloud does
not tarry long; it is gone when she remembers that the upright love Him
that
all whose love is worth having love Him
so she cheers her heart again with
this glad thought that there are some who hold Him at His true worth
some who
count Him fairest of the fair
and dearest of the dear. Then is it that she
speaks
not always in the first person
but sometimes in the third
for she
loves to get them to join the strain and all rejoice to sing the self-same
song. All ye who love Jesus
have you not all felt the same? I learn from this
text
first
that Jesus well deserves His people¡¦s highest love. Take the
revised version of the text
¡§Rightly do they love Thee.¡¨ He well deserves His
people¡¦s love
first
because of His great affection for His people. ¡§We love
Him because He first loved us.¡¨ This is the charm of Christ¡¦s love
that it is
ever the same
that it never changes
that it stands the strain of our
unfaithfulness and lack of love
and He has proved it over and over again. Did
He not leave His glorious throne to tabernacle with men? Did not He live? Did
not He die? Did not He rise again
all for your sake and for mine? Lord Jesus
rightly do we love Thee I Lord
we love Thee
because Thou art so lovely and so
lovable. ¡§Thy very name is as ointment poured forth
therefore do the virgins
love Thee.¡¨ The purer we are the more we shall love all that is pure. I love to
think of this
that the Lord Jesus delights to have His people happy in His
love
to see them trusting Him and familiar with Him. Who can chide us for
loving our dearest friends? Lastly
there is that other version in the margin
of the Authorized Version which tells us that they love Thee uprightly. I
understand from this that those who love Jesus must love Him in the best
possible style and greatest possible degree
love with utmost love. You love Christ
you are conscious of that; but that love of yours must count best. You must
love uprightly. Now
I want you to search your hearts to see if you love Him as
He deserves. Do you long for fresh tokens of His affection? Your love is not of
the right sort unless you are constantly pressing forward to closer proximity
to the Master. Here is another test. Have you great joy in His sacred Person?
We will be glad and rejoice in Thee. I do believe that true love to Jesus means
much joy to every one of us. My heart does leap at the sound of His name. There
is something wrong in the heart if it does not thus respond to His affection. I
would that you were happy Christians. The clouds that darken the sky are gilded
with this love. I pray you revel in His love. It is better than wine. Be as
those who feast. (T. Spurgeon.)
I am black
but comely
O
ye daughters of Jerusalem.
The church¡¦s blackness
I. The church of God and Christians
whilst they are here
are in an
imperfect state. There is a mixture of some light and darkness together
and so
it will be till we come to heaven
both for sin and sorrow
for sins and
defects in soul. The causes why God will have it so are:
1. In regard of outward infirmities
that we might be made
conformable to His Son (Romans 8:17)
and so reign with Him
being first made suitable to the body.
2. In respect of outward and inward infirmities
both because God¡¦s
glory is seen in our infirmities (2 Corinthians 12:7)
His grace being sufficient to uphold us
and also in regard our weakness commends His strength
and our folly His
wisdom.
3. Because He would draw us out of the earth
and have us hasten to
accomplish the marriage and come away
therefore He sends us so many crosses
and so little rest in the flesh.
4. Because God would have us humble
patient and pitiful people
neither of which would be unless our state were imperfect; we would never know
ourselves
our brethren and God
unless it were so
that on both sides we saw
the prints of our imperfections.
II. Though our estate be here imperfect
yet we must not be
discouraged.
1. We have a great and mighty deliverer. He loves His children in the
midst of all their deformities.
2. He is able to help them in all estates; His grace is still
sufficient
He hath present help. What needs the child be dismayed for pain
when the Father can remove it at His pleasure?
3. The saints of God in all ages have gone through imperfections;
they have been sick
poor
doubtful
passionate
as well as we. God hath
brought them to heaven
to happiness
through all storms.
4. Uprightness may stand with imperfection
some gold may be amongst
earth; as the Church shows here
beauty and deformity may stand together
some
light
some darkness. Now God bids the upright hope
rejoice
says he is
blessed (Psalms 23:6).
5. Because the effects of discouragement are too bad
as fretting (Psalms 42:11); yea
this doth not only keep Out praises
but causes neglect of
all ordinances
drives from God
makes one fierce
envious
uncomfortable
impotent
etc.
III. There is a glory and excellence in the saints of God in the midst
of all their deformities and debasements. Indeed their glory is like Solomon¡¦s
curtains
not obvious to every eye; like Kedar¡¦s tents
or a heap of wheat in
the chaff
and outwardly base
but inwardly excellent.
1. Needs it must be so
for being converted
they obtain a new name (Revelation 2:17); yea
they
have this peculiar favour granted
as 1 John 3:1
to be called the ¡§sons of God.¡¨
2. They have a new nature
being made partakers of the image of God
and so of the Divine nature; as it is (2 Peter 1:4).
3. They have a new estate; Christ Jesus makes them free
as John 8:35
and He makes them also rich
supplying all their wants with the
riches of His glory (Psalms 4:3).
4. They have a new kindred and guide. God is their Father
they are
members of Christ (1 Corinthians 12:13)
they are ¡§led by the Spirit of God.¡¨ God
dwelleth in them
and the Spirit of glory rests upon them even in affliction (1 Peter 4:14)
and filleth them with glorious faith and precious graces.
IV. We must not still be poring into the deformities of God¡¦s Church
and people
like flies on galled places
or dogs upon garbage and raw flesh.
For--
1. This is a practice which utterly crosseth God in His commandments
who chargeth us ¡§not to despise the day of small things¡¨ (Zechariah 4:10).
2. This is quite against justice; for Christians have beauty as well
as blackness
graces as well as corruptions.
3. This neither cometh from any good
nor worketh good. It ariseth
from pride
ignorance
etc.
and showeth that a man neither knows his own
estate
nor God s proceedings with His people
who brings them to honour
through baseness
and confounds the glory of the world with base things.
V. Then God¡¦s children pay for it
when they do not their own work
not keeping their own standing. It is with them as soldiers and scholars
when
they keep not their own places
and learn not their own lessons: they are met with on
every side.
1. Because no man speeds well out of his own place
but Christians
worst of all; as Proverbs 27:8
a thousand inconveniences befall to oneself
to his charge
when
absent. God will be upon him
and leave him to himself
till he hath wound
himself into woeful brakes.
2. Men will be upon his back
as Paul on Peter¡¦s
or else grow
strange till he be humbled; but bad men they will curse him
all the hypocrites
in the town will be at his heels.
3. The devil will be upon them
and having drawn them out of the way
will either still mislead them
or else cut their throats and steal all
or
hold them
if possible he may
from returning unto God; as in the prodigal son.
4. Their own consciences will be upon them
and it is with them as with a child that
plays truant
his heart throbs
he hath no peace: so a Christian
whether he prosper or not
prospers
he hath no peace
he eats not
he sleeps not in peace. (R. Sibbes.)
The Church¡¦s confession of
infirmity
By the ¡§daughters of
Jerusalem
¡¨ Jewish expositors understand the Gentiles
Jerusalem being the
spiritual metropolis and mother of us all. And
in substance
most Christian
expositors agree with them--that is
they suppose the persons addressed to be
some who are not yet openly joined to Christ; who are halting and undecided;
seeing much of power and grace in Christ
but discouraged and driven back
either by the remaining infirmities of His followers
or by the persecutions to
which they see them to be exposed. Hence the Church proceeds to vindicate
herself against any suspicions arising out of these adverse appearances. ¡§True
in one sense I am ¡¥black¡¦; judged of externally
and seen only as man seeth
I
am as dark and swarthy as the skins with which the wild Arab roofs his tent.
But
in another sense
I am ¡¥comely¡¦; my ¡¥clothing is of wrought gold
¡¦ my raiment
¡¥is of finest needlework¡¦; my soul
embroidered and enriched with the graces of
the Eternal Spirit
makes me beautiful as the hangings in king¡¦s palaces
gorgeous ¡¥as the curtains of Solomon.¡¦¡¨ ¡§Black
but comely.¡¨ The words may be
taken
and by the Jews are taken
as anticipative of the glory of the Church in
the latter days. In her present state she may be considered as dark as the
Ethiop¡¦s skin. Her heresies
her divisions
her heart-burnings
the spots in
her feasts of charity
the scandals among men professing godliness
make the
saying to be true of her which Jeremiah witnesses
that her ¡§visage is blacker
than a coal.¡¨ But how does Ezekiel speak of what her glory shall be (Ezekiel 16:9-14)? Again
the expression
¡§I am black
¡¨ may be taken to refer to
the many sins of the believer. In the eyes of no one is he so black as he is in his own. He
is covered over with blemishes
and spots
and soils. There are stains upon his
duties
stains upon his repentances
stains upon his prayers. But look we
again. We have seen the picture but from one side. On looking at it from the
other
this stained and darkened thing is beautiful as Tirzah
comely as
Jerusalem
¡§terrible as an army with banners.¡¨ Thus
while the believer is both
¡§black and comely
¡¨ he is neither all the one
nor all the other. There is a
strife for mastery always going on between the elements of his inner life--the
grace reigning
but the sin not expelled--the flesh disputing inch by inch the
claims of the Spirit
and iniquity forcing its presence into the shrine of his
holiest things. Still
comely he is
and that through Christ¡¦s comeliness. The
world sees only the ¡§tents of Kedar
¡¨ but cannot discern the ¡§curtains
of Solomon.¡¨ (D. Moore
M. A.)
Verse 6
Look not upon me
because I am black.
Self-humbling and self-searching
I. The fairest
Christians are the most shamefaced with regard to themselves. The person who
says
¡§Look not upon me
because I am black
¡¨ is described by some one else in
the eighth verse as the ¡§fairest among women.¡¨ Others
who thought her the
fairest of the fair
spoke no less than the truth when they affirmed it; but in
her own esteem she felt herself to be so little fair
and so much uncomely
that
she besought them not even to look upon her. Why is it that the best Christians
depreciate themselves the most? Is it not because they are most accustomed to
look within? They keep their books in a better condition than those unsafe
tradesmen
the counterpart of mere professors
who think themselves ¡§rich and
increased in goods
¡¨ when they are on the very verge of bankruptcy. In his
anxiety to be pure from evil
the godly man will be eager to notice and quick
to detect the least particle of defilement; and for this reason he discovers
more of his blackness than any other man is likely to see. He is no blacker
but he looks more narrowly
and therefore he sees more distinctly the spots on
his own character. The genuine Christian also tries himself by a higher
standard. He knows the law to be spiritual
and therefore he judges many things
to be sinful which others wink at; and he counts some things to be important duties
which others regard as trifles. The genuine Christian sets up no lower standard
than perfection. He does not judge himself by others
but by the exact measure
of the Divine requirements
by the law of God
and especially by the example of
his Lord and Master; and when he thus sets the brightness of the Saviour¡¦s
character side by side with his own
then it is that he cries out
Look not
upon me
for I am black. Another reason why the fairest Christians are
generally those that think themselves the blackest
is that they have more
light. When the light of God comes into the soul
and we see what purity really
is
what holiness really is
then it is the contrast strikes us. Though we
might have thought we were somewhat clean before
when we see God in His light
we see light
and we abhor ourselves in dust and ashes. Our defects so appal
our own heart
that we marvel they do not exhaust His patience. The better
Christian a man is
the more abashed he always feels; because to him sin is so
exceedingly hateful
that what sin he sees in himself he loathes himself for
far more than others do. A very little sin
as the world calls it
is a very
great sin to a truly awakened Christian. Now
I think our text seems to say
just this: there
were some that admired
the Church. They said she was fair. She seemed to say
¡§Don t say it; you don t know what I am
or you would not praise me. Every
Christian
in pro portion as he lives near to God
will feel this
self-abasement
this lowliness of heart; and if others talk of admiring or of
imitating him
he will say
¡§Look not upon me
for I am black.¡¨ And as he thus
in deep humility
begs that he be not exalted
he will often
desire others
that they would not despise him.¡¨ It will come into his mind
Such and such a
man of God is a Christian indeed; as he sees my weakness
he will contemn me.
Such-and such a disciple of Christ is strong; he will never be able to bear
with my weakness. Such and such a Christian woman does
indeed
adorn the
doctrine of God her Saviour; but as for me
alas! I am not what I ought to be
nor what I would be. Children of God
do not look upon me with scorn. I will
not say that you have motes in your own eyes. I have a beam in mine. Look not
upon me too severely. Judge me not harshly. If you do look at me
look to
Christ for me
and pray that I may be helped; ¡§for I am black
because the sun
hath looked upon me.¡¨
II. The most
diligent Christian will be the man most afraid of the evils connected with his
work. ¡§Evils connected with his work!¡¨ says one. ¡§Does work for God have evils
contingent upon it?¡¨ Yes; but for every evil connected with the work of God
there are ten evils connected with idleness. I speak now only to the workers. I
have known some whom the sun has looked upon in this respect; their zeal has
grown cold through non-success. You went out
first of all
as a Christian
full of fire and life. You intended to push the Church before you
and drag the
world after you. But you have been mixed up with Christians for some years of a
very cool sort. Use the thermometer to-night. Has not the spiritual temperature
gone down in your own soul? Perhaps you have not seen
many conversions under
your ministry? or in the class which you conduct you have not seen many
children brought to Jesus? Do you feel you are getting cool? Then wrap your
face in your mantle to-night
and say ¡§Look not upon me
for in losing my zeal
I am black
for the sun hath looked upon me.¡¨ Perhaps it has affected you in
another way
for the sun does not bring freckles out on all faces in the same
place. Perhaps it is your temper that is grown sour? Sometimes this evil of
sun-burning will come in the shape of joy taken away from the heart by
weariness. I do not think any of us are weary of God¡¦s work. If so
we never
were called to it. But we may get weary in it. The toil is more irksome
when the spirits are less buoyant. Well
I would advise you to confess this
before God
and ask for a medicine to heal you. You had need get your joy back
but first you must acknowledge that you have lost it. Say
¡§I am black
because
the sun hath looked upon me.¡¨
III. The most
watchful Christian is conscious of the danger of self-neglect. ¡§They made me
the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not kept.¡¨ Solemnly
let me speak again to my brethren who are seeking to glorify Christ by their
lives. I met some time ago with a sermon by that famous divine
Mr. Henry
Melvill
which consists all through of one solitary thought
and one only image
well worked out. He supposes a man to be a guide in Switzerland. It is his duty
to conduct travellers in that country through the sublime passes
and to point
out to them the glories of the scenery
and the beauties of the lakes
and
streams
and glaciers
and hills. This man
as he continues In his office
almost inevitably gets to repeat his descriptions as a matter of course; and everybody knows how
a guide at last comes to ¡§talk book
¡¨ and just iterate words which do not
awaken any corresponding feeling in his own mind. Yet when he began
perhaps it
was a sincere love of the sublime and the beautiful that led him to take up the
avocation of a guide; and at first it really was to him a luxury to impart to
others what he had felt amidst the glories of nature; but as
year after year
to hundreds of different parties
he had to repeat much the same descriptions
call attention to the same sublimities
and indicate the same beauties
it is
almost impossible but that he should get to be at last a mere machine. Through
the hardening tendency of custom
and the debasing influence of gain
his
aptest descriptions and most exquisite eulogies come to be of no greater
account than the mere language of a hireling. Every worker for Christ is deeply
concerned in the application of this parable; because the peril of
self-complacency increases in precisely the same ratio as the zeal of
proselytizing. When counselling others
you think yourself wise. When warning
others
you feel yourself safe. When judging others
you suppose yourself above
suspicion. You began the work with a flush of ardour; it may be with a fever of
enthusiasm; a sacred instinct prompted
a glowing passion moved you. How will
you continue it? Here is the danger--the fearful danger--lest you do it
mechanically
fall into a monotony
continue in the same train
and use holy
words to others with no corresponding feeling in your own soul.
IV. The most
conscientious Christian will be the first to inquire for the antidote
and to
use the cure. What is the cure? The cure is found in the verse next to my text.
See
then
you workers
if you want to keep up your freshness
and not to get
blackened by the sun under which you labour
go to your Lord again--go and talk
to--Him. Address Him again by that dear name
¡§Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ Ask
to have your first love rekindled; strive after the love of your espousals. Oh
to be always full of love to Him! You will never get any hurt by working for
Him then; your work will do you good. The sweat of labour will even make your
face the fairer. The more you do for souls
the purer
and the holier
and the
more Christlike will you he
if you do it with Him. Keep up the habit of
sitting at His feet
like Mary
as well as serving Him with Martha. You can
keep the two together; they will balance each other
and you shall not be
barren or unfruitful
neither shall you fall into the blackness which the sun
is apt to breed. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
My mother¡¦s children were
angry with me.
The Church¡¦s enemies
1. The greatest enemies of the Church are such as are the nearest in
relation unto her. Where there is the greatest sympathy
when divided
turns to
the greatest antipathy. Hereof David complaineth (Psalms 69:9). Such was the enmity of Cain
towards Abel
of Esau towards Jacob
of Absalom towards David.
2. The greatest pretenders to religion and holiness
prove many times
the greatest enemies to the same (Philippians 3:5-6). Paul had a zeal
but
not according to knowledge; and therefore none more forward to persecute the
saints than Paul; none more greater enemies to Christ than the Scribes and
Pharisees; none more opposite to the apostles than the devout Jew
one that was
zealous for legal observances.
3. Those that are nearest in relation to the saints
and those that
pretend most holiness
if such prove false brethren
they afflict and hurt the
saints most of all.
They made me keeper of the
vineyards; but my own vineyard have I not kept.--
The vineyard-keeper at fault
If you consider the bride in the nuptial song to be the Jewish
nation
then the text is a confession
that while witnessing for God against
other nations--idolatrous nations--the children of Abraham had not considered
their own ways. If you take the bride to be the Church of Christ
then the text
is a confession that while she has attended to her mission in the world
she
has forgotten her duty to herself. If the bride be the individual subject of
Messiah¡¦s kingdom
then the text is an acknowledgment that benevolent work has
supplanted personal spiritual cultivation. The heart of a Christian is redeemed
by the Saviour for God
and redeemed unto God; and that heart is
taken possession of by the Holy Ghost that it may bring forth fruit unto God.
Now
the keeping of that heart by God Himself is essential to prosperity and
well-being; but there is a something also which God requires us to do
and that
something is to co-operate with His ministrations and with His care of us. The
husbandman breaks up the clods of the field; he casts in the seed; he treats
the soil as the soil demands; but when he has done his best and his utmost
Providence has to do very much. Unless rain fall and the sun shine
unless the
Source of life give life
and sustain life
the husbandman will be a sower
but
he will never be a reaper. Just so is it with the heart of a Christian. There
are certain things which God does for us
and then God saith to us
¡§Now work
out your own salvation With fear and trembling.¡¨ You see
therefore
the point
to which I want your attention.
I. What is this
complaint? ¡§Mine own vineyard have I not kept.¡¨ The spiritual nature of a godly
man is here supposed to be likened to a vineyard; and it is like to a vineyard
in several respects. In the first place it is a soil in which things are
planted and sown; in which things spring up and wither; in which things grow
and are cut down; in which things bear fruit and are barren; in which things
live and die. In the next place it is a sphere affording full scope for
exertion
vigilance and skill. In the third place judicious labour secures
profit and reward. And in the last place neglect makes evil fertile
and brings
miserable barrenness of good. In a self-neglected spirit you will find such
things as these--first there is culpable and mischievous ignorance; also
undigested information; words about things
without the ideas of things; or the
ideas of things not connected or classified. You will also find injurious
prejudices
false judgments
vain imaginations
irregular emotions
an evil
conscience
corrupt motives supposed to be right motives
restlessness
self-deception
falsity of profession
and a constant going back from good and
from true positions which the individual has gained. Such an one will
not be
like the man who said
¡§I keep under my body
and bring it into subjection.¡¨ He
will have no idea of self-crucifixion
or of self-mortification. You will not
discover in such an one power in prayer. You will not observe in such a case
judicious and successful work. You may find such an one busy; but-you will not
witness in this case judicious and successful labour. Neither will you find
profit from Divine ordinances--rest of soul or peace of mind. The witness of
the Spirit with such a man will not be distinct and clear; nor will you behold
in this case the choicest fruits of righteousness. ¡§Mine own vineyard have I
not kept.¡¨
II. The cause and
the occasion of the evil complained of. You know the distinction between the
cause and the occasion. It is possible to keep others¡¦ vineyards
and
at the
same time
to take care of our own. The two things are compatible. We are quite
sure they may be done together
because God requires us to do them both. The
cause of self-neglect
therefore
is not in the vineyard-keeping for others; it
must be in the character of the individual concerned. But where in the
individual concerned? It may be in false views of a state of salvation
and of
our personal obligations. Many persons who are exceedingly particular about
doctrine
and who tithe their mint
and anise
and cummin
as respects
doctrinal statements
are often horridly careless with reference to practice: and yet if there be
not religious practice in those who embrace religious truths
tell me in what
is the advantage of holding true doctrine? The cause of neglecting our own
vineyards is to be found also in excess of zeal for the welfare of others. It
is to be found in false amiability and accessibility to others. It is to be
found in a strong taste for the excitement of caring for others; and in the
vanity which prefers the position of keeper of the vineyard to the quiet
condition of attending to one¡¦s own vineyard. These few remarks will show the
cause--now for the occasion. ¡§They made me.¡¨ ¡§They.¡¨ A great deal of religious
and benevolent work is done evidently as unto man
and not as unto God. You ask
me for proof of this--I give it you instantly. The proof is here. If the leader
or associate of some benevolent religious workers offend them
they will throw
the work up directly. What does this prove? It proves that they have been
Working for man
and not for God. If men work simply for gratitude
if they are
kind to each other simply expecting thankfulness
they will be invariably
disappointed. And it is not the prospect of thankfulness from others that
should ever bind you to doing good to men. Never look even for gratitude
but
do good to another for the sake of the blessed God. And then it matters very
little what the man you serve may be
how he may change
either towards you or
towards others
you will be able to cleave to him
not for his own sake
but
for his God¡¦s sake. We neglect our own vineyards because others call us away
and we obey. We become engrossed. We become too ardent
We are keeping the
vineyards of others
just
perhaps
that it may be said that we are keeping
their vineyards
and that we may have the praise of the fruit of the vineyard
or that we may please those who are connected with the vineyard. The occasion
of self-neglect may be suggested in these words: ¡§They made me keeper of the vineyards. (S.
Martin
M. A.)
The unkept vineyard; or
personal work neglected
We are all pretty ready at complaining
especially of other
people. Not much good comes of picking holes in other men¡¦s characters; and yet
many spend hours in that unprofitable occupation. It will be well for us
at
this time
to let our complaint
like that of the text
deal with ourselves.
I. First
then
let me begin with the Christian man who has forgotten his high and heavenly
calling. In the day when you and I were born again
we were born for God. In
the day when we were quickened by the Holy Ghost into newness of life
that
life was bound to be a consecrated one. This you will not deny. Christian
you
admit that you have a high
holy and heavenly calling! Now let us look back. We
have not spent our life idly:
we have been forced to be keepers of the vineyards. Even in Paradise man was
bidden to dress the garden. There is something to be done by each man
and specially
by each Christian man. Ask yourself
¡§Am I an earnest labourer together with
God
or am I
after all
only a laborious trifler
an industrious doer of
nothing
working hard to accomplish no purpose of the sort for which I ought to
work
since I ought to live unto my Lord alone?¡¨ to a very large degree we have
not been true to our professions; our highest work has been neglected
we have
not kept our own vineyards. In looking back
how little time has been spent by
us in communion with God! How little a part of our thoughts has been occupied
with meditation
contemplation
adoration
and other acts of devotion! How
little have we surveyed the beauties of Christ
His person
His work
His
sufferings
His glory! Think of our neglect of our God
and see whether it is
not true that we have treated Him very ill. We have been in the shop
we have
been on the exchange
we have been at the markets
we have been in the fields
we have been in the public libraries
we have been in the lecture-room
we have
been in the forum of debate; but our own closets and studies
our walk with
God
and our fellowship with Jesus
we have far too much neglected. Moreover
the vineyard of holy service for God we have too much left to go to ruin. I
would ask you--How about the work your God has called you to do? Men are dying;
are you saving
them? Might not many a man among you say to himself
¡§I have been a tailor
¡¨ or
¡§I have been a shopkeeper
¡¨ or ¡§I have been a mechanic
¡¨ or ¡§I have been a
merchant
¡¨ or ¡§I have been a physician
and I have attended to these callings;
but mine own vineyard
which was my Master¡¦s
which I was bound to look to
first of all
I have not kept¡¨? Well
now
what is the remedy for this? It is
that you follow up the next verse to my text. Get to your Lord
and in Him you
will find recovery from your neglects. Ask Him where He feeds His flock
and go
with Him. They have warm hearts who commune with Christ. They are prompt in duty who
enjoy His fellowship. Hasten to your Lord
and you will soon begin to keep your
vineyard; for in the Song you will see a happy change effected. The spouse
began to keep her vineyard directly
and to do it in the best fashion. Within a
very short time you find her saying
¡§Take us the foxes
the little foxes
that
spoil the vines.¡¨ See
she is hunting out her sins and her follies. Farther on
you find her with her Lord in the vineyard
crying
¡§Awake
O north wind; and
come
thou south; blow upon my garden
that the spices thereof may flow out.!¡¨
She is evidently keeping her garden
and asking for heavenly influences to make
the spices and flowers yield their perfume. She went down to see whether the
vines flourished
and the pomegranates budded. Anon
with her Beloved
she
rises early to go to the vineyard
and watch the growth of the plants. Farther
on you find her talking about all manner of fruits that she has ]aid up for her
Beloved. Thus you see that to walk with Christ is the way to keep your
vineyard
and serve your Lord.
II. Now I turn to
the man who in any place has taken other work and neglected his own. He can use
the words of the text--¡§They made me the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own
vineyard have I not kept.¡¨ There is a vineyard that a great many neglect
and
that is their own heart. It is well to have talent; it is well to have
influence; but it is better to be right within yourself. What is your
character
and do you seek to cultivate it? Do you ever use the hoe upon those
weeds which arc so plentiful in us all? Do you water those tiny plants of
goodness which have begun to grow? Do you watch them to keep away the little
foxes which would destroy them? Now think of another vineyard. Are not some
people neglecting their families? Next to our hearts
our households arc the
vineyards which we are most bound to cultivate. It is shocking to find men and
women speaking fluently about religion
and yet their houses are a disgrace to
Christianity. Besides that
every man who knows the Lord should feel that his
vineyard lies also around about his own house. If God has saved your children
then try to do something for your neighbours
for your workpeople
for those
with whom you associate in daily labour. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Shepherdess
The bride was most unhappy and ashamed because her personal beauty
had been sorely marred by the heat of the sun. The fairest among women had
become swarthy as a sunburnt slave. Spiritually it is so full often with a
chosen soul. The Lord¡¦s grace has made her fair to look upon
even as the lily;
but she has been so busy about earthly things that the sun of worldliness has
injured her beauty. The bride with holy shamefacedness exclaims
¡§Look not upon
me
for I am black
because the sun hath looked upon me.¡¨ This is one index of
a gracious soul--that whereas the ungodly rush to and fro
and know not where
to look for consolation
the believing heart naturally flies to its
well-beloved Saviour
knowing that in Him is its only rest. It would appear
from the preceding verse that the bride was also in trouble about a certain
charge which had been given to her
which burdened her
and in the discharge of
which she had become negligent of herself. ¡§Mine own vineyard have I not kept.¡¨
Under this sense of double unworthiness and failure
feeling her omissions and
her commissions to be weighing her down
she turned round to her Beloved and
asked instruction at His hands. This was well. Had she not loved her Lord she
would have shunned Him when her comeliness was faded
but the instincts of her
affectionate heart suggested to her that He would not discard her because of
her imperfections. She was
moreover
wise thus to appeal to her Lord against
herself. Never let sin part you from Jesus. Under a sense of sin do not fly
from Him; that were foolishness. Sin may drive you from Sinai; it ought to draw
you to Calvary.
I. Here is a
question asked. Every word of the inquiry is worthy of our careful meditation.
You will observe
first
concerning it
that it is asked in love. She calls Him
to whom she speaks by the endearing title
¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ Whatever
she may feel herself to be
she knows that she loves Him. The life of her
existence is bound up with Him:
if there be any force and power and vitality in her
it is but as fuel to the
great flame of her love
which burns alone for Him. Mark well that it is not ¡§O
Thou whom my soul believes in.¡¨ That would be true
but she has passed further.
It is not ¡§O Thou whom my soul honours.¡¨ That is true too
but she has
passed beyond that stage. Nor is it merely ¡§O Thou whom my soul trusts and
obeys.¡¨ She is doing that
but she has reached something warmer
more tender
more full of fire and enthusiasm
and it is ¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ The
question therefore becomes instructive to us
because it is addressed to Christ
under a most endearing title; and I ask every worker here to take care that he
always does his work in a spirit of love
and always regards the Lord Jesus not
as a taskmaster
not as one who has given us work to do from which we would
fain escape
but as our dear Lord
whom to serve is bliss
and for whom to die
is gain. ¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth
¡¨ is the right name by which a worker for
Jesus should address his Lord. Now note that the question
as it is asked in
love
is also asked of Him. ¡§Tell me
O Thou whom my soul loveth
where Thou feedest.¡¨
She asked Him to tell her
as if she feared that none but Himself would give
her the correct answer; others might be mistaken
but He could not be. She
asked of Him because she was quite sure that He would give her the kindest
answer. Perhaps she felt that nobody else could tell her as He could
for
others speak to the ear
but He speaks to the heart: others speak with lower degrees of
influence
we hear their speech but are not moved thereby; but Jesus speaks
and the Spirit goes with every word He utters
and therefore we hear to profit
when He converses with us. Now
observe what the question is. She wishes to
know how Jesus does His work
and where He does it. The question seems to be
just this: ¡§Lord
tell me what are the truths with which Thou dost feed Thy people¡¦s souls; tell
me what are the doctrines which make the strong ones weak and the sad ones glad: tell me what is that
precious meat which Thou art wont to give to hungry and fainting spirits
to
revive them and keep them alive; for if Thou tell me
then I will give my flock
the same food:
tell me where the pasture is wherein Thou dost feed Thy sheep
and straightway
I will lead mine to the selfsame happy fields. Then tell me how Thou makest Thy
people to rest. What are those promises which Thou dost apply to the
consolation of their spirit
so that their cares and doubts and fears and
agitations all subside? Thou hast sweet meadows where Thou makest Thy beloved
flock to lie calmly down and slumber
tell me where those meadows are that I may
go and fetch the flock committed to my charge
the mourners whom I ought to
comfort
the distressed ones whom I am bound to relieve
the desponding whom I
have endeavoured to encourage; tell me
Lord
where Thou makest Thy flock to
lie down
for then
under Thy help
I will go and make my flock to lie down
too. It is for myself
but yet far more for others
that I ask the question
¡¥Tell me where Thou feedest
where Thou makest them to rest at noon.¡¦¡§ We would
know the groves of promise and the cool streams of peace
that we may lead others into rest. If we can
follow Jesus we can guide others
and so both we and they will find comfort and
peace. That is the meaning of the request before us.
II. Here is an
argument used. The bride says
¡§Why should I be as one that turneth aside by
the flocks of Thy companions?¡¨ If she should lead her flock into distant
meadows
far away from -the place where Jesus is feeding His flock
it would
not be well. She speaks of it as a thing most abhorrent to her mind
and well might
it be. For
first
would it not look very unseemly that the bride should be
associating with others than the Bridegroom? They have each a flock: there is He with His
great flock
and here is she with her little one. Shall they seek pastures far
off from one another? Will there not be talk about this? Will not onlookers
say
¡§This is not seemly:
there must be some lack of love here
or else these two would not be so
divided¡¨? Stress may be put
if you like
upon that little word ¡§I.¡¨ Why should
I
Thy blood-bought spouse; I
betrothed unto Thee
or ever the earth was
I
whom Thou hast loved
--why should I turn after others and forget Thee? Our
hearts may grow unchaste to Christ even while they are zealous in Christian
work. I dread very much the tendency to do Christ¡¦s work in a cold
mechanical
spirit; but above even that I tremble lest I should be able to have warmth for
Christ¡¦s work and yet should be cold towards the Lord Himself. Beware of that I
Love your work
but love your Master better; love your flock
but love the
great Shepherd better Still
and ever keep close to Him
for it will be a token
of unfaithfulness if you do not. And mark again
¡§Why should I be as one that
turneth aside by the flocks of Thy companions?¡¨ We may read this as meaning
¡§Why should I be so unhappy as to have to work for Thee
and yet be out of
communion with Thee?¡¨ It is a very unhappy thing to lose fellowship with Jesus
and yet to have to go on with religious exercises. If the wheels are taken off
your chariot it is no great matter if nobody wants to ride
but how if you are
called upon to drive on? When a man s foot is lamed he may not so much regret
it if he can sit still
but if he be bound to run a race he is greatly to be
pitied. It made the spouse doubly unhappy even to suppose that she
with her
flock to feed and herself needing feeding too
should have to turn aside by the
flocks of others and miss the presence of her Lord. Above all
should we not
try to live as a church
and individually
also
in abiding fellowship with
Jesus; for if we turn aside from Him we shall rob the truth of its aroma
yea
of its essential fragrance. If we lose fellowship with Jesus we shall have the
standard
but where will be the standard-bearer? We may retain the candlestick
but where shall be the light? We shall be shorn of our strength
of our joy
our comfort
our all
if we miss fellowship with Him. God grant
therefore
that we may never be as those who turn aside.
III. We have here an
answer given by the Bridegroom to His beloved. She asked Him where He fed
where He made His flock to rest
and He answered her. Observe carefully that
this answer is given in tenderness to her infirmity; not ignoring her
ignorance
but dealing very gently with it. ¡§If thou know not¡¨--a hint that she
ought to have known
but such a hint as kind lovers give when they would fain
forbear to chide. The Lord forgives our ignorance
and condescends to instruct
it. Note next that the answer is given in great love. He says
¡§O thou fairest
among women.¡¨ That is a blessed cordial for her distress. She said
¡§I am
black¡¨; but He says
¡§O thou fairest among women. I would rather trust Christ¡¦s
eyes than mine. If my eyes tell me I am black I will weep
but if He assures me
I am fair I will believe Him and rejoice. As the artist
looking on the block
of marble
sees in the stone the statue which he means to fetch out of it with
matchless skill
so the Lord Jesus sees the perfect image of Himself in us
from which He means to chip away the imperfections and the sins until it stands
out in all its splendour¡¨ But still it is gracious condescension which makes
Him say
¡§Thou art fairest among women
¡¨ to one who mourned her own sunburnt
countenance. The answer contains much sacred wisdom. The bride is directed
where to go that she may find her Beloved and lead her flock to Him. ¡§Go thy
way forth by the footprints of the flock.¡¨ If thou wilt find Jesus
thou wilt
find Him in the way the holy prophets went
in the way of the patriarchs and
the way of the apostles. And if thou dost desire to find thy flock
and to make
them lie down
very well
go thou and feed them as other shepherds have
done--Christ¡¦s own shepherds whom He has sent in other days to feed His chosen.
Make the Lord Jesus your model and example; and by treading where the
footprints of the flock are to be seen
you will both save yourself and them
that hear you; you shall find Jesus
and they shall find Jesus too. Then the
spouse added
¡§Feed thy kids beside the shepherds tents
Now
who are
these shepherds? Let me take you to the twelve principal shepherds who came
after the great Shepherd of all. You want to bless your children
to save their
souls
and have fellowship with Christ in the doing of it; then teach them the
truths which the apostles taught. And what were they? Take Paul as an example.
¡§I determined not to know anything among you save Jesus Christ
and Him
crucified.¡¨ That is feeding the kids beside the shepherds¡¦ tents
when you
teach our children Christ
much of Christ
all of Christ
and nothing else but
Christ. Mind you stick to that blessed subject. And when you are teaching them
Christ
teach them all about His life
His doeth
His resurrection; teach them
His Godhead and His manhood. Preach regeneration. Let it be seen how thorough
the change is
that we may glorify God¡¦s work. Preach the final perseverance of
the saints. Teach that the Herd is not changeable--casting away His people
loving them to-day and hating them to-morrow. Preach in fact
the doctrines of
grace as you find them in the Book. Feed them beside the shepherds tents. Aye
and feed the kids there--the little children. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
A dialogue
It is the Church addressing her Lord; it is the condescending
Saviour giving in reply the instruction required.
I. The Church
addresses her Lord.
1. A conscious love to her best friend.
2. A dread of swerving from her loyalty to Him. ¡§Why should I be as
one that turneth aside
etc. Christ has many rivals: and that
not only in hearts which ¡§the god
of this world hath blinded
but even in those of His faithful followers. The
spiritual Christian is aware that there are such rivals. He knows how ensnaring
they are--how feeble and treacherous his own heart is.
3. An anxious petition for His pastoral care. ¡§Tell me where Thou
feedest
¡¨ etc. A true believer needs food for his soul; something to nourish
and strengthen him in the exercise of that spiritual life. And it is to Christ
that He looks for it--¡§Tell me where Thou feedest
¡¨ that I may ¡§go in and out
and find pasture.¡¨ He needs rest to his soul--peace from the war in his
members--victory over the world
whether it allure or terrify him. And because
Jesus has invited ¡§all them that labour and are heavy laden
¡¨ he ¡§comes¡¨; ¡§Tell
me where Thou makest Thy flock to rest at noon.¡¨
II. The condescending
Saviour replies.
1. A gentle reproof:
¡§If thou know not.¡¨ They who know so much of Christ
as the petition implies
already possess the means of knowing more. But they are apt to forget their
past experience of His care
and of the way in which they sought and found it
and impatiently desire some new and unusual means to be employed for their
consolation. Then He will gently reprove--¡§How I knowest thou not? if I be not
a Saviour to others
yet doubtless I am to thee I¡¨
2. An expression of endearment: ¡§O thou fairest among women!¡¨ Has He
then
forgotten that we are ¡§conceived in sin ¡§ and ¡§shapen in iniquity¡¨
V. He sees
moreover
the graces of the Spirit which He Himself bestows upon His children;
imperfect
indeed
but genuine--variable
but progressive--resisted by the
flesh
but gradually victorious over it.
3. A significant reference. Certain questions had been asked: the Saviour will not
give a direct answer
but refers the questioner to those who could satisfy the
inquiry. ¡§Go thy way forth by the footsteps of the flock
¡¨ etc.
The Church¡¦s love to her loving Lord
I. We commence
with thy title:
¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ It is well to be able to call the Lord Jesus
Christ by this name without an ¡§if
¡¨ or a ¡§but.¡¨ Learn to get
that positive knowledge of your love to Jesus
and be not satisfied till you
can talk about your interest in Him as a reality
which you have made
infallibly sure by having received the witness of the Holy Spirit
and His seal
upon your soul by faith
that you are born of God
and belong to Christ.
Speaking
then
of this title which rings the great bell of love to Jesus
let
us notice first the cause
and secondly the effect of that love.
1. If we can look into the face of Him who once sweat great drops of
blood
and call Him
¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth
¡¨ it is interesting to
consider what is the cause of our love. And here our reply is very quick. The
efficient cause of our love is the Holy Spirit of God why do we love Jesus? We
have the best of answers--because He first loved us. Moreover
we have another
is present dealings towards them. What has He not done for us this very day? He
has made us glad; our spirits have leaped for very joy
for He hath turned
again the captivity of our soul. Nor is this all. We love the Saviour because
of the excellency of His person. We are not blind to excellence anywhere
but
still we can see no excellence like His.
2. I shall now for a short time speak on the effects of this love
as
we have dwelt on the cause of it. When a man has true love to Christ
it is
sure to lead him to dedication. There is a natural desire to give something to
the person whom we love
and true love to Jesus compels us to give ourselves to
Him. When the pupils of Socrates had nearly all of them given him a present
there was one of the best scholars who was extremely poor
and he said to
Socrates
¡§I have none of these things which the others have presented to thee;
but
O Socrates
I give thee myself¡¨; whereupon Socrates said it was the best
present he had had that day. ¡§My son
give Me thy heart¡¨--this is what Jesus
asks for. True love next shows itself in obedience. If I love Jesus
I shall do
as He bids me. He is my Husband
my Lord--I call Him ¡§Master.¡¨ ¡§If ye love Me
¡¨
saith He
¡§keep My commandments.¡¨ True love
again
is always considerate and
afraid lest it should give offence. It walks very daintily. If I love Jesus
I
shall watch my eye
my heart
my tongue
my hand
being so fearful lest I
should wake my beloved
or make Him stir until He please; and I shall be sure
not to take in those bad guests
those ill-favoured guests of pride and sloth
and love of the world. Again
true love to Christ will make us very jealous of
His honour. As Queen Eleanor went down upon her knees to suck the poison from
her husband¡¦s wound
so we shall put our lips to the wound of Christ when He
has been stabbed with the dagger of calumny
or inconsistency
being willing
sooner to take the poison ourselves
and to be ourselves diseased and despised
than that His name
His cross
should suffer ill. Oh
what matters it what
becomes of us
if the King reigneth? If we love Christ
again
we shall be
desiring to promote His cause
and we shall be desiring to promote it
ourselves. We shall wish to see the strength of the mighty turned at the gate
that King Jesus may return triumphant; we shall not wish to sit still while our
brethren go to war
but we shall want to take our portion in the fray
that
like soldiers that love their monarch
we may prove by our wounds and by our
sufferings that our love is real. The apostle says
¡§Let us not love in word
only but in deed and in truth.¡¨ Actions speaks louder than words
and we shall
always be anxious to tell our love in deeds as well as by our lips. And once
again
if we love Jesus we shall be willing to suffer for Him. Darkness is
light about us if we can serve Him there.
II. The second
point of consideration is the desire of the Church after Christ Jesus our Lord: having called Him by
His title
she now expresses her longing to be with Him. ¡§Tell me
O Thou whom
my soul loveth
where Thou feedest.¡¨ The desire of a renewed soul is to find
out Christ and to be with Him. Stale meats left over from yesterday are very
well when there is nothing else
but who does not like hot food fresh from the fire?
And past communion with Christ is very well. ¡§I remember Thee from the land of
the Hermonites and the hill Mizar;¡¨ but these are only stale meats
and a
loving soul wants fresh food every day from the table of Christ
and you that
have once had the kisses of His mouth
though you remember the past kisses with
delight
yet want daily fresh tokens of His love. A true loving soul
then
wants present communion with Christ; so the question is
¡§Tell me where Thou
feedest? Where dost Thou get Thy comfort from
O Jesu? I will go there. Where
do Thy thoughts go? To Thy cross? Dost Thou look back to that? Then I will go
there. Where Thou feedest
there will I feed. Or does this mean actively
instead of being in the passive or the neuter? Where dost Thou feed Thy flock?
In Thy house? I will go there
if I may find Thee there. In private prayer?
Then I will not be slack in that In the Word? Tell me where Thou feedest
for
wherever Thou standest as the Shepherd
there will I be
for I want Thee. I
cannot be satisfied to be apart from Thee. My soul hungers and thirsts to be
with Thee. She puts it again
¡§Where dost Thou make Thy flock to rest at noon
¡¨
for there is only rest in one place
where Thou causest Thy flock to rest at
noon. She wants to get away to hold quiet communion with her Lord
for He is
the brook where the weary may lave their wearied limbs; He is that sheltered
nook
that shadow of the great rock in the weary land where His people may lie
down and be at peace.
III. The argument
used by the church. She says
¡§Why should
I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of Thy companions?¡¨ Thou hast
plenty of companions--why should I be turned aside? Why should I not be one?
Let us talk it over. Why should I lose my Lord¡¦s presence? But the devil tells
me I am a great sinner. Ah I but it is all washed away
and gone for ever. That
cannot separate me
for it does not exist. My sin is buried. The devil tells me
I am unworthy
and that is a reason. But I always was unworthy
and yet it was
no reason why He should not love me at first
and therefore cannot be a reason
why I should not have fellowship with Him now. Why should I be left out? Why
should I be turned aside? I am equally bought with a price. I cost Him
in
order to save me
as much as the noblest of the saints; He bought them with
blood; He could not buy me with less. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The love of the Redeemer and the redeemed
I. The relation
which Christ sustains to us as the shepherd of our souls.
II. The warm
affection which Christ¡¦s relation to us inspires. ¡§Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨
III. The special
manifestation of his favour for which our affection pleads. ¡§Tell me where Thou
feedest
where Thou makest Thy flock to rest at noon.¡¨ It is a perfectly
legitimate thing to desire a close
personal intimacy with our Saviour. There
is no virtue in spiritual timidity. We ought not to be contented with a dwarfed
and maimed Christianity
with an imperfect righteousness or a disturbed peace.
In everything we should seek to attain the highest and do the best. And if
Christ be a Saviour at all
we ought to desire His best and choicest blessings.
If He welcomes us in our sin and sorrow
He will not spurn our endeavours to be
always near Him. If
however
we are to reach this height
we must take the
course indicated in our text. We rise by earnest and fervent prayer. ¡§Tell me
where Thou feedest.¡¨ To receive we must ask; to find we must seek; to have the
door opened to us we must knock. The receiving of this blessing must be made a
direct and specific
aim.
IV. The
satisfaction and delight such a manifestation of our Lord¡¦s favour will bring.
¡¨Why should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of Thy companions?¡¦ I need
scarcely remind you how in actual life other lords than Christ claim to rule
over us. (J. Stuart.)
Love to Jesus
I. First
then
the loving title of our text is to be considered as expressing rhetoric of the
lip. The text calleth Christ
¡§Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ Let us take this
title and dissect it a little. One of the first things which will strike us
when we come to look upon it
is the reality
of the love which is here
expressed. Reality
I say; understanding the term ¡§real
¡¨ not in
contradistinction to that which is lying and fictitious
but in contrast to
that which is shadowy and indistinct. Suppose an infant taken away from its
mother
and you should seek to foster in it a love to the parent by constantly
picturing before it the idea of a mother
--and attempting to give it the
thought of a mother¡¦s relation to the child. Indeed
I think you would have a
difficult task to fix in that child the true and real love which it ought to
bear towards her who bore it. But give that child a mother; let it hang upon
that mother¡¦s real breast; let it derive its nourishment from her very heart: let it see that
mother; feel that mother; put its little arms about that mother¡¦s real neck and
you have no hard task to make it love its mother. So is it with the Christian.
We want Christ--not an abstract
doctrinal
pictured Christ--but a real Christ.
It is not the idea of disinterestedness; it is not the idea of devotion; it is
not the idea of self-consecration that will ever make the Church mighty: it must be that idea
incarnate
consolidated
personified in the actual existence of a realized
Christ in the camp of the Lord¡¦s host. I do pray for you
and pray you for me
that we may each one of us have a love which realizes Christ
and which can
address Him as ¡§Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨ But
again
look at the text and you
will perceive another thing very clearly. The Church
in the expression which
she uses concerning Christ
speaks not only with a realization of His presence
but with a firm assurance of her own love. Many of you
who do really love
Christ
can seldom get further than to say
¡§O Thou whom my soul desires to
love! O Thou whom I hope I love I¡¨ But this sentence saith not so at all. This
title hath not the shadow of a doubt or a fear upon it: ¡§O Thou whom my
soul loveth!¡¨ Is it not a happy thing for a child of God when he knows that he
loves Christ? when he can speak
of it as a matter of consciousness?--a thing out of which he is not to be
argued by all the reasonings of Satan?--a thing concerning which he can put his
hand upon his heart
and appeal to Jesus and say
¡§Lord
Thou knowest all things
Thou knowest that I love Thee¡¨? Now
notice something else equally worthy of
our attention. The church
the spouse
in thus speaking of her Lord
thus
directs our thoughts not merely to her confidence of love
but the unity of her
affections with regard to Christ. She hath not two lovers
she hath but one.
She doth not say
¡§O ye on whom my heart is set!¡¨ but ¡§O Thou!¡¨ She
hath but one after whom her heart is panting. She has gathered her affections
into one bundle
she hath made them but one affection
and then she hath cast
that bundle of myrrh and spices upon the breast of Christ. He is to her the
¡§Altogether Lovely
¡¨ the gathering up of all the loves which once strayed
abroad. She has put before the sun of her heart
a burning-glass
which has
brought all her love to a focus
and it is all concentrated with all its heat
and vehemence upon Christ Jesus Himself. Come
do we love Christ after this
fashion? Do we love Him so that we can say
¡§Compared with our love to
Jesus
all other loves are but as nothing¡¨? If you will look at the title
before us
you will have to learn not only its reality
its assurance
its
unity; but you will have to notice its constancy
¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨
Not
¡§did love yesterday;¡¨ or
¡§may begin to love to-morrow;¡¨ but
¡§Thou whom
my soul loveth
¡¨--¡§Thou whom I have loved ever since I knew Thee
and to love
whom has become as necessary to me as my vital breath or my native air.¡¨ The
true Christian is one who loves Christ for evermore. In our text you will
clearly perceive a vehemence of affection. The spouse saith of Christ
¡§O Thou
whom my soul loveth.¡¨ She means not that she loves Him a little
that she loves
Him with an ordinary passion
but that she loves Him in all the deep sense of
that word. Oh! you should see Love when she hath her heart full of her
Saviour¡¦s presence
when she cometh out of her chamber! Indeed
she is like a
giant refreshed with new wine. I have seen her dash down difficulties
tread
upon hot irons of affliction and her feet have not been scorched; I have seen
her lift up her spear against ten thousand
and she has slain them at one time.
I have known her give up all she had
even to the stripping of herself
for
Christ; and yet she seemed to grow richer
and to be decked with ornaments as
she unarrayed herself
that she might cast her all upon her Lord
and give up
all to Him. Do you know this love
Christian brethren and sisters?
II. Now let me come
to the logic of the heart
which lies at the bottom of the text. My heart
why
shouldest thou love Christ? With what argument wilt thou justify thyself? Our
hearts give for their reason why they love Him
first
this: We love Him for His
infinite loveliness. When you see Christ you look up
but you do more
you feel
drawn up; you do not admire so much as love; you do not adore so much as
embrace; His character enchants
subdues
o¡¦erwhelms
and with the irresistible
impulse of its own sacred attraction--it draws your spirit right up to Him. But
still
love hath another argument why she loveth Christ
namely
Christ¡¦s love
to her. One more reason does love give us yet more powerful still. Love feels
that she must give herself to Christ
because of Christ¡¦s suffering for her.
This is love¡¦s logic. I may well stand here and defend the believer¡¦s love to his
Lord. I wish I had more to defend than I have. I dare stand here and defend the
utmost extravagancies of speech
and the wildest fanaticisms of action
when
they have been done for love to Christ. I say again
I only wish I had more to
defend in these degenerate times. Has a man given up all for Christ? I will
prove him wise if he has given up for such an one as Christ is. Has a man died
for Christ? I write over his epitaph that he surely was no fool who had but the
wisdom to give up his heart for one who had His heart pierced for him.
III. Rhetoric is
good
logic is better
but a positive demonstration is the best. Let the world
see that this is not a mere label to you--a label for something that does not
exist
but that Christ really is to you ¡§Him whom your soul loves.¡¨ (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Heavenly Food
First of all
we find in the words of the text the cry of the
living
longing soul
¡§Tell me
O Thou whom I love
where Thou feedest
where
Thou makest Thy flock to rest at noon.¡¨ The soul that here speaks is the soul
of the child of God speaking to Jesus. It is a test by which to try the true
spiritual life of a soul. The heart can always speak to Jesus in words of love
for we are not God¡¦s true children
we are not true disciples of Jesus
unless
each of us can speak to Him in words like these
¡§O Thou whom my soul loveth.¡¨
It is not
remember
the warm excited feelings of affection of which God¡¦s Word
here speaks
but of the deliberate choice
of the deliberate surrender of the
will. But
again
the text is also the cry of a hungering soul
¡§Tell me
O
Thou whom my soul loveth
where Thou feedest
where Thou makest Thy flock to
rest at noon.¡¨ It is
you see
the soul hungering from a sense of weakness
conscious of the need of heavenly food. So we may hear one saying
¡§I see
others around me strong in the life and power of His might
though I suffer
naught but defeat.¡¨ It is the cry of a soul which has been stumbling on in
weakness
fighting and backsliding
yet longing to get more near to Jesus
to
cleave to Him
to follow after Him
yet deeply conscious of its utter
helplessness and weakness and need of spiritual food. God Himself hath given us
the answer. He feeds us with the Word of Life--gives us strength with which to
fight on through the struggle after Jesus. Is this the spiritual food with
which our souls are strengthened and refreshed from day to day Again
God feeds
us in the blessed sacrament of His body and blood. But
again
the soul asks
¡§Where makest Thou Thy flock to rest at noon?¡¨ The phrase ¡§at noon¡¨ carries us
to another suggestion of our text. It may have been in the scorching sun of
prosperity that we suffered our great trial--none so sharp as that
none under
which one who had been really seeking God found it more difficult to follow Jesus
none under which he had more need to cry
¡§Tell me
O Thou whom I love
where
Thou feedest
where Thou makest Thy flock to rest at noon.¡¨ But
blessed be
God
there are those on whom the sun of prosperity has shined in all its
brightness
yet have never been moved from rest in their Holy Saviour. We long
to know and enjoy that rest for ourselves. And where is our hope? Not in any
thing of man
but in God¡¦s Word. The Lord hath said
¡§Believe
¡¨ and I take Him
at His word and rest in that word. He tells me of One who loved me and gave
Himself for me
and then I ask my soul
¡§Do I feel peace? Do I sufficiently
care about this matter? Do I sufficiently love my Saviour.?¡¨ There is no
sweeter resting-place for weary souls than in God¡¦s own soul. But
once more
God gives us rest in His Church. Is this not the meaning of what we call the
¡§Day of Rest¡¨ our Lord¡¦s Day
the day given by our Lord to be a
resting-place unto our souls in the midst of a weary world? Surely
above all
things that we desire in this busy
toiling age
is that we may find rest. Yet
one other question arises in our hearts as we speak to Him whom our soul
loveth. Christ has two flocks--a travelling flock and a gathered flock. He
tells us where the travelling flock finds rest--in the pastures of His Word
in
the quiet of His Church
above all in His own heart of love. But that gathered
flock--where does that rest? We shall know when we
like it
are gathered.
God¡¦s Word tells us but little of that heavenly rest
but enough surely to spur
us on to seek it earnestly each for ourselves. ¡§There remaineth a rest for the
people of God.¡¨ Oh! let us then press on more earnestly after Jesus lest any of
us fail to enter into the rest. But now let us turn to the answer to our
text--¡§If thou know not
O thou fairest among women
go thy way. Go forth by
the footsteps of the flock
and feed thy kids beside the shepherd tents. Why
should I be as one that turneth aside by the flocks of Thy companions?¡¨ is the
question of the anxious soul. Let it be our question this morning
each one for
himself
¡§Why should I be as one that turneth aside?¡¨ God calls me to read His
Word
why should I reject the Heavenly knowledge? God calls me to rest on His
Church
why should I turn my back upon that rest and seize after the things of
the world? God calls me to His Holy Sacrament
¡§Why should I be as one that
turneth aside from the flocks?¡¨ Yes
why indeed? Can we do without Christ? Can
we risk disobedience to His Holy Word? Are we strong enough without His
strength? Can we be satisfied without He shall feed us? (Archbishop
Maclagan.)
If thou know not
O thou fairest among women
go thy way forth by
the footsteps of the flock.
Christ¡¦s answer unto His spouse
I. His
supposition.
1. The faithful servants and saints of Christ walk in much blindness
and ignorance.
2. Christ takes not advantage from the sins or from the ignorance of
His people to upbraid them
but doth rather help them against their infirmities
(Hebrews 2:17-18).
II. His
compellation.
1. Christ doth win the affections of His saints by sweet
insinuations.
2. The Church is exceeding fair and beautiful in Christ¡¦s eyes (Ephesians 5:25-27).
3. The saints are most fair in Christ¡¦s eyes
when they are most
deformed in their own (2 Corinthians 12:9-10).
III. His directions
to her.
1. Where she should go.
2. Where she should feed.
I have compared thee
O My
love
to a company of horses in Pharaoh¡¦s chariots.
Christ¡¦s commendation of
His Church
I. The sweet
epithet Ghrist giveth unto his Church. ¡§O My love.¡¨
1. The greatest outgoings of love and friendship from Christ
are
toward His Church. His love to His people is--
II. The comparison
by which He sets her forth.
1. ¡§I have compared thee.¡¨ Christ esteems His servants and people
not as they are
in themselves
but as they are in Himself.
2. ¡§A company of horses¡¨ etc. Now by this comparison Christ setteth
forth the glory and renown of His Church in respect of her victories and
achievements; for He having directed His Church to follow the footsteps of the
Flock
and to feed above the tents of false Shepherds
no question now but
these false Shepherds
who before were called Christ¡¦s companions
will
persecute and afflict her:
now for the comforting and supporting of her
Christ tells her
she shall be
strong
and victorious
she shall be like the horses of Egypt
ready for
the battle.
3. Christ having set forth the Church¡¦s strength and valour
now
continueth His speech
showing also
how His Church is decked with His
ordinances and graces (Song of Solomon 1:10).
4. Then He declareth what should be her future happiness; viz. a
further increase of her graces
and some addition of rich ornaments (Song of Solomon 1:11). (John Robotham.)
Verse 10
Thy cheeks are comely with rows of jewels
thy neck with chains of
gold.
The bride adorned with jewels
I. The graces of
the Holy Spirit are that adorning of the Church which is visible to all
spiritual discernment. Faith itself is a very choice jewel
but we are to have
rows of jewels--faith in exercise; faith
as a principle
honouring Christ; as
a hand
laying hold of Christ; as an eye
beholding His beauty; as a warrior
conquering all that opposes Christ--faith victorious over the world--the grace
of faith. The next jewel the apostle mentions is hope. We must take care we do
not get it exchanged for a pebble
or some portion of mud
as formalists
and
hypocrites
and profane persons do
hoping that they will be saved
hoping that
God will forgive them
and that they will get to heaven and the like. Pass on
to mark another brilliant jewel--love. Not only the love of God shed abroad in
the heart
though that is very blessed
but love as a grace of the Holy Spirit.
Then we go on to another jewel
a very lovely one
though frequently out of
sight--humility. ¡§God resisteth the proud
but giveth grace to the humble;¡¨ He
giveth it first
and giveth grace to supply it. Another jewel in close connection
with humility is meekness. ¡§Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ
Jesus.¡¨ He was meek and lowly of heart
and enjoins His disciples to imitate
Him
that they may find rest to their souls. Another very brilliant jewel is
zeal. I do not want the meekness and humility of the Christian to dwindle down
into Laodicean carelessness--that would tarnish his jewels; but I want the zeal
of the Lord of Hosts
which is said to have eaten up my glorious Master
to eat
me up also. I want
as He was
to be clothed with zeal
as with a cloak. I will
mention another jewel
making seven on this side of the face. It is a quiet
jewel
but a very important one. I mean patience. ¡§In patience possess ye your
souls.¡¨ ¡§Let patience have her perfect work.¡¨ I might lengthen this row of
jewels
but I leave you to do it in your retirement
for I want to turn to the
other cheek
and notice those jewels which are visible to the world. And when I
have exhibited both cheeks to you
you may follow the advice of our Lord
¡§If
thine enemy smite thee on the one cheek
turn to him the other also. If
they smite you on the cheek I have been naming
they will not hurt one of the
jewels. Now let us look at the other. The first jewel I mention is decision. A
very important one
for you must know that if you are like the Israelites
halting between two opinions
the world will laugh at you; if they find you one
hour very devout in the house of God
or perhaps reading the Bible or some good
book
or even holding conversation scripturally and profitably on spiritual
things
and another at some silly amusement
some careless kill-time pursuit of
the world
they will say your religion is all hypocrisy
and I should not
wonder if they are very near the mark. Oh
for more decision! Then there is
another jewel that the world will look at and admire--integrity. Oh
the
disgracefulness of everything like duplicity among those who profess to belong
to Christ! Oh
the dignity of a Christian being blessed with that integrity
which says what it means
and means what it says--that will not
cannot
say
and unsay
but is ever in the same mind as to the things which relate to God¡¦s
glory
and to his own perseverance in the divine life! Mark
another prominent
jewel before the world is self-denial
just the contrast of selfishness. Again
another of these visible jewels is fortitude
which bears up the soul with a
holy confidence
and shows a firm front to every enemy
and causes the soul to
put on the armour of God
and make its stand in the evil day
and having done
all
to stand. Circumspection must be reckoned among the jewels that are
visible to the world. Hence it is written
¡§See
then
that ye walk
circumspectly
not as fools
but as wise.¡¨ And again
¡§Walk in wisdom toward
them that are without.¡¨ But there are two more I must just mention. Devotion.
The spirit of devotion is invisible to the world
but its manifestation will be
seen. Just the contrast of that levity
and carelessness
and trifling that
characterize so many professors. Then there is one jewel more I must name--joy
¡§The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing¡¨ This
of course
will include gratitude
which
also
is a grace; but I put them together
and
just remark that we are exhorted to ¡§rejoice in the Lord always.¡¨
II. The bride¡¦s
neck and its ornaments. The first question that arises is
What are we to
understand by the neck of the Church? The neck is the part that unites the body
and the head. Then it must be the covenant of grace that is the neck; the
living union between Christ and His Church. It is the strength
the support
and the medium of communication. Now let us come to the ornaments. You are to
recollect they are in the plural--chains. ¡§Thy neck with chains of gold.¡¨ The
golden chain of doctrines. Observe
they are not detached links or rings
but
they are closely linked together
and we cannot part with one link without
breaking the chain. What shall I say about the chain of promises? If I take a
short summary of it I would just say
that they are distinct
that they are not
to be separated
and
as we before said
they are linked together. And hence we
read that all the promises of God in Him (Christ) are yea
and in Him amen. Are
they not well riveted? One more chain I must mention--the chain of privileges.
The privilege of separation and distinction from the world--the privilege of
high education
the Spirit of the Lord being the preceptor--the privilege of
adoption
being at home at the Father¡¦s house--the privilege of feasting on a
feast of fat things
provided and prepared by the Master of the feast
who is
the Bridegroom--the privilege of attendants
servants such as you cannot find
on earth. Moreover
the privilege of advocacy within the veil. ¡§If any man sin
we have an Advocate with the Father
Jesus Christ the righteous.¡¨ Here are
chains of gold
beloved
chains to hang about the neck. I tell you of these
as
of the jewels
that Jesus has put them on
and they are invaluable; though I
know the carnal mind will prefer the tinsel
the toys
the gilded ornaments
the empty
light
worthless things
that look a little gaudy in external
religion
rather than these gold chains. (J. Irons.)
Chains of gold
By those chains of gold
with which the Church¡¦s neck is
beautified and adorned
may be meant
1. The laws and ordinances of God; which the ministers of the Gospel
and members of Churches
should be careful to observe (Proverbs 1:9). Or
2. Those diversities of gifts which are bestowed on the ministers of
Christ
by which they are made ¡§able ministers of the New Testament¡¨; and so
become useful to many
and appear comely and beautiful
both in the eyes of
Christ
and of such souls to whom they minister. Or
3. The various graces of the Spirit
with which
not only ministers
but all believers are adorned; for sins and vices are so chained and linked
together
that where there is one
there is all; so the graces of the Spirit
are like chains of gold
which are so closely linked together
that they cannot
be separated
but where there is one grace there is every grace
which very
much beautify and adorn the believer. This chain consists of ten links:
4. Those blessings of grace which are laid up in an everlasting
covenant
come through the blood of Christ
and are communicated to all His
people
may be meant by these chains; they go inseparably together; where a
person is blessed with one
he is blessed with all: for though our interest in them may be
gradually discovered to us
yet are we blessed at once
¡§with all spiritual
blessings in heavenly places in Christ.¡¨ Not one of these links can be broken;
this golden chain of grace and salvation is described (Romans 8:30). (John Gill
D. D.)
While the King sitteth at His table
my spikenard sendeth forth
the smell thereof.
The Church¡¦s testimony to Christ
These words are the Church¡¦s testimony from experience of the
blessed effects which Christ¡¦s presence in His ordinances hath upon pious souls
which wait upon Him under them.
1. The title The Church gives Christ
¡§The King¡¨: as showing thereby
the sense she had of His dignity and dominion
and also of her subjection to
Him
and dependence upon Him.
2. What she says of Him from her own experience
as a witness to His
condescension and grace
the King sitteth at his table: which may refer to all the ordinances of
the Gospel
in which
as at a feast
He meets and entertains His people
supping with them
and they with Him
as His own expression is (Revelation 3:20).
3. The happy fruit or effect of Christ¡¦s sitting at His table upon
the believer who is admitted to sit with Him. ¡§My spikenard sendeth forth the
smell thereof.¡¨ Grace is compared to spikenard for its preciousness and value;
and the sending forth of its smell denotes that grace as discovering itself in
a lively
fresh and vigorous manner. It is as ointment poured forth
most
pleasing to Christ
and to all that love Him
too; they rejoicing in the honour
paid Him by themselves and others through a lively exercise of grace.
4. The connection of this effect with its cause
or the presence of
Christ
and the dependence of this upon it.
I. Grace in the
friends of Christ is highly valuable and precious.
1. Grace in Scripture most usually denotes these two things
namely
God¡¦s goodwill to us
and His good work in us.
2. From whence its worth and excellency may he collected.
(a) It comes from heaven;
(b) It marks out for it;
(c) It leads to it;
(d) It will issue in it.
1. Is grace so valuable? How blind are they that see not its worth I
What enemies to their souls are they who labour not after it I
2. How much hath God done for them on whom He hath bestowed His
grace
so excellent in itself
and leading to glory 1
3. How greatly are the partakers of grace obliged to Christ
by whose
blood it is purchased
and for whose sake it is bestowed! 4-How glad should
they be of all
the opportunities to meet Him
by His presence and influence
to have grace
drawn into act!
5. How thankful should they be who can say with the Church
¡§While
the King sat at His table
my spikenard sent forth the smell thereof I¡¨
6. How willing should they he whose grace hath been drawn forth by
the presence of Christ here
to behold Him in His glory
and dwell with Him for
ever. (D. Wilcox.)
A Sacrament sermon
In acts of special communion with Christ
grace cannot lie hid
hut will breathe out with great fragrancy; or
at the table of the Lord our
graces should be specially and in a most lively manner exercised.
1. There is a reverence common to all worship
for ¡§God will be
sanctified in all that draw nigh unto Him¡¨ (Leviticus 10:3).
2. There is a special delight and affection which should accompany
every act of communion with God (Psalms 73:28; Isaiah 56:7).
3. Besides
in all acts of communion with God there is an interchange
of donatives and duties. Where we expect to receive much grace
there it must
be much exercised and acted (Mark 4:24).
4. Christ may more sensibly manifest Himself in one duty than
another
for He is not tied to means
or to time and season; and it is His
presence that maketh an ordinance comfortable
and doth revive the exercise of
grace.
5. One duty must not be set against another. They are all instituted
by God
and accompanied with His blessing
and are means of our communion with
Him
yet they all have their special use and tendency
and one is to be
preferred in this respect
another in that
as the ends are for which they are
appointed; as in the Word we come to Christ as our teacher
in prayer as our
advocate
in baptism as our head and lord
into whose mystical body we are
planted; in the Lord¡¦s Supper as the master of the feast
or our royal
entertainer.
6. Though the Lord¡¦s Supper he a special means
yet it is the spirit
of grace which doth stir up faith
hope and love in us.
7. Allowing all this
yet it is a truth that at the Lord¡¦s table
graces should be exercised in a special lively manner
which will appear if we
consider--
I. What a
sacrament hath beyond other duties. It is the most mysterious instrument of our
sanctification and preservation in a state of grace
and therefore requireth a
special exercise of grace.
1. In a Sacrament there is a more sensible assurance. In other duties
we see God¡¦s goodness
or readiness to do us good
in this His solicitous and
anxious care for our good (Hebrews 6:17-18).
2. A closer application. A general invitation is not so much as an express
injunction. We have the universal proposal in the Word
the particular application
in the Sacraments (Acts 2:38).
3. A solemn investiture
or taking possession by certain instituted
rites. As we are put in possession by certain formalities of law
as of a house
by the delivery of a key
or of afield by the delivery of a turf
so we take
possession of Christ and all His benefits
¡§This is my body.¡¨
4. A visible representation of the mysteries of godliness; and so it
doth excite us to the more serious consideration of them when they are
transmitted to the soul not by the ears only
but by the eyes (Galatians 3:1).
5. An express means of union and communion with Christ. We draw nigh
to God in prayer
and God draweth nigh to us in the Word; but here is not only
an approximation
but a communion (1 Corinthians 10:16).
6. It is God¡¦s feast
where we come to eat and drink at His table as
those that are in friendship with Him.
7. This is the sum of all other duties and privileges
the abridgment
of Christian religion
the land of promise in a map (Luke 22:20).
II. What is the
special use and intent of this duty? It was instituted for the remembrance of
Christ (1 Corinthians 11:24-25)
and (verse
26) it is an annunciating or showing forth the Lord¡¦s death till He come.
1. The occasion and necessity of it
why Christ should he given for
us
our guilt
and misery
which could only be expiated by the blood of the Son
of God; so that one great work of the Sacrament is the representation of the
evil of sin; for we are to remember the Son of God
¡§Who was made sin for us
that knew no sin
that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him¡¨ (2 Corinthians 5:21)
and who was
¡§made a curse for us¡¨ (Galatians 3:13).
2. The cause of it; the great love of God
or His mercy to poor
sinners (John 3:16).
3. The act of redemption itself; His ¡§obedience to the death of the
cross¡¨ (Philippians 2:7); or His ¡§making His soul
an offering for sin¡¨ (Isaiah 53:10). Therefore He is
represented as ¡§crucified before your eyes¡¨ (Galatians 3:1).
4. The consequent benefits which thence result to us. You come not to
receive the mercy of an
hour but here is pardon of sin given us without any
infringing the honour of God¡¦s justice (Romans 3:25-26); the favour of God (2 Corinthians 5:19); the spirit of
grace (Titus 3:5-6; Galatians 3:14; and 1 Corinthians 10:4
compared with John 4:14; John 7:37). So also eternal life
or
hopes of glory (Titus 3:7; Romans 5:1-2
and 1 John 4:9). And indeed this whole
duty is a figure of the eternal banquet.
III. What graces are
to be exercised
which is
as it were
the pouring out of our box of precious
spikenard on Christ¡¦s head or feet?
1. With respect to the necessity of our redemption
a humble sense of
the odiousness of sin
represented to us in the bruises and sufferings of our
Lord Jesus Christ when He came to be a sacrifice for sin
that we may loath it
condemn it
resolve no more to have to do with it (Romans 8:3).
2. The love of God in Christ
which was the cause
must beget a
fervent love to Him again
that we may love Him who hath loved us at so dear a
rate (2 Corinthians 5:14-15).
3. The act of redemption
or the death of Christ
must breed in us a
lively faith in Christ
that we may accept Him as our Redeemer and Saviour upon
His own terms
and trust ourselves into His hands
and devote ourselves to His
service
crying out
as Thomas
¡§My Lord and my God¡¨ (John 20:28)
welcoming Him into our souls
with the dearest embraces of thankfulness and hearty affection.
4. With respect to the consequent benefits
there must he
5. That love which is here commemorated must be imitated
and leave a
suitable impression upon you. If Christ gave HIS life for those who are
sometimes called His enemies
sometimes His people
such an impartial charity
must you have to all men; to brethren and neighbours (1 John 4:11)
and to enemies (Ephesians 4:32). (T. Manton
D. D.)
A bundle of myrrh is my Well-beloved unto me.
A bundle of myrrh
I. Christ Jesus is
unutterably precious to believers. Observe first
that nothing gives the
believer so much joy as fellowship with Christ. In our esteem
the joys of
earth are little better than husks for swine compared with Jesus the heavenly
manna. I would rather have one mouthful of Christ¡¦s love
and a sip of His
fellowship
than a whole world full of carnal delights. What is the chaff to
the wheat? What is the sparkling paste to the true diamond? What is a dream to
the glorious reality? What is time¡¦s mirth in its best trim compared to our
Lord Jesus in His most despised estate? We may plainly see that Christ is very
precious to the believer
because to him there is nothing good without Christ.
Oh
what a howling wilderness is this world without my Lord! If once He groweth
angry
and doth
though it be for a moment
hide Himself from me
withered are
the flowers of my garden; my pleasant fruits decay; the birds suspend their
songs
and black night lowers over all my hopes. On the other hand
when all
earthly comforts have failed you
have you not found quite enough in your Lord?
Do you remember when you were poor? Oh! how near Christ was to you
and how
rich He made you! You were despised and rejected of men
and no man gave you a
good word! Ah! sweet was His fellowship then
and how delightful to hear Him
say
¡§Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God!¡¨ As
afflictions abound
even so do consolations abound by Christ Jesus. Nor should
I be straining the truth if I say that the Christian would sooner give up
anything than forsake his Master. If it came to this
that you must deny
Christ
or give up the dearest thing you have
would you deliberate? I think we
could go further
dear friends
and say
not only could we give up everything
but I think
when love is fervent
and the flesh is kept under
we could suffer
anything with Christ. I met
in one of Samuel Rutherford¡¦s letters
an
extraordinary expression
where he speaks of the coals of Divine wrath all
falling upon the head of Christ
so that not one might fall upon His people.
¡§And yet
¡¨ saith he
¡§if one of those coals should drop from His head upon
urine and did utterly consume me
yet if I felt it was a part of the coals that
fell on Him
and I was bearing it for His sake
and in communion with Him
I
would choose it for my heaven.¡¨ One thing I know proveth
beloved
that you
esteem Christ to be very precious
namely
that you want others to know Him
too. The more your love grows
beloved
the more insatiable will be your desire
that others should love Him
till it will come to this that you will be
like
Paul
¡§in labours more abundant
¡¨ spending and being spent that you may bring
the rest of Christ¡¦s elect body into union with their glorious head.
II. The soul
clingeth to Christ
and she hath good reason for so doing
for her own words
are
¡§A bundle of myrrh is my Well-beloved unto me.¡¨
1. Jesus Christ is like myrrh.
2. Christ is called a bundle of myrrh
or
as some translate it
a
bag of myrrh
or a box of myrrh. There were three sorts of myrrh; there was the
myrrh in sprigs
which being burnt made a sweet smell; then there was myrrh
a
dried spice; and then
thirdly
there was myrrh a flowing oil. We do not know
to which there is reference here. But why is it said ¡§a bundle of myrrh¡¨?
III. With a sense of
Christ¡¦s preciousness is combined a consciousness of possession. It is ¡§my Well-beloved.¡¨
My dear hearer
is Christ your well-beloved? A Saviour--that is well; but my
Saviour--that is the best of the best. What is the use of bread if it is not
mine? I may die of hunger. Of what value is gold
if it be not mine? I may yet
die in a workhouse. I want this preciousness to be mine. ¡§My Well-beloved.¡¨
Have you ever laid hold on Christ by the hand of faith? But that is not the
only word. ¡§A bundle of myrrh is my Well-beloved unto me.¡¨ He is not so to
many. Ah! my Lord is a root out of a dry ground to multitudes. They would
sooner go to a play or a dance than they would have any fellowship with Him.
They can see the beauties upon the cheeks of this Jezebel world
but they
cannot see the perfections of my Lord and Master. Well! well! well! Let them
say what they will
and let them think as they please
every creature hath its
own joy
but ¡§a bundle of myrrh is my Well-beloved unto me¡¨--unto
me--unto me
and if there is not another who finds Him so
yet ¡§a bundle of
myrrh is my Well-beloved unto me.¡¨
IV. A sense of
possession and a sense of enjoyment will always lead the Christian to desire
constant fellowship. The Church does not say
¡§I will put this bundle of myrrh
on my shoulders¡¨--Christ is no burden to a Christian. She does not say
¡§I will
put this bundle of myrrh on my back¡¨--the Church does not want to have Christ
concealed from her face. She desires to have Him where she can see Him
and
near to her heart.
1. It is an expression of desire--her desire that she may have the
consciousness of Christ¡¦s love continually. Do not you feel the same desire?
2. But then
it is not only her desire
but it is also her
confidence. She seems to say
¡§He will be with me thus.¡¨ You may have a
suspension of visible fellowship with Christ
but Christ never will go away
from His people really. He may close His eyes and hide HIS face from you
but
His heart never can depart from you.
3. This is also a resolve. She desires
she believes
and she
resolves it. Lord
Thou shalt be with me
Thou shalt be with me always. I
appeal to you
brethren
will you not make this resolve in God¡¦s strength this
morning to cling close to Christ? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
My Beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of
En-gedi.
A beautiful symbol
Terraced on the side of the mountains were the vineyards of
En-gedi. Oh
they were sweet places! From a shelving of the mountain four
hundred feet high waters came down in beautiful baptism on the faces of the
leaves; the grapes intoxicate with their own wine; pomegranates with juices
bursting from the rind; all fruits
and flowers
and aromatic woods--among the
sweetest of these the camphire plant of the text. Its flowers are in clusters
like our lilac--graceful
fragrant
symbolical of Jesus.
I. I will first
show you that this camphire plant of the text was a symbol of Christ
because
of its fragrance. If I had a branch of it
and should wave it in your midst
it
would fill all the house with the redolence. The camphor
as we have it
is
offensive to some; but the camphire plant of the text had a fragrance gracious
to all. The name of Caesar means power; the name of Herod means cruelty; the
name of Alexander means conquest; the name of Demosthenes means eloquence; the
name of Milton means poetry; the name of Benjamin West means painting; the name
of Phidias means sculpture; the name of Beethoven means music; the name of
Howard means reform; but the name of Christ means love! It is the
sweetest name that ever melted from lip to heart. Oh
rich and rare
exquisite
and everlasting perfume! Set it in every poor man¡¦s window; plant it on every
grave; put its leaves under every dying hearth; wreath its blossoms for every
garland; wave its branches in every home; and when I am about to die
and my
hand lies cold and stiff and white upon the pillow
let no superstitious priest
come with mumbling fooleries to put a crucifix of wood or stone in my hand
but
rather some plain and humble soul--let him come and put in my dying grasp this
living branch
with ¡§clusters of camphire from the vineyards of En-gedi.¡¨
II. This camphire
plant of the text was a symbol of Christ in the fact that it gives colouring.
From the Mediterranean to the Ganges
the people of the East gathered it
dried
the leaves
pulverized them
and then used them as a dye for beautifying
garments or their own persons. It was that fact that gave the camphire plant of
the text its commercial value in the time of King Solomon; a type of my Lord
Jesus
who beautifies and adorns
and colours everything He touches. I have no
faith in that man¡¦s conversion whose religion does not colour his entire life.
It was intended so to do. If a man has the grace of God in his heart
it ought
to show itself in the life. There ought to be this ¡§cluster of camphire¡¨ in the
ledger
in the roll of government securities
in the medical prescription
in
the law-book. I tell you
unless your religion goes with you everywhere
it
goes nowhere. That religion was intended to colour all the heart and the life.
But
mark you
it was a bright colour. For the most part
it was an orange dye
made of this camphire plant
one of the most brilliant of all colours; and so
the religion of Jesus Christ casts no blackness or gloom upon the soul. It
brightens up life
it brightens up everything.
III. The camphire
plant of the text was a symbol of Jesus Christ because it is a mighty
restorative. You know that there is nothing that starts respiration so soon in
one who has fainted as camphor
as we have it. Put upon a sponge or
handkerchief
the effects are almost immediate. Well
this camphire plant of
the text
though somewhat different from that which we have
was a pungent
aromatic
and in that respect it becomes a type of our Lord Jesus Christ
who
is the mightiest of all restoratives. I have carried this camphire plant into
the sick-room
after the doctors had held their consultation and said there was
no hope and nothing more could be done
and the soul brightened up under the
spiritual restorative. There is no fever
no marasmus
no neuralgia
no
consumption
no disease of the body
that the grace of God will not help. I
wish that over every bed of pain and through every hospital of distress we
might swing this ¡§ cluster of camphire from the vineyards of En-gedi.¡¨ Christ¡¦s
hand is the softest pillow
Christ¡¦s pardon is the strongest stimulus
Christ¡¦s
comfort is the mightiest anodyne
Christ¡¦s salvation is the grandest
restorative. This grace is also a restorative for the backslider. For great
sin
great pardon. For deep wounds
omnipotent surgery. For deaf ears
a Divine
aurist. For blind eyes
a heavenly oculist. For the dead in sin
the upheaval
of a great resurrection. But why should I particularize that class in this
audience when we all need this restorative
for we have all wandered and gone
away! (T. De Witt Talmage.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n