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Isaiah Chapter
Sixty-three
Isaiah 63
Chapter Contents
Christ's victory over his enemies. (1-6) His mercy toward
his church. (7-14) The prayer of the church. (15-19)
Commentary on Isaiah 63:1-6
(Read Isaiah 63:1-6)
The prophet
in vision
beholds the Messiah returning in
triumph from the conquest of his enemies
of whom Edom was a type. Travelling
not as wearied by the combat
but
in the greatness of his strength
prepared
to overcome every opposing power. Messiah declares that he had been treading
the wine-press of the wrath of God
Revelation 14:19; 19:13
and by his own power
without any human help
he had crushed his obstinate opposers
for the day of
vengeance was determined on
being the appointed season for rescuing his
church. Once
he appeared on earth in apparent weakness
to pour out his
precious blood as an atonement for our sins; but he will in due time appear in
the greatness of his strength. The vintage ripens apace; the day of vengeance
fixed and determined on
approaches apace; let sinners seek to be reconciled to
their righteous Judge
ere he brings down their strength to the earth. Does
Christ say
"I come quickly?" let our hearts reply
"Even so
come; let the year of the redeemed come."
Commentary on Isaiah 63:7-14
(Read Isaiah 63:7-14)
The latter part of this chapter
and the whole of the
next
seem to express the prayers of the Jews on their conversation. They
acknowledge God's great mercies and favours to their nation. They confess their
wickedness and hardness of heart; they entreat his forgiveness
and deplore the
miserable condition under which they have so long suffered. The only-begotten
Son of the Father became the Angel or Messenger of his love; thus he redeemed
and bare them with tenderness. Yet they murmured
and resisted his Holy Spirit
despising and persecuting his prophets
rejecting and crucifying the promised
Messiah. All our comforts and hopes spring from the loving-kindness of the
Lord
and all our miseries and fears from our sins. But he is the Saviour
and
when sinners seek after him
who in other ages glorified himself by saving and
feeding his purchased flock
and leading them safely through dangers
and has
given his Holy Spirit to prosper the labours of his ministers
there is good
ground to hope they are discovering the way of peace.
Commentary on Isaiah 63:15-19
(Read Isaiah 63:15-19)
They beseech him to look down on the abject condition of
their once-favoured nation. Would it not be glorious to his name to remove the
veil from their hearts
to return to the tribes of his inheritance? The
Babylonish captivity
and the after-deliverance of the Jews
were shadows of
the events here foretold. The Lord looks down upon us in tenderness and mercy.
Spiritual judgments are more to be dreaded than any other calamities; and we
should most carefully avoid those sins which justly provoke the Lord to leave
men to themselves and to their deceiver. "Our Redeemer from
everlasting" is thy name; thy people have always looked upon thee as the
God to whom they might appeal. The Lord will hear the prayers of those who
belong to him
and deliver them from those not called by his name.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 63
Verse 1
[1] Who
is this that cometh from Edom
with dyed garments from Bozrah? this that is
glorious in his apparel
travelling in the greatness of his strength? I that
speak in righteousness
mighty to save.
Who ¡X
The church makes enquiry
and that with admiration
who it is that appears in
such a habit or posture? Edom - Idumea
where Esau dwelt. It is put for all the
enemies of the church.
Bozrah ¡X
The capital city of Idumea. Here is also an allusion to the garments of this
conqueror
Edom signifying red
and Bozrah a vintage.
Glorious ¡X
Such as generals march before their armies in.
Righteousness ¡X
Here Christ gives an answer
wherein he both asserts his fidelity
that he will
faithfully perform what he hath promised
and that he will truly execute
justice.
Mighty ¡X I
have power to accomplish salvation.
Verse 3
[3] I have trodden the winepress alone; and of the people there was none with
me: for I will tread them in mine anger
and trample them in my fury; and their
blood shall be sprinkled upon my garments
and I will stain all my raiment.
Trodden ¡X I
have destroyed the enemies of my people
I have crushed them as grapes are
crushed
this being an usual metaphor to describe the utter destruction of a
people.
Verse 4
[4] For
the day of vengeance is in mine heart
and the year of my redeemed is come.
Of vengeance ¡X To
take vengeance on the enemies of my church.
Verse 5
[5] And
I looked
and there was none to help; and I wondered that there was none to
uphold: therefore mine own arm brought salvation unto me; and my fury
it
upheld me.
None to help ¡X
Not that he needed it
but to see what men would do
in regard his people
needed it; therefore the standing
or not standing by his people
is the same
thing with standing
or not standing by him.
Uphold ¡X A
metaphor
taken from a staff
that is an help to one that leans on it.
Verse 6
[6] And I will tread down the people in mine anger
and make them drunk in my
fury
and I will bring down their strength to the earth.
Drunk ¡X
They go as it were to and fro
not knowing what to do with themselves.
Bring down ¡X
Whatever it is wherein their strength lies
he will bring to the very dust
to
nothing.
Verse 7
[7] I
will mention the lovingkindnesses of the LORD
and the praises of the LORD
according to all that the LORD hath bestowed on us
and the great goodness
toward the house of Israel
which he hath bestowed on them according to his
mercies
and according to the multitude of his lovingkindnesses.
Mention ¡X
Here begins a new matter
which contains the prophet's prayer
to the end of
chap. 64
wherein he begins with mentioning the great kindnesses that God had
shewn the Jews
and that emphatically
setting them forth with the greatest
advantages.
Verse 8
[8] For
he said
Surely they are my people
children that will not lie: so he was their
Saviour.
He said ¡X
When he made a covenant with our fathers
and brought them out of Egypt.
Not lie ¡X
That will keep my covenant.
So he ¡X
Not Cyrus
Zerubbabel
or Nehemiah
but Christ himself.
Verse 9
[9] In
all their affliction he was afflicted
and the angel of his presence saved
them: in his love and in his pity he redeemed them; and he bare them
and
carried them all the days of old.
The angel ¡X
The same that conducted them through the wilderness; the Lord Jesus Christ
who
appeared to Moses in the bush.
Saved them ¡X
From the house of bondage.
Carried ¡X He
carried them in the arms of his power
and on the wings of his providence. And
he is said to do it of old
To remember his ancient kindness for many
generations past.
Verse 11
[11] Then
he remembered the days of old
Moses
and his people
saying
Where is he that
brought them up out of the sea with the shepherd of his flock? where is he that
put his holy Spirit within him?
He remembered ¡X
This relates
either 1. To the people
and then he is collectively taken
and
so it looks like the language of the people in Babylon
and must be read
he
shall remember. Or
2. It may look back to their condition in the wilderness
and thus they may properly say
Where is he? Or that God who delivered his
people of old
to do the like for us now? There is a like phrase used by God
as it were recollecting himself
Where is he? Where am I with my former bowels
that moved me to help them of old? His people - What great things he had done
for them by Moses.
The sea ¡X
Here God speaks of himself
as in the former clause
that divided the sea for
them.
Shepherds ¡X
Moses and Aaron.
Holy spirit ¡X
Those abilities and gifts
wherewith God furnished Moses
as properly
proceeding from the Spirit.
Verse 13
[13] That
led them through the deep
as an horse in the wilderness
that they should not
stumble?
As an horse ¡X
With as much ease and tenderness
as an horse led by the bridle.
Not stumble ¡X
That
tho' the sea were but newly divided
yet it was dried and smoothed by the
wind
that God sent
as it were to prepare the way before them.
Verse 14
[14] As a
beast goeth down into the valley
the Spirit of the LORD caused him to rest: so
didst thou lead thy people
to make thyself a glorious name.
The valley ¡X A
laden beast goeth warily and gently down the hill.
Rest ¡X
Led them easily
that they should not be over-travelled
or fall down
through
weariness; thus Jeremiah expresses it
Jeremiah 31:2
and thus God gave them rest from
their enemies
drowning them in the sea
and in their safe conduct
that they
could not annoy or disturb them
leading them 'till he found them a place for
resting; the word for leading
and resting
being much of a like notion
Zechariah 10:6
pointing at their several rests
by the way
Numbers 10:33
or it may be read by way of
interrogation
as all the foregoing words
and be the close of that enquiry
And where is the spirit
that caused then to rest? Or
he led them to Canaan
the place of their rest.
Verse 15
[15] Look
down from heaven
and behold from the habitation of thy holiness and of thy
glory: where is thy zeal and thy strength
the sounding of thy bowels and of
thy mercies toward me? are they restrained?
Look ¡X
Now the prophet begins to expostulate with God
and to argue both from the
goodness of his nature
and from the greatness of his works. God sees every
where
and every thing
but he is said to look down from heaven
because there
is his throne whereon he sits in majesty.
Behold ¡X
Not barely see
but behold with regard
and respect thy poor people.
Where ¡X
What is become of that love
which of old would not let thee suffer thy people
to be wronged? Strength - That power of thine manifested in those great acts?
The founding - This is spoken of God after the manner of men.
Verse 16
[16]
Doubtless thou art our father
though Abraham be ignorant of us
and Israel
acknowledge us not: thou
O LORD
art our father
our redeemer; thy name is
from everlasting.
Abraham ¡X He
who was our father after the flesh
though he be dead
and so ignorant of our
condition.
Redeemer ¡X
This is urged as another argument for pity; because their Father was their
Redeemer.
From everlasting ¡X
Thou hast been our Redeemer of old.
Verse 17
[17] O
LORD
why hast thou made us to err from thy ways
and hardened our heart from
thy fear? Return for thy servants' sake
the tribes of thine inheritance.
Made us ¡X
Suffered us to err.
Hardened ¡X
Suffered it to be hardened.
Thy fear ¡X
The fear of thee.
Servants sake ¡X
For our sakes
that little remnant that are thy servants.
Inheritance ¡X
The land of Canaan
which God gave them as an inheritance.
Verse 18
[18] The
people of thy holiness have possessed it but a little while: our adversaries
have trodden down thy sanctuary.
People ¡X
The people set apart for his servants.
A little while ¡X
Comparatively to the promise
which was for ever.
Sanctuary ¡X
The temple.
Verse 19
[19] We
are thine: thou never barest rule over them; they were not called by thy name.
Thine ¡X We
continue so; we are in covenant
which they never were; and thus it is an
argument they use with God to look upon them.
Never ¡X
Not in that manner thou didst over us.
They ¡X
Neither owned thee
nor were owned by thee.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
63 Chapter 63
Verses 1-6
Who is this that cometh from Edom?
--
Jehovah¡¦s triumph over His people¡¦s foes
A passage of unique and sublime dramatic power. The impotence of
Israel¡¦s enemies to retard or interfere with their deliverance has been
insisted on before (Isaiah 41:15 f.
49:25
26
51:23
54:17);
and it is here developed under a noveland striking figure. The historical fact
upon which the representation rests is the long-standing and implacable enmity
subsisting between Israel and Edom. The scene depicted is
of course
no event
of actual history; it is symbolical; an ideal humiliation of nations
marshalled upon the territory of Israel¡¦s inveterate foe
is the form under
which the thought of Israel¡¦s triumph is here expressed. The prophet sees in
imagination a figure
as of a conqueror
his garments crimsoned with¡¨ blood
advancing proudly
in the distance from the direction of Edom
and asks
¡§Who
is this that cometh?¡¨ etc. In reply
he hears from afar the words
¡§I that
speak in righteousness
mighty to save
¡¨ i.e. I who have announced (Isaiah 45:19) a just and righteous
purpose of deliverance
and am able to give ¡§it effect. The answer is not yet
sufficiently explicit
so he repeats the question in a more direct form
¡§Wherefore
art Thou red in Thine apparel?¡¦ etc. (Isaiah 63:2-3). Not Edom only
then
but
other nations also have been trodden down and subdued (Isaiah 63:4-6). In the hour when the
contest Israel contra mundum was to be decided
no human agent
willingly or consciously
came forward to assist; nevertheless
God¡¦s purposes
were not frustrated: Israel¡¦s opponents were humbled and defeated; but human
means
in so far as use was made of them
were the unconscious instruments of
Providence. And thus the blood-stained colour of the Victor¡¦s garments is
explained: it is a token of Jehovah¡¦s triumph over His people¡¦s foes
primarily
indeed
over those foes who would impede the release of the Jews
from Babylon
or molest them when settled again in Palestine
but by
implication also
over other foes who might rise up in the future to assail the
people of God. (Prof. S. R. Driver
D. D.)
The Saviour--God of Israel
The image presented is one of the most impressive and
awe-inspiring in the Old Testament
and it is difficult to say which is most to
be admired
the dramatic vividness of the vision
or the reticence which
conceals the actual work of slaughter and concentrates the attention on the
Divine Hero as He emerges victorious from the conflict. (Prof. J. Skinner
D. D.)
Who is the Hero?
It was a serious misapprehension of the spirit of the prophecy
which led many of the Fathers to apply it to the passion and death of Christ.
Although certain phrases
detached from their context
may suggest that
interpretation to a Christian reader
there can be no doubt that the scene
depicted is a ¡§drama of Divine vengeance¡¨ (G. A. Smith)
into which the idea of
propitiation does not enter. The solitary Figure who speaks in Isaiah 63:3-6 is not the servant of the
Lord
or the Messiah
but Jehovah Himself (comp the parallel
Isaiah 59:16); the blood whichreddens His
garments is expressly said to be that of His enemies; and the ¡§winepress¡¨ is no
emblem of the spiritual sufferings endured by our Lord
but of the ¡§fierceness
and wrath of Almighty God¡¦ (Revelation 19:15) towards the adversaries
of His Kingdom. While it is true that the judgment is the prelude to the
redemption of Israel
the passage before us exhibits only the judicial aspect
of the Divine dealings
and it is not permissible to soften the terrors of the
picture by introducing soteriological conceptions which lie beyond its scope. (Prof.
J. Skinner
D. D.)
The Conqueror from Edom
What does it mean--the prophetic Genius waiting
watching
and
questioning; the mighty stranger coming fresh from victorious battle
with the
robe red as if with the stain of grapes
coming up from Edom
with dyed
garments from Bozrah? Edom
remember
was the country where the Israelites¡¦
most inveterate enemies lived. No other nation pressed on them so constantly or
gave them such continual trouble as the Edomites. And Bozrah was the capital
city of Edom
the centre of its power. When the conqueror comes from Edom
then
and finds Israel anxious and eager upon the mountain
and shows her his
stained robe in sign of the struggle which he has gone through
and then tells
her that the victory is complete
that because he saw that she had no defender
he has undertaken her defence and trodden Edom under foot for her
we can
-
understand something of the power and comfort of such a poetic vision to the
Hebrew¡¦s heart. There may have been some special event which it commemorated.
Some special danger may have threatened on the side of the tumultuous Edomites
and some special unexpected deliverer may have appeared who saved the country
and was honoured by this song of praise. But every such special deliverance to
the deep religious and patriotic feeling of the Jew had a much wider meaning.
Every partial mercy to his nation always pointed to the one great mercy which
was to embrace all others
to the coming of the Messiah
whose advent was to be
the source of every good
and the cure of every evil. And so these words of
Isaiah mount to a higher strain than any that could have greeted an Israelite
warrior who aright have made a successful incursion into Edomite soil. The
prophet is singing of the victorious Messiah. This Hebrew Messiah has come
and
is more than the Hebrew Messiah: He is the Christian¡¦s Christ
He is our
Saviour. (Bp. Phillips Brooks.)
Christ¡¦s struggle and triumph
Very often now this sounds strange and incomprehensible; this
absorption of every struggle between the good and the evil that is going on in
the world into the one great struggle of the life and death of Jesus Christ;
but it follows necessarily from any such full idea as we Christians hold of
what Jesus Christ is and of what brought Him to this world. If He be really the
Son of God
bringing in an utterly new way the power of God to bear on human
life; if He be the natural-Creator-King of humanity
come for the salvation of
humanity; then it would seem to follow that the work of salvation must be His
and His alone: and if we see the process of salvation
the struggle of the good
against the evil
going on all over the world
we shall be ready still to feel
that it is all under His auspices and guidance; that the effort of any
benighted soul in any darkest heathen land to get away from its sins
and cast
itself upon an assured mercy of its God
is part of His great work
is to the
full intelligent faith of the well-taught Christian believer just what the
struggle of a blind plant underground to reach the surface is to the free aspiration
of the oak-tree
which in the full glory of the sunlight reaches out its eager
branches toward the glorious sun--a result of the same power
and a
contribution to the same victorious success. All forces strive after simplicity
and unity. Operations in nature
in mechanics
in chemistry
which men have
long treated as going on under a variety of powers
are gradually showing
themselves to be the fruits of one great mightier power
which in many various
forms of application is able to produce them all. This is the most beautiful
development of our modern science. The Christian belief in Christ holds the
same thing of the spiritual world
and unites all partial victories everywhere
into one great victory which is the triumph of its Lord. On no other ground can
Christianity stand with its exclusive claims
and Christianity is in its very
nature exclusive. In the susceptibility of all men to the same influences of
the highest sort
there comes out the only valuable proof of the unity of the
human race
I think. Demonstrate what you may about the diversity of origin or
structure of humanity
so long as the soul capable of the great human struggle
and the great human helps is in every man
the human race is one
On the other
hand
demonstrate as perfectly as you will the identity of origin and structure
of all humanity
yet if you find men so spiritually different in two
hemispheres that the same largest obligations do not impress and the same
largest loves do not soften them
what does your unity of the human race amount
to? Here
it seems to me
Christ in His broad appeal to all men of all races
is the true assorter of the only valuable human unity. If this be so
then
wherever there is good at work in the world
we Christians may see the progress
of the struggle
and rejoice already in the victory of Christ. (Bp. Phillips
Brooks.)
The method of Christ¡¦s salvation
Let us go on and look
as far as we may
into the method of this
salvation; first
for the world at large
and then for the single soul. And in
both let us follow the story of the old Jewish vision. Who is this that cometh
from Edom?¡¨ Sin hangs on the borders of goodness everywhere
as just across the
narrow Jordan valley Edom always lay threateningly upon the skirts of
Palestine. How terribly constant it was! How it kept the people on a strain all
the while! The moment that a Jew stepped across the border
the Edomites were
on him. The moment a flock or beast of his wandered too far
the enemy had
seized him. If in the carelessness of a festival the Israelites left the border
unguarded
the hated Edomites found it out and came swooping down just when the
mirth ran highest and the sentinels were least careful. If a Jew¡¦s field of
wheat was specially rich
the Edomite saw the green signal from his hilltop
and in the morning the field was bare. There was no rest
no safety. They had
met the chosen people on their way into the promised land
and tried to keep
them out; and now that they were safely in
there they always hovered
wild
implacable
and watchful. There could be no terms of compromise with them. They
never slept. They saw the weak point in a moment; they struck it quick as
lightning strikes. The constant dread
the nightmare
of Jewish history is this
Edom lying there upon the border
like a lion crouched to spring. There cannot
be one great fight
or one great war
and then the thing done for ever. It is
an endless fight with an undying enemy! Edom upon the borders of Judah!
1. We open any page of human history and what do we see? There is a
higher life in man. Imperfect
full of mixture
just like that mottled history
of Hebrewdom; yet still it is in human history what Judea was in the old
world--the spiritual
the upward
the religious element; something that
believes in God and struggles after Him. Not a page can you open but its mark
is there. ¡§Sometimes it is an aspiration after civilization
sometimes it is a
doctrinal movement
sometimes it is a mystical piety that is developed;
sometimes it is social; sometimes it is ascetic and purely individual;
sometimes it is a Socrates
sometimes it is a St. Francis
sometimes it is a
Luther
sometimes it is a Florence Nightingale. It is there in some shape
always: this good among the evil
this power of God among the forces of men
this Judah in the midst of Asia. But always right on its border lies the
hostile Edom
watchful
indefatigable
inexorable as the redoubtable old foe of
the Jews. If progress falters a moment
the whole mass of obstructive ignorance
is rolled upon it. If faith leaves a loophole undefended
the quick eye of
Atheism sees it from its watch-tower and hurls its quick strength there
If
goodness goes to sleep upon its arms
sleepless wickedness is across the
valley
and the fields which it has taken months of toil to sow and ripen are
swept off in a night. Is not this the impression of the world
of human life
that you get
whether you open the history of any century or unfold your
morning newspaper? The record of a struggling charity is crowded by the story
of the prison and the court. The world waits at the church door to catch the
worshipper as he comes out. The good work of one century relaxes a moment for a
breathing spell
and the next century comes in with its licentiousness or its
superstition. Always it is the higher life pressed
watched
haunted by the
lower: always it is Judah with Edom at its gates. No one great battle comes to
settle it for ever: it is an endless fight with an undying enemy.
2. How is it in these little worlds
which we are carrying about? You
have your good
your Spirituality
your better life; something that bears
witness of God. How evil crowds you! You cannot fight it out at once and have
it done. You go on quietly for days
and think the enemy is dead. Just when you
are safest
there he is again
more alive than ever. We live a spiritual life
like the life that our fathers used to live here in New England
who always
took their guns to church with them and smoothed down the graves of their
beloved dead in the churchyard that the hostile and watchful Indians might not
know how weak they were. This is the great discouraging burden of our
experience of sin. ¡§We look and there is none to help. We wonder that there is
none to uphold.¡¨ No power of salvation comes out of the good half of the heart
to conquer and to kill the bad. We grow not to expect to see the bad half
conquered. Every morning we lift up our eyes
and there are the low
black
hill-tops across the narrow valley
with the black tents upon their sides
where Edom lies in wait. Who shall deliver us from the bad world and our bad
selves? What then? It is time for the sunrise when the night gets as dark as
this. It is time for the Saviour when the world and the soul have learnt their
helplessness and sin. ¡§Who is this that cometh from Edom
with dyed garments
from Bozrah? this that is glorious in His apparel
travelling in the greatness
of His strength?¡¨ The whole work of the Saviour has relation to and issues from
the fact of sin. If there had been no sin there would have been no Saviour. He
comes from the right direction
and He has an attractive majesty of movement as
He first appears. This
as to the watcher on the hill-tops of Judea
so to the
soul that longs for some solution of the spiritual problem
some release from
the spiritual bondage
is the first aspect of the approaching Christ. He comes
from the right way
and He seems strong. (Bp. Phillips Brooks.)
The righteous Saviour
Let us look at what He says to His anxious questioner; what
account of Himself He gives; what He has done to Edom; and especially what mean
these blood-stains on His robes.
1. We ask Him
¡§Who is this?¡¨ and He replies
¡§I that come in
righteousness
mighty to save.¡¨ That reassures us
and is good at the very
outset. The Saviour comes in the strength of righteousness. Righteousness is at
the bottom of all things. Any reform or salvation of which the power is
righteousness must go down to the very root of the trouble; must extenuate and
cover over nothing; must expose and convict completely
in order that it may
completely heal. And this is the power of the salvation of Christ. Edom must be
destroyed
not parleyed with; sin must be beaten down
not conciliated; good
must thrive by the defeat
and not merely by the tolerance of evil.
2. The questioner wonders
as the Saviour comes nearer
at the
strange signs of battle and agony upon His robes. ¡§Wherefore art Thou red in
Thine apparel
and Thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine-fat?¡¨ And
the answer is
¡§I have trodden the winepress:¡¨ ¡§I will tread them in Mine anger
¡¨
etc. It is no holiday monarch coming with a bloodless triumph. It has been no
pageant of a day
this strife with sin. The robes have trailed in the blood.
The sword is dented with conflict. The power of
God has struggled with the enemy and subdued him only in the agony
of strife. What pain may mean to the Infinite and Divine
what difficulty may
mean to Omnipotence
I cannot tell. Only I know that all that they could mean
they meant here. This symbol of the blood bears this great truth
which has been
the power of salvation to millions of hearts
and which must make this
Conqueror the Saviour of your heart too
the truth that only in self-sacrifice
and suffering could even God conquer sin. Sin is never so dreadful as when we
see the Saviour with that blood upon His garments. And the Saviour Himself
surely He is never so dear
never wins so utter and so tender a love
as when
we see what it has cost Him to save us. Out of that love born of His suffering
comes the new impulse after a holy life; and so when we stand at last purified
by the power of grateful obedience
it shall be said of us
binding our
holiness and escape from our sin close to our Lord¡¦s struggle with sin for us
that we have ¡§washed our robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.¡¨
3. But He says something more. Not merely He has conquered completely
and conquered in suffering: He has conquered alone. He brings out victory in
His open hand. From His hand we take it by the power of prayer
and to Him
alone we render thanks here and for ever.
4. Yet once more. What was the fruit of this victory over Edom which
the Seer of Israel discovered from his mountain-top? It set Israel free from
continual harassing and fear
and gave her a chance to develop along the way
that God had marked out for her. Freedom! That is the word. It built no cities;
it sowed no fields; it only broke off the burden of that hostile presence and
bade the chosen nation go free into its destiny. And so what is the fruit of
the salvation that the Divine Saviour brings to the souls of men? It does not
finish them at once; it does not fill and stock their lives with heavenly
richness in a moment. But it does just this. It sets them free; it gives them a
new chance.
5. And notice that this Conqueror who comes
comes strong ¡§travelling
in the greatness of His strength.¡¨ He has not left His might behind Him in the
struggle. He is all ready
with the same strength with which He conquered
to
enter in and rule and educate the nation He has saved. And so the Saviour has not
done all when He has forgiven you. By the same strength of love and patience
which saved you upon Calvary
He will come in
if you will let Him
and train
your saved life into perfectness of grace and glory. (Bp. Phillips Brooks.)
Mighty to save
I. THE NATURE OF
THE CONFLICT CHRIST WAGED IN OUR WORLD AMONG MEN. It was--
1. Voluntary. Christ came joyfully
willingly
and self-forgetfully.
2. Sanguinary. The victory was not achieved without a severe
struggle.
3. Substitutionary. The hero was travelling in his strength
and had
wrought deliverance from the foe
had saved those for whom he had gone forth to
the fray. So our Redeemer came to conquer sin and death
not for Himself
but
for us.
II. THE
COMPLETENESS OF THE CONQUEST CHRIST ACHIEVED IN THE CONFLICT. The victor from
Edom was more than a conqueror.
1. He survived the fight. Many a warrior has won a victory
but has
lost his life in winning it. Jesus laid down His life to conquer death
but He
took it up again; ¡§and behold He is alive for evermore.¡¨
2. lie subdued the foe. The hero from Edom was travelling peacefully
for the enemy had been completely vanquished
the conquest finally won of
lords.¡¨
III. THE BRIGHTNESS
OF THE CROWN CHRIST SECURED BY HIS GREAT CONQUEST. The conqueror from Edom
appeared clothed in glorious apparel and in great strength; there was a halo of
glory around his head. In this aspect we get a picture of our triumphant Lord.
He assumed the vestment of our poor humanity
and was ¡§as a root out of a dry
ground;¡¨ yet He was clothed with the beautiful garments of grace and
righteousness
of spotless purity. His crown of glory consisted in the
following facts--
1. That justice was satisfied.
2. That pardon was procured. The full price of redemption was paid.
3. That heaven was opened. (F. W. Brown.)
The second advent
I. The first thing
is to determine the just answer to the question
¡§Who is this that cometh from
Edom
with dyed garments from Bozrah? in other words
we have to ascertain who
IS THE WARRIOR DELINEATED IN THIS PROPHECY.
1. The only endeavour to refer this prediction to another than
Christ
appears to be that which would assign as its subject Judas Maccabeus
because this great Jewish captain who did so valiantly for the Jews in the days
of Antiochus
overcame the Idumeans in battle; and if every circumstance
favoured that interpretation (and we might
perhaps
suppose that this
illustrious deliverer
in common with Moses
and Joshua
and other saviours of
Israel
may be regarded as a type of the Messiah)
still we could only plead
for the accommodation
not for the completion of the prophecy. However splendid
the achievements of Judas Maccabeus
there can be no sense
commensurate with
the expression
in which the chieftain could describe himself as ¡§speaking in
righteousness
¡¨ and assert that the year of his redeemed was come
or affirm
that his own arm had brought salvation: so that were it allowed that the
prediction had a primary fulfilment in Judas Maccabeus
we should still have to
search for another accomplishment. It seems
however
satisfactorily
established that Idumea or Edom at the prophet¡¦s time was a different country
from that which Judas conquered. This circumstance excludes Judas Maccabeus
from all share in the prophecy before us; and there remains none but the
Redeemer of men in whom we can look for its accomplishment.
2. When it is admitted that the prophecy delineates Christ
we have
to determine whether it be to an action already achieved or yet to be performed
by the Saviour
that so sublime a description refers. It can only have been
through inattention or oversight that any have supposed the prediction to
relate to the death and passion of the Mediator. You observe that though the
Redeemer is introduced as stained with blood
it is with the blood of His
enemies
not with His own. There is a little obscurity in the answer arising
from our translator having used the future tense instead of the past; and
according to Bishop Lowth
it should be
¡§I trod them in anger
and trampled
them in indignation
and their life blood was sprinkled upon My garments
and I
have stained all My apparel.¡¨ It was not
therefore
the winepress which He
trod in His agony at the crucifixion
whence He brought these dyed garments; He
must have been engaged in shedding the blood of others rather than pouring
forth His own
ere He breaks forth on the seer¡¦s vision travelling in the
greatness of His strength. The only circumstance associated with the first
advent of Christ to which the prophecy can be fairly thought to refer
is the
destruction of Jerusalem at that terrible visitation in which the Redeemer came
down in vengeance
and dealt with His enemies with the strongest retribution.
Yet
whatever there might have been in the desolations of Judea answering to
the fearful expressions which Christ applies to this act
it certainly was not
from Edom and Bozrah that He came
when returning from the overthrow of
Jerusalem. Of course it was not from the literal Edom
and the literal Bozrah
but neither was it from the figurative. We believe that Edom and Bozrah are
here used to denote nations that have been opposed to Christ and His people
and never was there a fiercer opposition than that of the Jews ere their city
was destroyed; still it is quite at variance with the rules of Scripture
metaphor
that the posterity of Jacob should be described by terms which belong
rightly to the posterity of Esau. We may add that Christ¡¦s description of
vengeance taken is immediately followed by thankful acknowledgments of great
good to the house of Israel. If the prophecy have reference to the destruction
of Jerusalem
how comes it to be instantly succeeded by a hymn of praise for
God¡¦s mercy to the Jews? On these various accounts we do not hesitate to assert
that the prediction finds no fulfilment in the events of past days; that the
future must be charged with its accomplishment
and that the fearful form on
which the prophet looked
the form of a warrior
fresh from the victory
must
be that of Christ appearing
as He shall appear
at the close of this
dispensation
when He has swept a clear scene for setting up His kingdom
and
purged the earth from the pollutions of crime. And to those who are familiar
with the prophecies which describe the last times
it will immediately suggest
itself
that the sudden transition from the assertion of the destruction of
antichristian powers
to the offering up of the thanksgiving of the Jews
is in
admirable keeping with the whole tenor of prophecy. It seems clearly the import
of yet unfulfilled predictions of Scripture
that the restoration of the Jews
to their own laud
that great event on which hangs the conversion of the
nations
shall not be accomplished without the opposition and overthrow of the
confederated powers of antichrist. If
therefore
we consider the final
destruction of the antichristian powers as the slaughter of Idumea
from which
Christ is returning
it is quite natural that the praises of the house of
Israel should immediately succeed the account of the overthrow.
II. Our business is
to show THE JUSTICE OF THE INTERPRETATION which would associate the prophecy
with the Saviour¡¦s second advent.
1. We shall examine what Scripture makes known with regard to the
second advent.
2. We shall endeavour to establish the thorough agreement between all
we are thus taught
and the prophecy of ore¡¨ text.
. The
antichristian power which was allowed for years to persecute and to harass the
Church
and is at last to be thrown down with violence
is expressly
denominated ¡§Babylon.¡¨ In like manner
names such as Edom and Moab
belonging
originally to the declared foes of God and His people
are used for others who
imitate these foes in their enmity. If you examine the predictions which relate
to these nations you will find prophecy
according to the character which it
usually presents
passing on from the past to what we must believe yet to come;
or
rather
describing the fall of those that first bore the name in language
inappropriate
unless designed to apply to others who by their wickedness
should deserve the same punishment. So far as Edom and Bozrah are concerned
the expressions are evidently too strong to refer to those places literally;
and it is impossible to read them and not see that they relate to a yet future
judgment.
Christ has achieved salvation
We behold here a new revelation of a blessed and startling fact.
People talk of Christ as though He were going to do something grand for us
after a while. He has done it. You might as well talk of Washington as though
he were going to achieve our national independence in 1950 as to speak of
Christ as though He were going to achieve our salvation in the future. He did
it in the year of our Lord 33
on the field of Bozrah
the Captain of our
salvation fighting unto death for our emancipation. All we have to do is to
accept that fact in our heart of hearts
and we are free for this world
and
for the world to come. (T. De W. Talmage
D. D.)
Christ¡¦s victory
I. TAKE THE WORDS
OF THE VICTORY WON ON CALVARY
and how they bring home to us the greatness of
our need and of our redemption! Nothing short of a Divine interposition could
save us. There was an old rule of the poet¡¦s art which a heathen has left on
record
which said that in the drama the intervention of a god was not to be
made use of by the poet
except on an occasion worthy of it. And in the great
drama of the world¡¦s redemption
wrought out in the presence of heaven and
earth
God Himself may with all reverence be said to have acted upon this rule.
God waited while human systems did what they could for the salvation of the
world. God waited through the long ages while Edom--the power of the
world--seemed to wax mightier and mightier. Each one of the centuries
whichrolled on before the Incarnation only added to the hopelessness and
despair of humanity. System after system of philosophy was tried. Each in its
turn promised much
but performed little; until at length a dull
blank despair
seemed to be settling down upon a decaying and dying world. And then
at
length
God Himself intervened. And the work which the Son of God undertook in
His infinite pity for man was no holiday task
to be entered upon with a light
heart.
II. WE MAY TAKE THE
VISION AS RECEIVING A FULFILMENT IN OUR OWN LIVES
whenever in the mercy of God
we win a victory over the power of evil around us. There are times when we need
some such vision as this to comfort and reassure us in the stress of the
conflict. There is the Conqueror from Edom. His blood-stained garments are the
pledge of His victory over your foe. And that victory which He won for you on
Calvary He will repeat in you
if you will only yield yourself up to Him.
III. BUT THE
PROPHECY IS NOT EXHAUSTED YET. Victory after victory may be won; but there are
gaps in the ranks of those who have fought; and we have sorrowfully to confess
that the power of evil still remains in the world. Foiled in one quarter
it is
successful in another. And so it goes on from generation to generation. The
heart is made sad and the head grows heavy with the thought that
conquer evil
in our own person as we may
yet
after all
it will outlive us. It will give
our children after us just the same trouble that it has given to us. Yet
here
too there is comfort for us in the vision of the prophet
if we only take in
its full meaning
for it points forward to a final victory in the future when
the power of evil is to be destroyed. (E. C. S. Gibson. M. A.)
The Hero
I. THE HERO HERE
IS ONE WHO HAD FOUGHT IN THE MIDST OF ENEMIES. What Edom was to Israel
sin is
to the universe. Christ fought in the midst of enemies; entered the very heart
of this sinful world
battled with evil in all its forms.
II. THE HERO HERE
IS ONE WHO HAS BEEN DEEPLY WOUNDED. He returns from Bozrah with dyed garments.
Christ was wounded--
1. In HIS body.
2. In HIS reputation. He was represented as a blasphemer
as a
political traitor
as the emissary of Beelzebub.
3. In His soul. ¡§My soul is exceedingly sorrowful
¡¥ etc.
III. THE HERO HERE
IS ONE RETURNING FROM BATTLE IN GREAT MAGNIFICENCE. ¡§Glorious in his apparel
travelling in the greatness of his strength.¡¨ With what magnificence Christ
returned from the battle of earth to the scenes of heaven (Acts 1:9-11).
IV. THE HERO HERE
IS ONE WHOSE CAREER HAD BEEN DISTINGUISHED BY RIGHTEOUSNESS. ¡§I that speak in
righteousness. I
the declarer of righteousness (as some render it). Though a
warrior
he had invented no stratagems to deceive
and had violated no rights.
Christ was righteous in all His conflicts. He taught righteousness
He
practised righteousness
He fought for righteousness
He died for
righteousness.
V. THE HERO HERE
IS ONE
WHOSE STRENGTH IS MIGHTINESS TO SAVE. His form was the very embodiment
of strength; but his strength was not to destroy
but to save. (Homilist.)
1. ¡§I that speak in righteousness.¡¨ The very essence and being of
Christ is righteousness. But the expression here seems to refer to the fact of
His being the incarnate righteousness of God and the imputed righteousness of
man. He speaks in our stead. He stands holy in place of our unholiness.
2. ¡§Mighty to save.¡¨ The victory was for man. He is mighty to save--
No man may punish Christ¡¦s enemies
but Himself
1. We have no authority.
2. We have no prescription
or rules authorized by custom.
3. Persecution does no good.
4. Christians are taught to love their enemies.
5. The certainty of the day of judgment deters good men from
persecuting. It is not enough to persecute the enemies of Christ; we are bound
by every solemn tie to perform every duty
yea more
every kind office of
friendship towards them. (B. Robinson.)
This that is glorious in
His apparel
The glory of Christ in His humiliation
I. IN WHAT
RESPECTS THE GLORY OF OUR REDEEMER WAS APPARENT EVEN IN HIS SUFFERINGS
and
shone through the dark cloud that covered Him in His humiliation.
1. From His ready undertaking of the work of our redemption. There
can be little honour to any man in submitting to what he cannot avoid
or doing
what he dare not refuse; but the humiliation of Christ was perfectly¡¨
voluntary.
2. From the greatness of those sufferings which He endured. A weak
person is crushed by a small weight; but he who is able to endure uncommon
sufferings shows himself to be possessed of uncommon strength. Our blessed
Lord
in His life in this world
endured the greatest and most dreadful
sufferings.
3. From the purity of His carriage
and the perfection of His
patience.
4. From the end He had in view in His sufferings
and which He so
effectually obtained. The glory of God
and the salvation of sinners.
II. PRACTICAL
IMPROVEMENT.
1. We are here caned to admire and adore the unsearchable wisdom and
unspeakable love of God.
2. The guilt and danger of all who are not reconciled to God.
3. The encouragement of sinners to return to God through Christ.
4. Be is able to uphold the weakest Christian in the midst of the
most dangerous temptations
though He often suffers the self-sufficient to fall
before His enemies. Wherefore believe in the almighty power of your Redeemer.
5. The comfort of every disconsolate soul. (J. Witherspoon.)
Mighty to save
Might and mercy
Most of our ideas of might are associated with the ¡§terrible
majesty of God. E.g the deluge; destruction of the cities of the plain;
earthquakes
etc. These show might in connection with judgment. The text
directs our thoughts to might in connection with mercy.
I. POWER IN THE
WORKING OUT OF THE GREAT REDEMPTIVE PLAN.
1. Typical sacrifices.
2. Prophetic ministry.
3. Christ¡¦s atonement and intercession.
II. POWER IN THE
SAVING AGENCY AT WORK IN THE WORLD.
1. The Divine Spirit.
2. The Church of Christ.
III. POWER AS SEEN
IN THE LIVES OF THOSE SAVED BY DIVINE MERCY.
1. Their numbers. ¡§A great multitude.¡¨
2. Their characters. Mary Magdalene; Saul of Tarsus; the
Corinthians (1 Corinthians 6:11).
IV. POWER IN THE
COMPLETION OF THE WORK OF MERCY. Resurrection of body
and eternal union of
body and soul in glory. Conclusion:
1. The divine fight of mercy does not render personal effort
unnecessary.
2. The fact that the Divine power and mercy are united in seeking our
salvation should lead us to immediate and hearty surrender to God. (Julius
Brigg.)
Glorious Almightiness of the Redeemer
The Redeemer¡¦s mightiness to save may be seen--
I. IN THE NATURE
OF THE EVIL FROM WHICH HE saws. So we measure the success of a physician
a
statesman
a warrior. Christ saves from sin
the most malignant disease--from
sin
the wildest internal revolt--from sin
the strongest aggressive foe. In
this saving work this ¡§Announcer of Righteousness is almighty in atonement and
in redemption. He makes a man right with God
right with self
right with the
universe.
II. IN THE
BIOGRAPHIES OF THOSE HE HAS SAVED. The Christ of the ages has transformed
multitudes. His victory on the Cross over the heart of the dying thief is but a
pledge and specimen of His victory by the Cross over a million others. Mary
Saul
Augustine
Bunyan
are but conspicuous instances out of a great multitude
which no man can number.
III. IN THE WORK HE
HAS YET TO ACCOMPLISH. The Divine predictions are
¡§As I live
the whole earth
shall be filled with My glory.¡¨ ¡§He must reign
¡¨ etc. How vast the work of the
Redeemer yet to be done! Its vastness is illustrated in--
1. Individual characters yet to be renewed and perfected.
Introspection helps us to understand this.
2. The vast area of human lives to be regenerated. The redemptive
work is to girdle the entire globe.
3. The ages through which this work will continue. For such stubborn
widely-extended
and long-enduring sinners
only He can be equal who is ¡§mighty
to save.¡¨ (U. R. Thomas
B. A.)
A mighty Saviour
I. WHAT ARE WE TO
UNDERSTAND BY THE WORDS ¡§TO SAVE¡¨? Something more than just delivering
penitents from going down to hell. By the words ¡§to save
I understand the
whole of the great work of salvation
from the first holy desire
the first
spiritual conviction
onward to complete sanctification. All this done of God
through Jesus Christ.
II. HOW CAN WE PROVE
THAT CHRIST IS ¡§ MIGHTY TO SAVE¡¨? The argument is
that He has done it. We need
no other; it were superfluous to add another. He has saved men in the full
extent and meaning of the word
which we have endeavoured to explain. The best
proof you can ever have of God¡¦s being mighty to save is
that He saved you.
III. WHY IS CHRIST
¡§MIGHTY TO SAVE¡¨?
1. Because of the infinite efficacy of his atoning blood.
2. Because of the omnipotent influence of His Divine Spirit.
IV. WHAT ARE THE
INFERENCES TO BE DERIVED FROM THE FACT THAT JESUS CHRIST IS ¡§MIGHTY TO SAVE ¡§?
1. Ministers should preach in faith.
2. There is encouragement for men and women who are praying to God
for their friends.
3. Here is encouragement for the seeking sinner. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Omnipotent to save
I. IN THE DIGNITY
OF THE NATURE OF CHRIST
AND THE MYSTERIOUS CONSTITUTION OF HIS PERSON WE HAVE
THE BEST OF REASONS FOR CONCLUDING THAT HE IS OMNIPOTENT TO SAVE.
II. IN THE TRIUMPH
OF CHRIST OVER ALL HIS AND OUR ENEMIES WE HAVE ANOTHER REASON FOR BELIEVING
THAT HE IS OMNIPOTENT TO SAVE.
III. IN THE
RESURRECTION OF CHRIST FROM THE STATE OF THE DEAD WE HAVE ANOTHER REASON TO
BELIEVE THAT HE IS OMNIPOTENT TO SAVE.
IV. IN THE
EXALTATION OF CHRIST TO GLORY WE HAVE ANOTHER AND A CONVINCING EVIDENCE THAT HE
IS MIGHTY TO SAVE.
V. IN THE POSITIVE
DECLARATIONS OF SCRIPTURE ON THIS SUBJECT
AND IN PLAIN MATTERS OF FACT
IN
THESE SCRIPTURES RECORDED
WE HAVE THE MOST INTELLIGIBLE EVIDENCE THAT HE IS
MIGHTY TO SAVE.
VI. IN THEIR OWN
EXPERIENCE ALL GOOD CHRISTIANS HAVE AN EVIDENCE OF THE FACT THAT CHRIST IS
OMNIPOTENT TO SAVE. Conclusion:
1. Let us beware of trusting in any power but that of Christ.
2. Let us rejoice that He is in all points such a Saviour as we
require. (W. Craig.)
Christ¡¦s power to save
I. SHOW THAT THIS
IS A PREDICTION OF THE LORD JESUS CHRIST.
II. CONSIDER THAT
ATTRIBUTE OF THE LORD JESUS TO WHICH THE TEXT REFERS. ¡§Mighty to save.¡¨
III. DRAW SOME
PRACTICAL INFERENCES. If Christ is mighty to save--
1. Ministers have the best motives to preach the Gospel with
unlimited freedom
energy and zeal.
2. Abundant encouragement is provided even for those who are ready to
sink in despair.
3. Whatever disastrous events may come
the Church is secure.
4. If you have experienced His might and His mercy
let it be your
uniform aim to show forth His praise both by your lips and by your life. (Essex
Congregational Remembrancer.)
Verse 3
I have trodden the winepress alone
The single-handed conquest
I.
THE
INTERESTING FIGURE EMPLOYED. ¡§I have trodden the winepress.¡¨ This is Jesus
speaking after HIS conquest over HIS foes
1. This denotes the supreme contempt with which the mighty Conqueror
regarded the enemies whom He had overcome. It is as if He had said
¡§I compare
My victory over them to nothing but the treading of the winepress.¡¨
2. There is in the figure an intimation of toil and labour; for the
fruit of the vine is not bruised without hard work. So the mighty Conqueror
though
in contempt
He says His foes were as nothing but the grapes of the
vintage to His might; yet
speaking as a man like unto us
He had something to
do to overcome His foes.
3. Moreover
there is an allusion to the staining of the garments.
II. THE GLORIOUS
FACT STATED. ¡§I have trodden the winepress.¡¨
III. THE SOLITARY
CONQUEROR DESCRIBED. ¡§I have trodden the winepress alone.¡¨
IV. SOME SWEET AND
SALUTARY CONSIDERATIONS SUGGESTED BY THIS SUBJECT.
1. The first inference is
there is no winepress of Divine wrath for
thee
O believer
to tread.
2. There are winepresses of suffering
although not of punish ment
which thou wilt have to tread. But I want thee to remember that thou wilt; not
have to tread these winepresses alone.
3. But since Jesus trod the winepress alone
I beseech you give all
things to Him. Alone He suffered; will you not love Him alone? Alone He trod
the winepress; will you not serve Him? Alone He purchased your redemption; will
you not be His property
and His alone? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The lonely treader
I. JESUS CHRIST
WAS ABLE TO TREAD THE WINEPRESS ALONE. This is characteristic of a great man
that he is able to stand alone. It does not follow that a man is great because
he stands alone. He may be selfish; and not wishing to be pained by the sorrows
of humanity
and not desiring to give his labour and substance for the
alleviation of those evils which afflict humanity
he shuts himself off from
society. Thus his self-inflicted loneliness will be self-inflicted torture.
Greater would be his happiness if he had greater self-denial. The man who
stands alone through nervous sensibility is in a measure to be pitied and to be
helped. Every rough word strikes like a barbed arrow into the centre of his
nature. But it was neither selfishness nor nervous sensibility which caused
Jesus Christ to be a lonely man. The Saviour stood alone by reason of the
sublime grandeur of His nature. The good man is satisfied from himself
and the
Saviour was for Himself all-sufficient. Society was not needful to Him in the
sense in which it is needful for other men. But it is when a man has to
accomplish some vast enterprise that his power to stand alone is tested. The
greatness of John the Baptist was revealed
not when the crowds thronged to his
preaching
not when the multitudes flocked to his baptism; but when he was cast
into prison
and alone he was left to ponder over the world¡¦s cruel baseness
and the difficulty of reforming sinning men. The greatness of Luther was seen
not when men admired his trenchant exposures of Romish errors
not when the
crowds thronged his way and crowded the houses and windows to see him pass; but
when he stood before that imposing gathering which held his life in its hands
and said
¡§Here I stand
I can do no other; may God help me. Amen.¡¨ Only great
men can do the world¡¦s greatest works alone. Now the greatest work of all was
that which Jesus Christ accomplished when He trod the winepress alone. Some say
that He was only a great Teacher. But it is difficult to utter new truths; and
great teachers have found it needful for their success to surround themselves
with sympathizing adherents. As a great Teacher Jesus was able to stand alone.
The rude world was not ready for His moral lessons
and even His disciples
could not appreciate the spirituality of His utterances. But He was more than a
great Teacher. He came to give Himself to be the light and the life of men. And
in carrying out the mediatorial purpose He was able to stand alone; for the
indwelling Divinity imparted sublime power. And we
looking back to His
finished work
resting upon it by faith
and deriving from it unspeakable
blessings
can triumphantly declare that Jesus Christ was able to tread the
winepress alone.
II. JESUS CHRIST
WAS WILLING TO TREAD THE WINEPRESS ALONE. The perfectly-constituted and
fully-developed man loves society. The great man loves solitude; but he also
delights in social pleasures; and
though able to stand alone
may not be
willing to do so to the extent that his circumstances demand. Or
again
a man
may be able to do some great work for the world¡¦s benefit
but says
¡§ If there
is no one to help
if there is no one with sufficient benevolence to sacrifice
himself for the good of humanity
I shall not single-handed undertake the work.
Now Jesus Christ did not move through this world as a gloomy recluse
and yet
He did not give full play to the social part of His nature
because it was
needful for Him to be much in solitude that His Divine mission might be
successful.
III. JESUS CHRIST
WAS CONSTRAINED TO TREAD THE WINEPRESS ALONE. By the sting of the lash the
unwilling slave may be compelled to get into the winepress and tread out the
grapes
but no such compulsion could be applied to the Redeemer. He had all
power--power over Himself as well as over others; but He kept His power in
check. He was compelled by the sweet force of His own great love. And the
solitariness of Jesus brings to our view the greatness of His love most
vividly.
IV. JESUS CHRIST
SORROWED TO TREAD THE WINEPRESS ALONE. He possessed a sympathetic nature
and
He would be made sorrowful by the fact that His mission separated Him from the
loves and the sympathies of mankind.
V. JESUS CHRIST
REJOICED TO TREAD THE WINEPRESS ALONE. There is great joy as well as great
sorrow in all spiritual work; and Jesus tasted both in fullest measure. This is
the climax of benevolence
that it can rejoice in suffering for the welfare of
others. And Jesus rejoiced to tread the winepress alone
for He foresaw the
beneficent and widespread results of His labours. The treader-out of grapes is
producing a refreshing beverage for society; but Jesus Christ was producing not
only a refreshing but a healing and reviving remedy for humanity to the very
close of the world¡¦s history. Alone He trod the winepress
but not alone does
He drink of the new wine
for He saves men in order that they may participate
in the results of His solitary labours. Learn--
1. To each man there is a winepress to tread. We must in a sense
tread the winepress the Saviour trod
for we must be crucified together with
Christ; we must penitently and believingly recognize the fact that He suffered
for our sins. But more than that
each man will have his own winepress to
tread. Each man has his own work to do
his own cup of sorrow to drink
his own
besetting sin to conquer
his special thorn to endure.
2. This winepress must be trodden alone. We cannot be saved by proxy.
Jesus Christ
even in the higher departments of HIS work--work which we cannot
do--left us an Example
or indirectly taught us how we are to work. Alone each
one must tread the winepress. The great works of life must be done alone. Moral
victories must be gained when there are none present to applaud.
3. The blessed results of lonely treading will be diffusive. No man
can do faithful soul-work without blessing others as well as himself.
4. The glorious rewards of lonely treading will be publicly bestowed.
In a measure it is so in this world. In a complete measure it will be so in
that world where rewards are rightly administered. The scholar works alone
but
receives his prize in public. The investigator toils in solitude
but publicly
his labours are acknowledged. We sow in the tears of solitary working but we
reap in the joy of many approvals. The truth commands so few admirers in this
world of error that we are often found almost alone in its defence and in its
advocacy; but to every faithful defender of truth will Jesus Christ say in the
presence of assembled nations
¡§Well done
good and faithful servant.¡¨ (W.
Burrows
B. A.)
Christ¡¦s lonliness
There is always a certain degree of solitariness about a great
mind. What is thus true of all great minds must have been
beyond all others
characteristic of the mind of Him who
with all His real humanity
could ¡§think
it no robbery to be equal with God.¡¨ You who are parents have
I dare say
often felt struck by the reflection
what a world of thoughts
and cares
and
anxieties are constantly present to your minds into which your children cannot
enter. Perhaps there is no spectacle so exquisitely touching as that which one
sometimes witnesses in a house of mourning--the elder members of the family
bowed down to the dust by some heavy sorrow
whilst the little children sport
around in unconscious playfulness. What children are to the mature-minded man
the rest of mankind were to Jesus. Nay
such an illustration falls far short of
conveying to us an adequate representation of the measureless inferiority of
all other minds to that mighty
mysterious Spirit that dwelt in the bosom of
Jesus. ¡§He was in the world
and the world was made by Him
and the world knew
Him not.¡¨ ¡§The light shone in darkness
and the darkness comprehended it not.¡¨
He had nothing in common with the spirit of the times in which He lived. His
views
principles
motives
associations
object of life
were not those of His
own nation
nor of any land or clime on earth: they were drawn from the
infinite
the eternal. He moved among a narrow-minded
grovelling
sensual
race
breathing a spirit of ineffable purity and holiness. (J. Caird
D. D.)
The solicits of Christ¡¦s sufferings
By this I mean not that they were solitary or peculiar as being
propitiatory sufferings
though in this they were indeed distinguished from the
sufferings of all other men. Nor do I mean merely that they were sufferings of
extraordinary and unexampled severity
though that also is true. But there were
connected with the nature of this mysterious Sufferer certain features or
conditions which rendered His sorrows such as no other of our race could
endure
--certain facts which gave to them
as to His whole history
a character
of elevation and awfulness
beyond the range of mere human experience. Amid all
the sons and daughters of sorrow that crowd the page of human history
Jesus
yet stands forth ¡§the man of sorrows
¡¨ - the solitary Sufferer of humanity.
I. ALL HIS
SUFFERINGS WERE
LONG ERE THEIR ACTUAL OCCURRENCE
CLEARLY AND FULLY FORESEEN.
II. THEY WERE THE
SORROWS OF AN INFINITELY PURE AND PERFECT MIND. As it is the cup that is
deepest that can be filled the fullest--as it is the tree that rears its head
the highest that feels most the fury of the storm
so it is the soul that is
largest and most exalted that is capable of the greatest sorrows. A little
narrow
selfish
uncultured mind is liable to comparatively few troubles. The
range alike of its joys and its sorrows is limited and contracted. It presents
but a narrow target to the arrows of misfortune
and it escapes uninjured where
a broader spirit would be ¡§pierced through with many sorrows.¡¨ The insect
in
the summer
breeze
brimful of mere animal happiness
is exposed to mere animal
privation and pain. Its life is but one long sensation. The little child
again
has fewer capacities of suffering
fewer cares and anxieties
and
troubles
than the mature-minded man
-the savage than the civilized being
--the
ignorant
unrefined
unreflecting man
than the man of high intellectual and
moral culture
of thoughtfulness and refinement Of taste and feeling. It is the
great law of life that every advancing power
every improvement
physical
intellectual
moral or spiritual
which a man gains
carries with it
as the
necessary penalty
an additional liability
a new degree of exposure to
surrounding evils. Turn your thoughts to one who has begun to receive that
highest of all culture
the renewing influence of Divine grace
--is it not so
that he
too
becomes susceptible
in such a world as this
of pains and
sorrows unfelt before? The blind know not the pains of sight
nor the deaf of
sound
nor the dead and insensible of living
and breathing men. And so the
quickening touch of God¡¦s Spirit wakes the believer¡¦s soul from a state of
moral insensibility and death
to one in which the inner eye can be pained by
deformities
and the ear by discords
and the spiritual nature by sicknesses
and troubles
of which hitherto it had been all unconscious. But if all this be
so
how far beyond all human experience
how far even beyond all human
comprehension
must have been the sufferings of the soul of Jesus. Conceive of
the sun struck out of yonder heavens
and the world suddenly overwhelmed with
the horror of perpetual darkness and cold. Imagine the sustaining providence of
God withdrawn from the universe
and everything hurrying to desolation and
ruin. But no emblem
no comparison can convey to us but the faintest conception
of what it was for God¡¦s dear Son
as if God-deserted
to die.
III. IT WAS THE
SORROW OF A CREATOR AMID HIS RUINED WORKS
The feelings of Jesus in beholding
and living amidst the moral ruin and degradation of mankind were not those
merely of an exquisitely pure and sensitive human spirit: they flowed from a
far deeper and more awful source. It was nothing less than the world¡¦s great
Creator that
concealed in that humble guise
surveyed and moved for thirty
years amidst the ruins of His fairest
noblest work
lying widespread around
Him! (Genesis 6:5-6; Luke 19:41-42.) There is a sort of
sentimental melancholy which gathers over the mind of one who surveys the scene
of some great nation¡¦s bygone glory
now
it may be
strewn
only with wreck of
departed
greatness. But surely an emotion of a far deeper kind may well be
called forth in the thoughtful mind when contemplating the mournful moral and
spiritual degradation of humanity
as contrasted with the glory of its original
structure
and the splendours of that destiny for which it was created I Even
the body
the mere tabernacle in which the soul resides
a work which only
Deity could create
is a work over whose ruin even Deity might mourn. Yet every
sick-bed by which Jesus stood
and every sufferer¡¦s cry He heard
and every
bier and grave to which His steps were led
were to His eye the ruthless
destruction of another and another glorious work of God--the proofs of the
triumph of the destroyer over the results of infinite wisdom and skill. But the
destruction of the body is insignificant in comparison with the ruin of the
soul. Shall we wonder
then
that the Creator of such a work as this--so noble
so deathless
so Divine
should have experienced bitter grief for its ruin?
Reflections:
1. All such views of the sufferings of Jesus are most obviously
suggestive of gratitude for His marvellous self-devotion on our be if.
2. Is not this subject fraught with a most solemn warning to all who
are living in carelessness or indifference to the spiritual interests of
themselves and others? What more awful intimation could be conveyed to us of
the evil of sin
and of the infatuation of those who are indifferent to its
fatal consequences
than in the sorrow of Jesus?
3. Such views of the sufferings of Jesus afford to every penitent soul
the strongest encouragement to rely on the Saviour¡¦s love. Your salvation was
an object which even at such a fearful cost He was willing to seek; and think
you He is less willing to seek it now (J. Caird
D. D.)
The loneliness of Christ in His sufferings
We behold the Redeemer--
I. DESERTED BY
HUMAN FRIENDS. No human friends could understand or sympathize in the work of
Christ. It is the fate of many men to go through life alone. They may have many
relatives
acquaintances
companions
and derive much
pleasure from their
society; but they may never meet with a truly ¡§kindred spirit. Them are two
kinds of loneliness--the isolation of distance and the loneliness of the heart;
and the latter is the far more complete and sad of the two. The fisherman
alone
at night upon the sea
with no other living being near
no sound but the
plashing of the wavelets
no sight but of the occasional struggling of a star
through the clouds
may be in spirit at his cottage home upon the beach
and
space and time are annihilated
and his heart peopled with many a dear familiar
form. But far different is the loneliness of the heart! What solitude is there
comparable to the spiritual loneliness of him who
with a soul filled with
sadness
finds himself jostled in the midst of a gay and pleasure-seeking
crowd? So is it with the man of transcendent goodness or genius. Such a one
must
to a greater or less extent
be lonely. This it was which constituted the
peculiar bitterness of the trial of Elijah (1 Kings 19:14). It has often been
said that the possession of a real and truehearted friend is at once the
greatest and the rarest of earthly blessings; such a friend as was Jonathan to
David. But if such friendships are rare among men
how utterly impossible was
it that our Lord Jesus Christ
the Son of God
should find a friend and
sympathizer
in the truest sense of those words
among the sons of men. Twelve
chosen associates
indeed
He had
but they were utterly incapable
as long as
He lived below
even of understanding Him
much less could they enter into
and
sympathize with
the great work of His life and death. That work was
essentially a lonely one. For--
1. He alone could accomplish our redemption.
2. Christ was alone in His foreknowledge. We often hear those who
have passed through some heavy trial say
¡§ If I had known beforehand what I
had to endure
I could not have borne it; I should have sunk under the
appalling prospect!¡¨ So mercifully has our Heavenly Father
knowing our frame
hidden the things that are to be from our eyes. But there was this ineffable
aggravation of the grief of the ¡§Man of sorrows
that
to the suffering of the
present
there was superadded the heavier prospect of the future.
3. Then
too
from the Divine purity and loftiness of His soul
Christ suffered far more than any mere man could suffer. The more refined and
elevated a man¡¦s nature is
the more sensitive he is apt to he; the keener are
his sorrows
and the more ecstatic his joys. But sin
and death its punishment
the whole world¡¦s burden of which rested upon the pure soul of the Redeemer
had for Him a dark and dreadful reality of horror
inconceivable by any of us
whose innermost heart has been tainted with the love of sin.
4. Moreover
in another way
the grief of the Lord Jesus Christ in
this world was what the sorrow of no mere man could be
the sorrow of the
Creator in the midst of His mined works.
5. Yet again
in His power of omniscience He stood ¡§alone.¡¨ ¡§He that
increaseth knowledge
increaseth sorrow.¡¨ If we could discern the secrets of
all hearts
if the thoughts and desires of a crowd could be rendered audible to
us
how continually should we be overwhelmed with shame and horror. But Christ
knew all men.
II. LEFT ALONE BY
GOD. When He foretold to the disciples their desertion
He added
¡§And yet I am
not alone
because My Father is with Me.¡¨ But in the hour of His deepest agony
there was an exception even to that companionship of eternity. Far otherwise
has it been with the martyrs of Jesus
and with all His faithful people since
in the ¡§article of death.¡¨ Conclusion:
1. Christ ¡§trod the winepress alone¡¨ for you. Mourn
therefore
and
rejoice.
2. Christ will ¡§tread the winepress alone¡¨ again: the winepress of
the wrath of God.
3. It is oftentimes the lot of God¡¦s people to be called upon in some
degree to ¡§tread the winepress alone.¡¨ Daniel had to do so. But remember for
your encouragement that
in the highest sense
you never can be alone in the
conflict. Your Saviour met the world
the flesh
and the devil alone
that you
might never have to wage a single-handed warfare
never be left without a
higher Presence in the good fight of faith. (H. E. Nolloth
M. A.)
The solitude of Christ
I. CHRIST WAS
ALONE IN THE VIEW HE HAD OF THE WORK HE CAME TO ACCOMPLISH. The people were
looking for one thing
and He was labouring for another. Of all earthly beings
His mother was
for a long season
the nearest to Him. She cherished in her
heart
as amongst her choicest treasures
all the words which both human and
angelic prophets had spoken to her. But we get a glimpse of a great gulf
between even her and Him. All the sadness involved in this kind of solitude we
cannot appreciate. We can only get some faint perceptions of it from
illustrations drawn from human experience. We know that if a man have some
loving purpose in his heart
and some great plan for achieving it
there is
nothing so cheers him as to meet with some one who sees the matter very much as
he sees it
and who will listen intelligently and with interest while he sets
forth the wisdom of his plan and the worth of his purpose. Think of a Christian
man going to a strange shore
where painted savages dwell. He sets his heart
and his hands to the work of educating and evangelizing them. When he begins
his work
who amongst them can understand what he wants to do? When he wants to
feel that another heart beats in harmony with his own
he must turn from man to
God. Inquire of him
and he will tell you that this is one of the heaviest
trials he has to bear. Christ came from heaven to earth on the grandest errand
that wisdom ever designed or mercy ever proposed. He saw this world wandering
far away from God
to perish there. He set His heart on bringing back the soul
from its wandering to the bosom of Him who made it; but
strange to say
He had
suffered
died
come back from the dead
risen again to His native skies
before even His own disciples had clear ideas of why He had clothed Himself in
mortal flesh
passed through a baptism of agony
and shed His blood on the
Cross.
II. HE WAS ALONE IN
HIS BURNING ZEAL FOR THE ACCOMPLISHMENT OF HIS WORK. a child sees that his
father is very earnest about some matter. He cannot see clearly what it is
still less can he explain it to others
and yet he catches the fire from his
father¡¦s heart
and in his little way he is all burning with desire that his
father may succeed in that about which he is so zealous. The heart may be quick
to sympathize where the head is not wise enough to understand. Not even such
help as this did Jesus have when He for us was leading the life of sorrow
when
He for us was dying the death of shame. In this matter His own disciples were
not much better than the carnal-minded multitude. Do not we too frequently
leave the Saviour in the same solitude even now? We know what His desires are
concerning us. ¡§This is the will of God
even our sanctification.¡¨ But
alas I
how often it happens that while He looks and longs for that
our strongest
desires and most diligent endeavours tend in another direction; while His Word
and Spirit
while His providence and grace
arc striving for our holiness
how
often we make some other thing supreme t
III. JESUS WAS ALONE
IN HIS THOUGHTS AS TO THE MANNER OF ACCOMPLISHING HIS WORK. There was one thing
the Saviour could not make His disciples clearly see--that He had come into the
world to die
and that His death was to be the life of the world. This kind of
solitude we may make the Saviour to suffer even now. We do in this same way put
Him to shame when we think that His will can be done without uplifting His
Cross
in the full and frequent setting forth of His atoning death. (C.
Vince.)
Christ alone
I. A GENERAL VIEW
OF THE PROPHECY
It stands by itself. The general subject of the chapter is the
destruction of the enemies of God. The scene is one of surpassing sublimity
as
one which tells of a conquering Messiah. Every enemy shall be trampled under
foot; but it shall be Christ¡¦s own work
and one in which He will have no helper.
II. THE LESSONS
THAT MAY BE GATHERED FROM THIS VIEW OF THE PROPHECY.
1. Christ is alone in His great work
as against all other mediators
all other saviours
all other intercessors
all who
whether as saint
angel
or glorified spirit
should be set up by a false theology to bridge over the
infinite gulf between us and God. And therefore the work can be done by none
but Christ.
2. The work of Christ is alone-has been supplemented and helped by no
human works and services.
3. This repudiation of anything in ourselves that shares in the
honour of Christ¡¦s mediation is to be extended to our faith. I believe there
are very many persons who would have a holy and jealous shrinking from having a
saviour in their works
who do not see how near they may go towards having a
saviour in their faith; yet this they do when
as the ground of their
justification
they trust on the realized experience of a strong personal
confidence
and that because it is strong. The mistake arises from their not
perceiving that they must be justified by something out of themselves
and not
by anything in themselves--by what Christ has wrought for them
and not by
anything which the Spirit may have wrought in them. This thought should be
comforting to us under those fluctuations of trust and weakened hold upon the
promises which may fall to the lot of every one of us.
4. This is said to exclude from all part or lot in Christ¡¦s work
those frames
feelings
convictions
emotions of the spiritual mind
which too
many regard as indispensable to their salvation
and which therefore they do in
effect put in Christ¡¦s place. (D. Moore
M. A.)
Christ alone
I. IN HIS PERSONAL
UNDERTAKING OF THE WORK OF SALVATION.
II. IN THE DIVINE
INCARNATION.
III. IN THE PURITY
OF HIS LIFE AND THE CHARACTER OF HIS MINISTRATIONS.
IV. IN HIS
SUFFERINGS. YE IN HIS DEATH
VI. IN HIS
INTERCESSORY AND MEDIATORIAL WORK. Conclusion
1. He is the alone Saviour for us.
2. Without faith in Christ there is no salvation.
3. How great the guilt of the rejecter of Christ!
4. How glorious the prospect of the believer in Jesus! (S. D.
Phelps.)
Loneliness
I. IT HAS MANY
SENSES
INWARD AND OUTWARD.
1. There is what I may call the loneliness of simple solitude.
Solitude which is first voluntary
and secondly occasional
is but half
solitude. Solitude which we fly to as a rest
and can exchange at will for
society which we love
is a widely different thing from that solitude which is
either the consequence of bereavement or the punishment of crime; that solitude
from which we cannot escape
and which perhaps is associated with bitter or
remorseful recollections.
2. There is the loneliness of sorrow. Is not loneliness the prominent
feeling in all deep sorrow? Is it not the feeling of loneliness which gives its
sting to bereavement?
3. There is the loneliness of a sense of sin. Whatever duties may lie
upon us towards other men
in our innermost relation to God we are and must be
alone. When the sense of sin is heavy upon us
how incapable is the soul of
anything but solitude! And if such be the loneliness of repentance
what must
be the loneliness of remorse
which is repentance without God
without Christ
and therefore without hope. If repentance is loneliness
remorse is desolation.
4. There is the loneliness of death.
5. Can we follow the soul one step further
and see it standing in
judgement before the throne of God? ¡§Every one shall give account of himself to
God.¡¨
II. PRACTICAL
CONSIDERATIONS. There are two senses at least in which you ought to practise
the being alone.
1. Being alone in prayer. I do not mean that you must necessarily be
in a place by yourselves
in order to pray: if this were essential to prayer
then the poor and the young in most cases could never pray. But I mean that in
praying
whether by yourselves (which is
no doubt
a great advantage) or in
the presence of others
you should try to shut out the recollection of any
other presence than that of God.
2. If you are to die alone
and if you are to be judged alone
be not
afraid also to think alone
and
if necessary
to act alone.
3. If the view of life thus presented seem to any one to be fiat and
dreary
let him remember that
though we must pray alone
and judge alone
and
sometimes act alone
and certainly die alone
and be judged alone
yet there is
a reality of sympathy still
which we may find and rejoice in if we will. It is
a sympathy independent of sight and word
secret yet real
unchangeable and
eternal. Sympathy with Him who so loved that He died for us
and who is the
same yesterday and to-day and for ever. Sympathy with Him
and with God through
Him
exercised by the intervention of the Holy Spirit. This is the Divine
aspect of Christian sympathy. But there is a human side also. (Dean Vaughan.)
Christian loneliness
Every one of us probably takes the same impression from those
words. What is the figure they summon up before us all? Probably that of a man
left to solitary toil
deserted but not faithless
having a heavy burden to
bear
and bearing it uncheered by social sympathy
--a hard and bitter work to
do
yet nobly doing it alone. From this image our minds pass unconsciously over
to the solitude of our spiritual strifes and reward sufferings. We instantly
and universally recognize in Him who ¡§trod the winepress alone a representative
of all our internal work. For a religious purpose
and as a part of God¡¦s
spiritual discipline with us
our deepest experiences must be passed through in
solitude. We must suffer alone
we must get wisdom alone
we must be renewed in
the inmost spirit of our minds alone
we must resist temptation alone
we must
meditate alone and pray alone
and we must pass through the valley of the
shadow of death alone. It was a distorted perception of that truth that gave
what value they had to the old systems of monasticism
or religious retirement.
These ancient practices our modern times have
for the most part
reversed. If
a man is much alone now
it must be rather by a direct effort to that end than
by popular habits. Some such effort will be salutary to his virtue. Social
habits may soften asperities
but it needs solitude to settle our principles.
Social habits may make us good-natured
but to get certainty for our ideas
or
assurance for our faith
we must be alone. The friction of society may smooth
down individual peculiarities
but there are such things as a smoothness that
is insipid
and a compliance that is so accommodating as to be cowardly. If
constant intercourse with others neutralizes our prejudices
it may also
undermine our simplicity
coax our kindly sentiments into vicious compromises
and tempt our integrity out of its self-possession into disgraceful bargains.
If we learn amiability in the mixed company
so we do learn what staunch and
steadfast convictions are by standing alone. If we form delightful connections
in the one
so do we gain the nobler faculty of thinking
acting
believing for
ourselves
in the other. At a period when the activities of associate
enterprise threaten Christian individuality with so many perils
among customs
where majorities take the place of single-headed tyrants
and the bribe of
promotion bewilders the clear-sightedness of faith--let us look to our
integrity. I do not forget the obvious arguments for association
nor the often
quoted benefits of a union of minds. Let them stand for their undoubted worth.
It is clear that Christian faith wins some of its noblest victories only in
social revivals. But let it be also remembered that a concentration of the
individual will upon its own chosen purpose
such as a man never gets except by
isolating himself
is a matter of as much moment to the success of every good
interest in the world as the contact of numbers. Who would not prize more
highly the solemn determination of a single independent mind
-taken and weighed
and perfected in solitude
unswayed by public dictation
and incorrupt from the
hot breath of crowds
than the longest subscription-list to a set of written or
concocted measures
or the enthusiastic ¡§resolutions¡¨ of the loudest caucus?
Let it be further remembered
that if combinations of masses are promotive of
good causes
they are also mighty facilities for bad ones. This truth may enter
more readily if we remember that the higher intellectual qualities--those that
are more intimately related to the moral
and thus have the largest agency in
forming character--depend on solitude for their most successful cultivation.
Judgment
imagination
clearness and consistency of thought
breadth of vision
whatever constitutes the originality and natural force of the mind--these are
all nurtured in lonely studies. So
emphatically
of those best persons
who by
the combined weight of intellectual and moral attributes have been the signal
reformers or builders of institutions. Affecting society far and wide
they did
not gather their best power in social resorts
but alone with heaven. Paul
three years in Arabia; Luther
in his cell; Alfred
in the Island of Nobles.
Mohammed
Columbus
Washington--their youth was apart from men; their career
was baptized and initiated in the air of retirement. And of the great Lord of
all
the Divine ministry to the world must begin with forty days in the
wilderness. If being alone is tributary to intellectual greatness
it is still
more so to the proper symmetry and health of the moral principles. Still more
strictly does this rule hold of the deeper emotions. The loftiest of all our
possible emotions is religious reverence
expressing itself in worship
or
prayer. Nature has herself given a broad hint of this truth
in making it
absolutely impossible for us to express to any mortal the deepest feeling.
Impatience of solitude is a bad religious sign. Whoever dreads to be alone has
reason to dread the hereafter. If he is afraid of being left to himself
how
shall he dare to meet the searching of his Judge? Something must have gone
terribly wrong with us
if we are afraid to be shut up with none but God. This
is demanded from us in mere fidelity to Truth herself; for when we begin to
esteem her for the multitudes she fascinates
when we begin to count up her
adherents and ask whether she draws large audiences
we have already broken
from the true loyalty. Next to the sordidness of wedding Truth to her dowry
which Stillingfleet satirizes
is that of choosing her because all the world
admires her. A Christian loneliness
the solitude that has Christ in it
renews
man¡¦s strength. Human suffering
in all its forms
is solitary. (F. D.
Huntington
D. D.)
Duty pertains to the individual
In the responsibilities of life we must tread the winepress alone.
Duty is
in the last resort
to be determined by the individual conscience
and
to his own Master must each one stand or fall. (A. P. Peabody.)
The soul¡¦s solitude
What are the appointed resources for this spiritual loneliness?
1. Christian fellowship. We are one in Christ. Our fellowship is with
Him
and through Him with one another.
2. Direct communion with Christ.
3. We are not alone
for the Father is with us.
4. More intimate union than we can enjoy here is reserved for us in
heaven: Shall not this hope bring us into nearer and happier fellowship even
here? (A. P. Peabody.)
Christ¡¦s solitariness in the work of atonement
Look at the ancient institution of the annual day of atonement. On
other occasions inferior priests slaughtered the animals and prepared the
offering. But upon this anniversary
the high priest alone officiated. And all
the drudgery
clear down to the lighting of the lamps and the kindling of fire
for incense
a long work of preparation
requiring sometimes more than two
weeks to complete it
so the Rabbins tell us
was undertaken by him. That day
was a day of days to him. He was to put aside his jewelled mitre
and wear none
of the so-called ¡§golden garments;¡¨ even his shining breastplate of precious
stones had to be relinquished
his ephod and his bells. Clad in simple linen
a
linen girdle
a linen coat
a linen mitre
he alone entered the Holy of holies
he alone laid the victim on the coals
and he alone led the people¡¦s scapegoat
away into the wilderness. All this was typical of the solitary errand of our
Lord Jesus Christ. (C. S. Robinson
D. D.)
Christ¡¦s solitariness in death
Did you ever ponder the pertinency of the fact that none among all
the disciples of our Lord
not one o fall the adherents who followed Him
was
permitted to die with Him? He was condemned as a rebel; yet not a single man or
woman who succoured Him
or sustained Him
in that so-called insurrection
suffered for it. A few of His friends talked about it; one of them said
outright on a conspicuous occasion
¡§Let us go and die with Him;¡¨ but
none of them ever did. The meaning of this is very plain. It was an infinitely
wise precaution against mistake. It would
without a doubt
have misled some
feeble minds if
by any accidental confusion
another name had been coupled
with His in the dying hour on the cross. It was just as well that all those
disciples forsook Him and fled. One Priest
one Lamb
was all that was needed.
(C. S.Robinson
D. D.)
Verse 4
For the day of vengeance is in Mine heart
¡§The day of vengeance"
¡§The day of vengeance
" announced in Isaiah 61:2.
¡§Is in Mine heart
¡¨ i.e in My purpose. (Prof. J. Skinner
D. D.)
The Redeemer¡¦s vengeance upon the grand enemy of the redeemed
These words are a material repetition of the first promise (Genesis 3:15). We have here--
1. The designation of God¡¦s remnant of mankind--sinners. ¡§My
redeemed.¡¨ They are Mine by election
Mine by My Father¡¦s donation
Mine by the
purchase of My blood
and they are to be Mine by conquest.
2. The deep resentment that the glorious Redeemer has of the quarrel of
the redeemed. ¡§The day of vengeance is mine heart.¡¨
3. The stated time for the deliverance of the redeemed. ¡§The day.
¡§The year.¡¨
4. The Redeemer¡¦s satisfaction with the view of all this. He speaks
of it with a particular air of joy and triumph. (E. Erskine.)
The annals of redeeming love
I. THE GREAT AND
GLORIOUS REDEEMER. He is--
1. A chosen Redeemer. ¡§Mine elect.¡¨
2. A mighty Redeemer. ¡§Mighty to save.¡¨
3. A Redeemer of great authority. ¡§The government shall be upon His
shoulder.¡¦ ¡§His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom.¡¨
4. A wealthy Redeemer.
5. An incomparable Redeemer.
6. A resolute and courageous Redeemer.
II. THE REDEEMED.
III. THE YEAR OF THE
REDEEMED. There is--
1. The year of purposed redemption. With respect to this year Christ
is called ¡§a Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.¡¨
2. The year of purchased redemption. This year the great God was
incarnate; the great Lawgiver voluntarily subjected Himself to His own law; God
blessed for ever was made a curse; everlasting righteousness was brought in;
God actually laid the foundation of a throne of grace
in justice and judgment
etc.
3. The year of exhibited redemption. The year of a
Gospel-dispensation among a people.
4. The year of applied redemption; under which may be comprehended
the whole period of time from the soul¡¦s conversion unto the day of death.
5. The year of consummate redemption. This is a year which never
never ends.
IV. THE YEAR OF THE
REDEEMED
THE JOY OF THE REDEEMER¡¦S HEART.
V. APPLICATION. (E.
Erskine.)
The Redeemer¡¦s vengeance
I. WHO IS THE
GRAND ENEMY THAT THE GLORIOUS REDEEMER HAS IN HIS VIEW? Satan.
II. THE GROUND OF
THE QUARREL THAT OUR REDEEMER HATH AGAINST THIS ENEMY. What injury hath Satan
done to the redeemed? He hath deceived them; he defaced the image of God; he
made them liable to the curse of the law; he made them his own slaves.
III. WHAT VENGEANCE
IS IT THAT OUR REDEEMER TAKES UPON THIS ENEMY OF THE REDEEMED? A bruising of
his head (Genesis 3:15). A judging of the devil (Jonah 16:11). A destroying of the devil (Hebrews 2:14). A spoiling of
principalities and powers (Colossians 2:15). Our glorious Redeemer--
1. Invades Satan¡¦s usurped kingdom and government
which he had
established in this world. Satan is called ¡§the god of this world.¡¦
2. Out-shoots the devil in his own bow--takes this wise spirit in his
own craftiness.
3. Condemns sin
the first-born of the devil.
4. Wrests the keys of death and hell out of the devil¡¦s hand.
5. Lays a heavy chain upon the roaring enemy.
6. Takes those who were his slaves from under his power
and arms
them with His truth
whereby they make war against him
under Christ as their
Leader and Commander.
7. Makes a spectacle of him and all his legions (Colossians 2:15).
8. Makes a road between heaven and earth
by His ascension
through
the very territories of the devil
who is called ¡§the prince of the power of
the air.
9. Will
at the last day
make the poor believer
who was once under
his power
and whom he many times harassed with his fiery darts
to judge and
condemn him. ¡§Know ye not that the saints shall judge angels?¡¨
10. Burns his galleries
where he has walked up and down. ¡§The earth .
. . shall be burned up.¡¨
IV. THE STATED TIME
OF VENGEANCE
here called a ¡§day.¡¨
1. There are some seasons of His taking vengeance upon him in his own
person.
2. When Christ is avenged upon this enemy in the redeemed.
V. WHY THIS DAY OF
VENGEANCE IS SAID TO BE IN THE REDEEMER¡¦S HEART.
1. He had firmly purposed it.
2. The thoughts of it were a delight to Him.
3. He had not forgotten the quarrel he had with Satan and his works.
4. The stated time of final vengeance lay as a secret in His own
breast.
V. APPLICATION. (E.
Erskine.)
The year of my redeemed is
come
The ¡§year¡¨ of redemption
A rendering preferred by many authorities is
¡§the year of My
redemption:¡¨ the plural being taken as expressing the abstract idea
in
accordance with a common Hebrew usage. The year of redemption
is the same as
the year of Jehovah¡¦s favour in Isaiah 61:2; it is the time of Israel¡¦s
victory and salvation
a year that has no end. (Prof. J. Skinner
D. D.)
The year of the redeemed
I. THE PERIOD
FORETOLD. The word ¡§year
¡¨ in such connections as this
is to be interpreted in
a general sense as applying to a lengthened period of time. ¡§The year of the
redeemed may not mean so much the year when Christ died
in order to redeem
them
as the period when He should begin to win the victories of His grace
among them; the period when He should be ¡§lifted up¡¨ by the preaching of the
Gospel
and ¡§draw all men unto Him;¡¨ the period when the sign of the Son of
Man
in the preaching of Christ and of Him crucified
should be visible in the
ecclesiastical world
represented in the everlasting prophecy as heaven
and
when by the preaching of a crucified Saviour
sinners
numerous as on the day
of Pentecost and in succeeding times
should be won from darkness to light
and
translated from the kingdom of Satan to the kingdom of God¡¦s dear Son.
II. THE CERTAINTY
OF ITS ARRIVAL. God has decreed it
and all its glories must be realized. It
may be said to be come in the distinct and positive revelations of prophecy. In
the prophecies of God
the decrees of God are unfolded. (W. H. Cooper.)
Verse 5
And I looked
and there was none to help
Man¡¦s extremity the Divine opportunity
The doctrine of the text is
that salvation
of every kind and
every degree
is from the Lord.
I. THIS POINTS OUT
TO US THAT ALL MEN ARE IN A MISERABLE CONDITION. Why should man need salvation?
He is lost.
II. THE TEXT
IMPLIES THE INTERPOSITION OF GOD. The Speaker is the great Messiah
and He
speaks in righteousness. There are difficulties in the way of a sinner¡¦s
recovery which none can remove but God. ¡§The righteousness by faith¡¨ is
accompanied by the power of God
and this alone can save the soul.
1. This shows God¡¦s knowledge of the dreadful condition of the
sinner. He lays help on One mighty to save.
2. It bespeaks His forbearance (Romans 3:25-26).
3. It implies the impossibility of man¡¦s being saved but by a Divine
arm; and the all-sufficiency of God to save sinners
however deeply sunk in
sin
misery
¡¨ and guilt.¡¨
4. Here is the language of
triumph
as though God delighted in this
work of saving sinners: ¡§Mine own arm
etc. He had a sufficiency of wisdom to
devise the plan; a fulness of merit to justify
of the Spirit to sanctify
of
mercy to pity
and of grace that should abound
in the sinner¡¦s pardon
and in
the purity and peace of his conscience.
III. THE ADVANTAGES
OF THIS SALVATION.
1. The full character of God is displayed. Here I see God to be just
and wise in pardoning the sin He punishes
and showing His abhor fence of the
sin He forgives.
2. Salvation is secured to every believer.
3. This secures all the glory to God.
4. It is the most encouraging that could have been devised.
5. It binds the strongest obligation on us. If saved without any
power or merit of my own
what shall I render for such a salvation to such a
sinner (J. Cooke.)
Verse 7
I will mention the loving kindnesses of the Lord
God¡¦s redemptive triumph evoking thanksgiving
prayer and
confession
The dialogue ended
the prophet¡¦s tone changes.
In the assurance that the redemption
guaranteed by Jehovah¡¦s triumph
will be
wrought out
he supplies faithful Israel with a hymn of thanksgiving
supplication and confession
expressive of the frame of mind worthy to receive
it (Isaiah 63:7-19; Isaiah 64:1-12). In a stream of
surpassing pathos and beauty the prophet
as it were
¡§leads the devotions
(Cheyne) of his nation
and lends words by his eloquence to their repentance. (Prof.
S. R. Driver
D. D.)
A chastened piety
The passage (Isaiah 63:7-19; Isaiah 64:1-12) is one of themost
instructive of Old Testament prayers
and deserves careful study as an
expression of the chastened and tremulous type of piety begotten in the sorrows
of the Exile. So far as the ideas of the passage are concerned
it might have
been composed at any time from the Exile downwards. (Prof. J. Skinner
D. D.)
The tender mercies of God
To discover the heights or to fathom the depths of this grace
exceeds the power of men or angels; yet the view perhaps may be enlightened by
some of the following reflections.
1. In purposing and planning the grit work of redemption
the Eternal
Mind was self-moved
uncounselled
unsolicited.
2. This love was wholly disinterested
having no-reward in view but
the pleasure of doing good.
3. This love is still more sublimely considered as acting towards
inferiors.
4. Redeeming love is still more wonderful as exercised towards
enemies.
5. This love appears altogether astonishing when we consider the
greatness of the sacrifice it made.
6. The extent of redeeming love further appears in the magnitude of
the blessings which it intended for a ruined race.
7. This mercy is heightened by the fact that the Saviour is so
necessary
reasonable and all-sufficient.
8. This mercy is still further heightened by the patience and
condescending tenderness which He exercises towards His people. He calls them
His friends
His brethren
His children
His spouse
the members of His body
the apple of His eye.
9. This wondrous mercy is further expressed in the gift of Sabbaths
and sacraments
and especially the written Word.
10. Fresh evidence of this love springs up at every review of God¡¦s
past providence towards the Church.
11. All these are the more affecting as being marks of distinguishing
love.
12. The grace of God appears still greater as being abundant. (E.
Griffin.)
A song concerning loving kindnesses
I. THE MERCIES TO
BE MENTIONED. A complete summary we cannot give
for who can count the sands of
the sea or the stars of the sky?
1. The list commences with special electing love. In the Hebrew the
eighth verse runs
¡§For He said
they only are My people.¡¨
2. Pass on to the next sweet token of Divine lovingkindness which is
found in the Fatherly confidence which the Lord has manifested towards His
people. ¡§Children that will not lie. ¡¥
3. His great sympathy with us. ¡§In all their affliction He was
affected (Isaiah 63:9).
4. His intimate intercourse with us. ¡§The Angel of His presence saved
them.¡¨
5. The gracious interpositions of God on behalf of His people. ¡§In
His love and in His pity He redeemed them.¡¨
6. God provided for
led
protected and upheld His people by a
wondrous special providence while they were in the wilderness. ¡§He bare them
¡¨
etc. (Isaiah 63:9).
7. The prophet further goes on to mention the Lord¡¦s chastening. It
is to be sorrowed over that we need chastening
but God is to be praised that
He does not withhold it from us (Isaiah 63:10).
8. The next thing the prophet sings about is God¡¦s faithfulness
for
though He did smite His people
yet in a very short time we find that ¡§He
remembered the days of old
¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 63:11-13). We will close this
catalogue with one more choice mercy
for the prophet tells us of God¡¦s giving
His people rest after all (Isaiah 63:14).
II. CERTAIN POINTS
WORTHY OF SPECIAL MENTION.
1. Whatever has been bestowed upon us by God reveals His lovingkindness.
2. The consequent praise which is due to God on account of this.
3. The uniform nature of all God¡¦s dealings with us. ¡§According to
all that the Lord hath bestowed on us.¡¨ Let us praise Him according to all that
the
Lord hath bestowed upon us
blessing Him for bitters and sweets
for blacks and whites
for storms and calms.
4. The grandeur of the goodness which is shown in every mercy. ¡§The
great goodness toward the house of Israel.¡¨ Ingratitude makes little of much
but gratitude sees much in little.
5. We ought to take peculiar note in our song of the condescending
tenderness and pity of God
for such is the force of the next expression
¡§which He hath bestowed on them according to His mercies
¡¨--a clearer rendering
would be
¡§according to His compassion.¡¨
6. One other special note demands to be heard
and that is the
multitudinous displays of His love. ¡§According to the multitude of His
lovingkindnesses
¡¨ of all shapes
and at all times
and in all ways
and from
all points of the compass.
III. PRACTICAL
REASONS WHY WE SHOULD THUS MENTION THE LOVINGKINDNESSES OF THE LORD.
1. That we may have pleas in prayer. This is the best way of praying:
¡§Lord
Thou hast done this for Thy servant
Thou hast done that for Thy
servant
therefore I beseech Thee do more. This is not after the manner of men
for when we once relieve a man¡¦s necessities we say to him
¡§Do not come
again;¡¨ but every gift which God gives is an invitation to come again
and the
best way in which we can show our gratitude is to seek for further gifts.
2. These memories will act as stays to your faith.
3. They will minister to your present comfort.
4. The thought of all this would make us love God more
and obey Him
better.
5. To mention the Lord¡¦s goodness enables us to cheer others
for we
do not know who may be standing by.
6. It will glorify Him
and this should always be your master motive.
(C. H.Spurgeon.)
A rinsed mouth
The Lord rinse your mouths out if you have a bitter way of talking
about other people
or about His providence
and lead you henceforth to glory
in His holy name.(C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verses 7-19
Verse 8
Children that will not lie
Sincerity toward God
The Christian exemplifying the power of truth in his renewed
nature
and in all the engagements and relations of life
is a phenomenon--a
miracle of grace.
A Christian Church
consisting of believers adorning
in all things
the
doctrine of God our Saviour
are men ¡§wondered at. Yet
peculiar or eccentric
as the course of such men may be deemed in the world
it is evident
from
Scripture
that the people of God are expected to render practical homage to
the truth no less habitual and profound.
I. THEIR REGARD
FOR TRUTH. ¡§Children that will not lie.
1. They estimate truth at its proper value. Buy the truth
but sell
it not. Divine truth--the truth as it is in Jesus--is the greatest treasure our
world contains. The full possession of this treasure cannot be secured with
diligence and care. ¡§Search the Scriptures.¡¨ ¡§Prove all things.¡¨ ¡§So that thou
incline thine ear unto wisdom
and apply thine heart to understanding. Yea
if
thou criest after knowledge
and liftest up thy voice for understanding; if
thou seekest her as silver
and searchest for her as for hid treasures
then
shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord
and find the knowledge of God.¡¨ Yet
no man ever reached a full and abiding conviction of Divine truth by a mere
process of investigation. No one will ever come to the light until he feels
that he is walking in darkness. No one will ever find the truth until he feels
that he has everything to learn in order to life and salvation
and that Christ
alone can teach him. ¡§All Thy children shall be taught of the Lord.¡¨
2. When truth is sought from this Divine source it will be cordially
welcomed.
3. They are concerned for the preservation of the truth in
themselves. Not in the letter only
but in its spirit and power. The truth may
be held in unrighteousness. The Gospel itself may become the savour of death
unto death. What solemn words are ¡§those of Christ
¡§If
therefore
the light
that is in thee be darkness
how great is that darkness!¡¨
4. They bear a distinct and consistent testimony for the truth. What
we feel deeply we shall speak freely. We believe
said the apostle
and
therefore speak.
5. If the truth be so valued
received
obeyed
and testified
it
will exert a practical influence in all the relative duties and circumstances
of life.
II. HOW FAR IS THIS
THOROUGH TRUTHFULNESS DISTINCTIVE OF THE PEOPLE OF GOD?
1. Sincerity toward God--faith unfeigned--brings with it the
conviction that the subjects of it are His people. They have the witness within
themselves. They are the children of light. They that have known the truth in
its power can say
¡§The truth dwelleth in us
and shall be in us for ever.¡¨
2. Their relation to God is made manifest to others.
3. Such sincere and faithful men have the strength of the people of
God. If you would find the strongest men in the world¡¦s history you must not
look for them in camps
in senates
or in palaces
but in dungeons
in exile
or at the stake. It was not Caesar
Alexander
Napoleon
or Wellington that
affected the greatest changes in the world
but men who were made witnesses for
the truth. ¡§Ye are strong
for the Word of God abideth in you; and ye have
overcome the wicked one.¡¨ The spirit of faith alone is invincible.
4. Those who are faithful to the truth have the freedom of God¡¦s
people. ¡§I will walk at liberty
for I seek Thy precepts.¡¨
5. They have the peace of the people of God and the honour sure to
arise from fidelity. (J. Waddington
D. D.)
Fidelity between God and His people
God deals fairly and faithfully with them
and therefore expects
they should deal so with Him. (M. Henry.)
¡§Children that will not lie¡¨
God¡¦s people are children that will not lie
for those that will
are not His children
but the devil s. (M. Henry.)
Verse 9
In all their affliction He was afflicted
God not impassive
Just as a man may feel pain
whilst in his own person he is raised
above it
so God feels pain without His blessedness suffering hurt; and so He
felt His people¡¦s suffering; it did not remain unreflected in His own life; it
moved Him inwardly.
(F. Delitzsch
D. D.)
¡§The Angel of His presence¡¨
1. The ¡§Presence¡¨ (lit. ¡§Face¡¨) of Jehovah is used elsewhere of His
self-manifestation. The fundamental passage is Exodus 33:14-15. But compare also Deuteronomy 4:37; Lamentations 4:16.
2. An ¡§angel of the Presence
¡¨ on the other hand
is a figure
elsewhere unknown to the Old Testament: the phrase would seem to be ¡§a
confusion of two forms of expression
incident to a midway stage of revelation¡¨
(Cheyne).
3. The ¡§Face¡¨ of Jehovah
however
is not (as the LXX inferred) just
the same as Jehovah Himself in person. It is rather a name for His highest
sensible manifestation
and hardly differs from what is in other places called
the Mal¡¦ak Yahveh (Angel of Jehovah). This is shown by the comparison Exodus 33:14 f with Exodus 23:20-23. The verse
therefore
means that it was no ordinary angelic messenger
but the supreme embodiment of
Jehovah¡¦s presence that accompanied Israel in the early days. (Prof. J.
Skinner
D. D.)
The Angel in whom Jehovah was seen; who was Jehovah Himself in
manifestation. (A. B. Davidson
D. D.)
Not some one of the ¡§ministering spirits
¡¨ nor some one of the
angel-princes standing in God¡¦s immediate presence (archangels)
but the one
whom God makes the medium of His presence in the world for affecting the
revelation of Himself in sacred history. (F. Delitzsch
D. D.)
The Angel of His presence
The great majority of men dread affliction more than they dread
sin. And yet the two things are related--sometimes as cause and effect and
sometimes by more distant connections.
I. AFFLICTIONS MAY
BE DIVIDED INTO THREE CLASSES--the physical
the mental
and the emotional. Not
that we can ever totally separate these three
but for purposes of
consideration it may be practicable to do so.
1. It is very hard to resist a plea from physical disability. It is
well that it should be so
for callous indifference to the causes of sorrow and
pain found in the lives of others is surely a most unpromising state. Anything
which will draw us out of ourselves
and keep us from being self-contained
must surely be
in some sort
a servant of God. Our Lord recognized the
physical afflictions of men and entered sympathetically into them.
2. But physical afflictions
though more impressive
are oftentimes
more endurable than mental afflictions. Indeed
when we come to the last
analysis of the case
we find that the mental region is the region where pain
reports itself. If we could totally separate the physical and mental
and keep
the mind clear and calm while the body suffered its pains and penalties
affliction would be a very different matter from what it now is. Only that then
physical affliction would lose its meaning and purpose
for everything physical
is for the sake of the mental. But there are mental sufferings which do not
report themselves in physical manifestations. The mind is often so tried with
doubt and debate--so cast down by its own inability and decrepitude--that it is
in a constant state of unrest
and no report thereof is made in the physical
frame--no report anyway of such a nature that all can read it.
3. But back of the intellectual department of the mind is that other
profounder realm covered by the word ¡§emotional.¡¨ This emotional region is the
strangest and strongest of all. It is the realm of love
of joy
of peace--or
of hatred
joylessness
discord. Without our emotions we should be not men and
women
but stones
or at best animals. Our emotions gather around persons
places
objects
and these become to us of such transcendent worth that all the
world seems poor in comparison with them.
II. When we think
of these things
HOW WONDROUS
HOW TERRIBLE DOES THIS NATURE OF OURS SEEM! We
become afraid of ourselves. To be owners of ourselves seems too great a
responsibility. Does it not seem to us that the Creator
in giving us this
nature
has taken upon Himself a responsibility so great and so fearful that
none but Himself could bear it? We ask ourselves
in amazement
what must His
own nature be?
III. Is not this the
revelation made by the prophet
that WE ARE NOT ALONE IN OUR AFFLICTIONS.
IV.
As it was with the
Israelites
so is it with all the Spiritual Israel; for they and we are not
unlike.
¡§In all their affliction
He was afflicted.
¡¨ He! Who? The Deliverer.
The One who identified
Himself with them.
And His nature has not
changed.
We assume that Deity
cannot suffer
but we do not know it.
We suppose that Deity
means perfection--impassive perfection. But is impassivity perfection? May
there not be suffering which has in it more of perfection than
imperfection
suffering which does not arise from sin
or from weakness
or
from anything outside perfection
V. Anyway
Jesus
Christ has come between us and naked
unknowable Deity; He has united in some
way the human and the Divine. And He is
in some mysterious manner
identified
with us; and in all our afflictions He is afflicted
and inside all the
affliction is ¡§the Angel of His presence¡¨ to save us. I can¡¦t tell you what
this Angel of the presence means. But cherish faith in these unseen forces and
powers--ay
in unseen personal ministries. (R. Thomas
D. D.)
The spheres of compassion
I. GOD¡¦S
COMPASSION IN THE SPHERE OF HUMAN SORROW. We must not make too much of human
sorrow. There is much else in the life of man. There is the joy of youth and
the sober delights of age. Does any man really think that God looks down on all
this welter and does not care--and
because He does not care
does not prevent
it? God would not prevent it if He could
and He could not if He would. A world
such as ours
and without suffering
is not possible to God. It is His
sovereign will which has made every law under which we suffer
and His holiness
which enforces every penalty. This compassion in the sphere of sorrow has been
from the ¡§days of old¡¨ long before men had eyes to see it. But it reaches its
highest manifestation in the life of Jesus our Lord. God¡¦s compassion is still
working in the sphere of human sorrow
in the heart of the ascended Christ.
Even now in all your affliction He is afflicted
and the angel of His presence
is saving you
not from suffering
but from fall and shame.
II. GOD¡¦S
COMPASSION IN THE SPHERE OF SIN. The compassion of God has a greater work to do
than to transform suffering
by grace
into nobility and strength. It has to go
down into the depths of sin. Though the sin of the world lies behind all our
suffering
there is much sorrow that is wholly pure. But when we come to sin
to the bondage of evil habit
the riot of wicked passion
to the indulgence of
sloth and vanity and pride
ending in defiance of the Almighty and rebellion
against His law
then compassion might well be exhausted. And then
indeed
holiness cannot but condemn
and sovereignty cannot but execute the decree; but
compassion finds a way even in the sphere of
sin
and so the prophet
continues
¡¨ ¡§m¡¨ His¡¨ love and in His pity He redeemed them. But the compassion
needs no words to make itself known. In the thorns on His brow
in the nails in
His hands
in the prayer for human forgiveness
compassion proclaims its
victory. This cross of Christ
just because it is so unlike man and is so like
God
is the greatest mystery in the world. Whatever be your sin
whatever be
your shame
whatever may have been your past lack of faith
come to-day again
to the Cross
to find that sovereignty
holiness
and compassion have redeemed
you.
III. GOD¡¦S
COMPASSION IN THE SPHERE OF HUMAN WEAKNESS. Our human needs are not all
supplied when our sufferings are borne with us
and our sins are pardoned.
Though we cross our Red Sea
we have still the years of pilgrimage: though we
lose our burdens at the Cross
we have still our cross to carry. Though we
surrender ourselves to Christ
we have our warfare to accomplish. And who is
there among us who knows the frailty of his past
the slips and falls of poor
human nature
who does not feel the inspiration of the Word when it completes
the revelation: ¡§He bare them and He carried them all the days of old.¡¨ There
is no one so helpless as a disciple of Christ. Before we came to Christ
we
could gird ourselves
and walk whither we would. Now we cannot take a step
alone. Only by continually casting ourselves upon Him in our prayers
being
led
guided
instructed
strengthened by HIS Spirit; only by clinging to Him in
faith does our safety lie. (W. M. Clow
B. D.)
Christ with His people in trouble
We remember an old tale of our boyhood
how poor Robinson Crusoe
wrecked on a foreign strand
rejoiced when he saw the print of a man¡¦s foot. So
is it with the Christian in his trouble; he shall not despair in a desolate
land
because there is the foot-print of Christ Jesus on all our temptations
and troubles. Go on rejoicing
Christian; thou art in an inhabited country; thy
Jesus is with thee in all thy afflictions and in all thy woes. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
In His love and in His
pity He redeemed them
Discipline by chastisement
¡§In His love and His pity He redeemed them
¡¨ says Isaiah. These
sharp and tragic punishments where with God visited His people were part of His
redemptive work. God punished in order to redeem. He used the sword in order to
deliver His people from the curse and doom of sin. It was ¡§love and pity¡¨ that
prompted even His terrible judgments. God still sometimes inflicts upon His
people great and sore troubles
so that we are tempted to think He has
forgotten to be gracious. But in reality it is love that sends the trouble; it
is pity that prompts the punishment. ¡§God¡¦s wrath
¡¨ somebody has said
¡§is but
His love on fire.¡¨ A God who never punished sin would not be a loving God. (J.
D. Jones
B. D.)
Divine discipline
There can be no government
there can be no Church
save there be
discipline. In the natural world we find this law. In the animal kingdom there
is ruling and serving. In the vegetable kingdom superior vitality makes the
weaker plants give room. Among men we witness this not alone where brute force
is displayed and secures mastery. We see it in the intellectual and moral
world. Each man has his sphere
his proper position. He must be held in that
position
else there is chaos and utter waste--worse than utter waste
of all
his power. The work of discipline is to restore and hold man to his proper
sphere. We now behold man as fallen. See him in his pristine glory. See him as
he falls. Even in his prostration he is not wholly without compensation
for he
has gained a knowledge of good and evil. But now the tendency in man
which
before was toward God
is downward. We see in fallen man attempts to recover
himself a recognition of the necessity of Divine help. In Scripture
more
especially
do we find it set forth that God is the Source of that help which
can restore man. Here is sovereignty manifested in mercy. Observe the
characteristics of this discipline.
I. IT IS JUST.
II. IT IS EQUITABLE
(Psalms 85:10).
III. IT IS
REMEDIAL--designed
like a righteous
law
for good
not for punishment. -It is
paternal
for it brings the wanderer home.
IV. IT IS SPECIAL.
It is adapted to each case.
V. IT IS
EXHAUSTIVE OF DIVINE HELP. You cannot think of any one thing which God has
neglected to do that man might be saved.
VI. IT EXHAUSTS THE
GREATEST EFFORTS OF THE HUMAN SOUL. Take away the beneficial effect of this
Divine discipline
and the human soul sinks in anarchy and woe for evermore.
Rightly improved
it lifts man to more than his pristine glory. (N. H.
Schenck
D. D.)
Verse 10
But they rebelled
and vexed His holy Spirit
The Holy Spirit in the Old Testament
Except here and in Isaiah 63:11 and Psalms 2:11 the predicate ¡§holy¡¨ is never
in the Old Testament used of the Spirit of Jehovah.
It is
perhaps
impossible to determine the exact connotation of the word in
this connection. It cannot be accidental that in all three cases the holy
Spirit is a principle of religious life; hence the phrase hardly signifies so
little as merely ¡§His Divine Spirit¡¦; as Jehovah¡¦s ¡§holy arm¡¦ may mean no more
than His Divine arm. Nor is it likely that it describes the Spirit as the
influence that imparts to Israel the quality of holiness
i.e separateness
from other nations
and consecration to Jehovah. The idea rather is that the
Spirit is holy in the same sense as Jehovah Himself is holy--a principle which
is both pure and inviolable
which resents and draws back from the contact of
human impurity and especially of wilful opposition. This Spirit is a national
endowment
residing in the community (verse 11); it is the Spirit of prophecy
resting on Moses
but manifesting its presence also through other organs of
revelation Deuteronomy 34:9; Numbers 11:25 ft.). Hence it is said to
have led the people (verse 14)
and to ¡§vex¡¨ the Spirit is to resist His
guidance by disobeying the Divine word which He inspires. The use of this verb
marks the highest degree of personification of the Spirit attained in the Old
Testament
preparing the way for the New Testament doctrine concerning Him. (Prof.
J. Skinner
D. D.)
The Holy Spirit
The Spirit of [Jehovah¡¦s] holiness
as an existence capable of
feeling
and therefore not a mere force
is distinguished from Him. For as the
Angel
who is His countenance
i.e the representation of His nature
is
described as a person
both by His name and the mediatorial work of redemption
ascribed to Him
so the Spirit of Holiness
i.e holy in Himself and producing
holiness (Psalms 143:10) is similarly described by
the circumstance that He is grieved
and He can therefore feel grief Ephesians 4:30). Thus Jehovah and the
Angel of His countenance and the Spirit of His holiness are distinguished as
three existences
in such a way
indeed
that the latter two have their
existence from the first; who is the primal ground of the Godhead and of
everything Divine. (F. Delitzsch
D. D.)
Rebellion against God
The pronoun at the beginning is emphatic: they on their part
as
opposed to God¡¦s forbearance and long-suffering. (J. A. Alexander.)
The sin and consequence of vexing the Holy Spirit
I. INQUIRE
CONCERNING THE EVIL DONE.
1. The nature of it. We are not to understand it as if the blessed
Spirit of God was capable of real perturbation or passion. That
common reason
will tell us
the Divine nature is not capable of. But yet there is some great
thing lies under this expression
which we may conceive of in these two
particulars.
2. The cause of this vexation. We may well understand in the general
that sin does so; being in its own nature a direct contrariety to His good
and
holy
and acceptable will. But especially rebellion against the Spirit of God
is vexatious
which is a higher pitch of sin
and implies a continued course of
disobedience. We may understand what sin is more especially vexing to the
Spirit of God
if we allow ourselves to consider what the titles and attributes
of this Spirit in Scripture are.
(10) A Spirit of sincerity and uprightness; and wherever it obtains
it
makes men upright and sincere. Thus it is called the Spirit of a sound mind (2 Timothy 1:7). Hypocrisy
therefore
or a deceitful dealing with the blessed God in matters of religion
is a most vexatious thing to his Spirit.
(11) A Spirit of union
peace and meekness
among them that belong to
God. Animosities among the people of God are the most vexing things imaginable
to the Spirit of God
(12) A Spirit of sobriety and temperance
in opposition to grossly
sensual lusts. It is a very vexatious thing to the Spirit of God
when among a
people that profess His name
there is a general profusion
and running into
vile sensual lusts (Jude 1:19).
II. INQUIRE
CONCERNING THE EVIL SUFFERED HEREUPON. Namely
His turning against them so as
to become their enemy.
1. The nature of this evil. It is implied that He shall cease doing
for such a people as He hath done. Have we vexed[ the Spirit of God? then it is
natural to expect that the Spirit of God will retire. Then these words express
some positive evils against such persons.
2. Consider how justly this penal evil does ensue in this case.
Inferences:
1. Among a people professing the name of God
the Spirit of God is
wont to be at work; and where it is not doing any work
we cannot but suppose
it to be thus vexatiously resisted and contended against.
2. Consider whether this may not be much our case and the case of the
generality at this time
even thus like the Jews to have vexed the holy Spirit
of God
which hath been for a long season dealing with us.
3. Let us be persuaded to hasten the taking up this controversy by
humbling and abasing ourselves in the dust before the Lord; for ourselves on
our own account
and on the behalf of the generality of those among whom we
dwell.
4. Let us apply ourselves particularly and with great earnestness to
supplicate the continuance of the Spirit
where it remains breathing in us; and
the restoring it
where it had been in any measure restrained. (John Howe
M. A.)
Vexing the Holy Spirit
I. SOME OF THE
WAYS IN WHICH MEN MAY BE SAID TO VEX THE HOLY SPIRIT. This sin is committed--
1. When the all-important office executed by the Spirit in the
Church
as sent by Christ to quicken
convert and sanctify the soul
is not
duly recognized and honoured.
2. When the means and instruments by which He carries on His work are
despised or abused.
3. By the unwarrantable doubts and fears which sometimes depress the
minds of the people of God.
4. When any good motions or purposes which He excites in the heart
are suppressed
or not followed out.
5. When the grace and energy which He imparts are not actively and
faithfully exercised.
II. THE DANGEROUS
CONSEQUENCES OF VEXING THE HOLY SPIRIT.
1. One result of the Spirits ¡§turning against¡¨ any one would be His
withdrawing altogether the instruments and means and opportunities of grace
which men have despised or abused; and as they sought not to arrive at the
knowledge of the truth
leaving them to perish in the darkness which they have
loved.
2. Another thing obviously implied is
HIS ceasing to work and make
the means of grace effectual for conviction and conversion. (A. B.Davidson
D. D.)
Verses 11-14
Then he remembered the days of old
Israel rembering God¡¦s dealings with His people
It is possible that the words ¡§Moses¡¨ and ¡§His people¡¨ are
marginal explanations
the former to ¡§shepherd¡¨ and the latter to ¡§he¡¨: ¡§Then
he¡¨ (Israel) ¡§remembered the days of old
saying
Where is He¡¨ (God). . . ¡§with
the shepherd of flock¡¨ (Moses) . . . ¡§His holy Spirit within it!¡¨ (the flock).
(A. B. Davidson
D. D.)
Where is the Lord?
I. A SACRED
LOVING REMEMBRANCE. The people remembered what God did to them. What was it?
1. He gave them leaders. ¡§Where is He that brought them up out of the
sea?¡¨ etc. Moses and Aaron
and a band of godly men who were with them
were
the leaders of the people
through the sea and through the wilderness. We are
apt to think too little of our leaders. First of all we think too much of them.
We seem to swing like a pendulum between these two extremes. There have been
epochs in history that were prolific of great leaders of the Christian Church.
No sooner did Luther give his clarion call
than God seemed to have a bird in
every bush; and Calvin
and Farel
and Melancthon
and Zwingle
and many
besides joined him in his brave protest against the harlot-church of Rome. The
Church remembers those happy days
with earnest longing for their return.
2. God put His Spirit within these shepherds. They would have been
nothing without it. A man with God¡¦s Holy Spirit within him
can anybody
estimate his worth?
3. Then there was
as a happy memory for the Church
a great
manifestation of the Divine power. ¡§That let them by the right hand of Moses.¡¨
¡§The right hand of Moses
¡¨ by itself
was no more than your right hand or mine;
but when God¡¦s glorious arm worked by the right hand of Moses
the sea divided
and made a way for the hosts of Israel to pass over. What we want to-day is a
manifestation of Divine power.
4. Then there came to God¡¦s people a very marvellous deliverance:
¡§That led them
through the deep
as a horse in the wilderness
that they
should not stumble. Understand by the word ¡§wilderness here
an expansive
grassy plain; a place of wild grass and Kerbs
for so it means. And as a horse
is led where it is flat and level
and he does not stumble
so were the hosts
of Israel led through the Red Sea. God has done so with His Church in all time.
Her seas of difficulty have had no difficulty about them.
5. As a blessed ending to their trials
God brought them into a place
of rest: ¡§As a beast goeth down into the valley
the Spirit of the Lord causeth
him to rest: so didst Thou lead Thy people. In the desert they rested a good
deal; but in Canaan they rested altogether. As the cattle come down from the
mountains
where they have been picking up their food
when the plains are fat
with grass
and they feed to their full
and lie down and rest
so did God deal
with His people. I read it
first
literally as a sketch of Israel¡¦s history;
next
as a sketch of the Church a history. The same thing has happened to us as
individuals.
II. AN OBJECT
CLEARLY SHINING
like the morning star I see
through the text
God¡¦s great
motive in working these wonders for His people.
1. It was God who did it all. But then
why had God done all this?
Did He do it because of His peoples merits
or numbers
or capacities?
2. God works His great wonders of grace with the high motive of
making known to His creatures His own glory
manifesting what He is and who He
is
that they may worship Him.
III. AN ANXIOUS
INQUIRY
which I find twice over in my text. Believing in what God ¡§has done¡¨
and believing that His motive ¡§still¡¨ remains¡¨ the same
we begin to cry
Where
as He that brought them up out of the sea with the she herd of His flock?¡¨ etc.
1. This question suggests that there is some faith left. ¡§Where is
He?¡¨ He is somewhere
Then
He lives.
2. The question implies that some were beginning to seek Him. Where
is He?
3. It shows that she has begun to mourn over His absence. I like the
reduplicated word. ¡§Where is He? Where is He?¡¨ Not
¡§Where is Moses? Where are
the leaders? The fathers
where are they? But where is He that made the
fathers? Where is He that sent us Moses and Aaron? Where is He that divided the
waters
and led His people safely?¡¨ Oh
if He were here! One hour of His
glorious arm; just a day of His almighty working
and what should we not see?
4. Where is He
then? Well
He is hidden because of our sins.
5. For your comfort
the next verse (Isaiah 63:15) tells you where He is. He
is in heaven. They cannot expel Him from His throne.
6. ¡§Where is He?¡¨ Well
He is Himself making an inquiry; for
as some
read the whole passage
it is God Himself speaking. He remembered the days of
old
Moses and His people; and when He hid Himself
and would not work in
wrath
yet He said to Himself
¡§Where is He that brought them up out of the sea
with the shepherd of His flock?¡¨ When God Himself begins to ask where He is and
to regret those happier days
something will come of it. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Verse 12
That led them
God and His people
I.
GOD
LEADS HIS PEOPLE BY INSTRUMENTS WHICH HE CHOOSES AND QUALIFIES
II. HE DEFENDS THEM
WITH THE ARM OF HIS POWER.
III. HE REMOVES
EVERY DIFFICULTY THAT INTERCEPTS THEIR COURSE.
IV. HE GLORIFIES
HIS OWN NAME IN THEIR DELIVERANCE. (J. Lyth
D. D.)
To make Himself an
everlasting name
God¡¦s glorious and everlasting name
(with Isaiah 63:14 : ¡§to make Thyself a
glorious name ¡§):--Manschief end is to glorify and enjoy God. God¡¦s greatest
and highest object is to make to Himself a glorious and an everlasting name.
Since God is God it must be so: for He is full of love and kindness to His
creatures
and He cannot more fully bless His creatures than by making Himself
known to them. Everything that is good
true
holy
excellent
loving
is in
God. God may well desire to make to Himself a name--that is to say
to make
Himself known--because He is worthy to be known. This knowledge of God is the
heaven of the perfect. It is the help of the growing. Men can only get holier
and better as they know more of God. It is also the great hope of sinners. If
you knew Him better
you would fly to Him. If you understood how gracious He
is
you would seek Him. If you could have any idea of His holiness
you would
loathe your self-righteousness. If you knew anything of His power
you would
not venture to contend with Him. If you knew anything of His grace
you would
not hesitate to yield yourself to Him.
I. GOD¡¦S DESIGN
HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED. From everlasting He was God most glorious; He existed
but He had as yet no name. For a name is that by which any one is revealed
and
until His power called into being the hosts of heaven
God was God alone
and
there were none to whom He could be known. Then the angels lifted high His
praise in their songs
and bowed low before His throne. In creation His name
was manifested and magnified. But our subject is how God has made His name
glorious amongst men.
1. The text speaks of God as making to Himself a great and glorious
name
in redeeming Israel.
2. As God got to Himself a great name at the Red Sea
He has done
much more by the great work of salvation in the gift of Jesus.
3. HIS design has been accomplished in the saints in glory.
II. GOD¡¦S DESIGN IS
BEING ACCOMPLISHED. In many ways the grand work is still going forward. God is
carrying out His gracious plan. This purpose is being fulfilled--
1. In sparing the provoking.
2. In turning the rebellious to Himself.
3. In forgiving the guilty.
4. In purifying the unholy.
5. In preserving the tempted.
6. In using weak instruments.
7. In doing great things for His people by sending very wonderful
seasons of refreshing and reviving to His Church.
III. GOD¡¦S DESIGN IS
VERY DELIGHTFUL.
1. Because it hides pride from men.
2. Because it opens a great door for sinners.
3. Because it gives comfort to strugglers.
4. Because it sustains in trying times.
5. Because it answers our chiefest prayers. ¡§Hallowed be Thy name
etc. (C. H Spurgeon.)
Verse 15-16
Look down from heaven
An appeal to God
I.
GOD¡¦S
PEOPLE IN TROUBLE.
II. THEIR RESOURCE.
III. THEIR PLEA.
Past interpositions. Past mercies. (J. Lyth
D. D.)
I. OUR FATHER¡¦S
HOUSE.
Our Father--God
1. Heavenly.
2. Holy.
3. Glorious.
II. OUR FATHER¡¦S
CHARACTER. Strong; tender; compassionate.
III. OUR FATHER¡¦S
FAITHFULNESS. Survives our ingratitude; vicissitude; time.
IV. OUR FATHER¡¦S
NAME.
1. Father.
2. Redeemer.
3. From everlasting.
V. OUR FATHER¡¦S
CLAIMS. Honour; obedience; love. (J. Lyth
D. D.)
The habitation of Thy
holiness and of Thy glory
Whither did our Lord ascend?
(with Isaiah 6:3
¡§The whole earth is full of
His glory¡¨):--What was the new scene into which our Lord was introduced? He
went up into heaven.
1. What is heaven? The place where Almighty God is specially present John 14:2; John 16:28). But is not the Father
present everywhere? Psalms 139:7-12). What means the being
¡§specially present? Has it any meaning? In the case of men they are present to
us
or absent from us; but there is no medium between the two. Presence does
not seem to admit of more or less. Either we are here or elsewhere. There are
many doctrines of religion
and this is one of them
that can only be
apprehended by analogy
or
as the apostle says
¡§in a glass darkly.¡¨
The union of body and soul furnishes in this case a very just analogy. There is
no part of the human body in which the soul is not present. I mean by the soul
simply the animating principle and the principle of sensation. Every member of
the living body is endowed with feeling
or sensibility to pain. But that this sensibility
resides not in the mass of matter
but in the soul or life
is
of course
clear from the fact that when death separates body and soul
the body has no
longer any feeling. Yet
although the soul pervades the whole body
and resides
even in its remotest extremities
it has a special connection with what are
called the vital parts. A man may pluck out his right eye
and cut off his
right hand
or his right foot
without ceasing to live. Assault the heart
and
you assault the seat of life. Surely
then
there can be no objection to
affirming as
on the one hand
a general residence of the soul in every member
of the body
so
on the other
a special residence of the soul in the heart.
There is the figure of the truth of which we are in search. Now
let us elicit
the truth from it. No district of this fair
broad universe is without the
presence of Almighty God. In that Presence stands the being of everything that
is. Yet
although the presence of God in and under all things as their support
is unquestionable
arc we
for this reason
to deny His special connection with
a certain part of the universe above others? No? The earth is but the remote
extremity of creation--the universe has a heart
the special seat
the royal
residence of that God who quickens with His presence the entire framework of
the world. This place
wherever it is locally situated
is the source of all
movement in the world
just as the heart is the source of all movement in the
natural body. Heaven! The region in which the hand of God immediately operates
without any intervention of secondary causes
the region in which His fiat is
issued to the firmament
and the firmament pours forth its rain upon the earth
and the earth yields her fruit to the inhabitants
and the heart of those inhabitants
is filled with food and gladness; the region is called heaven. This is the
region to which our blessed Lord¡¦s body was carried up on the day of His
ascension; and into which
without seeing death
the patriarch Enoch and the
Prophet Elijah were translated.
2. In what sense Christ¡¦s people are now with Him in heaven. The
apostle intimates that Christians themselves
in their present state of
existence
have undergone a similar translation. ¡§God
¡¨ says he
¡§who is rich
in mercy
for His great love wherewith He loved us
even when we were dead in
sins
hath quickened us together with Christ (by grace we are saved)
and hath
raised us up together (mark
hath raised us up together)
and made us sit
together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.¡¨ How can language so strong be
substantiated? Just consider prayer--prayer offered in the faith of Christ. It
penetrates to these regions of which we have been speaking
and has its effect
and operation there. A sublime thought indeed
and one of which we may make
good use in stirring up ourselves to prayer I Prayer penetrates to a region
beyond the stars
and
in the holy audacity of its enterprise
lays hold of
that primary will of God from which proceed
through a long series of
intermediate causes
all the movements of the universe. And prayer
if genuine
is the voice of the Christian¡¦s affections
the outpouring of his heart. Hence
because his thoughts are in heaven
his hope in heaven
his affections in
heaven; the Saviour
around whom gather all his thoughts
and hopes
and
affections
in heaven; because his prayers move in that sphere and touch the
spring of God¡¦s will
he himself
according to the spiritual element of his
nature
is said to ¡§sit together in heavenly places in Christ.¡¨
3. Consider
that this region is ¡§the habitation of God¡¦s holiness
and of His glory.¡¨ And here remark a striking and most instructive contrast
between the two passages of which my text consists. It is said in the latter of
them that ¡§the whole earth is full of God¡¦s glory.¡¨ The seraphim say nothing
about holiness as witnessed upon the earth. Alas! what could they say? There is
no spot upon the earth where an intelligent and devout eye may not see and
adore the glory of the Divine Being. But when upon the stage of this earth we
look ¡§for judgement
behold oppression; for righteousness
behold a cry.¡¨
Holiness
like Noah¡¦s dove upon the water
can find no resting-place for the
sole of her foot upon this earth. But heaven is the habitation of God¡¦s
holiness
no less than of His glory. Every heart admitted within its precincts
is a mirror which gives back the holiness of the Most High
His hatred of sin
His stern and uncompromising righteousness
His exact justice
His fervent and
all-embracing love. There shall in no wise enter into the heavenly
¡§anything
that defileth
neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lie
but they
which are written in the Lamb¡¦s Book of Life.¡¨
4. Heaven cannot possibly be accessible to any man without a
congeniality of mind to its pursuits and employments. A tropical plant cannot
possibly thrive in the bleak and raw atmosphere of the North; vegetation
generally is blighted and killed by an atmosphere uncongenial to it. And he who
loves not praise and thanksgiving
who turns away from the thought of God¡¦s
presence as an intrusion on his peace
who regards sin with levity rather than
with fear
and freely cherishes any animosity
or worldly or carnal lusts--that
man¡¦s sentiments and character
quite irrespective of any Divine decree
must
exclude him from the habitation of holiness to which he hath no affinity.
5. Our blessed Lord¡¦s presence in heaven is that which lends to it
its great attraction in the eyes of the true Christian. (Dean Goulburn.)
Verse 16
Doubtless Thou art our Father
The Jewish Church a spiritual body
The true sense of the verse
as it appears to me
is that the
Church or chosen people
although once
for temporary reasons
co-extensive and
coincident with a single race
is not essentially a national organization
but
a spiritual body.
The father is not Abraham or Israel
but Jehovah
who is and always has been
its Redeemer
who has borne that name from everlasting. (J. A. Alexander.)
God¡¦s fatherly regard for His people
¡§For Thou art our Father; for Abraham is ignorant of us
and
Israel knows us not. Thou
Jehovah
art our Father; from of old our Redeemer is
Thy name.¡¨ Jehovah is Israel¡¦s Father Isaiah 64:7)
i.e begetter (Deuteronomy 32:6); His creative power and
loving
merciful purpose called it into existence. The second ¡§for¡¨ justifies
this confession
that Jehovah is Israel¡¦s Father
and that it can therefore
look for fatherly care and help from Him alone; even the dearest and most
honourable men
the nation¡¦s progenitors
cannot help it. Abraham and
Jacob--Israel--have been taken away from this world
and are unable of
themselves to intervene in the history of their people. (F. Delitzsch
D. D.)
The Jewish sense of orphanhood
These words came from the heart of the Jewish people when they
felt themselves ¡§aliens from the commonwealth of Israel
and strangers to the
covenants of promise.¡¨ They had wandered from the God of their fathers
and
they feel as if their fathers had east them off. If Abraham were to appear on
earth
he would not know them; if Jacob were to return
he would not
acknowledge them; and what then can they do? They cannot endure life
cannot
bear the burden of its sorrows and struggles without a father and a friend.
What can they do but pass up beyond men
and seek a father in God? Their heart
is an orphan everywhere
else
and is forced to this door of refuge; ¡§Doubtless
Thou--Thou art our Father. (J. Ker
D. D.)
The cry of the orphaned heart
It has never died out
and is present still in many a spirit.
I. THE WORDS
EXPRESS A DEEP LONGING OF THE HUMAN HEART. With all its folly and frivolity and
sin
the heart of man has been made to feel after these words: ¡§Our Father--our
Father which art in heaven.¡¨ The lower creatures have not this cry
because
they have not our wants
our aspirations
or the possibility of our hopes.
There are wonderful instincts among them--most wonderful often in the most
minute. But what curious microscope ever discovered among them a spire pointing
heavenward
or tokens of prayer and praise? The magnet which is passed over the
earth to draw things upward finds nothing in this world which trembles and
turns to it save the human heart. It is very true that many hearts make little
viable response
and seem to bear the want of a heavenly Father very lightly.
But even in them there may be discerned the heart-hunger that shows itself in
unnatural cravings which the lower creatures do not feel. The void may be
discovered in the restless attempts men make to fill it. When we look at the
length and breadth of man¡¦s history
it
tells us that this cry constantly returns
¡§O that I knew where I might find Him! There have been men in all ages to whom
the answer of this cry has been the one necessity of life
and if you could
convince them that is impossible to find a heavenly Father
they would smile no
more.
II. YET IT IS OFTEN
DIFFICULT TO SPEAK THESE WORDS WITH FULL ASSURANCE. The struggle to reach them
is evident in the men who use them here
and is felt in the very word
¡§doubtless
¡¨ with which they begin their claim.
1. There is one difficulty
which belongs specially to our time
in
the mind of man as it deals with the universe and its laws. There is a form of
science which says
¡§I have ranged the world
and there is nothing in it but
material law. There may be a heart in man
but there is no heart beyond to answer
it; or
if there be
the heart of man can never reach it.¡¨
2. Besides the mind
the heart finds difficulties in itself. There
are so many things in life which make it hard to believe in the love of God.
3. And still beyond the mind and heart there is the conscience. When
we think of a Father in heaven
we must think of a righteous Father
of One
¡§who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity.¡¨ The weak
indulgent fatherhood
which is passed so lightly from hand to hand
will not fit into the parts of the
world¡¦s history which show the terrible penalties of sin; it will not satisfy
the soul when it is brought face to face with the majesty of God¡¦s law and the
holiness of HIS character.
III. WITH ALL THESE
DIFFICULTIES
IT IS A FEELING WHICH CAN BE AND HAS BEEN REACHED. There have
been men who could look up and say
¡§Doubtless Thou art our Father.¡¨ They have
said it not only in sunshine
but in storm and in the shadow of death; have
given up their lives that they might testify to it clearly and fearlessly; and
have shut the door and said it to their Father who seeth in secret. But we are
to
think of One
the greatest of all. Even those who take the lowest view of
Jesus Christ will admit that He
beyond all others
taught men to think of God
as a Father
and gave the example of it in His own life and death. How strong
it made Him
and how patient
how active in doing good
how comforted in
solitude
that His Father had sent Him
and was present with Him
putting the
cup of suffering into His hand
and ready to receive Him when He said
Father
into Thy hands commend My spirit!¡¨ But His example
His influence
wonderful as
they are
would not enable us to follow Him to God as a Father
unless there
was something in His death which laid hold of us with stronger power. It is
this which enables us to go to God the Judge of all with confidence
because we
go through the blood of sprinkling. And when the conscience can say
My Father;
the heart beans to say it also. When the heart has found a Father in God
all
the world¡¦s laws cannot lay hand on it to imprison it; it moves ¡§through the
midst of them
and so passes by.¡¨
IV. THIS FULL SENSE
OF GOD¡¦S FATHERHOOD IS NOT GENERALLY GAINED AT ONCE. We do not say that the
position is not gained at once. As soon as any one comes to God through Christ
he is no more a stranger and an enemy
but a child
and all the
dealings of
God with him are paternal. But he may fail to recognize a Father¡¦s voice and
hand. Think of the ways by which it may be gained. Come
first of all
by a more
simple and loving faith to the death of Christ in the fulness of its meaning.
Then seek more fully to give Christ entrance into your heart and life. As
the-heart is purified we see God. To have God for our Father is not merely to
be forgiven
it is not even to be sanctified; it is to be one with Him in
thought and feeling
to listen to Him and speak with Him
as one speaks with a
friend. It is peculiarly the work of the Holy Spirit to lead us into this
inmost sanctuary of sonship. ¡§As many as are led by the Spirit of God
they are
the sons of God.¡¨ But to be led by Him
we must not grieve Him by sin or
neglect
but welcome His whispered admonitions; and then
as we listen and
obey
we shall reach the innermost room where ¡§the Spirit beareth witness with
our spirit
that we are the children of God.¡¨
V. TO USE THESE
WORDS TRULY IS A MATTER OF INFINITE MOMENT TO US ALL. Here is a Friend we need
in every stage of life
and in every event of it. (J. Ker
D. D.)
The assurance of God¡¦s Fatherhood
There are three chambers by which we advance to the assurance of
Fatherhood in God. The first is the upper chamber of Jerusalem
which comes to
us ever and again in the Lord¡¦s table
with its offer of pardon and peace. The
second is the chamber of the heart
to which we give Him admission in love and
obedience. And the third is the home
where the Holy Spirit teaches us to cry
¡§Abba
Father.¡¨ (J. Ker
D. D.)
The creed of the optimist
I. This noble
utterance represents THE CONSOLATION AND FINAL APPEAL OF TEE SPIRIT OF MAN
baffled and dissatisfied with what the poet calls ¡§the riddle of this painful
earth
¡¨ or despised and rejected by his fellow-men; and that appeal is to the
responsibility
omnipotence
unalterable love
and unerring justice of a Divine
Father.
II. The cry of
Isaiah is THE INSPIRED TEXT OF THE OPTIMIST
of the man who
in spite of the
riddles and difficulties and waste and failure in a world teeming with
injustice
persists in enthroning God alone behind all worlds
and saying to
Him
¡§Doubtless Thou art our Father
though scientific materialism be ignorant
of us
and the facts of experience seem to be against us.¡¨ (Basil
Wilberforce
D. D.)
Our Redeemer
--
God the Redeemer
¡§God¡¨ signifies both a redeemer and an avenger
but the latter
only as he is the former. Hence one reason for the close linking together of
the two books of Isaiah. In the first Jehovah is the Avenger of the nation
against the oppressor
of the poor against the godless rich
of the widow and
fatherless against the unjust
of the outraged Theocracy against the no-gods
which claim to be Jehovah¡¦s rivals and equals. In the second He is the
Redeemer
who ransoms and delivers through the Nan of His choice. It is used in
both senses throughout the Books of the Law
and in the Psalms. But in the
writings of the prophets it is nearly confined to Isaiah. (F. Sessions.)
Our Redeemer
The Lord is our Redeemer for the soul. It is a great comfort to
know that it is our heavenly Father who is our Redeemer. It is God in Christ.
1. Our Redeemer has suffered for us.
2. He is our Redeemer from the grave of sin.
3. He is our Redeemer
bringing us to God.
4. He is our Redeemer from our wicked self
and from the power of
sin. (W. Birch.)
The Redeemer of Israel
¡§Our Redeemer from everlasting is Thy name.¡¨ (A. B.Davidson
D.
D.)
Verse 17
O Lord
why hut Thou made us to err from Thy ways?
--
God¡¦s anger with His people
Very singular is the plea that the sinfulness of the people is due
to the excessive and protracted anger of Jehovah
who ¡§causes them to err from
His ways¡¨ (cf. Isaiah 64:5; Isaiah 64:7).This feeling appears to
proceed from two sources; on the one hand the ancient idea that national
calamity is the proof of Jehovah¡¦s anger
and on the other the lesson taught by
all the prophets
that the sole cause of Jehovah¡¦s anger is the people¡¦s sins.
The writer seems unable perfectly to harmonize these principles. He accepts the
verdict of Providence on the sins of the nation
but he feels also a
disproportion between the offence and the punishment
which neutralizes all
efforts after righteousness
unless Jehovah will relent from the fierceness of
His wrath. The higher truth
that the Divine chastisement aims at the
purification of the people
and is therefore a mark of love
is not yet
grasped
and for this reason the Old Testament believers fall short of the
liberty of the sons of God. Yet amid all these perplexities the faith of the
Church holds fast to the truth of the Fatherhood of God
and appeals to the
love which must be in His heart
although it be not manifest in His providential
dealings. (Prof. J. Skinner
D. D.)
God¡¦s withdrawing His presence
the correction of His Church
These are words that carry a great deal of dread in them:
tremendous words as any in the Book of God. It is the true Church of God that
speaks these words. They were ¡§all as an unclean thing
¡¨ and their ¡§holiness
all faded away as a leaf¡¨ (Isaiah 64:6). Yet faith maintains a sense
of a relation toGod; therefore they cry
¡§Doubtless thou art our Father
¡¨ etc.
(Isaiah 63:16). And if God would help us
to maintain
and not let go our interest in Him as our Father by faith
we
should have a bottom and foundation to stand upon. Observe
here
the condition
of the Church at that time.
1. It was a time of distress and oppression (Isaiah 63:18).
2. A time of deep conviction of sin (Isaiah 64:6-7). Well
then
suppose it be
a state of great oppression
and a state of great conviction of sin what is the
course that we should take? We may turn ourselves this way and that way;
but
the Church is come to this
to issue all in an inquiry after
and a sense of
God¡¦s displeasure
manifesting itself by spiritual judgments.
I. WHAT IS IT TO
ERR FROM THE WAYS OF GOD? The ways of God are either God¡¦s ways towards us
or
our ways towards Him
that are of His appointment. God¡¦s ways towards us are
the ways of His providence. Our ways towards God are the ways of obedience and
holiness. We may err in both. The ways that God hath appointed for us to walk
in towards Him are these here intended. Now we may err from thence--
1. In the inward principle.
2. In the outward order.
II. WHAT IS IT TO
HAVE OUR HEARTS HARDENED FROM THE FEAR OF GOD?
1. There is a total hardening.
2. A partial hardening.
III. HOW IS GOD SAID
TO CAUSE US TO ERR FROM HIS WAYS
AND TO HARDEN OUR HEARTS FROM HIS FEAR?
1. God is said to do that (and it is not an uncommon form of speech
in Scripture) whose contrary He doth not do
when it might be expected
as it
were
from Him. If there be a prophet that doth prophesy so and so
¡§I the Lord
have deceived that prophet¡¨ (Ezekiel 14:9)
that is
I have not kept
him from being deceived
but suffered him to follow the imaginations of his own
heart
whereby he should be deceived.¡¨ God may be said to cause us to err from
HIS ways
and to harden our hearts from His fear merely negatively
in that He
hath not kept us up to His ways
nor kept our hearts humble and soft in them.
2. God hardens men judicially
in a way of punish-meat. This is a
total hardening.
3. God may be said to cause men to err from His ways
and to harden
their hearts from His fear
by withholding
upon their provocation
some such
supply of His Spirit
and actings of His grace
as they have formerly enjoyed
to keep up their hearts to the ways and in the fear of God. That is the
hardening here intended.
IV. WHY DOTH THE
HOLY GOD DEAL THUS WITH A PROFESSING PEOPLE?
1. What provokes God to it.
(1) Unthankfulness for mercy received (verses 8-10).
2. What does God aim at in such a dispensation?
V. WHAT WAY SHALL
WE TAKE NOW FOR RETRIEVING OUR SOULS OUT OF THIS STATE AND CONDITION? One way
is prescribed here. It is by prayer: ¡§Return
O Lord.¡¨ The arguments here given
are peculiar to the case; and we may plead them.
1. Sovereign mercy and compassion (verse 15).
2. Faith fulness in covenant (verse 16). (John Owen
D. D.)
Verse 19
We are Thine
The intimate relation subsisting between God and His people
The intimate relation subsisting between God and His people
suggests strong encouragement in their supplications at the throne of grace.
The Lord God is more ready to give good things to them that ask Him than
earthly parents are go give to their children. They may be poor
niggardly
or
hard-hearted; whereas the treasures of our heavenly Father are inexhaustible
His liberality is unbounded
and His compassions never fail. (R. Macculloch.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n