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Lamentations
Chapter Three
Lamentations 3
Chapter Contents
The faithful lament their calamities
and hope in God's
mercies.
Commentary on Lamentations 3:1-20
(Read Lamentations 3:1-20)
The prophet relates the more gloomy and discouraging part
of his experience
and how he found support and relief. In the time of his
trial the Lord had become terrible to him. It was an affliction that was misery
itself; for sin makes the cup of affliction a bitter cup. The struggle between
unbelief and faith is often very severe. But the weakest believer is wrong
if
he thinks that his strength and hope are perished from the Lord.
Commentary on Lamentations 3:21-36
(Read Lamentations 3:21-36)
Having stated his distress and temptation
the prophet
shows how he was raised above it. Bad as things are
it is owing to the mercy
of God that they are not worse. We should observe what makes for us
as well as
what is against us. God's compassions fail not; of this we have fresh instances
every morning. Portions on earth are perishing things
but God is a portion for
ever. It is our duty
and will be our comfort and satisfaction
to hope and
quietly to wait for the salvation of the Lord. Afflictions do and will work
very much for good: many have found it good to bear this yoke in their youth;
it has made many humble and serious
and has weaned them from the world
who
otherwise would have been proud and unruly. If tribulation work patience
that
patience will work experience
and that experience a hope that makes not ashamed.
Due thoughts of the evil of sin
and of our own sinfulness
will convince us
that it is of the Lord's mercies we are not consumed. If we cannot say with
unwavering voice
The Lord is my portion; may we not say
I desire to have Him
for my portion and salvation
and in his word do I hope? Happy shall we be
if
we learn to receive affliction as laid upon us by the hand of God.
Commentary on Lamentations 3:37-41
(Read Lamentations 3:37-41)
While there is life there is hope; and instead of
complaining that things are bad
we should encourage ourselves with the hope
they will be better. We are sinful men
and what we complain of
is far less
than our sins deserve. We should complain to God
and not of him. We are apt
in times of calamity
to reflect on other people's ways
and blame them; but
our duty is to search and try our own ways
that we may turn from evil to God.
Our hearts must go with our prayers. If inward impressions do not answer to
outward expressions
we mock God
and deceive ourselves.
Commentary on Lamentations 3:42-54
(Read Lamentations 3:42-54)
The more the prophet looked on the desolations
the more
he was grieved. Here is one word of comfort. While they continued weeping
they
continued waiting; and neither did nor would expect relief and succour from any
but the Lord.
Commentary on Lamentations 3:55-66
(Read Lamentations 3:55-66)
Faith comes off conqueror
for in these verses the
prophet concludes with some comfort. Prayer is the breath of the new man
drawing in the air of mercy in petitions
and returning it in praises; it
proves and maintains the spiritual life. He silenced their fears
and quieted
their spirits. Thou saidst
Fear not. This was the language of God's grace
by
the witness of his Spirit with their spirits. And what are all our sorrows
compared
with those of the Redeemer? He will deliver his people from every trouble
and
revive his church from every persecution. He will save believers with
everlasting salvation
while his enemies perish with everlasting destruction.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Lamentations》
Lamentations 3
Verse 1
[1] I am the man that hath seen affliction by the rod of his
wrath.
I am the man — It seems
this is spoken in the
name of the people
who were before set out under the notion of a woman.
Verse 4
[4] My flesh and my skin hath he made old; he hath broken my
bones.
Made old — All my beauty is gone
and all my strength.
Verse 5
[5] He hath builded against me
and compassed me with gall
and travail.
Builded — He hath built forts and batteries against my walls and
houses.
Verse 9
[9] He hath inclosed my ways with hewn stone
he hath made
my paths crooked.
Enclosed — He has defeated all my methods and counsels for
security
by insuperable difficulties like walls of hewn stone.
Crooked — Nay
God not only defeated their counsels
but made
them fatal and pernicious to them.
Verse 15
[15] He hath filled me with bitterness
he hath made me
drunken with wormwood.
Wormwood — With severe and bitter dispensations.
Verse 16
[16] He hath also broken my teeth with gravel stones
he hath
covered me with ashes.
Ashes — Mourners were wont to throw ashes on their heads.
Verse 19
[19] Remembering mine affliction and my misery
the wormwood
and the gall.
Wormwood — Wormwood and gall
are often made use of to signify
great affliction.
Verse 21
[21] This I recall to my mind
therefore have I hope.
This — Which follows
concerning the nature of God
and his
good providences.
Verse 23
[23] They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.
Faithfulness — In fulfilling thy promises to thy
people.
Verse 27
[27] It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth.
Bear — Quietly and patiently to bear what afflictions God
will please to lay upon us. And if God tame us when young
by his word or by
his rod
it is an unspeakable advantage.
Verse 28
[28] He sitteth alone and keepeth silence
because he hath
borne it upon him.
Borne it — That he keep his soul in subjection to God
because
God hath humbled him by his rod.
Verse 29
[29] He putteth his mouth in the dust; if so be there may be
hope.
In the dust — Both this and the former verses
let us know the duty of persons under afflictions.
Verse 33
[33] For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the
children of men.
Willingly — Not from his own mere motion without
a cause given him from the persons afflicted. Hence judgment is called God's
strange work.
Verse 36
[36] To subvert a man in his cause
the Lord approveth not.
To subvert — Here are three things mentioned
which God approveth not.
Verse 37
[37] Who is he that saith
and it cometh to pass
when the
Lord commandeth it not?
Who — Nothing comes to pass in the world
but by the
disposal of divine providence. This seems to be spoken in the name of the
people of God
arguing themselves into a quiet submission
to their
afflictions
from the consideration of the hand of God in them.
Verse 38
[38] Out of the mouth of the most High proceedeth not evil
and good?
Evil — Doth not evil or trouble come out of God's mouth from
his direction
and providence
as well as good?
Verse 39
[39] Wherefore doth a living man complain
a man for the
punishment of his sins?
Wherefore — The Jews
check themselves in
their complaints from the consideration
that nothing had befallen them
but
what was the just reward of their sins.
Verse 42
[42] We have transgressed and have rebelled: thou hast not
pardoned.
Thou — Thou hast plagued us according to the just desert of
our sins.
Verse 49
[49] Mine eye trickleth down
and ceaseth not
without any
intermission
Mine eye — The prophet speaks this of himself.
Verse 53
[53] They have cut off my life in the dungeon
and cast a
stone upon me.
Dungeon — Dungeon seems here to be taken for the lowest
condition of misery.
Verse 54
[54] Waters flowed over mine head; then I said
I am cut off.
Cut off — I am undone
there is no hope for me.
Verse 56
[56] Thou hast heard my voice: hide not thine ear at my
breathing
at my cry.
Heard — In former afflictions.
Hide not — Shew me now the same favour.
Verse 58
[58] O Lord
thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul; thou
hast redeemed my life.
O Lord — Thou hast been wont to take my part against my
enemies.
Verse 60
[60] Thou hast seen all their vengeance and all their
imaginations against me.
Seen — Thou hast been a witness to all their fury.
Verse 63
[63] Behold their sitting down
and their rising up; I am
their musick.
I am — At feasts
and at their merry meetings
I am all the
subject of their discourse.
Verse 66
[66] Persecute and destroy them in anger from under the
heavens of the LORD.
Persecute — Many passages of this nature
which we meet with are prophecies
some of them may be both prophecies and
prayers.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Lamentations》
His Compassions Fail Not
(Lam. 3:22)
Jesus had compassion—and touched their eyes (Matt.
20:34)
Jesus
moved with compassion—touched the leper—and
he was cleansed (Mark 1:41~42)
Jesus said
I have compassion on the multitude
because they have nothing to eat (Matt. 15:32)
He was moved with compassion toward them
and He
healed their sick (Matt. 14:14)
When He came out He was moved with compassion
towards them
because they were as sheep having no shepherd (Mark 6:34)
He
being full of compassion
forgave their iniquity
(Ps. 78:38; Luke 23:24)
--E.A.H.
03 Chapter 3
The Man that hath seen affliction
Whether we
regard it from a literary
a speculative
or a religious point of view
the
third and central elegy cannot fall to strike us as by far the best of the
five. Like Tennyson
who is most poetic when he is most artistic
as in his
lyrics
and like all the great sonneteers
the author of this exquisite Hebrew
melody has not found his ideas to be cramped by the rigorous rules of
composition. Possibly the artistic refinement of form stimulates thought and
rouses the poet to exert his best powers; or perhaps — and this is more
probable he selects the richer robe for the purpose of clothing his choicer
conceptions. This elegy differs from its sister poems in another respect. It is
composed
for the most part
in the first person singular
the writer either
speaking of his own experience or dramatically personating another sufferer. Who
is this "Man that hath seen affliction"? There is just the
possibility that the poet is not describing himself at all; he may be
representing somebody well known to his contemporaries — perhaps even Jeremiah
or just a typical character
in the manner of Browning's Dramatis
Personae. While some mystery hangs over the personality of this man of
sorrows
the power and pathos of the poem are certainly heightened by the
concentration of our attention upon one individual. Few persons are moved by
general statements. The study of abstract reports is most important to these
who are already interested in the subjects of these dreary documents; but it is
useless as a means of exciting interest. Philanthropy must visit the office of
the statistician if it would act with enlightened judgment
and not permit
itself to become the victim of blind enthusiasm; but it was not born there
and
the sympathy which is its parent can only be found among individual instances
of distress. In the present case the speaker who recounts his own misfortunes
is more than a casual witness
more than a mere specimen picked out at random
from the heap of misery accumulated in this age of national ruin. He is not
simply a man who has seen affliction
one among many similar sufferers; he is the
man
the well-known victim
one preeminent in distress even in the midst of a
nation full of misery. Yet he is not isolated on a solitary peak of agony. As
the supreme sufferer
he is also the representative sufferer. He is not
selfishly absorbed in the morbid occupation of brooding over his private
grievances. He has gathered into himself the vast and terrible woes of his
people. Thus he foreshadows our Lord in His passion. The idea of representative
suffering which here emerges
and which becomes more definite in the picture of
the servant of Jehovah in Isaiah 53
only finds its full realisation and
perfection in Jesus Christ. It is repeated
however
with more or less
distinctness wherever the Christ Spirit is revealed. The portrait of himself
drawn by the author of this elegy is the more graphic by reason of the fact
that the present is linked to the past. The striking commencement
"I am
the man
" etc.
sets the speaker in imagination before our eyes. The
addition "who has seen" (or rather
experienced)
"affliction" connects him with his present sufferings. His own
personality has slowly acquired a depth
a fulness
a ripeness that remove him
far from the raw and superficial character he once was. We are silenced into
awe before Job
Jeremiah
and Dante
because these men grew great by suffering.
Is it not told even of our Lord Jesus Christ that He was made perfect by the
things that He suffered? It is to be observed that here in his self-portraiture
— just as elsewhere when describing the calamities that have befallen his
people — the elegist attributes the whole series of disastrous events to God.
So close is the thought of God to the mind of the writer
he does not even
think it necessary to mention the Divine name. Like Brother Lawrence
this man
has learnt to "practise the presence of God." In amplifying the
accounts of his sufferings
after giving a general description of himself as
the man who has experienced affliction
and adding a line in which this
experience is connected with its cause — the rod of the wrath of Him who is
unnamed
though ever in mind — the stricken patriot proceeds to illustrate and
enforce his appeal to sympathy by means of a series of vivid metaphors. Let us
first glance at the successive pictures in this rapidly moving panorama of
similes
and then at the general import and drift o! the whole. The afflicted
man was under the Divine guidance; he was not the victim of blind self-will; it
was not when straying from the path of right that he fell into this pit of
misery. The strange thing is that God led him straight into it — led him into
darkness
not into light
as might have been expected with such a Guide. The
first image
then
is that of a traveller misled. God
whom he has trusted
implicitly
whom he has followed in the simplicity of ignorance
God proves to
be his Opponent! He feels like one duped m the past
and at length undeceived
as he makes the amazing discovery that his trusted Guide has been turning His
hand against him repeatedly all the day of his woeful wanderings. For the
moment he drops his metaphors
and reflects on the dreadful consequences of
this fatal antagonism. His flesh and skin
his very body is wasted away; he is
so crushed and shattered
it is as though God had broken his bones. Then the
scene changes. The victim of Divine wrath is a captive languishing in a
dungeon
which is as dark as the abodes of the dead
as the dwellings of those
who have been long dead. The horror of this metaphor is intensified by the idea
of the antiquity of Hades. There the prisoner is bound by a heavy chain (ver.
7). He cries for help; but he is shut down so low that his prayer cannot reach
his captor (ver. 8). Again
we see him still hampered
though in altered
circumstances. He appears as a traveller whose way is blocked
and that not by
some accidental fall of rock
but of set purpose
for he finds the obstruction
to be of carefully prepared masonry
"hewn stones" (ver. 9).
Therefore he has to turn aside
so that his paths become crooked. Yet more
terrible does the Divine enmity grow. When the pilgrim is thus forced to leave
the highroad and make his way through the adjoining thickets
his Adversary
avails Himself of the cover to assume a new form
that of a lion or a bear
lying in ambush (ver. 10). The consequence is that the hapless man is torn as
by the claws and fangs of beasts of prey (ver. 11). But now these wild regions
in which the wretched traveller is wandering at the peril of his life
suggest
the idea of the chase. The image of the savage animals is defective in this
respect
that man is their superior in intelligence
though not in strength.
But in the present ease the victim is in every way inferior to his Pursuer. So
God appears as the Huntsman
and the unhappy sufferer as the poor hunted game.
The bow is bent
and the arrow directed straight for its mark (ver. 12). Nay
arrow after arrow has already been let fly
and the dreadful Huntsman
too
skilful ever to miss His mark
has been shooting "the sons of His
quiver" into the very vitals of the object of HIS pursuit (ver. 13). Here
the poet breaks away from his imagery for a second time
to tell us that he has
become an object of derision to all his people
and the theme of their mocking
songs. This is a striking statement. It shows that the afflicted man is not
simply one member of the smitten nation of Israel
sharing the common hardships
of the race whose "badge is servitude." Returning to imagery
the
poet pictures himself as a hardily used guest at a feast. He is fed
crammed
sated; but his food is bitterness
the cup has been forced to his lips
and he
has been made drunk — not with pleasant wine
however
but with wormwood (ver.
15). Gravel has been mixed with his bread
or perhaps the thought is that when
he has asked for bread stones have been given him. He has been compelled to
masticate this unnatural diet
so that his teeth have been broken by it. Even
that result he ascribes to God
saying
"He hath broken my teeth." It
is difficult to think of the interference with personal liberty being carried
farther than this. Here we reach the extremity of crushed misery. Reviewing the
whole course of his wretched sufferings from the climax of misery
the man who
has seen all this affliction declares that God has cast him off from peace
(ver. 17). This most precious gift of heaven to suffering souls is denied to
the man who here bewails his dismal fate. So
too
it was denied to Jesus in
the garden
and again on the Cross. It is possible that the dark day will come
when it will be denied to one or another of His people. In the elegy we are now
studying
a burst of praise and glad confidence breaks out almost immediately
after the lowest depths of misery have been sounded
showing that
as Keats
declares in an exquisite line —There is a budding morrow in midnight.When we
come to look at the series of pictures or affliction as a whole
we shall
notice that one general idea runs through them. This is that the victim is
hindered
hampered
restrained. He is led into darkness
besieged
imprisoned
chained
driven out of his way
seized in ambuscade
hunted
even forced to eat
unwelcome food. This must all point to a specific character of personal
experience. The troubles of the sufferer have mainly assumed the form of a
thwarting of his efforts. If the opposition comes from God
may it not be that
the severity of the trouble is just caused by the obstinacy of self-will?
Certainly it does not appear to be so here; but then we must remember the
writer is stating his own case. Two other characteristics of the whole passage
may be mentioned. One is the persistence of the Divine antagonism. This is what
makes the case look so hard. The pursuer seems to be ruthless; He will not let
his victim alone for a moment. One device follows sharply on another. There is
no escape. The second of these characteristics of the passage is a gradual
aggravation in the severity of the trials. At first God is only represented as
a guide who misleads then He appears as a besieging enemy; later like a
destroyer. And correspondingly the troubles of the sufferer grow in severity
till at last he is flung into the ashes
crushed and helpless. All this is
peculiarly painful reading to us with our Christian thoughts of God. It seems
so utterly contrary to the character of our Father revealed in Jesus Christ.
But then it was not a part of the Christian revelation
nor was it uttered by a
man who had received the benefits of that highest teaching. That
however
is
not a complete explanation. The narrator may be perfectly honest and truthful
but it is not in human nature to be impartial under such circumstances. Even
when
as in the present instance
we have reason to believe that the speaker is
under the influence of a Divine inspiration
we have no right to conclude that
this gift would enable him to take an all-round vision of truth. Finally
it
would be quite unfair to the elegist
and it would give us a totally false
impression of his ideas
if we were to go no further than this. To understand
him at all we must hear him out. The triplet of verses 19 to 21 serves as a
transition to the picture of the other side of the Divine action. It begins
with prayer. Thus a new note is struck. The sufferer knows that God is not at
heart his enemy. So he ventures to beseech the very Being concerning whose
treatment of him he has been complaining so bitterly
to remember his
affliction and the misery it has brought on him
the wormwood
the gall of his
hard lot. Hope now dawns on him out of his own recollections. God
too
has a
memory
and will remember His suffering servant.
(W. F. Adeney
M. A.)
! —
I. CONSIDER THE GENERALITY OF AFFLICTION IN THE NATURE THEREOF. We
met all generally in the first treason against ourselves in Adam's rebellion;
and we met all
too
in the second treason — the treason against Jesus Christ.
All our sins were upon His shoulders. All the evils and mischiefs of life come
for the most part from this — that we think to enjoy those things which God has
given us only to use.
II. CONSIDER AFFLICTION AS BEARING ON MAN. "I am the man that
hath seen affliction." Man carries the spawn and seed and eggs of
affliction in his own flesh
and his own thoughts make haste to hatch them and
bring them up. We make all our worms snakes
all our snakes vipers
all our
vipers dragons
by our murmuring.
III. CONSIDER AFFLICTION IN ITS SPECIAL APPLICATION TO ONLY MAN. That
man the prophet Jeremiah
one of the best of men. As he was submitted to these
extraordinary afflictions
we see that no man is so necessary to God as that
God cannot come to His ends without that man. God can lack and leave out any
man in His service. The best of our wages is adversity
because that gives us a
true fast
and a right value of our prosperity.
IV. CONSIDER THIS WEIGHT AND VEHEMENCE OF AFFLICTIONS.
1. They are aggravated in that they are the Lord's. They are
inevitable; they cannot be avoided; they are just
and cannot be pleaded
against; nor can we ease ourselves with any imagination of our innocency
as
though they were undeserved.
2. They are in HIS rod. Our murmuring makes a rod a staff
and a
staff a sword
and that which God presented for physic
poison.
3. They are inflicted by the rod of His wrath. It is the highest
extent of affliction that we take God to be angrier than He is.
V. CONSIDER THE COMFORTS WE HAVE IN AFFLICTIONS.
1. That we see our afflictions
we understand
consider them. We see
that affliction comes from God
and that it is sent that we may see and taste
the goodness of God.
2. That
though afflicted
we still retain our manhood. God may mend
thee in marring thee; He may build thee up in dejecting thee; He may infuse
another manhood into thee
so that thou canst say
"I am that Christian
man; I am the man that cannot despair since Christ is the remedy."
3. That the rod of God's wrath is also the rod of His comfort and
strength (Micah
7:14; Psalm 45:6; Psalm 23:4).
(J. Donne
D. D.)
This chapter
would seem to be the property of all sorrowful men. Job's lamentation over the
day of his birth
and Jeremiah's lamentation over his personal sufferings
are
the heritage of sorrow throughout all time. We never know what sorrow is until
we feel its personality. Every man must have his own sorrow
must receive
sorrow into his nature
so that the whole plan of life may
so to say
be saturated
with tears
and be made to know how much weight God can lay upon human life
as
if He were heaping it up in cruelty. What would be sorrow to one man would be
no sorrow to another; hence the infinite variety of the Divine visitation of
our life. God knows where the stroke would hurt us most
and there He delivers
the blow
so that we may know ourselves to be but men. Every man having a
sorrow of his own is thereby tempted to make a species of idol of it. Are there
not persons.
who make a luxury of sorrow? Are they not pleased to be the
objects of social interest and sympathy
instead of being humbled by their
losses
and taught to seek the true riches which are in heaven? Silent sorrow
is the most poignant. If sorrow could sometimes shed tears
it would be
relieved of its keenest agony. In many cases it is impossible for the sufferer
to give expression to his distress
and therefore he is deprived of all the
compensation and holy excitement to be derived from earnest and intelligent
human sympathy. If a man has not seen affliction
what has he seen? The deepest
students of human life assure us that unless joy has in it somewhat of a tinge
of melancholy it is not pure gladness. We must look at both sides of the
picture; we must allow the light and the shadow to interplay
and judge not by
the one nor by the other
but by the result.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
My flesh and my
skin hath He made old
1. God's punishments for sin often appear even in the body of
man.(1) Because sin is committed in the body.(2) The body being the more
sensitive part
it may affect us the more when we feel God's punishments in
it.(3) That others may have the more clear example in beholding our bodies
punished.
2. The wasting and withering of the body is to he acknowledged a
punishment from God; and the flourishing of the same to be a special blessing.
3. There is no torment so grievous but the godly feel it when God's
hand is upon them for their sins.
(1)His
anger is most grievous and intolerable.
(2)He
would have us thoroughly affected and humbled.
(J. Udall.)
He hath hedged
me about that I cannot get out
Homilist.
I. The "hedge" of MORAL SENSE. Conscience shuts the sinner
in and prevents him from a full development of all the wicked passions and
impulses of his nature.
II. The "hedge" OF SOCIAL LIFE.
1. Social relationship. How many sinners are held in by the
influence of father
mother
brother
sister!
2. Social sentiment. In a morally enlightened age like ours
public
sentiment is strong against wrong
and most men stand in awe of public
sympathy.
III. The hedge of PERSONAL INCAPACITY.
1. The want of physical health. Many men would do far more mischief
were they not so physically frail.
2. The want of intellectual ability. Many men would swindle on a
large scale
propagate infidelity by their writings and their oratory
had they
the ability.
3. The want of secular means. Were there not so much incapacity and
poverty
the world would abound with Alexanders
Caesars
and Napoleons. Thank
God for these hedges!
(Homilist.)
Also when I cry
and shout
He shutteth out my prayer.
I. Although our prayers were never
in a single instance
directly
answered in this world
YET IS PRAYER NOT IN VAIN
FOE TO PRAY IS A COMMANDED
DUTY; and to the dependent creature it can never be unprofitable to obey a
Divine command. Prayer
in its very nature
tends to mortify sin
to compose
our minds into a frame of devout dependence on Almighty power
and to maintain
in us sentiments of habitual trust
and rejoicing confidence in God.
II. Though prayer be not immediately answered
IT MAY NEVERTHELESS BE
ANSWERED AT SOME AFTER PERIOD
even in the present world. The glory of God
the
arrangements of Providence
and our own good
may render delay expedient; but
delay is not denial
III. The thing we ask MAY BE INCONSISTENT WITH THE RECTITUDE OF THE
DIVINE SOVEREIGNTY
and on that account must necessarily be denied.
IV. IT IS NOT ALWAYS IN WRATH
HOWEVER
THAT OUR PRAYERS FOR OTHERS
ARE NOT HEARD
BUT OFTEN IN MERCY TO THEM. In our fond attachment to children
or to friends
we would detain them from God and glory
to suffer amid the
evils of time. In our ignorance we ask things detrimental for ourselves as well
as for others. In labour
poverty
and trouble
we seek ease
and peace
and competency
and freedom from affliction; but it may enter into God's plan for preserving
and perfecting us
to withhold from us health and a prosperous state. And
besides
the thing we desired may be refused
in order to give us something
better than we sought. Oh
what need there is of the Spirit to help our
infirmities! for we know neither what we should pray for
nor as we ought.
V. When we pray to God
it becomes us to REMEMBER THE INFINITE
DISTANCE BETWIXT THE CREATURE AND THE GLORIOUS CREATOR; AND THOUGH EARNEST
LET
US BEWARE OF BEING WILFUL AND PEREMPTORY.
(J. Sievewright
M. A.)
God wants more
than prayer from His creatures
when that prayer is limited to mere asking
or
to the expression of a beggar's desires. Prayer may be but a religious form of
selfishness. Asking must
of course
enter into prayer: every day brings its
need; but what is prayer in its widest and most enduring acceptation? It is
communion with God. When we omit this element
we degrade ourselves and our
prayers to the level of selfishness
and when our prayer is so degraded it is
shut out from heaven. There is no mystery in this. Let us always understand
that we are accepted
not because of our formality
but because of our
sincerity and earnestness and importunity. Good men in all ages have had
experience of this exclusion of prayer from heaven
and sometimes they have
misjudged it (Job 30:20; Psalm 22:2).
It is well to have such experiences
terrible as they are at the moment of
their realisation; they chasten the spirit
they are full of theological
teaching
they drive us back to first principles
they constrain us to ask the
most serious and penetrating questions. God will not allow such experiences to
be unduly prolonged
for he knows that the extension of such trial would end in
despair or madness. The Lord can take us very near to the brink
but He will
not let us fall over.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
Prayer not immediately answered
1. Afflictions do make the dullest and most forward of God's
children cry for help (Leviticus 26:41; Psalm evil 6
19
28).
2. The heaviest plague that man can endure in this life is to have
God refuse to hear his prayer when he calleth upon Him in distress (Proverbs
1:28; Jeremiah 14:11
12).
3. God often deferreth to hear the prayer of His children
when He
yet purposeth in due time to grant their requests (Psalm 22:1;
Psalm
77:8).
(1)To
try their patience
and exercise their faith.
(2)To
move them to continue and to grow in fervency.
(J. Udall.)
Or shutteth His
ear to my prayer. This was very grievous to any good heart; more than it could
be to fully
a stranger to the true God
who yet bewaileth the matter to his
brother in these words: "I would pray to the gods for those things; but
that
alas! they have given over to hear my prayers."
(J. Trapp.)
I was a
derision to all my people.
1. The godly are usually more subject to reproaches than any other
people.
(1)Because
godliness seemeth mere foolishness to them that are naturally minded.
(2)They
show
as they think
their own wisdom in disdainfully contemning the godly.
2. Then are the godly most derided by the wicked
when the hand of
God is heaviest upon them to afflict them.
3. All sorts of people (though divers one from another) do deride
the godly in their adversity.
4. Those that are nearest unto the godly
and not fearing God
will
be crosses unto them in the time of trouble.
5. The wicked do greatly delight themselves in mocking the godly.
(1)Thereby
they think to suppress and disgrace the truth forever.
(2)They
think their own folly by that means will justify and advance.
6. The wicked are never satisfied
but still continue their hatred
against the godly.
(1)Because
they do greatly delight therein.
(2)They
are afraid that they have never done enough to defame them.
(J. Udall.)
He hath filled
me with bitterness.
1. This sorrow did arise especially from the derision they were in
by their adversaries
and yet it being ascribed unto the Lord
teaches us that
there is no outward trouble more grievous to the godly than to be reproached by
their adversaries in the time of their affliction.
2. There is no outward trouble more grievous to the godly than to be
reproached by their adversaries in the time of their affliction.(1) Because we
are much comforted in the hope that our sufferings shall advance the truth
which professed derision hindereth.(2) Such reproaches are accompanied with
much blasphemy and wickedness.(3) Such dealing carrieth many weak professors
from the affecting of our cause and sufferings.
3. The godly have often upon them all the greatest griefs that can
be desired.
4. It is the Lord above that frameth our hearts to be affected with
our afflictions
else they remain stony and astonished.
5. The godly may not be as Stoics
but must be most passionate in
their afflictions.(1) Because their sins procure them their troubles
which
ought to grieve them most of all
that God is offended with them.(2) God
afflicteth us that we should repent
which we cannot do without great remorse.
6. The godly are often so laden with miseries
that they are
exceedingly distracted therewith
both in body and mind.
(J. Udall.)
My strength and
my hope is perished from the Lord.
1. The godly are often brought to such extremity as they find no way
out of it.
2. According to our strength
generally of knowledge
and
particularly of feeling
so do we hope. Because hope is grounded upon faith
and faith upon knowledge (Hebrews 11:1).
3. The godly in their afflictions do recount what blessings they
have lost.(1) Because of the love and delight that they had therein
which is
most remembered when it is lost.(2) That their hearts may be made the more
affected with grief for the loss thereof
and with desire to be restored
thereunto again.
4. The godly do not always feel the comfort of God's favour in the
like measure.(1) Because God will make it the more delightful unto them by
intermission.(2) That they may see what they are
if God should leave them unto
themselves.(3) That they may be the more careful to use all good means to keep
it while they have it.
5. The godly are often so grievously afflicted that they grow to a
great measure of desperation.
(1)Because
of their great weakness when God
who is strong
trieth them.
(2)They
judge according to their present feeling.
(3)Because
of the consciousness of their deserts for sin.
(4)The
abundance of natural infidelity which
always being in us
doth then appear to
have the greatest power.
(J. Udall.)
Remembering
mine affliction and my misery
1. The deep weighing of God's punishments for sin felt in times past
doth often most effectually move the heart unto great lamentation.
2. Though grief and sorrow be naturally the effects of affliction
yet in the godly it must be
because of the sin committed
and not for the
penalty sustained.
3. In recounting any former thing
we must take only so much thereof
as may serve our turn.
(1)That
it may affect us the more.
(2)That
our minds be not employed about any other matter.
(J. Udall.)
My soul hath
them still in remembrance
1. There is no meditation that is available to further in godliness
but that which is earnest and effectual.
(1)Else
it moveth not the heart.
(2)Nothing
else prevaileth with the affections.
2. The heart must be thoroughly touched before we can profit by any
action of religion that we take in hand.
(1)Every
point of religion concerneth principally the heart.
(2)God
accepteth nothing but that which proceedeth from the heart.
3. When we are thoroughly affected with any part of God's Word
or
His works
then do we much consider of it
and cannot easily forget it.
(1)Because
it hath taken root in the heart
which is the fountain of all serious
meditations.
(2)It
setteth the affections on work
to digest it
unto the end whereunto the heart
desireth to bring it.
(J. Udall.)
This I recall
to my mind
therefore have I hope
1. It is a special stay to the troubled heart
to consider how it
hath striven to be at peace.
(1)It
calleth to mind the strife betwixt the flesh and the spirit
which argueth that
God hath a portion there.
(2)It
showeth our desire of well-doing which must needs be the work of grace.
(3)It
daunteth Satan our adversary
depriving him of hope to prevail.
(4)It
administereth us hope
that we shall stand even in the strongest temptations.
2. The right and thorough meditation of God's punishments upon us
for sin
and our striving to profit thereby
hath always hope of the issue.
(1)Because
it taketh away all those refuges which naturally we flee unto
as friends
wit
riches
strength
etc.
and forceth us to fly unto God.
(2)The
Lord respecteth
and is ready to help the broken and contrite hearted (Isaiah
66:2).
3. All our care in peace and in affliction must be how to gather to
ourselves a certain hope that God will be merciful unto us.
(1)Because
we have more need of it then of all things else.
(2)Satan
will labour more to deprive us of it than of anything else.
4. It is our duty to hope for God's favourable hand to rid us out of
any trouble that we are in
though it continue and increase upon us
and no
means of redress appear.
(1)Because
God afflicteth us not to east us off
but to amend us and try us.
(2)He
useth so to deliver His servants.
5. The consideration of God's heavy rod upon us in this life giveth
us hope to find favour for the life to come.
(1)God
chastiseth those whom He receiveth.
(2)It
is a token of bastardy to be without correction.
(3)The
whole life of the godly hath been continual affliction
(J. Udall.)
The prophet
begins to realise the results of discipline wisely and gratefully accepted. At
first probably
like all other men
he was obstinate
resentful
and wholly
indisposed to look for moral teaching in the midst of physical suffering.
Better thoughts came to his aid. After a while he began to survey the
situation
and
as he looked upon the plan of God
light came to him
and he
saw that God's meaning even in man's humiliation was the elevation and
perfecting of the man himself. Let us be rich in remembrance. Who cannot
recount the sorrows which have been turned to his advantage! There was a day
that was all cloud
a cloud that was all thunder
and we said we should die
when that cloud discharged its tempest upon us. The cloud broke
the thunder
rolled
and our life was refreshed by the very torrent that we looked forward
to with dread. Do not let us forget those days of rain and storm and high wind
but call them to remembrance
and count them as amongst our jewels
for we then
saw somewhat of the treasures of the Most High
and saw how even in what
appeared to be extremity God could provide a way of deliverance. The prophet
derives hope from a sanctified review of providence — "therefore have I
hope." The sorrow had not been in vain; it had become a sweet gospel to
the soul which it overshadowed
and this it will become to us if we remember
that the Lord reigneth
and that discipline as well as benediction is in the
hand of the living God.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
Memory -- the handmaid of hope
Memory is very
often the servant of despondency. Despairing minds call to remembrance every
dark foreboding in the pact
and every gloomy feature in the present. Memory
stands like a handmaiden
clothed in sackcloth
presenting to her master a cup
of mingled gall and wormwood. Like Mercury
she hastes
with winged heel
to
gather fresh thorns with which to fill the uneasy pillow
and to bind fresh
rods with which to scourge the already bleeding heart. There is
however
no
necessity for this. Wisdom will transform memory into an angel of comfort. That
same recollection which may in its left hand bring so many dark and gloomy
omens
may be trained to bear in its right hand a wealth of hopeful signs. She
need not wear a crown of iron
she may encircle her brow with a fillet of gold
all spangled with stars. When Christian
according to Bunyan
was locked up in Doubting
Castle
memory formed the crab tree cudgel with which the famous giant beat his
captives so terribly. They remembered how they had left the right road
how
they had been warned not to do so
and how in rebellion against their better
selves
they wandered into By-path Meadow. They remembered all their past
misdeeds
their sins
their evil thoughts and evil words
and all these were so
many knots in the cudgel
causing sad bruises and wounds in their poor
suffering persons. But one night
according to Bunyan
this same memory which
had scourged them
helped to set them free; for she whispered something in
Christian's ear
and he cried out as one half-amazed
"What a fool am I to
lie in a stinking dungeon
when I may as well walk at liberty! I have a key in
my bosom
called Promise; that will
I am persuaded
open any lock in Doubting
Castle." So he put his hand into his bosom
and with much joy he plucked
out the key
and thrust it into the lock; and though the lock of the great iron
gate
as Bunyan says
"went damnable hard
"
yet the key did open it
and all the others too; and so
by this blessed act of
memory
poor Christian and Hopeful were set free. We lay it down as a general
principle
that if we would exercise our memories a little more
we might
in
our deepest and darkest distress
strike a match which would instantaneously
kindle the lamp of comfort. There is no need for God to create a new thing
in
order to restore believers to joy; if they would prayerfully rake the ashes of
the past
they would find light for the present; and if they would turn to the
book of truth and the throne of grace
their candle would soon shine as
aforetime. I shall apply that general principle to the cases of three persons.
I. First of all
to THE BELIEVER WHO IS IN DEEP TROUBLE. If you turn
to the chapter which contains our text
you will observe a list of matters
which recollection brought before the mind of the prophet Jeremiah
and which
yielded him comfort.
1. First stands the fact that
however deep may be our present
affliction
it is of the Lord's mercy that we are not consumed. This is a low
beginning certainly. The comfort is not very great
but when a very weak man is
at the bottom of the pyramid
if he is over to climb it
you must not set him a
long step at first; give him but a small stone to step upon the first time
and
when he gets more strength then he will be able to take a greater stride. Now
consider
thou son of sorrow
where thou mightest have been. Have you seen
those foul dungeons of Venice
which are below the watermark of the canal
where
after winding through narrow
dark
stifling passages
you may creep
into little cells in which a man can scarcely stand upright
where no ray of
sunlight has ever entered since the foundations of the palace were laid — cold
foul
and black with damp and mildew
the fit nursery of fever
and abode of
death? And yet those places it were luxury to inhabit compared with the
everlasting burnings of hell. When you are kindling your household fire
before
which you hope to sit down with comfort
you do not first expect to kindle the
lumps of coal
but you set some lighter fuel in a blaze
and soon the more
solid material yields a genial glow; so this thought
which may seem so light
to you
may be as the kindling of a heavenly fire of comfort for you who now
are shivering in your grief.
2. Something better awaits us
for Jeremiah reminds us that there
are some mercies
at any rate
which are still continued. "His compassions
fail not
they are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness." Evil
your plight may be
but there are others in a still worse condition. You can
always
if you open your eyes and choose to do so
see at least this cause for
thankfulness that you are not yet plunged into the lowest depth of misery. This
again is not a very high step
but still it is a little in advance of the
other
and the weakest may readily reach it.
3. The chapter offers us a third source of consolation. "The
Lord is my portion
saith my soul; therefore will I hope in Him." You have
lost much
Christian
but you have not lost your portion. Your God is your.
all; therefore
if you have lost all but God
still you have your all left
since God is all.
4. The prophet then reminds us of another channel of comfort
namely
that God is evermore good to all who seek Him. "The Lord is good
unto them that wait for Him
to the soul that seeketh Him." Let Him smite
never so hard
yet if we can maintain the heavenly posture of prayer
we may
rest assured that He will turn from blows to kisses yet. Bunyan
tells us that when the City of Mansoul was besieged it was the depth of winter
and the roads were very bad
but even then prayer could travel them; and I will
venture to affirm that if all earthly roads were so bad that they could not be
travelled
and if Mansoul were so surrounded that there was not a gap left
through which we could break our way to get to the king
yet the road upwards
would always open. No enemy can barricade that; no blockading ships can sail
between our souls and the haven of the mercy seat.
5. We are getting into deeper water of joy
let us take another
step
and this time we shall win greater consolation still
from the fact that
it is good to be afflicted. "It is good that a man should hear the yoke in
his youth." Why should I dread to descend the shaft of affliction if it
leads me to the gold mine of spiritual experience? Why should I cry out if the
sun of my prosperity goes down
if in the darkness of my adversity I shall be
the better able to count the starry promises with which my faithful God has
been pleased to gem the sky?
6. One step more
and surely we shall then have good ground to
rejoice. The chapter reminds us that these troubles do not last forever. When
they have produced their proper result they will be removed
for "the Lord
will not cast off forever." Who told thee that the night would never end
in day? Who told thee that the sea would ebb out till there should be nothing
left but a vast track of mud and sand? Who told thee that the winter would
proceed from frost to frost
from snow
and ice
and hail
to deeper snow
and
yet more heavy tempest? Who told thee this
I say? Knowest thou not that day
follows night
that flood comes after ebb
that spring and summer succeed to
winter? hope thou then! Hope thou ever! for God fails thee not.
II. We will speak to the DOUBTING CHRISTIAN WHO HAS LOST HIS
EVIDENCES OF SALVATION.
1. Let me bid you call to remembrance in the first place matters of
the past. Do you remember the place
the spot of ground where Jesus first met
with you? Perhaps you do not. Well
do you remember happy seasons when He has
brought you to the banqueting house? Cannot you remember gracious deliverances?
2. Possibly
however
that may not be the means of comfort to some
of you. Recall
I pray you
the fact that others have found the Lord true to
them. They cried to God
and He delivered them.
3. Remember
again
and perhaps this may be consolatory to you
that
though you think you are not a child of God at all now
yet if you look within
you will see some faint traces of the Holy Spirit's hand. The complete picture
of Christ is not there
but cannot you see the crayon sketch — the outline —
the charcoal marks? "What
" say you
"do you mean?" Do not
you want to be a Christian? Have you not desires alter God? Well
now
where
God the Holy Ghost has done as much as that
he will do more.
4. But I would remind you that there is a promise in this Book that
exactly describes and suits your case. A young man had been left by his father
heir of all his property
but an adversary disputed his right. The case was to
come on in the court
and this young man
while he felt sure that he had a
legal right to the whole
could not prove it. His legal adviser told him that
there was more evidence wanted than he could bring. How to get this evidence he
did not know. He went to an old chest where his father had been wont to keep
his papers
turned all out
and as he turned the writings over
and over
and
over
mere was an old parchment. He undid the red tape with great anxiety
and
there it was — the very thing he wanted — his father's will — in which the
estate was spoken of as being left entirely to himself. He went into court
boldly enough with that. Now
when we get into doubts
it is a good thing to
turn to this old Book
and read until at last we can say
"That is it —
that promise was made for me."
5. If these recollections should not suttee
I have one more. You
look at me
and you open your ears to find what new thing I am going to tell
you. No
I am going to tell you nothing new
but yet it is the best thing that
was ever said out of heaven
"Jesus Christ came into the world to save
sinners." You have heard that a thousand times — and it is the best music
you have ever heard. If I am not a saint
I am a sinner; and if I may not go to
the throne of grace as a child
I will go as a sinner. In a lamentable accident
which occurred in the north
in one of the coal pits
when a considerable
number of the miners were down below
the top of the pit fell in
and the shaft
was completely blocked up. Those who were down below
sat together in the dark
and sang and prayed. They gathered to a spot where the last remains of air
below could be breathed. There they sat and sang after the lights had gone out
because the air would not support the flame. They were in total darkness
but
one of them said he had heard that there was a connection between that pit and
an old pit that had been worked years ago. He said it was a low passage
through which a man might get by crawling all the way
lying flat upon the
ground — he would go and see: the passage was very long
but they crept through
it
and at last they came out to light at the bottom of the other pit
and
their lives were saved. If my present way to Christ as a saint gets blocked up
if I cannot go straight up the shaft and see the Light of my Father up yonder
there is an old working
the old-fashioned way by which sinners go
by which
poor thieves go
by which harlots go — come
I will crawl along lowly and
humbly
flat upon the ground — I will crawl along till I see my Father
and
cry
"Father
I am not worthy to be called Thy son; make we as one of Thy
hired servants
so long as I may but dwell in Thy house."
III. A few words with SEEKERS.
1. Some of you are troubled about the doctrine of election. You have
got an idea that some persons will be sent to hell
merely and only because it
is the will of God that they should be sent there. Throw the idea overboard
because it is a very wicked one
and is not to be found in Scripture. Remember
again
that whatever the doctrine of election may be or may not be
there is a
free invitation in the Gospel given to needy sinners
"Whosoever will let
him take of the water of life freely." Now you may say
"I cannot reconcile
the two." There are a great many other things that you cannot do. Leave
your difficulties till you have trusted Christ
and then you will be in a
capacity to understand them better than you do now. Trust Christ even if thou
should perish
and thou shalt never perish if thou trustest in Him.
2. Well
if that difficulty were removed
I can suppose another
saying
"Ah! but mine's a case of great sin." Recall this to mind and
you will have hope
namely that "Jesus Christ came into the world to save
sinners
of whom
" Paul says
"I am the chief." The stupendous
bridge which Christ has flung across the wrath of God will bear the weight of
your sin
for it has borne ten thousand across before
and will bear millions
of sinners yet to the shore of their eternal rest. Call that to remembrance
and you may have hope.
3. "Yes
" says one
"but I believe I have committed
the unpardonable sin." My dear brother
I believe you have not
but I want
you to call one thing to remembrance
and that is that the unpardonable sin is
a sin which is unto death. Now a sin which is unto death means a sin which
brings death on the conscience. The man who commits it never has any conscience
afterwards; he is dead there. Now
you have some feeling; you have enough life
to wish to be saved from sin; you have enough life to long to be washed in the
precious blood of Jesus. You have not committed the unpardonable sin
therefore
have hope.
4. "Oh
but
" you say
"I have a general unfitness
and incapacity for being saved." Then call this to remembrance
that Jesus
Christ has a general fitness and a general capacity for saving sinners. I do
not know what you want
but I do know Christ has it.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
This
"therefore" ought to be to us like a great gate of entrance into a
king's house. If the logic fails here
it falls everywhere. We must keep our
eye upon the therefores of Divine and human reasoning and providence. We must
note the time of things; we must not set up the standard at the wrong place;
nor must we judge the evening by the morning nor the morning by the evening.
There is a manhood of infancy
and a manhood of youth
and a manhood of old
age: each period has its own manhood
its own Bible
its own vision
its own
song or groan. This third chapter of Lamentations opens well "I am the man
that hath seen affliction." That is the man we want to hear talk; we do
not want any foamy babble; we cannot now do with any piled or inflammatory
rhetoric. There comes a time in life when affliction must speak to us. "He
hath filled me with bitterness
He hath made me drunken with wormwood."
And yet I am told I should be cheerful
and pray
and look up
and be happy
and be expectant; how can I pray when the Lord hath broken my teeth with gravel
stones and covered me with ashes? Can the grave praise His majesty? And so long
has He removed my peace and my joy that I have forgotten prosperity
My soul
has been removed from peace; strength and hope I have none. But
remembering
mine affliction and my misery
the wormwood and the gall
my soul hath them
still in remembrance
and is humbled in me. This I recall to my mind
therefore
have I hope. It Is as if insanity suddenly emerged into sobriety
self-control
and a true spiritual realisation of the meaning and purpose of things. The very
memory of the gall and the wormwood makes me hope; I have had so much of them
that there cannot be any more to have; it has been so terrible that now surely
it is going to be summer time and joy. We need those great prophetic voices.
Sometimes we need the very biggest soul that ever lived
and we seem to need
him every whir — all his brains
all his heart
all his music. He is not too
much for us because our grief is so deep and so sensitive
and the whole
outlook is a horizon of blackness
and darkness has no history and no measuring
points. This is where the religious element enters into life with great copiousness
and where it should be received with unutterable welcomes. I wonder if there
are any analogies that may help us in the explanation of the meaning and the
application of the purpose of this mysterious "therefore." Seed
grows. If it does grow
what then! Everything. As what? As the resurrection;
that is answer enough to your mean inquiry. If a little seed can grow
why may
not the planted bulb of the body grow? Thou sowest not the body that shall be
and yet a body in some real
strong
clear
and satisfactory sense. But some
man will say
How? Oh
universe
halt! call thy suns and moons to stand still
to answer this fool's How? When we come to question asking
we had better fall
to praying. Do not mistake impertinence for inquiry; and do not suppose that
the whole universe
with all its constellations
will say to itself
Hush! here
is some poor dark stumbling soul that wants to understand how. There will be no
answer given to him until time
with all its evolution and declaration of
answers to enigmas and mysteries
shall work out its purpose
and the man shall
be answered by a great vision. "Therefore." I have never seen the
stars except in the darkness
therefore the night may have something to show me
as well as the day — the night of loneliness and desolation and bitter sorrow.
Intellect grows
therefore character may grow. The little may become great
the
weak may become strong
that which is far off may be brought nigh
and that
which is barren may be fruitful. We know that intellect grows; we have seen it
in the little child
we have almost seen the new idea enter the opening brain;
it is as if we saw a beautiful little bird fly into a bush in the summer time
and reappear
so to say
though not literally
not as a bird
but as a song.
Who can tell when the ideas came to fruition in the human brain? Who can fix
the date when the little boy became almost a philosopher? Who can say at what
hour the meaning of certain words was revealed to any one of us? If this
process of mental expansion can go forward with such happy results
so the
human soul
when it is known under the name of character
nobleness
self-control
love of God
may grow
and no man can say just when or just
where.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
It is of the
Lord's mercies that we are not consumed.
I. MAN'S WHOLE LIFE
BODILY
MENTAL
AND SPIRITUAL
IS SUSTAINED BY
THE MERCY OF THE LORD.
1. It is of the Lord's mercy that we are not consumed bodily.
Consider the waste constantly going on
etc. Set against this the powers of
digestion and assimilation
and the constant supply of food.
2. It is of the Lord's mercy that we are not consumed
intellectually. Consider the wear and tear of the brain
the continual
evolution of thought
the daily anxiety of mind; and against this set the
all-renewing energy of the Holy Ghost
who gives strength day by day
repairing
the waste of faculty and renewing the resources of power.
3. It is of the Lord's mercy that we are not consumed morally.
Consider our sins
our daily provocations
our constant obduracy of heart. Why
aces lie withhold the stroke of righteous vengeance? The answer is
in His
mercy! Very beautiful is the expression
"They are new every morning"
— new just as we want them — standing at the very threshold of the day to help
us through all work and trial
all darkness and light.
II. To know what the mercy is
consider WHAT IS MEANT BY CONSUMPTION.
Figure a tree that is diseased at the roots; a man who is daffy pining away; a
soul wasting! From such consumption there is no protection but in God's mercy.
Show the vanity of all human schemes. Call the attention of Christians to the
fact that every day is provided for; if the trial comes daily
so does the
mercy. Human preservation is not merely a question of science or prudence;
underlying all are the "compassions" which are "new every
morning."
(J. Parker
" D. D.)
I. The application of this to the case of the Jews is very obvious
considering their multiplied provocations
and God's multiplied mercies toward
them; but we may well consider it in its application to ourselves
for AS
SINNERS WE HAVE ALL DESERVED TO BE CONSUMED. "The wages of sin is
death." "Sin is the transgression of the law." Sin therefore is
man practically separating himself from God
refusing to love Him
to serve
Him
preferring to go with the great enemy of God and godliness
and to be led
by him according to his evil will
and to do the vile work which he commands.
Thus sin is no trifle. We have all sinned in our different ways. In how many
ways
how many times we have abused the faculties which God hath given us
whether of body
soul
or spirit! We have perverted the energies which should
have been employed in serving Him
into so many weapons of rebellion wherewith
we dared to fight against God. And what have we deserved? Surely to be
consumed
to be cut off in our sins
to be separated from God forever. Then how
is it that we are here spared as we are? It is not of our merits
but of the
Lord's mercies. This explains His wonderful forbearance towards sinners while
living in sin
forming habits of Sinning
and acting out those habits in
innumerable acts
and deeds
and thoughts of a sinful character
doing
in
fact
nothing to please God.
II. HIS MERCIES ARE TO BE TRACED UP TO HIS COMPASSIONS; even
"because His compassions fail not." His mercies are the streams of
which His compassions are the source. His compassions are in the essential
goodness of our God
prompting Him to manifest His mercies in a way consistent
with His glorious perfections. Of His compassion to guilty sinners He sent His
Son to take man's nature
to become man's substitute
to be his surety
to
suffer the Just for the unjust
that He might bring us to God. Thus His
compassions prompting
His mercies can flow freely through the mediation of
Christ. God can be just
and yet justify the ungodly
believing in Jesus for
His sake. Hence
if partakers of His mercies in Christ Jesus
we are quickened
who were dead in trespasses and sins; we are justified by faith
and so have
peace with God
who were guilty before God
under condemnation
deserving hell.
We
who were by nature the children of wrath
even as others
are made the
children of God by adoption and grace. We are being trained and educated by the
Holy Spirit for dwelling with God in heaven; our trials and sufferings are all
being sanctified for our souls' profit. Thus how great the compassions of our
God! what a never-failing source of mercies ever flowing and overflowing!
III. THESE MERCIES
SO TRACED UP TO THE COMPASSIONS OF OUR GOD
ARE
ALL SECURED BY HIS FAITHFULNESS. Every morning brings a new or a renewed need
to every man of the mercies and compassions of God. The coming day will bring
its duties and its trials
its difficulties
its dangers
its temptations
it
may be its sufferings. For all these we need new or renewed grace. The grace
that was sufficient yesterday will not serve for today. We need like grace
or
more grace today
and this our God in covenant is ready to supply. "As thy
day is
so shall thy strength be." It is morning. "Son
go work today
in My vineyard
" the Lord of the vineyard is saying; then
Lord
I must
look to Thee to give working strength
otherwise I faint and fail. But "He
giveth power to the faint
and to them that have no might
He increaseth
strength." Thus out of weakness we are made strong. Every working
Christian
as he goeth forth
to his work and to his labour until the evening
can say or sing of God's mercies and compassions. "They are new every
morning." But again
it is morning; a voice from heaven is saying
"My child
today go not out to work; stay at home and suffer according to
the will of God; commune with thine own heart upon thy bed
and be still
and
know that I am God." Here
then
is harder duty than outdoor work. But
here again the mercies and compassions of our God are found "new every
morning"; the throne of grace is nearer to us than before; these trials
draw the soul nearer to God
and into closer communion with Him; there is more
leisure now for retirement and devotion
or if pain and weakness interrupt
there is by the medium of pain a reminder of Christ's own sufferings and their
saving object. He can make His strength manifestly perfect in this felt
weakness. Thus the day of suffering
though it may seem long and tedious
may
ye short and sweet in the experience of His mercies.
(John Hambleton
M. A.)
Spiritual
experience must be looked at as a whole. It is not right to fix attention
either upon this side or upon that
to the exclusion and the forgetfulness of
the other. One side is very dark and full of sadness
sharply inclined towards
despair; the other is brighter than the summer morning
tuneful
sunned with
all the lustre of saintly hope: so we must take the night with the morning
if
we would have the complete day. Where we find the highest mountains we find the
deepest valleys. In proportion to the range and spirituality of the world in
which a man lives will be the pensiveness and gloom of his occasional hours. If
the poet droops when his harp does not respond to his touch
how must the soul
faint when God hides Himself? If the timid child moans because his chamber
light has gone out
with what bitterness of complaint should we speak if the
sun were extinguished? If men say they are never depressed
that they are
always in high spirits
it is probably because they never were really in high
spirits at all — not knowing the difference between the soul's rapture
mental
and spiritual ecstasy
and merely animal excitement. A great deal depends upon
the clearness of the atmosphere as to whether we appreciate this object or that
in natural scenery. So it is with souls. A great many of us seem to have such
long winters
short days
with poor
artificial light
and such murky
gloomy
dispiriting weather
with cruel fogs. Others of us have more sunshine
more
summer weather in the soul. But what we want to understand is this — that
religion
right relations with God
a true standing before the Almighty
does
not depend upon this feeling or upon that; it is not a question of climate
atmosphere
air
spirits: it is a question of fact. The question is not
How do
you feel today? but
Where are you standing? are you on the rock? The rock will
not change; the climate will. Be right in your foundation
and the season of
rejoicing will come round again. Taking Jeremiah's experiences as a whole
what
do we find that sanctified sorrow had wrought in him?
1. In the first place
it gave him a true view of Divine government.
Jeremiah was brought to understand two things about the government of God. He
was brought to understand that God's government is tender. What words do you
suppose Jeremiah connected with the government of God? Why these two beautiful
words
each a piece of music
"Mercies
" "Compassions." A
man can only get into that view of government by living the deepest possible
life. A God all strength would be a monster. A God throned on ivory
ruling the
universe with a sceptre of mere power
could never establish Himself in the
confidence and love and trust of His creatures. Man cannot be ruled and
governed by mere power
fear
overwhelming
dominating
crushing strength and
force. So we find David saying
"Power belongeth unto God: unto Thee also
O Lord
belongeth mercy." Power in the hands of mercy
Omnipotence
impregnated by all the tenderness of pity. That is the true exposition of
Divine nature which opens up the fatherliness
motherliness
mercifulness
and
compassion of God's great heart.
2. This discipline wrought in Jeremiah the conviction that God's
government was minute. Speaking of God's mercies
he says
"They are new
every morning." Morning mercies — daffy bread. That is it. God shutting us
up within a day and training us a moment at a time. The Psalmist said
"Thy mercies have been ever of old." And another singer said
"Thy mercies are new every morning." Is there no contradiction there?
Ever of old — every morning! Old as duration
new as morning; old as human
existence
new as the coming summer. These are all inconsistencies that mark
our life. Jeremiah having given this view of the Divine government
tells us
two things about discipline. He tells us
in the first place
the goodness of
waiting: it is good for a man to wait. Observe you: wait for God. I am not
called upon to wait because somebody has put a great waggon across the road; I
might get that out of the way. But if God had set an angel there
I must make
distinctions. There is a waiting that is indolence; there is a waiting that is
sheer faithlessness; there is a waiting that comes of weakness. This is the
true waiting
— wanting to get on
resolute about progress
and yet having a
notion that God is just before us teaching patience. Jeremiah tells us this second
thing about the Divine government. It is good for a man to bear the yoke.
Commend me to the man who has been through deep waters
through very dark
places
through treacherous
serpent-haunted roads
and who has yet come out
with a cheerful heart
mellow
chastened
subdued
and who speaks tenderly of
the mercy of God through it all. And that man I may trust with my heart's life.
A right acceptance of God's schooling
God's rod
God's judgment
and God's
mercy
mingled together
will cause us to become learned in Divine wisdom
tender in Divine feeling
gentle and charitable in all social judgment; good
men whilst we are here
and always waiting
even in the midst of our most
diligent service
to be called up into the more fully revealed presence and the
still more cloudless light.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
I. A STATE OF DESERVED PUNISHMENT. It is not enough to compare
England with other nations — in the glory of her institutions
in the valour of
her arms
in the extent and enterprise of her commerce
in the growth of her
civilisation
in the freedom of her laws
in the grandeur of her discoveries
and in the nobility and genuine heartedness of her people — and then to boast
of her superiority. No. We must look upon our nation in the light of her moral
and spiritual character as she stands related to the God of the universe. And
what is the nature and character of the spectacle? Have we not reason for
humiliation? But regard this part of our subject in an individual point of
view. Let us bring the matter home to our own hearts. And do we not find in
them reason upon reason why the vengeance of Almighty God should fall upon us?
Well then may we exclaim
"It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not
consumed."
II. A REASON FOR THE DIVINE CONDUCT. "Because His compassions
fail not." Thus our hopes are centred in the unchangeableness of God's
mercy and love. Other things do change. The sunshine gives place to the
blackness of the tempest. The life and bloom of spring and summer pass away
into the fading beauties of autumn and the cold sterility of winter. The health
of childhood
of youth and manhood
soon yields to the power of sickness
and
perishes beneath the blight of death. Prosperity is oftentimes overcast with
the gloomy shadows of adversity. The smiles of peace are changed into the
frowns of war. Promises and compacts are broken — superseded by the avarice of
selfishness
by the grasping aims of ambition
by the caprice of pride
and by
the tyranny of despotism. But the "compassions" of God "fail
not." They are ever new
and ever abiding.
III. DUTIES SUGGESTED BY THE TEXT.
1. What more consistent and natural than thankfulness and gratitude?
2. Trust in God
and not in man
is another duty founded upon the
constancy and immutability of God's compassion. There is something sublime
as
well as consolatory
in trust in God: sublime
as respects its object
so
infinitely superior to any other in the glory and majesty of its nature
its
eternity and perfectibility; consolatory
inasmuch as the human mind is cheered
and strengthened with the conviction
founded upon the most certain evidence
that "they who trust in the Lord shall never be confounded." And
herein
too
lies the special privilege of the Christian.
3. Another duty presented to us by the text is repentance. And what
so calculated to effect this glorious result as the unfailing compassions of
the Almighty?
(W. D. Horwood.)
I. THE PRESERVATION. It is ascribed in this passage to three
attributes.
1. Mercy. Many "mercies" here referred to
for there are
many manifestations of the same mercy — e.g.
there
is atoning mercy
forgiving mercy
sanctifying mercy
and preserving mercy —
all of which are combined in the salvation of the believer.
2. Compassion. This differs from mercy
because it does not
like
mercy
necessarily imply sin.(1) It fails not. In it there is neither
fickleness nor exhaustion (Hebrews 13:8).(2) It is new every morning. There
are fresh mercies every day — daily bread
daily power for work
daily
comforts
daily privileges of family prayer
etc.
3. Faithfulness. Faithfulness implies unchanging love. There may be
faithfulness to a covenant
faithfulness to a promise
and faithfulness to a
person. The latter seen in the faithfulness of a mother or nurse.
II. THE EFFECT OF THIS PRESERVATION ON THE MIND OF THE PROPHET. Seen
in his declaration for the present
and determination for the future.
(E. Hoare
M. A.)
As John Bunyan says
all the flowers in God's garden are
double; there is no single mercy; nay
they are not only double flowers
but
they are manifold flowers. There are many flowers upon one stalk
and many
flowers in one flower. You shall think you have but one mercy
but you shall
find it to be a whole flock of mercies. Our beloved is unto us a bundle of
myrrh
a cluster of camphire. When you lay hold upon one golden link of the
chain of grace
you pull
pull
pull
but lo! as long as your hand can draw
there are fresh "linked sweetnesses" of love still to come. Manifold
mercies! Like the drops of a lustre
which reflect a rainbow of colours when
the sun is glittering upon them
and each one
when turned in different ways
from its prismatic form
shows all the varieties of colours
so the mercy of
God is one and yet many
the same
yet ever changing
a combination of all the
beauties of love blended harmoniously together.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
I was going
home one winter's evening with my little maiden at my side
when she looked up
into the sky and said
"Father
I am going to count the stars."
"Very well
" I said
"do." And soon I heard her whispering
to herself
"Two hundred and twenty-one
two hundred and twenty-two
two
hundred and twenty-three
" and then she stepped and sighed. "Oh dear!
I had no idea" they were so many! Like that little maiden. I have often
tried to count my mercies
but right soon have I had to cry
I had no idea they
were so many!"
(Mark Guy Pearse.)
His compassions
fail not.
Although the
elegist has prepared us for brighter scenes by the more hopeful tone of an
intermediate triplet
the transition from the gloom and bitterness of the first
part of the poem to the glowing rapture of the second is among the most
startling effects in literature. How could a man entertain two such conflicting
currents of thought in closest juxtaposition? In their very form and structure
these touching elegies reflect the mental calibre of their author. A wooden
soul could never have invented their movements. They reveal a most sensitive
spirit
a spirit that resembles a finely strung instrument of music
quivering
in response to impulses from all directions. The author composes the first part
in an exceptionally gloomy mood
and leaves the poem unfinished
perhaps for
some time. When he returns to it on a subsequent occasion he is in a totally
different frame of mind
and this is reflected in the next stage of his work.
Still the point of importance is the possibility of the very diverse views here
recorded. Nor is this wholly a matter of temperament. Is it not more or less
the case with all of us
that since absorption with one class of ideas entirely
excludes their opposites
when the latter are allowed to enter the mind they
will rush in with the force of a pent-up flood? Then we are astonished that we
could ever have forgotten them. Still it may seem to us a strange thing that
this most perfect expression of a joyous assurance of the mercy and compassion
of God should be found in the Book of Lamentations of all places. It may well
give heart to those who have not sounded the depth of sorrow
as the author of
these sad poems had done
to learn that even he had been able to recognise the
merciful kindness of God in the largest possible measure. A little reflection
however
should teach us that it is not so unnatural a thing for this gem of
grateful appreciation to appear where it is. We do not find
as a rule
that
the most prosperous people are the foremost to recognise the love of God. The
reverse is very frequently the case. The softening influence of sorrow seems to
have a more direct effect upon our sense of Divine goodness. Perhaps
too
it
is some compensation for melancholy
that persons who are afflicted with it are
most responsive to sympathy. The morbid
despondent poet Cowper has written most
exquisitely about the love of God. Watts is
enthusiastic in his praise of the Divine grace; but a deeper note is sounded in
the Olney hymns
as
for example
in that beginning with the line —Hark
my
soul
it is the Lord.In his new consciousness of the love of God
the elegist
is first struck by its amazing persistence. Probably we should render the
twenty-second verse thus —The Lord's mercies
verily they cease not
etc.There
are two masons for this emendation. First
the momentary transition to the plural
"we" is harsh and improbable. Second — and this is the principal
consideration — the balance of the phrases
which is so carefully observed
throughout this elegy
is upset by the common rendering
but restored by the
emendation. The topic of the triplet in which the disputed passage occurs is
the amazing persistence of God's goodness to His suffering children. The
proposed alteration is in harmony with this. The thought here presented to us
rests on the truth of the eternity and essential changelessness of God. We
cannot think of Him as either fickle or failing; to do so would be to cease to
think of Him as God. If He is merciful at all He cannot be merciful only
spasmodically
erratically
or temporarily. The elegist declares that the
reason why God's mercies are not consumed is that His compassions do not fail.
Thus he goes behind the kind actions of God to their originating motives. To a
man in the condition of the writer of this poem of personal confidences the
Divine sympathy is the one fact in the universe of supreme importance. So will
it be to every sufferer who can assure himself of the truth of it. But is this
only a consolation for the sorrowing? The pathos
the very tragedy of human
life on earth
should make the sympathy of God the most precious fact of
existence to all mankind. Portia rightly reminds Shylock that "we all do
look for mercy"; but if so
the spring of mercy
the Divine compassion
must be the one source of true hope for every soul of man. Further
the elegist
declares that the special form taken by these unceasing mercies of God is daily
renewal The love of God is constant — one changeless Divine attribute; but the
manifestations of that love are necessarily successive and various
according
to the successive and various needs of His children. The living God is an
active God
who works in the present as effectually as He worked in the past.
There is another side to this truth. It is not sufficient to have received the
grace of God once for all. If "He giveth more grace
" it is because
we need more grace. This is a stream that must be ever flowing into the soul
not the storage of a tank filled once for all and left to serve for a lifetime.
Therefore the channel must be kept constantly clear
or the grace will fall to
reach us
although in itself it never runs dry. There is something cheering in
the poet's idea of the morning as the time when these mercies of God are
renewed. God's mercies do not fail
are not interrupted. The emphasis is on the
thought that no day is without God's new mercies
not even the day of darkest
trouble; and further
there is the suggestion that God is never dilatory in
coming to our aid. He does not keep us waiting and wearying while He tarries.
He is prompt and early with His grace. The idea may be compared with that of
the promise to those who seek God "early
" literally
"in the
morning" (Proverbs 8:17). Or we may think of the night as
the time of repose
when we are oblivious of God's goodness
although even
through the hours of darkness He who neither slumbers nor sleeps is constantly
watching over His unconscious children. Then in the morning there dawns on us a
fresh perception of His goodness. To the notion of the morning renewal of the
mercies of God the poet appends a recognition of His great faithfulness. This
is an additional thought. Faithfulness is more than compassion. There is a
strength and a stability about the idea that goes further to insure confidence.
The conclusion drawn from these considerations is given in an echo from the
Psalms —The Lord is my portion.The words are old and well worn; but they obtain
a new meaning when adopted as the expression of a new experience. The lips have
often chanted them in the worship of the sanctuary. Now they are the voice of
the soul
of the very life.
(W. F. Adeney
M. A.)
Man's desert and God's compassion
I. GOD HAS THE ORDERING OF BOTH WHAT HIS PEOPLE FEEL AND WHAT THEY
ARE KEPT FROM FEELING; that they are cast down
and yet not destroyed;
afflicted
and yet not consumed. All their times are in His hand (Isaiah
45:7; Amos 3:6). He orders what affliction shall
befall any one of His children
and in what manner; to what degree it shall
prevail
how long continue
and what shall be the issue (1 Samuel
2:6; Job 38:11). This is agreeable to His nature
and
His relation to them; to His love and promise to His people
and to the design
He is carrying on by all His dealings with them
which is to fit them for the
kingdom He hath prepared for them (Psalm
103:8
9
14; Isaiah 57:16). In judgment He remembers mercy
correcting in measure
and staying the rough wind in the day of His east wind (Isaiah
27:8).
II. THE PEOPLE OF GOD UNDER THEIR HEAVIEST SUFFERINGS
ARE TO LOOK TO
THE FAR GREATER MISERY WHICH GOD MAY RIGHTEOUSLY INFLICT UPON THEM FOR THEIR
SINS. Think of the misery due to sin
as it includes —
1. The loss or being deprived of the image and Spirit of God
being
abandoned by Him
and left to live without Him in the world.
2. It is part of the misery due to sin
to be cast out of the favour
of God
and abhorred by Him.
3. A being stript of all external comforts
of whatever might make
life easy or desirable; a deprivation of all such things
is our due upon the
account of sin.
4. Having the body filled with pain and torment
making its beauty
to consume away as a moth-eaten garment
is part of the punishment due to sin.
5. Having the soul filled with horror
belongs to the punishment of
sin; which some have felt to that degree
as to extort from them that doleful
cry (Psalm
88:15).
6. Being cut off by death
and cast into hell
is the destruction
due to sin.
III. Such is the evil of sin
and so much of it is found even in
saints themselves
that SHOULD GOD BE STRICT TO MARK INIQUITY
THEY WOULD HAVE
NOTHING TO EXPECT BUT TO BE CONSUMED.
1. Such is the evil of sin
that it deserves this. It is the
abominable thing that God hates; and well it may
as by it His majesty and
justice are affronted
His power and wisdom disowned
His goodness despised;
His holiness reproached
His truth contradicted
His promises and threatenings
slighted
as if His favours were not valuable
nor His wrath to be feared.
2. So much of this is found in saints themselves
as would expose
them to destruction
should God deal with them according to it.
IV. It is TO THE DIVINE MERCY AND COMPASSIONS THAT EVEN THE PEOPLE OF
GOD OWE THEIR PRESERVATION FROM BEING CONSUMED.
1. The evidence of this is obvious.(1) As it is not owing to any
worth nor power of their own
not to anything they could do for God
or do
against Him.(2) Nor is their preservation owing to this
that God is
unacquainted with the sins of His people
or makes light of them.(3) Nor is
their preservation owing to God's want of power to punish to the height of the
desert of sin.(4) He has given dreadful proofs of His power on His implacable
enemies; and that His people are otherwise treated
is because His mercies and
compassions fail not. It was mercy that spared them in their unregenerate
state
though they were by nature children of wrath
even as others (Ephesians
2:3). It was mercy in God that provided us an all-sufficient
Saviour
even His own Son (John 3:16). It was mercy that from eternity
designed their recovery whom God is pleased to set apart for Himself; and
according to it
in the appointed season
He called them into the kingdom of
His dear Son.
2. What kind of mercy it is.(1) It is most free and sovereign
This
is His own declaration (Exodus 33:19; Romans
9:15).(2) It is rich and full; large and abundant in the fountain
and extending to all His people.(3) It is most wonderful mercy; considering by
whom it is exercised
towards whom
against what provocations
in what manner
and to what ends. Considering by whom exercised. How astonishing is it that the
High and Holy One
who humbleth Himself to behold the things that are in
heaven
will attend to the preservation of any in this lower world! Considering
to whom it is exercised
to men
to sinners; recovered indeed
but very
imperfect; such whom He fetched out of nothing by His power
and from a state
of guilt by His grace. Considering against what provocations
even from those
towards whom it is exercised. How often do we offend our God
while preserved
by Him? How many
how great are our sins? How grievous to Him
and how plain
before Him? How worthy of destruction are we
and yet He spares us! Considering
in what manner it is exercised by God
even with delight. Judgment is His
strange work. Considering to what end it is exercised
namely
in order to
their salvation
for them or in them
preparatory to their being with Him in
heaven
the blissful state to which by mercy they are designed.(4) It is most
seasonable mercy. How often has my life been in danger
and yet God has
appeared for me
when unable to help myself
and the help of fellow creatures
was tried in vain
in how remarkable a juncture did He take my case into His
own hands; proving thereby that to Him alone belong the issues from death?(5)
The mercy of God
to which saints owe their preservation
is distinguishing
such as He did not exercise towards apostate spirits.(6) The mercy of God is
never-failing (Psalm 103:17). This makes up the greatest part
of His name
and what He esteems His glory (Exodus
34:6).
3. The manner in which this mercy is exercised.(1) Through a
Mediator
for His sake
and upon His account.(2) In a covenant way.
(D. Wilcox.)
The perennial stream of Divine compassion
Because His
compassions are not spent
wasted; but as the oil in the cruse
as the spring
ever running
the sun ever shining
etc. This should ever shine in our hearts
as the sun doth in the firmament.
(J. Trapp.)
Joseph Parker
bids us "never go to God for new blessings before we have given Him a
receipt for the old ones." We may at least recognise them
and the
recognition is sure to render us grateful. But
on the contrary
most lives are
one big sponge
one hungry petition
always greedily asking
and never stopping
to repay.
(Amos R. Wells.)
Christian Age.
Many times
Captain Holm had crossed the Atlantic Ocean without losing a spar
but at last
disaster overtook him. He says
"On one voyage my ship was struck by
lightning in mid-ocean. The bolt came down the mizzenmast through the cabin and
passed into the hold
leaving a long black scar on the mast as it went. We were
cotton loaded
and we had every reason to fear the horrors of a ship on fire at
sea. But the Lord in His mercy spared us
and we came safely to port. When
a
little later
men came on board to make some repairs
I went into the cabin one
day
just as the painter was raising his brush to paint out the lightning mark
on the mast. 'Stop! stop!' I said; 'don't you put a brushful of paint on that
mast. So long as I am master of this ship
that scar on the mast shall stand
so that I may never forget how good the Lord was to save us when my
cotton-loaded ship was struck by lightning:"
(Christian Age.)
They are new
every morning.
It is almost
startling to find this tender and inspiriting utterance embedded in the very
heart of a book of lamentations. It is not what we expect. The hurricane that
has been haunting all hearts with the frenzy of its unceasing roar lulls itself
for a moment to listen to the low-ringing
fearless prattle of a child. The
wreaths of smoke that rise from sacked and smouldering homes and from crackling
cities part as some passing breeze stirs the air
and the calm
lustrous azure
of the firmament peeps out again. The shrieks that break from a thousand homes
of death
and rend the awful midnight
grow shrill for a while; and in the
mysterious pause a nightingale begins to pour out its stream of dainty melody.
I. THE INEXHAUSTIBLE WEALTH OF GOD'S FORGIVENESS. But for the daily
renewal of God's mercy to His people
they would have been utterly cut off.
1. Alas! with many of us every day has its acts of shortcoming
if
not of conscious transgression
and God's pardoning love must needs go before
us in new forms of manifestation. I once visited the ruins of a noble city that
had been built on a desert oasis. Mighty columns of roofless temples still
stood in unbroken file. Halls in which kings and satraps had feasted two
thousand years ago were represented by solitary walls. Gateways of richly
careen stone led to a paradise of bats and owls. All was ruin. But past the
dismantled city
brooks
which had once flowed through gorgeous flower gardens
and at the foot of marble halls
still swept on in undying music and unwasted
freshness. The waters were just as sweet as when queens quaffed them two
thousand years ago. A few hours before
they had been melted from the snows of
the distant mountains. And so God's forgiving love flows in ever-renewed form
through the wreck of the past.
2. And when there is no fresh wandering to be forgiven
God's new
mercy awaits us at the dawn to refresh our joy and invigorate our strength
and
to give to us the power of a new and sinless consecration. Close by one of the
great cities of the East
there is a large stretch of grass that is always
green. Sometimes the showers are rare and scanty
and the thermometer mounts to
an appalling height
and one wonders to see the grass green and lush as though
it were growing in some English meadow. It is kept so by a heavy dew that never
fails to fall in the nighttime. And so with our life of consecration. There is
no dawn without the dew of abounding love and compassion descending to keep it
green.
II. THE RESOURCEFULNESS OF DIVINE PROVIDENCE. The mercy that is ever
fresh to pardon is ever fresh to guide and shape the circumstances in the midst
of which the pardoned life is spent. "Weeping may endure for the
night
" but God's gracious hand never forgets to make ready its surprise
of joy for the morning. The setting sun sees God's people beleaguered by hostile
legions
and with hearts sinking beneath the weight of perplexity and despair;
but the path of providential leading has turned a sharp corner in the night
and the morrow's sun has risen upon a traversed sea
and the dreaded foe strewn
like helpless wreck drift along the shore. And even when there are no special
difficulties awaiting the solution of God's providence
and our life is
uneventful in its outward complexion
providence is always versatile in its
unseen methods and processes. We may sometimes seem to be left at the mercy of
unalterable forces; no interposition; old natural laws that shaped the destiny
of Adam shaping ours without any break
old events repeating themselves
all
mechanism. Yet as bridges built in the time of the Conquest carry over their lines
day by day new men with new thoughts to be accomplished in the world
these
ever-repeating events are working by the line of an old order to new
providential issues. Astronomers at one time puzzled themselves over a problem
in solar physics. How was the heat of the sun maintained? It seemed a natural
inference that as it was always giving off heat in stupendous volumes
ultimate
exhaustion must one day come. Within recent times the suggestion has found wide
acceptance
that the sun is constantly drawing meteors and asteroids and comets
to itself
and that the heat is maintained by the impact of these bodies
as
they fall into the sun. Things come to us from time to time that seem out of
all accord with the harmonies around us. Strange difficulties
stumbling
blocks
tribulations start up in the path of our daily life. These things are
drawn into the circle of God's control and government for their solution
and
it is in this way that the very glory of God's providence is maintained.
III. THE UNFAILING TRUTH AND FAITHFULNESS OF GOD in His relation to
His people. God's renewed mercies are linked with the morning
because the
return of the day is one of the most perfect and intelligible symbols of
constancy to be found in the economy of nature. How unlike human love in many
of its forms
which
once embittered by disappointment
changes into gall
cynicism
misanthropy! There are not a few hearts from whose affection all
elasticity has forever gone. The affection is like a spring that has been
rendered limp and useless through overstrain. A shrewd observer of human nature
has stud
"For a woman there is no second love. Her nature is too delicate
to withstand a second time that most terrible shock and convulsion of soul.
Think of Juliet. Could she have sustained a second time that overpowering bliss
and horror?" Well
that statement is true
within certain limits of both
man and woman alike. The human love that is centred on human objects cannot
renew itself forever. It may be so crushed
that no dew or sunshine can lift it
up again. Old people do not care to form new friendships. How transcendent the
Divine love! It has been grieved and crossed and contemned by our weaknesses
insincerities
rebellions
a thousand times; and yet it renews itself
unceasingly with every day dawn.
IV. THE UNFAILING PROMPTNESS OF GOD'S MINISTRATIONS. "His
mercies are new every morning"; that is
just as soon as
or even before
we begin to need them. We receive our salvation and guidance and defence
not
of our own work
but of His free love. If it were of our own work
we must
needs wait for the nightfall before we could receive any recompense. Wages are
paid at sunset. But it is all His gift. So the mercy in which we rejoice comes
to us with the dawn
before we have done a solitary stroke of work. The
regulations of the court at Pekin are so framed as to give to the Chinese
Empire an example of promptness and despatch. The emperor always receives his
cabinet ministers and councillors at three or four o'clock in the morning
long
before day dawn. And so God awaits His servants with new pardons
new counsels
new honours in His kingdom
long before the day dawn. God's mercies are new for
you at the outset of every morning. There are some flowers that do not open
till noon
and others that pour out the stores of rare spices hidden in their
hearts at sunset only. God's mercy begins to shine before the sun
and diffuses
its incense about our path through every succeeding hour of the day. An
ingenious botanist
by watching the hours at which certain flowers opened
hit
upon the pretty conceit of constructing what he called a flower clock. God's
matchless mercies
like circles of thickset bloom that break into splendour
with a rhythm that never halts
are measuring out the successive hours of our
life. No winter comes to blast the flowers
and the clock is never behind time.
His opening compassions anticipate the light. "They are new every
morning."
V. THE PERPETUAL FRESHNESS OF THE DIVINE NATURE. God's compassions
are unceasingly new
because they well
pure and fair
out of the sacred and
stainless and infinite depths of His Fatherhood. They have the ever-renewed and
living sweetness of His own spring-like nature in them. A smile never grows
old
because it is kindness turned into the grace of outward line
and the
charm of kindness is undying. Art may pall upon the taste
and music jar to
torture over-wrought nerves. But not so the smile of sincere and unaffected
human kindness. A smile with the love of a finite nature behind it is always
new. How much more is that true of a smile with the infinite kindness behind
it! God's daily mercies come to us clothed with the enkindled grace of His own
matchless smile
and full of the light of an immortal May time. He cannot give
or do without putting the buoyancy of His own untiring and eternal youth into
each boon and act. Charles Lamb
in a few wise and beautiful sentences
dedicates one of his books to his afflicted sister Mary
with whom he had been
living for years in tender and unselfish affection. He says that "when
people are living together day by day
they are too apt to take for granted the
affection they bear each other
and to forget those special expressions of
affection that are the gauge of its true and constant depth." He would therefore
make the publication of his book the occasion for that special expression of
love he might have forgotten to render amidst the bustle and routine and
commonplace of daily life. God is always with us
but He never suffers us to
take His tender affection for granted. Each of His daily mercies comes to us
with a new dedication upon it. It is a legible evangel
witnessing to the
exceeding love of our Father on high. How sweet and lightsome life would be to
us
if we could only enter into the prophet's view of the ever-renewed mercy
with which it is filled! Solomon had jaded his nature with false luxury and
mock grandeur
and voluptuous habits that would have better suited a pagan
when he moaned out his epitaph upon human life
"There is nothing new
under the sun." Some one has said he counted the sun itself "a piece
of warmed up pleasantry only." A Frenchman would have put an end to
himself when he had reached that point. Solomon was kept from that madness by
his reserve of religions principle
and made to warn all the ages against the
vanity of a life spent away from God. He would have tuned his harp to a better
key than that
if
like his father
he had bathed his spirit day by day in the
fountain of God's perpetual goodness. He could not see the goodness and mercy
that were ever following him. Is life wearisome and insipid? It is because we
are blind to God's ever-renewed mercies. I read the other day of a man who had
lest his sense of taste through the shock of a railway collision. And some of
us are like that. Our faith has had its shocks
and our hopes its
disappointments
and our life plan its abrupt and disastrous interruptions
and
we sometimes find it an empty counsel to "taste and see that the Lord is
good." We fail to appreciate the newness of His daily mercy. It is fitting
that new mercies should be greeted with new songs. The heart alive to the
freshness of God's mercy will find new language in which to express itself.
Whilst passing in early manhood through a stage of deep dejection
John Stuart
Mill found occasional comfort in music. One day he was thrown into a state of
profound gloom by the thought that musical combinations were exhaustible. The
octave was only composed of five tones and two semi-tones. Not all the
combinations of these notes were harmonious
so there must be a limit somewhere
to the possibilities of melody. No such possibility can limit the range of
"the new song
" for it shall be pitched to the key of God's
ever-renewed mercies.
(T. G. Selby.)
There is
I am
persuaded
no greater evil committed by any of us than a practical
forgetfulness of the common mercies of life
mercies which
because of their
commonness
cease to be regarded as mercies. The Psalmist
you will remember
calls upon us to "forget not all God's benefits
" and he thus
indicates our perpetual danger
a danger which he himself felt and against which
he had to guard his own soul. There are two great causes which may be said to
account for our forgetfulness of the mercies of God which are new every
morning.
I. THE HAND OF THE GIVER IS INVISIBLE. He is a Spirit
and He can
only manifest Himself to the senses of His creatures by such physical
operations as appeal to their senses. To ask that we may see God
and see Him
with our eyes
is to ask that He may cease to he what He is
namely
an
infinite Spirit; or else it is to ask that we should cease to be what we are.
We forget
when we wish to see God who giveth us all things richly to enjoy
that we do not even see each other. My friend may give me presents
but I do
not see that in my friend which these presents express and reveal. I can only
infer that he loves me because of what he has given me
and of he should send
me gifts every day and every moment
I should still only infer the same. And if
he were some unknown friend — that is
a person whose face I had never seen at
all
but who for some reason or other should supply me with all the necessaries
of life every day — the fact that I had never seen him would not impair the
value of his gifts
nor would it diminish the gratitude which I should feel
towards him. It may be
too
that the gifts of a friend might come to me
through a chain of a thousand hands
some of which I might see
and some of
which I might not see; but no matter how long the chain of intermediate agents
through whom the blessings come
they would still he the gifts of a friend.
Nay
if the chain were long
so far from our forgetting the friend
or being
ungrateful for his gifts
we should see in every separate link of the chain a
fresh proof of his regard
and should say
how much he must love me when he
takes so much pains that his gifts shall not miscarry
but provides agents at
every step to hand on the gifts until they reach me in safety. This is what God
does. He is this friend
except that though unseen He is not unknown. He is our
Father in heaven Who loves us and cares for us.
II. Another cause of our forgetfulness of our mercies as gifts of God
is THEIR CONSTANCY
OR REGULARITY. This is strange
and sad as well as strange
that the very faithfulness and constancy with which God's blessings come down
to us should create forgetfulness
and should lead us to undervalue them. He
has made them constant that we may never lack
has remembered us always that we
might always remember Him
has given
us perpetual mercies that we might give
Him perpetual praise; and we forget Him
forget Him because His mercies are new
every morning. What if they were not? What if they were intermittent? Let us
look at a few.
1. Take as the first illustration
sleep. I venture to say that
there are thousands who never kneel down and thank God for sleep. While it
visits us unwooed
unsolicited
even unsought
and sometimes even unwelcomely
it takes its place without any distinct recognition among the regular facts in
the order of nature. "We sleep"; of course we sleep; we sleep as we
stand
or walk
or eat
or think
so much
is it a matter of course! Happy they
who can speak thus; happier still if they Knew the priceless value of this
boon
and happier still if
with the breaking day
they have a heart to bless
that God from whom sleep cometh. It is a mercy which no money can buy
which no
rank can command. I call you
then
today to thank God for the common blessing
of sleep
which is new "every night."
2. Look at another of these common mercies which are too often
forgotten. I mean our reason. The value of this gift is practically disesteemed
from the very fact of its commonness. We need at times to see men and women
bereft of their reason
that we may see by comparison with these sad foils how
much we need to bless God that our intellects are preserved. To see a man once
sound in brain and rich in faculty
with high powers of reasoning and of
speech
wild and wandering
the victim of strange and delirious fantasies
turning his heart away from those he has most deeply loved
and sometimes
blaspheming the very God whom it has been his joy to worship and to serve; this
is a spectacle to fill one with grief and horror. But should it not also awaken
in us a perpetual wonder that we have been preserved from such a calamity; and
should it not stir us up to daily thanksgiving to Him whose mercies are new to
us every morning?
3. Look at another common mercy — the power of motion and action and
speech
or
in other words
that general energy of body which constitutes the
great part of our daily outward life. Have you ever thought of this? Has not
its very commonness hidden its value and meaning from you?
(E. Mellor
D. D.)
I. NATURE PRESENTS A CERTAIN UNIFORMITY
BUT IN THAT UNIFORMITY WE
FIND INFINITE VARIETY. It is commonplace to say
"No two blades of grass
are alike." The ancients believed that a new sun rose every day — a technical
error
but a positive truth. We never look twice at the same sun; we never
twice see the same river. The water flows along and next moment is a new river.
This is true of the whole universe about us. Landscapes
mountains
forests
oceans
skies
all change while we gaze. So with man. All life is newness.
II. THE ORIGINALITY OF HUMAN LIFE PRESENTS AN UNCEASING DISCOVERY OF
DIVINE MERCIFULNESS. "His mercies are new every morning." The text
contains two grand ideas: —
1. The inexhaustibility of the Divine mind. In this way we consider
His works from the intellectual standpoint.
2. The inexhaustibility of the Divine heart. Not only do God's
thoughts fail not
but His compassions fail not. His love is as great as His
power.
III. THIS RENEWAL OF MERCIES SHOULD MATERIALLY AFFECT OUR DAILY LIFE.
1. "New every morning." Then how blind we are! There is a
huge gloomy crowd to whom life lacks variety
freshness
gladness. The
carnally-minded
whose heart is gross
etc.
cannot see the glory of life
the
grandeur of events
the power and prophecy of all things. It is far otherwise
with the man whose spiritual nature has made them full of life. So with the
Bible. It is a field of treasure. But how many scan its pages
yet miss its
precious thoughts!
2. "New every morning." Then how thankless we often are!
Judging from our spirit and speech
it would hardly seem as if we had any
mercies at all. As a great rose grower was walking with a lady in his grounds
she expressed the desire to possess one of the most beautiful blossoms. He
plucked the coveted flower and gave it to his friend
only to find
shortly
after
that in a fit of unconsciousness she was plucking the leaves and
dropping them to the ground. Is not this a picture of ourselves? We covet
certain things — health
wealth
knowledge
friendship. Yet
having obtained
these and other mercies
how coldly and carelessly we receive and use them. The
rose grower was so deeply offended that he gave away no more prize flowers This
was like man
but not like God. He still gives
although the dying leaves of
many wasted mercies are ever lying at our feet. Heaven drops fresh blossoms
into our hands
only to be ignored and wasted in their turn.
3. "New every morning." Then how foolish we often are!
Every mercy has a mission
and designs the enrichment of our life and
character. How much
then
do we lose by our carelessness and ingratitude!
There is a fairy tale
in which a boatman in the evening time ferried across a
river a strange being
who gave him as a reward what seemed to be only shavings
and stones
which he threw over in disgust. But next morning
when the sun
arose
he discovered that a few fragments of the gift had escaped destruction
and the light showed him that it consisted
not of shavings and dirt
but of
gold and precious atones
and
too late
he cursed his hateful folly. So
through life we go casting aside from us our daily benefits as if they were
poor and meaningless
and appropriating to ourselves but a fraction of that
which is more precious than rubies.
(W. L. Watkinson.)
There are a
great many mercies that are "new every morning." One of them is the
benefit of yesterday's experience. This life is a training school; each day
teaches its needed lessons. Experience is a pretty rough instructor
but
next
to the Holy Spirit
none is more valuable. If yesterday led us astray
then we are
worse than fools if we take the same track again. The mischief with bad habits
is that we thoughtlessly put them on again as we put on our clothes. If they
are ever to be broken off
they must be taken by the throat; and the beginning
of a new day is a good time to begin. A distinguished minister once said to me
"I found that hard smoking wee killing me
and one morning I stopped
square off
and it has saved my life." It is doubtful if he had squelched
that enemy as successfully later in the day. How can we ever hope to grow in
grace
and make real progress in the Divine life
if we are satisfied to start
every day on the same old beaten tracks
and repeat the old blunders; and let
the same besetting sins get firmer hold on us?
(T. L. Cuyler
D. D.)
Mr. Gladstone
speaking at the National Workmen's Exhibition
said he remembered how
in the
old coaching days
the dead level of nearly thirty miles on the Slough road
killed more horses than any other road
because the same muscles were
constantly in action
whereas there would have been a change in going up or
down hill. Nature has no dead levels. Ruskin says that
with one or two
exceptions
there are no lines nor surfaces of Nature without curvature. God's
gifts to us are never "staled by frequence." They are "new every
morning." He ordains constant changes in our life and its sceneries
"lest we be wearied
and faint in our minds."
(Quiver.)
The Lord is my
portion
saith my soul
therefore will I hope in Him.
The believer's hope in God
and waiting for His salvation
I. GOD IS THE PORTION OF EVERY ONE OF HIS PEOPLE.
1. What may be said of God as the portion of His people? He is —
(1)A
most suitable portion to them.
(2)An
all-sufficient portion.
(3)An
infinite portion.
(4)As
the portion of His people
He is most safe and secure to them.
(5)He
is an eternal
durable portion.
(6)As
the result of all this
He is a satisfying portion: What we can never be weary
of
or desire to change.
2. Every one of God's people has a special interest in Him as his.
How He comes to be so? There is a mutual claim
and 'tis brought about by
something on each side; on God's part and on theirs.(1) On God's part
it is
owing to His own love resolving to raise them to the highest happiness. This He
has done from all eternity (Psalm 103:17; Ephesians
1:3
4). To make way for this
His Son is given to die for them. God
expressly makes over Himself in the covenant of grace to be theirs
saying
I
am God All-Sufficient
and your God: And to every individual believer
I am
and will be Thine: One whom thou hast an interest in
and may'st call thy
own.(2) On His people's part
they accept of Him as such; having their minds
enlightened by HIS Spirit to discern what a portion God is
how much preferable
to all others
and their wills sweetly bowed to choose and close with Him.
II. THE SOUL THAT HAS THE LORD FOR HIS PORTION HAS ABUNDANT
ENCOURAGEMENT TO HOPE IN HIM.
1. Under an affecting sense of the Church's sufferings.
2. When low and despised in the world
exercised with pressing
necessities and straits
the soul that can say
The Lord is my portion
may
take encouragement to hope in Him.
3. When walking in darkness
and seeing no light
the soul that can
say
The Lord is my portion
has encouragement still to hope in Him.
4. When buffeted by Satan
the soul that has the Lord for his
portion has reason also to hope in Him.
5. The people of God are not exempted from afflictions: But when
these are their lot their interest in God is sufficient for their support.
6. The righteous must die as well as others: but
under the
apprehensions of this
the interest he hath in God is a solid ground of hope.
III. PRAYER AND PATIENCE ARE TO BE THE COMPANIONS OF HOPE IN THE
PEOPLE OF GOD
TO BOTH WHICH THEY HAVE A POWERFUL ARGUMENT IN HIS GOODNESS.
1. The people of God are a generation that seek Him.
2. Everyone that seeks God aright has his soul engaged in the work.
3. They whose souls are engaged in seeking God
will and ought to
wait for Him.
4. The goodness of God is a powerful argument to engage His people
to seek to Him
and wait for Him.
IV. NO SERVANT OF GOD SHALL BE A LOSER BY HIM; BUT EVERY ONE OF THEM
BE LED TO OWN AT LAST THAT IT IS GOOD TO HOPE AND QUIETLY WAIT FOR HIS
SALVATION.
1. What is included in the salvation waited for?
(1)A
salvation from every kind and degree of evil; sin
temptation
the troubles of
this world
and future everlasting miseries (Revelation
21:3
4).
(2)A
being put into a possession of all good.
2. Consider it under its engaging title
the salvation of the Lord.
(1)It
is a salvation worthy of him (Hebrews 11:16).
(2)It
is designed
prepared
and promised by Him.
(3)It
is a salvation that will consist in the enjoyment of God; dwelling in His
presence under the light of His countenance
the freest communications of His
love and goodness
filling the soul with that fulness of joy
which nothing
short of possession can acquaint us with.
3. What is implied in hoping
and patiently waiting for it?
(1)Having
the heart fixed by faith on the salvation of God as real
though out of sight.
(2)A
firm persuasion
that the salvation of God will come at last
though for a time
deferred.
(3)Expecting
God's salvation in His time; depending upon His wisdom to choose the fittest
season
and His faithfulness to remember us when that season comes.
(4)Serious
care to he found ready whenever called to enter upon the salvation of God we
have been waiting for.
4. In what respects may it be said to be good
thus to hope and
quietly wait for the salvation of God?
(1)As
it redounds to God's glory; as it is a testimony to His power and grace
as
what bears us up during our stay in this world
and fully provides for our
complete blessedness.
(2)As
it may encourage others to put in for a share in the salvation of God; by the
hope of which we are borne up amidst the difficulties of the present state
and
enabled patiently to wait for the salvation of God in a better.
(3)As
it will be comfortable to ourselves
disposing us to meet the will of God in a
becoming manner.Application —
1. Does every one of God's people say from His soul the Lord is my
portion? Hence learn that real religion is an inward thing; and the power of it
lies in what passes between Heaven and the heart
in transactions that only God
and the soul can be witnesses to.
2. Does every one that comes into the number of the people of God
say from his soul
The Lord is my portion? Of what importance is it to inquire
what is the language
the sense
of my soul?
3. How great and amiable is the change that grace hath made on every
saint
in leading him to take up the language of the text as his own
The Lord
is my portion; and thereupon to hope
and quietly wait. for his salvation.
4. If you have chosen God for your portion
living and dying
hope
in Him as such.
5. But how may it be known when this is said in truth?(1) Where any
say in truth
The Lord is my portion
they have been so far sensible of His
worth
and their own need of Him
as to be incapable of being satisfied without
Him
or taking up with anything else?(2) The soul that has said
the Lord is
his portion
has entered into covenant with Him.(3) Where the soul says
The
Lord is my portion
it loves Him
above all
or with a superlative
affection.(4) The soul that saith
The Lord is my portion
values communion
with Him more than any sensible enjoyment.(5) The soul that saith
The Lord is
my portion
cannot but delight and rejoice
so far as apprehended to be so
and
is greatly thankful for the direction and grace that inclined and enabled him
to make the happy choice which he would not now exchange for all the world.(6)
The soul that saith
The Lord is my portion
feels the greatest grief for the
apprehended loss of Him
or when in the dark as to an interest in Him.(7) The
soul that saith
The Lord is my portion
will
by prayer and supplication
frequently go to Him
and be more earnest for His favour and grace than for any
lower good.(8) The soul that saith
the Lord is his portion
will make Him the
ground of his trust and triumph
when outward comforts may be withdrawn or
denied (Habakkuk 3:17
18).(9) Where the soul saith
The
Lord is my portion
there will he a care to please and serve Him with the
inward man
and a fear to offend Him
even in the thoughts
or things that do
not come under the eye of the world.(10) The soul that says
The Lord is my
portion
is breathing after that world and state where it shall have the full
enjoyment of Him; and frequently
with pleasure
taken up in the believing
thoughts and hopes of it; as its chief felicity will then begin
when this
world is to be forever left
and all lower sensual delights at an end.
(D. Wilcox.)
(with Deuteronomy
32:9): — The love of God changes us into its own image
so that what
the Lord saith concerning us
we also can declare concerning Him. God is love
essentially
and when this essential love shines forth freely upon us
we
reflect it back upon Him. The Lord loveth His people
and we love Him because
He first loved us; He hath chosen His saints
and they also have made Him their
chosen heritage.
I. "THE LORD'S PORTION IS HIS PEOPLE."
1. The Church of God is the Lord's own peculiar and special
property. The whole world is God's by common right
He is Lord of the manor of
the universe; but His Church is HIS garden
His cultivated and fenced field
and
if He should give up His rights to all the rest of the wide earth
yet He never
could relinquish His rights to HIS separated inheritance. "The Lord's
portion is His people." How are they His?(1) By His own sovereign choice.
As our text says
Jacob is the lot of his inheritance
or as the Hebrew has it
"the cord" of His inheritance
in allusion to the old custom of
measuring out lots by a line of cord; so by line and by lot the Lord has marked
off His own chosen people
"and they shall be Mine
saith the Lord
in the
day when I make up My jewels."(2) By purchase. He has bought and paid for
them to the utmost farthing
hence about His title there can be no dispute.(3)
By conquest.(a) Upon your necks
Oh
ye tyrants of the Church
hath the
Anointed put His feet; He hath dashed you in pieces with His own right hand!(b)
We are Christ's this day by conquest in us. What a battle He had in us before
we would be won!
2. The saints are the objects of the Lord's especial care. "The
eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole world
" — with what
object? — "to show Himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is
perfect toward Him." The wheels of Providence are full of eyes; but in
what direction are they gazing? Why
that all things may "work together
for good to them that love God
to them who are the called according to His
purpose." It is sweet to reflect how careful God is of His Church. We are
jealous of our eyes
but the Lord keeps His people as the apple of His eye.
What a wonderful affection birds have for their young; they will sooner die
than let their little ones be destroyed! But like as an eagle fluttereth over
her nest
so doth the Lord cover His people
and as birds flying so doth the
Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem. What love a true husband has for his spouse!
How much rather would he suffer than that she should grieve! And just such love
hath God towards His Church. Oh
how He careth for her; how He provideth for
her as a king should provide for his own queen! How He watcheth all her footsteps;
guardeth all her motions; and hath her at all times beneath His eye
and
protected by His hand.
3. The Church is the object of the Lord's special joy
for a man's
portion is that in which he takes delight. See what terms He uses; He calls
them His dwelling place. "In Jewry is God known
His name is great in
Israel
in Salem also is tabernacle
and His dwelling place is Zion."
"For the Lord hath chosen Zion; He hath desired it for HIS
habitation." Where is man most at ease? why
at home. Beloved
the Church
is God's home; and as at home a man unbends himself
takes his pleasure
manifests himself to his children as he does not unto strangers
so in the
Church the Lord unbendeth Himself
condescendingly manifesting Himself to them
as He doth not unto the world. We are expressly told that the Church is the
Lord's rest. "This is My rest forever; here will I dwell
for I have
desired it." As if all the world beside were His workshop
and His Church
His rest. Yet further
there is an unrivalled picture in the Word where the
Lord is even represented as singing with joy over His people. who could have
conceived of the Eternal One as bursting forth into a song? Once more
remember
that the Lord represents Himself as married to His Church. The joy and love of
the young honeymoon of married life is but a faint picture of the complacency
and delight God always has in His people.
4. God's people are His everlasting possession. There is an allusion
here to the division of the portions among the different tribes. There was a
law made
that if any man should lose his inheritance by debt
or should be
driven to the necessity of selling it
yet at the year of jubilee it always
came back again to him; so that you see no Israelite ever lost his portion.
Now
God maps out for Himself His people. He says
"These are My
portion"; and think you God will lose His portion? They are His
and they
shall be His while time lasts; and when time ends
and eternity rolls on
He
never can
He never will
cast away His chosen people.
II. "THE LORD IS MY PORTION
SAITH MY SOUL."
1. This implies that true believers have the Lord as their sole
portion. It is not
"The Lord is partly my portion
" not "The
Lord is in my portion"; but He Himself makes up the sum total of my soul's
inheritance. When Martin Luther had a large sum of
money sent to him
he gave it all away directly to the poor
for he said
"O Lord
Thou shalt never put me off with my portion in this life."
Now
when God's children receive anything in the way of gift from Providence
they thank God for it
and endeavour to use it for His honour and glory
but
they still insist upon it that this is not their portion. St. was wont very
often to pray
"Lord
give me Thyself." A less portion than this
would be unsatisfactory. Not God's grace merely
nor His love; all these come
into the portion
but "the Lord is my portion
saith my soul."
2. As God is our only portion
so He is our own portion: "The
Lord is my portion
saith my soul." Come
brethren
have you got a
personal grip of this portion? Are you sure it is yours? We have heard of a
great man who once took a poor believer and said
"Do you look over there
to those hills." "Yes
sir." "Well
all that is mine; that
farm yonder
and that yonder
and beyond that river over there — it is all mine."
"Ah
" said the other — "look at yonder little cottage
that is
where I live
and even that is not mine
for I have to hire it
and yet I am
richer than you
for I can point up yonder and say — there lies my inheritance
in heaven's unmeasured space
and let you look as far as ever you can you
cannot see the limit of my heritage
nor find out where it ends nor where it
begins." Oh
what a blessing it is if you and I can say
"He is my
heritage!"
3. The Lord is to His people an inherited portion. "If children
then heirs; heirs of God
and joint heirs with Christ;" but if not
children
then not heirs
and the heritage cannot be yours.
4. This heritage is also ours by choice. We have chosen God to be
our heritage. Better to have Christ and a fiery faggot
than to lose Him and
wear a royal robe. Better Christ and the old Mamertine dungeon of the Apostle
Paul
than to be without Christ and live in the palace of Caesar.
5. God is His people's settled portion. Heaven and earth may pass
away
but the covenant grace shall not be removed. The covenant of day and
night may be broken; the waters may again cover the earth
sooner than the
decree of grace be frustrated.
6. The Lord is my all-sufficient portion. God fills Himself; and as Manton says
"If God is all-sufficient in Himself
He
must be all-sufficient for us;" and then he uses this figure — "That
which fills an ocean will fill a bucket; that which will fill a gallon will
fill a pint; those revenues that will defray an emperor's expenses are enough
for a beggar or a poor man; so
when the Lord Himself is satisfied with
Himself
and it is His happiness to enjoy Himself
there needs no more
there
is enough in God to satisfy."
7. I think I may add — and the experience of every believer will
bear me out — we have today a portion in which we take intense delight. I tried
in a poor way to show that God had a delight in His people. Beloved
do not His
people
when they are in a right state of heart
have an intense delight in
Him? Here we can bathe our souls: here we riot and revel in inexhaustible
luxuriance of delight; here our spirit stretches her wings and mounts like an
eagle; here she expands herself
and only wishes she were more capacious
and
therefore she cries
"Lord
expand me
enlarge my heart
that I may hold
more of Thee." Often have we felt in the spirit with Rutherford
when he
cried
"Lord
make me a heart as large as heaven
that I may hold Thee in
it! But since the heaven of heavens cannot contain Thee
Lord
make my soul as
wide as seven heavens
that I may contain Thy fulness."
8. This is to the saints of God an eternal portion. Indeed
it is in
the world to come that believers shall have their portion. Here they have none
except trials and troubles; "in the world ye shall have tribulation."
But as God cannot be seen
and as He is the believer's portion
so their
portion cannot be seen. It is a good remark of an excellent commentator upon
that passage
"For which cause He is not ashamed to be called their
God." He writes to this effect: "If it were only for this world
God
would be ashamed to be called His people's God
for HIS adversaries would say
'Look at those people
how tried they are
what troubles they have
who is
their God? and
' saith he
'the Lord speaks as if He might be ashamed to be called
their God
if this life were all'; but the Scripture says
'Wherefore God is
not ashamed to be called their God: for He hath prepared for them a
city:'" Thus may the Lord turn upon His enemies
and say
"I am their
God
and although I do chasten them sore
and lead them through the deep
waters
yet see what I am preparing for them — see them as they shall be when I
shall wipe all tears from their eyes
and shall lead them unto living fountains
of waters." Hence it is in the prospect of bliss so ecstatic
joy so
boundless
glory so eternal
that He is not ashamed to be called their God.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
I. THE LORD JESUS CHRIST IS A BELIEVER'S PORTION.
1. The word "portion" is sometimes taken for a piece or
part of a thing
be it a less part or a bigger part. Now our heavenly Father
hath made comfortable provision
set by a competent portion for every child of
His
and that portion is Christ. He hath not divided Christ among them
given a
part of Him to one
and a part of Him to another. Is Christ divided? No; hut He
hath given Him all
all wholly and entirely to each one of them
so that each
one may say
all Christ is mine
mine to all intents and purposes.
2. What in Christ is a believer's portion? All that He is
and all
that He hath
both as God
and as God-man.(1) As God. All His wisdom
and
power
and goodness is theirs. I say theirs
to be employed for their best
benefit and advantage.(2) As God-man; as Mediator. His merit and righteousness
is theirs for justification; His blood for reconciliation; His sufferings and
death to make atonement. His spirit and grace are theirs for sanctification; of
His fulness they receive (John 1:16). His comforts are theirs
to revive
and refresh them when they are sad and drooping (Isaiah 50:4).
His Word is for their guidance and direction in all their doubts and
difficulties
like the pillar of cloud and fire. His presence is theirs
for
their preservation and protection in all their perils and dangers (Genesis
15:1). His crown
and throne
and kingdom are theirs
eternally to
reward them (Revelation 3:21).
3. What kind of portion is Christ?(1) In general
He is a worthy
portion — allusion to 1 Samuel 1:5 — that is
a dainty
delicate
portion
excelling all other; none like it
worthy of all acceptation
that is
to be readily accepted of
and closed with by each of us as soon as offered.(2)
In particular
He is a soul portion — as here
He is my portion
saith my soul.
The portion of my heart (Psalm 73:26)
of my spirit
my inner man. A
sufficient portion. There is enough in Him
enough and enough again to make us
all happy. Merit enough
spirit enough
grace enough
glory enough. He is El
Shaddai — God
that is enough (Genesis 17:1). A satisfying portion. The soul
that hath Him will own and acknowledge it hath enough (Psalm
116:7). A sweet portion — exceedingly pleasant and delightful. It
doth not only satisfy the soul that hath it
but fills it with joy unspeakable
and full of glory (Psalm 16:5
6). A suitable portion. If it were
not suitable it would not be sweet; if not proper
not pleasant. A sure portion
(Isaiah
55:3). A part in Christ is
therefore
a good part
nay
the best
part
because it cannot be taken away from us.
II. INFERENCES.
1. Then it follows that Christ is a rich Christ
who hath
wherewithal to portion such abundance of people
as in all ages and generations
have been portioned by Him. The apostle calls it the unsearchable riches of
Christ (Ephesians 3:8). He is a bottomless mine of merit and spirit;
a boundless ocean of righteousness and strength; a full fountain of grace and
comfort.
2. Then all that are true believers are really and truly rich
people.
3. Then how much doth it concern us all to make this portion ours.
May we do so? We certainly may
each of us. But how? By a sincere
hearty
deliberate choice of it. Choose it
and thou shalt have it. Thus Mary did (Luke 10:42).
4. There are four sorts of persons who should especially hearken to
this motion.(1) Those that are young. The days of your youth are the days of
your choice
your choosing days. Now choose Christ (Ecclesiastes
12:1).(2) Those that are poor
and low in the world. The less we
have on earth the more need there is to make heaven sure; lest we should be
doubly poor
poor here
and forever miserable.(3) Those that are convinced
whose eyes are m some measure opened
whose hearts God hath touched.(4) Those
that have children (Genesis 17:7).
5. Then if Christ be our portion
and we can make out our title upon
good grounds
and that we have thus chosen
then it is our duty to hope in Him;
as here. "Therefore will I hope in Him
" rely upon Him
trust to Him.
If He be thy portion
He may well be thy hope
thy refuge.(1) A refuge — as to
the things of this life. Thou art well provided for
thou shalt want no good
thing (Psalm
34:10; Psalm 142:5).(2) A refuge — as to our
everlasting condition (1 Corinthians 15:19).
6. Then we should carry it as those whose souls can say the Lord
Christ is their portion. In all holy obedience before Him (Psalm
119:57)
fearing to offend Him
caring to please Him.
(Philip Henry.)
I. WHAT IS MEANT BY A PORTION AND WHAT SORT OF A PORTION GOD IS. The
word is taken from the distribution of Canaan
by which each of the Israelites
had a quantity of ground assigned to him and his heirs. This they called their
portion (2 Kings 9:21). According to this explanation
it is not what
a man has originally of his own
but something assigned to him
by special gift
or course of law. So God is the portion of the saints; not from any original
right or property which they have in Him
but by His own particular and
gracious appointment. God also is the portion of His people
as they have a
peculiar interest in Him
of which they can never be deprived. As a portion
also is that which we chiefly depend upon for our maintenance
so is God
in a
spiritual respect
to His people. His favour is their life. In answer to the
inquiry
what kind of a portion God is
I reply
first
that He is a spiritual
portion; and for that reason little valued or sought after by the world. Let
the rich man glory in his riches
"my soul shall make her boast in the
Lord": let the sensualist talk of his pleasures
"the Lord is my
portion
saith my soul." He is a sufficient as well as a spiritual
portion: every way complete; and adequate to all the wants and desires of His
creatures. The Lord is also a sure portion; and in our fluctuating world
this
is a circumstance particularly interesting and encouraging. Earthly possessions
and enjoyments are so precarious
that there is no dependence on them for a
moment. But our Divine portion is subject to no such accidents; it is secured
to us by an unchangeable covenant. The Lord is therefore an eternal portion.
"He is the strength of my heart
and my portion forever." After this
I may very well add
that He is a transcendent portion
excellent and glorious
beyond all comparison.
II. HOW CAME THE LORD TO BE THE PORTION OF HIS CREATURES?
1. First
by free gift on God's part. We durst not have asked such a
thing. Or
if we had
what could we have expected
hut to have our petition
rejected
and our presumption and rashness punished with severity? But what we
durst not ask
God has freely bestowed.
2. It is
secondly
by free choice on man's part. What God gives
we
must receive; not with a cold indifference
as if we did not care whether we
had it or not; but with eagerness
gratitude
and joy.
3. I add
thirdly
that it is by the gracious mediation of Christ on
both parts. Whenever
therefore
you are rejoicing in the Lord as your portion
and are happy in the pledges of His presence and favour
bless God for Jesus
Christ; and ascribe all to "the praise of the glory of His grace
in which
He has made us accepted in the beloved."
III. WHAT BELIEVERS MAY HOPE FROM GOD AS THEIR PORTION. They are not
to hope for a total exemption from trouble. "No!" Can any that are
acquainted with the Word of God
and the nature of His covenant
expect any
such exemption? Is it any where promised
or hinted
that God's people shall be
so privileged? But if we must not hope for an exemption from present trouble
what may we hope for? I answer
that we may expect present support and
subsistence. You may hope that if your sufferings for Christ abound
your
consolation by Christ shall much more abound; that if outward comforts drop
off
He will grant you better instead of them; and that when He cuts off the
stream
He will give you nearer access to the fountain. You may hope that when
you walk through the valley of the shadow of death
He will be with you
and
that His rod and staff shall comfort you. In short
you may hope that goodness
and mercy shall follow you all the days of your life
and that you shall dwell
in the house of the Lord forever.
1. If God then is the portion of His people
we infer that they are
richer and happier than the world supposes them to be.
2. Is God the only satisfying portion
then the men of the world are
not so happy as they appear. Not so happy! — Alas! they are in the most
miserable condition.
3. Let us seriously inquire whether the Lord be our portion or not.
4. "Walk worthy" of your portion. It would be a shame for
a prince to appear like a beggar; for one who is heir to a crown
to herd with
the lowest of the people; and it would be equally disgraceful for you
whose
treasure is in heaven
to be as vain and trifling
as careful and troubled
about many things
as those who have no hope in the favour of God.
(S. Lavington.)
I. HOW DOES THE LORD BECOME OUR PORTION?
1. By showing us our poverty. Sin has blotted out its amiable
excellencies
and robbed the soul of all its original treasure. Poor is the
Christless master of a world. Men think
with talents and honour and power
the
soul is rich; but
alas! in it there is a meagre poverty.
2. By enlarging our capacities and improvements.
3. By giving Himself.
II. THE EVIDENCE WE HAVE WITHIN US OF THAT DIVINE PORTION. The
expression
"Saith my soul
" is fraught with instruction "He
that believeth hath the witness in himself." It is not what we hear or
read or pray
that can tell us we are Christians; it is some conviction of the
soul within us
not founded in presumption
nor arising from pride
but founded
in knowledge
and arising from humility.
1. It speaks in meditation: not in noisy pleasure
in sallies of
wit
in the hour of feasting
nor in the fascination of indulgence
which
things are so dangerous to the Christian
since they confuse his religious
feeling
introduce fears and doubts
and even stop for a time communion with
God; but in meditation
when the thoughts are turned inwards — then the voice
of the soul is heard.
2. It speaks in prayer: not in that fluency and happy way of
expression which some have in prayer; not in apparent zeal
nor in aptness in
quoting Scripture
— all these are nothing
except the soul is engaged in
prayer. A thought
or a sigh
or a devout breathing of spirit will mount to the
throne of God sometimes sooner than the wordy and eloquent appeal.
3. It speaks in trouble. Jeremiah was placed in circumstances of no
common oppression
and he said
"Remembering mine affliction
" etc.
(ver. 19). It is in such a moment
when everything seen is found to be but
vanity and vexation of spirit; when death stalks by us clad in his own terrific
honours
and when our own careworn
sinful
oppressed hearts are ready to sink
before the piercing eye of the Judge of the whole earth
— it is in such a
moment that the renewed soul is heard uttering the convictions of its safety.
III. THE EFFECT IT PRODUCES ON THE BELIEVING MIND. "Therefore
will I hope in Him." "He that hath this hope in Him
purifieth
himself
even as Christ is pure." That man awfully deceives himself who
fancies he has any claim to a portion in God
and yet lives in sin. Those who
have that portion
will earnestly pray after increased sanctification of the
spirit
through the belief of the truth.
(G. D. Mudie.)
I. IMPORT OF THE WORDS.
1. A "portion" denotes whatever constitutes the stable and
permanent source of our chief enjoyment
as distinguished from an occasional
and transient benefit. The prophet rests in God as his portion; places on God
his expectation of good; concentrates all his hopes and affections
all the
sentiments of confidence and complacence
on Him
and on Him alone.
2. In a "portion" two qualities are requisite: protection
from evil
and supply of good; it should be a shield to defend and a sun to
bless us: and "the Lord God is a sun and a shield; He will give grace and
glory
and no good thing will He withhold."
3. Though God alone is fit to be the portion of any of His
creatures
He is not such to any
unless they choose Him. Till He is fixed upon
as such
and preferred to all beside
we have no part or lot in His favour and
perfections.
II. THOSE QUALITIES IN THE DIVINE BEING WHICH RECOMMEND HIM TO US AS
OUR PORTION AND ABUNDANTLY JUSTIFY THE CHOICE WHICH HIS PEOPLE HAVE MADE.
1. That only is fit to be the portion of any rational being
which
is congenial with the nature of the mind. That which is not fitted for his
thinking powers can never be the portion of a thinking being. And as we are
spiritual
nothing that is not such can be our real good. The benefits and
gifts of providence are not sufficient; the Divine Being Himself is required to
satisfy the desires of His people: they see that
in His nature and character
which alone can fill their souls.
2. The portion which we want must be one that can make us perfectly
happy. Give a man all the world
he will not be satisfied; "the eye is not
satisfied with seeing
nor the ear with hearing"; the passions of
sensuality
avarice
or ambition
are never satisfied by indulgence. But the
Divine Being opens a field of joy in which we may expatiate to all eternity!
for He is the original of all good; never can we exhaust the pleasures that
arise from His power
directed by His goodness; pleasures which must satisfy
every desire.
3. A portion must be
not only valuable in itself
but communicable
to us. Many things may be admired
which are not communicable; they may be fit
for others
yet not fit for us. But God is infinitely communicable: He has the
disposition
and He has the power
to disclose Him. self
to approximate Himself
to His creatures.
4. A portion must be something present with us
something that we
can bear about with us
and use whenever we desire. And such a portion is God!
His presence is always near; "He is not a God afar off
but a God that is
nigh!" His ear is always open to hear
His hand always stretched out to
save us. As the stars
in consequence of their magnitude and elevation
are
seen alike in places the most distant from each other; so God is the same to
all His people; His presence is equally enjoyed by them in every scene.
5. That which is worthy to be our portion should be something
unchangeable in its nature
not exposed to uncertain fluctuations. An things
around us change. Where we expected most
we are often most disappointed. But
God is the same now
as in all past generations; and Jesus Christ
in whom He
manifests Himself as the Saviour of them that believe
"is the same
yesterday
today
and forever."
6. A portion
to be perfect
must be eternal in its duration
capable of surviving every change. Here the difference between God and all
beside must be strikingly apparent to all.
7. In choosing God for our portion
we return to our ancient course
we reclaim and re-enjoy our original inheritance. "Return unto thy rest
O
my soul!"
(R. Hall
M. A.)
Homilist.
I. MAN'S POSSESSION OF THE HIGHEST GOOD. "The Lord is my
portion." What does this mean? How can man finite possess the infinite? To
possess a person is to possess the love and friendship of another. The little
child possesses his parents
he has their hearts. The father may be a monarch
swaying his sceptre over millions
yet the child has him
and with his lisping
tongue he may say
"That monarch is mine
I have his heart." Thus a
good man possesses the infinite. This wonderful possession —
1. Answers the profoundest cravings of human nature.
2. Consummates the bliss of human nature.
II. MAN'S ASSURANCE OF THE HIGHEST GOOD. "Saith my soul."
Man is a duality. In his nature there is the auditor and speaker. How does the
soul give this assurance?
1. By its reasoning. Its logic conducts to the conclusion —
(1)That
God gives Himself to souls of a certain character.
(2)That
it is in possession of that identical character.
2. By its consciousness. Wherever there is genuine godliness
there
is
I believe
an impression apart from all reasoning of God's love and
friendship.
III. MAN'S CONFIDENCE IN THE HIGHEST GOOD. "Therefore will I hope
in Him." To trust in Him is to trust —
1. In infinite love.
2. In infallible wisdom.
3. In almighty power.
4. In unchanging all-sufficiency.
(Homilist.)
I. THE AUTHORITY UPON WHICH GOD IS CLAIMED AS THE PORTION OF GOOD
MEN. It is high language for worms of the earth — sinners. Not natural
relation
for that has been forfeited by sin. Not Church privileges. The Jews
were mistaken in claiming the favour of God on account of Abraham
Moses
the
law
and the covenant
and the promises.
1. God claims His people by right of purchase. As Christ has
purchased believers for God
so He hath purchased God for believers; hence they
are called "heirs of God." He is —
(1)Of
infinite power to support.
(2)Of
infinite wisdom to direct.
(3)Of
infinite goodness to supply.
2. He calls His people His portion
because they choose Him; and we
call Him our portion
because He chooses us.
II. THE ADVANTAGES OF SUCH AN ATTAINMENT.
1. Abundant and never-failing in its produce.
2. Satisfying in its enjoyments.
3. Eternal in possession.
III. THE DUTIES RESULTING FROM THIS RELATION.
1. Thankful acknowledgment. "The lines are fallen
" etc.
These thankful acknowledgments are made in private and in public.
2. Dependence upon God for every spiritual supply. As a man upon his
portion.
3. To reside in it — dwell in God.
4. Defend your possession.
5. Delight in it.
(J. Walker
D. D.)
The portions of the unbeliever and believer contrasted
I. In considering THE PORTION OF THE UNBELIEVER. God has placed
before us things temporal and things eternal
as containing all that He has in
store for the sons of men; and the unbeliever ever chooses his portion from
some one or other of the things which are temporal But whilst there is but one
way to God
there are many ways from Him; whilst we have only one method of
pleasing Him
there are innumerable methods of "pleasing the flesh."
1. Pleasure
or at least what is called by that name
is the portion
chosen by many; and it consists in self-indulgence in whatever form is most
suited to the lusts of each carnal mind. They have chosen an empty
a worthless
portion. The things after which they long
the things for which they have
forsaken God
cannot support them in the hour of death
or in the day of
judgment.
2. But whilst these are choosing a portion of sell indulgence
there
are others who choose one of self-denial
which is not the less
on that
account
an ungodly and a worldly portion. Their choice is covetousness
their
portion is riches. Amongst them you may find those who are called the wise
the
prudent
and the industrious
giving their diligence to everything except to
make their calling and election sure. Oh! what a poor portion for an immortal
being is this! It has required labour and self-denial in the acquisition; it
has required care and anxiety and watchfulness in the possession; and death
comes
and tears it from the grasp of the poor wretch who has desired nothing
better.
3. Others seek for their portion in human applause
and the
admiration which one worm bestows upon another. They can despise sensuality
they can hold riches in contempt
but praise and worldly distinction are dear
to them. Let such a vainglorious sinner as this be but talked of by his fellow
sinners: let him be pointed at
and wondered at; and he has obtained his
portion. And for this
which is but the breath of a worm
an immortal being is
ready to make the most unremitting exertions
and to face the most appalling
dangers.
4. Akin to this is another portion often chosen by the unbeliever —
knowledge. The desire for this is not sinful in itself
for knowledge is
certainly both useful and desirable; but when it is sought merely for its own
sake
and when it is unsanctified by the Holy Spirit
it is only an idol which
draws away our hearts from God
and
as such
is an injury
not a blessing
to
him who attains to it.
II. THE PORTION OF THE CHRISTIAN. Pleasure
riches
fame
and
knowledge
have been aimed at by the unbeliever; and for a time he has acquired
or rather seemed to acquire them: the Christian has been enabled by Divine
grace to say
"The Lord is my portion
" and he has acquired all these
things for eternity. Whilst sensuality ever brings with it disappointment and
disgust
the Christian has a comfort from above to cheer him. He has heard that
voice which says
"Son
be of good cheer
thy sins be forgiven thee";
and as the sense of unpardoned sin had ever been his heaviest affliction
so
his greatest pleasure arises from his being enabled to say
"O Lord
I
will praise Thee; though Thou wast angry with me
Thine anger is turned away
and Thou comfortest me." Then
as he goes on
by Divine grace
walking in
the ways of the Lord
how sweet to feel the Spirit bearing witness with his spirit
that he is the child of God; to be taught day by day that God's dealings with
him are all in mercy and in love; that his very afflictions are tokens of
kindness
and that his "Heavenly Father is making all things to work
together for his good"!
(R. W. Kyle
B. A.)
The soul's all-sufficient portion
If God is
all-sufficient in Himself
He must be all-sufficient for us. That which fills
an ocean will fill a bucket; that which will fill a gallon will fill a pint;
those revenues that will defray an emperor's expenses are enough for a beggar
or a poor man; so
when the Lord Himself is satisfied with Himself
and it is
His happiness to enjoy Himself
there needs no more
there is enough in God to
satisfy.
( T. Manton.)
The saint's exhaustless portion
To little
brooks men have often gone in seasons of drought
and found only a parched bed
cracked open with the heat. But who ever saw the Atlantic low? What ship ever
failed to sail for Liverpool through lack of water? When some one urged old
John Jacob Astor to subscribe for a certain object
and told him that his own
son had subscribed to it already
the old man replied very dryly
"Ah
he
has got a rich father." You and I have a rich Father too. You are an heir
of the King of kings.
(T. L. Cuyler.)
Therefore will
I hope in Him
A man having a
soul must worship something as a God; he must look upon something as the source
of supply
of protection
of reliance
and trust; and if you do not give him a
God in revelation
he will go to work and make one. We want a God whom we can
adore. What is the character of the God of the Bible? He comes rolling up to us
in infinite grandeur from of old
from everlasting: His date is eternal. Then
look at His character — how sublime! He is represented as being universally
present. That gives us the idea of infinite spirituality. He fills all space
is everywhere
and has this peculiar characteristic
that He can bring all the
perfections of His nature to every point in space. wherever He is
He is there
the Almighty
the all-knowing
and the infinitely wise and good God. Well
now
from the universality of His presence and knowledge
He is enabled to be the
God of providence. He can interpose where He sees the necessity
and where you
call upon Him according to His promise to interpose in your behalf
and
superintend your wants. Well
then
we have a God who can do everything
who is
everywhere
and who is infinite in mind and in knowledge. Thank God
He knows
everything. I think the sublimest commentary upon the knowledge of God is the
declaration that He inhabiteth eternity. We have a natural admiration for that
which we feel to be infinitely greater than ourselves. The fact is we feel it
toward men in a measure; but as our minds expand a little we detect mistakes
and see that men are not so great as we thought
and as we go on a little
further we find that they do not know so much as we supposed they did; so that
these men keep going down as we keep going up. We detect many errors in their
policy and in their reasoning; and we find that they are nothing but men. Not
so in the study of our God
who has never made a mistake. We have never
detected a point of ignorance in the great Jehovah. The further we look into
His works
the grander they appear; and the further we look into the Word
how
much fuller it is than we perceived at first! As our minds expand they only
catch glances of the infinite sweep of His mind
which rolls on to interminable
meanings
and culminates in designs worth the infinite resources and plans of
the infinite God of the universe. Now
if I want something to adore
give me
God. I adore Him in the exercise of His power
in the displays of His wisdom
in the fountain of His goodness
and in the plans that He has projected for my
own well-being. I adore Him that He has a remedial system going on over the
infirmities and calamities of mankind that will terminate in the resurrection.
I adore God as an infinite
spiritual
and intelligent Being
who made the
whole universe
and who is full of power and goodness. That is not all I adore
Him for. The text says
"Therefore will I hope in Him." I see His
resources
His plans
and His purposes
and I will hope in Him. Paul celebrates
God as the God of hope. This God has given me capacity to know
has given
promises and ground of hope
and has also arranged everything that pertains to
hope. He has authorised me to hope for eternal life
for unbounded wealth
for
glory
honour
and immortality; to look to the coming period when my head shall
be crowned with life
and my hand palmed with victory; when my soul shall be
home in glory in the presence of God
where there is fulness of joy
and
pleasures for evermore. He authorises me to hope for the triumph over all my
enemies
to look for the rest that remains to the people of God
and to
anticipate association with the sweetest society in the universe. What sort of
hopes has God arranged for? Christians have the highest hopes of any other
class of beings that belong to this world. The politician hopes to reach the
presidential chair
and he knows there is only one chance out of many millions
and that it is no great thing when he gets it at last
for it is mixed with
heavy burdens
terrible responsibilities
and a torrent of perpetual abuse. The
Christian hopes for a victory over all things; he hopes to ascend in glory
and
to enter into the rest that remaineth for the people of God; he hopes for a
kingdom prepared for him from the foundation of the world. Again
our God is
not only the God of hope; but He is also the God of all grace. It was to pardon
guilty persons
to purify defiled souls
and to provide an inheritance adequate
to the wants of His children; it was to help their infirmities
to comfort them
in their distress
to enlighten them in their darkness and ignorance
to solace
them with the comforts of holiness
and fit them for glory. He is the God of
all grace; He has formed this system of salvation
and carries it out until we
are saved from sin
trouble
toil
poverty
and ignorance.
(Bishop Kavanagh.)
The sustaining power of hope in God
A crew of
fifteen men once left a burning ship in mid-Pacific. They were thousands of
miles from land. They left the ship so hastily that they had no time to take
oars
or sail
or any other tackle or gear with which to produce motion. They
were only able to snatch at some food and water. They lived for six weeks in
that boat
and the last three-and-twenty days they dreamed every night of
feasting
and woke every morning to the same starving comrades
vacant waters —
for they passed no ships — and desolate sky. Yet these men never lost their
courage
because they perceived from the outset that their boat was in the
current of an equatorial ocean
a current which those who knew the geography of
the sea were aware would slowly but surely carry them at last to land
which it
did. Sometimes the patience of hope in the Christian life has to be exercised
in that way. No oar and no sail; no strength and no light; for many days
neither sun nor moon nor stars appearing
but only the magnet of faith pointing
steadily to the Rock of Ages
and the current of eternal nature of Him who is
what He is
bearing us on to the promised land.
(John Laidlaw
D. D.)
An able seaman
once said to me
"In fierce storms we have but one resource: we keep the ship
in a certain position. We cannot act in any way but this. We fix her head to
the wind; and in this way we weather the storm." This is a picture of the
Christian. He endeavours to put himself in a certain position. "My hope
and help are in God." The man who has learnt this piece of heavenly
navigation shall weather the storms of time and of eternity. This confidence
has supported thousands in perilous situations — where others would have given
up all in despair.
(R. Cecil.)
The Lord is
good unto them that wait for Him.
I. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN WAITING FOR GOD.
1. God has work for us
and we should be ready to do it.
2. There are blessings to bestow
and we should be waiting to
receive them. The fountain is flowing; let us go out and drink of it. God
blesses His people not according to their worth
but according to their wants;
and in proportion as you feel your parchedness
and look that it may be
allayed
so will be the shower that descends from these clouds which are big
with mercies.
3. In waiting for God we should wait His time. For as to certain
services which He requires and rewards which He bestows
there is need that we
exercise patience. He who is conscious that he deserves nothing
and that he
needs much
will feel as if God were not exacting anything unreasonable in
making him wait. He who knows how much is promised
and how certainly it will
be granted in proper season
will be delighted to wait.
4. Waiting for God implies sire and expectation. We are longing for
the blessings
as you see the husbandman looking over the whole sky for the
coming shower to refresh his crops
or for the signs of dry weather to enable
him to gather in his grain; as you have seen the mother in her eagerness
or
the father
saying less
but not less earnest
looking out for a son or
daughter who has been for years in a foreign clime
but who has promised to be
at home at such a time. How is every object in the dim distance examined! how
is every sound listened to! and
"Why is he so long in coming? why tarry
the wheels of his chariot?" Ah
if we were longing for spiritual blessings
in this spirit
they would come
assuredly come; and our faith would insure
them
and our eagerness would hasten them: for "He that shall come will
come
and will not tarry."
II. HOW THE LORD ENCOURAGES THEM THAT WAIT FOR HIM.
1. It is a good thing in itself thus to wait when God so requires
it. It braces and invigorates the soul
and enables it to use the means to
procure the expected benefit!
2. It is good to wait
inasmuch as in waiting we receive many
valuable lessons. A pupil or apprentice puts himself under a master
who
promises to teach him a certain branch of knowledge. Now
it is possible that
in fulfilment of his engagement
the master may just set the learner to work
and point out service after service for him. Would the scholar be thereby
justified in charging his master with a breach of promise
and saying to him
"You promised to give me instruction and skill
and you set me instead to
work and toil"? We see at once that if such a spirit were cherished by the
pupil
it would indicate not only that he is ignorant of the branch of
knowledge he wishes to learn
but that he is labouring under a more deplorable
ignorance
— that he is ignorant of his own ignorance; for it is in the very
act of waiting on that master
and doing the work which he prescribes
that he
is to attain the skill he is seeking. It is the same in the school of Christ.
3. The blessing is larger because we have waited for it. Why is it
that man
when he has an arduous work to do
must do it when he can
and hasten
to perform it? How is it that when he makes a promise he must be ready to
execute it when he can
and not wait till
as he supposes
some more favourable
opportunity may present itself? Plainly because his power is limited
because
his time on the earth is uncertain
and if he let one opportunity slip
another
may never present itself. But no such weakness is laid on the High and Holy One
who "inhabiteth eternity
" and with whom "one day is as a thousand
years
and a thousand years as one day." He can allow opportunity after
opportunity
to pass away
till at last the "fit time
" "the set
time
" "the fulness of times
" comes. All is order and
beneficence amidst so much complexity and seeming irregularity. Everything is
happening at its most appropriate time
amid so much apparent delay and
procrastination. While nothing lingers beyond its time
nothing hastens to a
premature conclusion. God delays the blessing only that it may be larger when
it comes. His counsels ripen slowly
that the ear may be fuller
that the fruit
may be richer and mellower. How is it that the river
which rose in so small a
fountain among the rugged hills
now sweeps along so magnificently among
fertile plains? It is because in its lengthened and circuitous course it has
gathered contributions on either side
receiving a new stream from every valley
which it passed. Thus it is that the stream of God's bounty is made to turn and
wind
only that it may receive contributions from every quarter as it sweeps
along
and flow at length more largely into the bosom. Hence it is that the
royal munificence of His bounty knows no limits at last. Thus it is that He is
good to them that wait for Him.
(J. M'Cosh.)
Throughout the
Scriptures the two terms Seeking and Waiting run parallel as describing prayer
earnest and effectual prayer
in all its acts and offices. The command to seek
the Lord and the command to wait on the Lord have the same general meaning
and
the same general promises are given to each. But in this passage they are for
once combined: their combination suggesting a certain difference between them
and the perfection of devotion which results from their union. Each has in it
the blessedness of prayer: but each has a character of its own as qualifying
the other; and both
in their unity
form the highest devotion.
I. Generally
IN THE COMBINATION OF THESE TERMS EACH EXPRESSES THE
PERFECTION OF ALL PRAYER AS IT IS EITHER THE ACTIVE SEEKING OF GOD OR THE
PASSIVE WAITING FOR HIM; IN OTHER WORDS
WHAT MAN DOES AND WHAT HE MUST EXPECT
GOD TO DO IN THE WHOLE BUSINESS OF DEVOTION. All communion with God requires
this. Seeking suggests at once the idea of the soul's activity: making God the
Unknown
the Unfound
the Unseen
the Hidden
the Distant
or
better still
the Waiting God
its one great object. The spirit in man goes out
as the
Scripture says
after Him
on an infinite quest; and its restless cry m
O that
I knew where I might find Him
that I might come even to His seat!" Alas
He is hidden from us in our natural state by a thick veil: not by distance
but
by worse than distance
by a cloud of thicker than Egyptian darkness
by a veil
which our sins and His justice have woven. But that veil has been rent in
Christ. We know where we may find Him
where His seat is: on the mercy seat
which is the Cross. Now
the testimony is: "He is good to the soul that
seeketh Him." But that seeking must be a waiting also. God m near at hand
as well as afar off. Not only are we brought nigh by the blood of Jesus
but He
also is brought nigh: and in a very different sense from that in which He is
"nigh to every one of us." The waiting soul lays hold on that great
truth
and calmly expects His revelation of Himself. In that posture the wings
of the seeking spirit are folded again
its voice is stilled to silence
and it
thinks rather than cries: "O when will He come unto me!" No seeking
will find until He make Himself present. "The Lord is good to those that
wait for Him." There is a set time for His manifestation of Himself. The
seeker after God must also
in the very act of seeking
be a waiter upon Him.
In the former
man does his part: in the latter
God acts alone. It will be
plain
then
that the two terms express one and too same prayer throughout the
whole history of devotion; from the moment when the first glimpse of God lights
up the desire
through all the acts of special supplication and all the habits
of communion with Deity
up to the full possession of God in the beatific
vision. All our communion with heaven from beginning to end is the union of our
activity with patient dependence on the Divine fidelity to His promise. And
this communion is the communion of the Holy Spirit: the New Testament secret
which we must put into an Old Testament text. He
from above
lights up the
energy of seeking in our souls; and He
from above
reveals the Eternal God to
our souls. But my present point is only this: that the whole business of the
religious life
which is
in one word
the finding God
His goodness
and His
salvation
is the union of our intense activity and of our most passive expectation.
In the seeking of God you have a great work yourselves to do: in the waiting
you acknowledge His absolute supremacy in your salvation.
II. AGAIN
THE SEEKING STANDS HERE AND EVERYWHERE FOR THE PLEADING
BOLDNESS OF PRAYER
WHICH REQUIRES TO BE QUALIFIED BY ITS WAITING HUMILITY.
Nothing is more certain than that the petitioner who brings his request to God
is permitted to come with boldness. He is pledged by His immutable word and
oath to do for us all that is contained in the covenant. It is wonderful how we
are encouraged to plead by God's own name and honour! In every way we are told
to remember that our humility must not forget its rights. Every prayer
from
beginning to end
has in it the strength of the voice
the irresistible voice
of Jesus. And this idea is in the word "seek" as generally used in
Scripture; as may be noted where "calling" is connected with it. So
our Lord makes the seeking an advancement on the process of asking; the
knocking of bold importunity or shamelessness
in fact
being its highest
character. He always encourages in every petitioner what may be called an
undaunted
resolute
and bold spirit of appeal to heaven. Now
it is obvious
that this requires to be carefully guarded that boldness must be humble
boldness
and must wait before God humbly pondering its own unworthiness. The
seeker must learn that
after all that Christ has done to give him right of
approach
the fact of his own utter vileness as respects himself remains
and
will remain throughout eternity. Now
the waiting spirit is not simply the
spirit that is content to tarry
but one that knows why the delay is appointed.
Read it here. It is good to bear the yoke. It is good to taste of "the
wormwood and the gall" before we think of the "cup of salvation."
The lesson of penitence must be thoroughly learnt; the lesson of impotence.
Waiting is self-examination. Here is the secret of the Divine delay and the
deferred hope. It is not that He delighteth not in mercy
that He forgets to be
gracious. But it is the eternal law of the covenant of grace that salvation is
given only to those who profoundly feel their need
their unworthiness
and
their utter helplessness: I do not say that they be reduced to despair; for
that is not the waiting
but the ceasing to wait. Hence
the combination of
these is the perfection of acceptable prayer: the Scripture terms it
"humble boldness." Boldness is sure that the blessing is there
and
is the confidence of faith; humility can hardly be persuaded that the point of
personal preparation is fully come. The union is the achievement of the Holy
Ghost; groanings that seek
but use an unuttered language. Now you must apply
this to your ease as a penitent seeker of salvation: indeed
it is to your case
as such that all this specially applies. You have come to know that you have
one sole business before you: to acquaint yourself with God being the one thing
needful. Before you think of anything else in heaven or earth
that supreme
matter must be settled: on that your eternal destiny depends. Now
you have to
seek in the prayer of confession
pleading the promises ratified in Christ
and
urging your plea day and night continually. But you must wait as knowing that
pardon is a deliberate act of God
to be attested by the Holy Ghost
when all
the conditions are perfect. When your seeking and waiting are both one in the
perfection of entire self-renunciation and simple faith
God will certainly
show Himself good; but not till then. Here is the secret of the Divine delay.
On the other hand
though you merit not that God should look at you
much less
that He should embrace and love you as a child
your seeking must be imperfect
if you cannot rejoice in
His mercy. You need to be aroused. "Be of good
courage: rise
He calleth thee. Always be sure of this
that "The Lord is
good unto them that wait for Him
to the soul that seeketh Him."
III. Once more
THE TWO TERMS SIGNIFY THE FERVOUR AND EARNESTNESS OF
PRAYER JOINED TO PERSISTENCY IN THAT FERVOUR; AND THE RARE COMBINATION OF THESE
GIVES THE HIGHEST CHARACTER TO THE TONE OF OUR DEVOTION. In almost every
instance in which the seeking is commanded
it is connected with the idea of
intense ardour. This is the spirit of devotion generally into which our
acceptance introduces us. The man has become a man of God
which is
in other
words
a man of prayer. "I — prayer": the whole being is one active
desire for the gifts of God and for God Himself; and whether we regard the
value of the gifts or the infinitely greater value of the God who gives
it is
obvious that the undivided soul must be engaged in the seeking. "Then
shall ye find Me when ye seek Me with your whole heart." It is the
continuing instant in prayer. It is the concentration of every faculty in its
utmost strength on seeking spiritual good as hid treasure. But spiritual good
is God Himself. There is literally no limit to the degree in which the desire
after God may kindle the human spirit. The waiting habit is as constantly
commended to us as the seeking: first
as the test of real earnestness
and
secondly
as its stimulant.
1. It is its test. There is a vehemence which deserves not to be
called earnestness: clamorous indeed and excited for a season
but cooling very
soon under the withering influence of delay
if
indeed
its own excitement
does not consume it. There is nothing which we need to have more deeply
impressed on our minds than this
that strong desires
lively feelings
and the
rush of superficial ardour are not themselves evidences of the indwelling of
the true spirit of prayer. They may coexist with a very slight feeling of
humility and with a very inadequate sense of the value of what we ask for. But
the sure test is the necessity of waiting: this God knows how to apply. We
apply it very often to each other. We wait to see what will come of the
vehemence of our fellows; and too often we find that it is only "the
crackling of thorns." Continuance is the infallible test. Blessed is that
deep fervour of spirit which no time changes; which no delay can dull.
2. But waiting is also the stimulant to seeking. And doubtless that
is the secret of the discipline of the Holy Ghost. The perfection of the spirit
of prayer is the permanence of strong and deep emotion in all devotional
exercises. This is what St. Paul calls "continuing instant in prayer":
"instant
" that is
ardent and vehement; "continuing"
instant
that is
keeping up that blessed glow at all times and under all
circumstances. Now
the injunction to wait simply means this. We are to make it
our study to keep up this ardour. And how is that done but by feeding our
desire in the pondering which studies our own weakness and keeps alive the
intense longing by considering our impotence without heavenly grace? There is
indeed
a waiting which itself defeats this end: which indolently acquiesces in
the Divine delay; leaves all to the set time of grace; and folds its wings too
closely. But the true waiting of the spirit of prayer only feeds desire
and
gives it strength and permanence. The soul that meditates much upon the
greatness of the blessing sought spends no waiting time in vain. Let us mark
the combination as it is enforced and exemplified in Scripture
and apply it to
ourselves. There is nothing which our Lord has more constantly and affectingly
taught us than this. Almost all His lessons pointed "to this end";
that men must pray always and not faint
though "God bear long with
us." But He always impresses the combination as such. The man whom we
remember in His parable sought and waited; but his waiting only rendered him
desperately importunate and "shameless." See how the Master of prayer
applies His own parable with a difference: every one who asks receives
but the
reserved mysteries of blessing are for those who wait and knock at the
innermost gate of heaven. So in that parable of real life. How did the Lord
keep the Syro-Phoenician waiting! And why? She asked and received something
though we see it not; she sought and found something
strength to knock; she
knocked at the door of His heart
and it opened to her. The entire history of devotion
in Scripture illustrates this combination. We see how the earlier and the later
saints showed forth the spirit of prayer which was in them; ardently seeking
always and always patiently waiting. From Abraham
and Job
and Jacob
that
night-long wrestler with the angel
and Hannah
and Samuel
and David
and
Daniel
and our Jeremiah
down to the Great Exemplar and those whom He taught
to pray
we see the utmost intensity of seeking desire combined with the
tranquil waiting of silent awe and patient expectation. Their intensity is not
measured by the multitude of pleading cries; for it rather tends always to few
words
again and again repeated
and even towards the limit of perfect
speechlessness. With deepening fervour they wait
and their groanings become
unutterable; their transports of desire are prolonged
and perfected into the
most passive tarrying for God. Be determined
therefore
to cherish at all
costs this sacred spirit of prayer. Learn it of our Master's precepts
and
learn it of His example. But remember here two things of great importance.
First
that the lesson of this union is to be practised in the inner man of the
heart. There is the true place of prayer
where all the sacred arts of devotion
are to be learnt. There alone can we "pray without ceasing
" seek
without interruption
and wait without leaving the Divine presence. There we
may have ardour without vehemence
waiting without indolence: the combination
which belongs rather to the spirit and frame and tone of devotion than to its
direct acts. Therefore
preserve your spirit by all means in that posture and
condition: whatever it costs you. And
secondly
keep it ever in view that the
Holy Ghost is your teacher. He is the Spirit of intercession within us. And if
you always let Him guide you
the great lesson shall be learnt. He will prompt
you to such earnestness
and stimulate you to such deepening fervours
as you
cannot now conceive; and yet keep you in so tranquil a spirit that the
groanings shall not be uttered.
IV. WE MAY NOW PROFITABLY APPLY OUR TWO WORDS TO THE CONFIDENCE AND
SUBMISSION OF PRAYER AS IT HAS TO DO WITH THE SEEKING AND WAITING FOR SPECIAL
BLESSINGS. This is a further stage in our present subject: it is not now the
general union of seeking and waiting as belonging to all prayer
to the prayer
that seeks salvation
to the spirit of prayer in the regenerate: but as
specifically concerned with the individual requests of our religious life.
Throughout Scripture we are exhorted to seek everything we need from God. Our wants
are endless. For everything God will be inquired of; the permission is as broad
as the care of life: "be careful for nothing
but in everything
by prayer
and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known." Here
the seeking is the seeking unto the Lord as an oracle; as to a hand forever
stretched out: as to an inexhaustible treasury. But we must not misunderstand
this. Our confidence is simply the making known our requests with certain faith
that they are heard: no more. Then submission comes in. We must blend waiting
with our seeking; and leave to God the whether
the when
and the how of His
granting. He may not bestow what we ask in some cases; and there is no true
prayer which does not leave to His supreme wisdom and Jove the decision as to
the propriety of granting its request. Now
the confidence of prayer is only
required to wait in this sense when it is asking the innumerable good things
which we think to be good
but which are directly connected with our
providential allotment. We wait only to know His will. He may have His own
methods of granting our requests. This applies to both orders of blessing. And
this is the supreme lesson we have to learn. We pray in confidence that our
prayer is heard; but the method of Divine answer demands our waiting. Let us
now see this gracious combination in its effects. The perfect union of
confidence and submission will have a most happy influence on our life of
prayer
as it is a life of supplication. It will dispose and enable us to pray
for temporal good and earthly deliverances with entire submissiveness to the
will of God: confident that we are heard
but leaving the answer to His wisdom.
The illustrations of this are endless; but let the context suffice now. The
seeking and waiting to which Jeremiah referred was the seeking for deliverance
from sore temporal troubles blended with the pure resignation of waiting which
accepted the denial of God. We need not ask what the keen trial was which in
this chapter pours out its exceeding bitter cry. Jeremiah is a typical man of
sorrows: and these lamentations are the lamentations of humanity. He was in his
meditation taught the blessedness of simply giving the case up to God. The very
waiting is good: "It is good that a man quietly wait." It teaches thankfulness
that matters are not worse: "This I recall to my mind. It is of the Lord's
mercies that we are not consumed." Sometimes the earthly good is granted.
But what was true of providential interposition is also true of the delay of
granting many most important spiritual requests. We must plead for them
and
yet learn in waiting the reason why they are withheld. In other words
they are
granted in an indirect manner
and in the discipline of graces more valuable
than the gifts themselves. This refers especially to the petitioning for
special manifestations of favour which are very often denied
but strangely
granted even in the denial no
St. Paul had not the thorn removed; but a
glorious manifestation of Divine strength was made perfect in his weakness. By
waiting upon God for any great blessing
we discipline the waiting graces:
trust
hope
faith
reverence
obedience
humility
submission. These
though
we seek them not
are precious results of waiting. There is
however
a
combination of seeking and waiting which rises to the pitch of assured hope of
immediate bestowment. The seeking and waiting are one in the present faith.
This cannot be doubted with the Lord's words in our mind. If this were not
added
we should be unjust to the covenant. The Great Teacher of prayer does
not make faith always its own reward. There are blessings which He makes
unconditionally ours; if we seek and wait in assurance that they are ours. Now
in all these cases
He by His Spirit prompts us to believe that they are given
and must be given "Believe that ye receive them
and ye shall have
them." Of what blessings is such a large word spoken? Of such certainly as
concern the honour of our Lord in our present salvation. These blessings are
not to be waited for so much as demanded.
V. Lastly
THE COMBINATION OF WHICH SO MUCH HAS BEEN SAID FORMS IN
ITS HIGHEST PERFECTION THE DEVOTIONAL STATE OF THE SOUL
IN WHICH BOTH THE
SEEKING AND THE WAITING GO BEYOND THEIR FORMER MEANINGS AND BLEND INTO THE
HABIT RATHER THAN THE ACT OF COMMUNION WITH GOD. Remember that this is not a
state which leaves behind the outgoings of seeking and waiting in express
supplications; it includes all that has been spoken of; but it superadds
something of much importance to the higher spiritual life. In the state of soul
I refer to
God Himself is an ever-present internal Reality
neither to be
actively sought nor passively waited for: the spirit lives in God; it is purely
filled with a desire that needs no words
and is always sensible of His
influence without needing to tarry for it. In such devotion the seeking is the
silent aspiration that is ever deepening towards infinity; and the petitioner
rather waits on the Lord than waits for Him. The soul has returned to its rest.
It dwells in God and God in it: and the consequence of that mutual indwelling
speaks for itself. That must in the nature of things be the tranquillity of
perfect waiting: it must be in the nature of things the ardour of ceaseless
longing. But it must be the aspiration of every one of us to reach that
perfectness of union with God in which seeking and waiting are one. The Triune
God will come and "make His abode with us." Thus shall we live where
all seeking and waiting are one in abiding communion with the Supreme Good. It
has been said that such habitual silent communion with God does not supersede
the acts and habits of formal worship: it graciously pervades them all. We must
be on our guard against an exaggeration of this deep truth which reckons it the
perfection of the devout estate to be free from every desire
and to keep every
feeling and impulse of the heart under such restraint as to be absolutely dead
and quiet before God
indifferent about everything that is His or from Him
and
intent only upon possessing Himself. Whether this is the perfection of heaven
we know not; it is not the perfection of earth. We must not set such an
unauthorised and impracticable standard before us. If we follow this high and
tranquil spirit of devotion into the public ordinances
or rather
if we are so
happy as to carry it into them
we shall feel how good it is to pray for
ourselves and for others
seeking earnestly what the Lord waits to give
But
our seeking will be one with the waiting: which ponders the Divine perfections
worshipping Him while we are asking His gifts. The whole service will be an act
of seeking and waiting combined: all adoration and praise
while all is seeking
and prayer. If we retire with it into secret
what is its effect there but such
a combination of active petition and passive meditation as makes the peculiar
blessedness of closet devotion? There the laws are very free; no rules are laid
down in Scripture; the Spirit bloweth where it listeth. There the seeking and
waiting are or may be blended in a most gracious way. Sometimes the soul united
to God is drawn out in vehement requests which will not be denied; happy are
you when this is the case. But at such times
even when you are praying
"with strong crying and tears
" you must be
you will be
waiting to
be heard "in that you fear" with humble reverence. Finally
this
habitual union of waiting and seeking in the presence of God makes the whole of
life one constant preparation for the final fulfilment of the promise of the
text. After all
the highest reaches of devotion below are only the seeking of
what cannot be fully found on earth
the waiting for what heaven alone can
reveal This is the very blessedness of the seeking waiting life
that its
object is too good for time. The end is not yet: however perfect may be the destruction
of sin and the peace of God in the soul. Make it the great law of your earthly
existence that it shall be ruled by this boundless expectation. Expect much in
this world
but not too much. Render to earth wilt belongs to earth
and to
heaven what belongs to heaven.
(W. B. Pope
D. D.)
God's goodness to them that wait
1. Illustrate this by the case of sorrow. "The heart knoweth
its own bitterness
" and none knoweth it beside. Sorrow is not to be
painted or described
or quite imagined. When it is heard of
it is known to be
serious; when it is felt
it is found to be misery. It is often a choice heart
which is thus chosen for sorrows. When the sorrow is godly
borne well by the
soul which bends under it
then it brings a true turning from the past: a
living faith in the promises is itself a very close communion with Christ. After
such a trial we go softly all our days; so softly that we can hear those
voices
unheard or unheeded before
which tell us "the Lord is good unto
them that wait for Him."
2. Take
again
the case of ill-health. At first
when the health
has failed
life seems to have lost its meaning. All occupations have to be
changed
new and unknown expedients adopted. The patient groans in weariness
"Surely against me is he turned. He turneth His hand against me all the
day." But in silent watchings and long dreary hours gleams of comfort
gradually enter the soul
till at last it is found; weakness has been a sort of
watchtower
with an outlook heavenward
and after many longings
many sighs and
prayers
we have seen and felt on the sick bed that "the Lord is good unto
them that wait for Him
unto the soul that seeketh Him."
3. We might take other and frequently recurring cases in the anxiety
of business — the feeling that one has a too heavy work to do
that one is
bound to a career which is not congenial
has to do what one is not adapted
for
or placed where one is not best placed
that one has not the necessary
means
openings
or conditions of success
no certainties in the future
no
prospect of really advancing
or eventually holding one's own
that one cannot get
one's family well out in life
that if we are taken away we know not what will
become of them. How many have to watch for bad tidings which are already
pluming the wing for a heavy flight
to sit about with a sinking heart where
they would long to be near to help! When such trial is upon us
our heart
complains with the unreasoning sincerity of suffering
"Thou hast remove a
my sore far off from peace; I forget prosperity." We forget prosperity in
trial
as we forget the Giver of good gifts in prosperity; we do not regard
what we had or what is left to us; we see that
and only that
which is taken
away. Then the school hour begins
and the lessons
at first irksome
are
settled down to at last. The Christian comes to a more patient docile waiting
upon God
a remembrance mat man does not live by bread alone; that the hand
which clothes the flower and feeds the bird will not forget us; that our issues
are with Him
and that
if our prosperity has grown poor
Jesus was poorer;
that our true riches lie hid in His. salvation.
4. Take the case of the besetting sin
known
deplored
wrestled
with
yet besetting still; a thorn in the spirit
buffeting and laying low —
the contrasting shadow of our better self following us year after year along
life's road — a breach in the battlements of the inner life
where the enemy at
his will cometh in as a flood. Wait; bear on; by and by your infirmity will
heal up
and the Lord will so lift the load that in a day you may be free from
it forever.
5. Or
take the trial of religious doubt — the shadow of the
intellect projected on the page
discord in the ear
and therefore the music
out of tune. Why does not the system which has satisfied the most gifted
satisfy us? Why does not the path where the most gracious have walked secure
give me some ease? I wish to do service
but there again intrudes upon me the
irritating problem. My difficulty is nothing to another; his difficulty is none
to me; yet. there we are
both in difficulties alike. "So all these things
worketh God oftentimes with man
" and His object is still the same: to
bring back his soul from the pit to be enlightened with the light of the
living.
(T. P. Crosse
D. C. L.)
"I stood
one evening last summer watching the pure white flowers on a creeper encircling
the veranda I had been told that the buds that hung with closed petals all day
every evening near sunset unfolded and sent out a fragrance. The miracle was
more than I had anticipated. A feeling of silent awe possessed me as I saw bud
after bud
as if under the touch of invisible hands
slowly fold back its
leaves until the creeper was filled with perfect blossoms
most beautiful and
sweet. And I said
'If the finger of God laid upon these
His flowers
can do
this in a way beyond the power of human study to explain
cannot the same
Divine touch
in ways we know not of
do as much for human hearts?' Shall the
flowers teach a lesson of patient waiting and holy trust for the coming
messing? There are hearts for whom we have prayed seemingly closed as yet to
every influence of the blessed Spirit; but let us be patient; we have sown the
good seed; God's rain and sunshine through His own providences are nourishing
the plant; the breath of prayer always surrounds it; surely by and by the
Divine touch will in a way we can least understand bring forth the perfected
flowers of His grace.
(John Hall.)
Waiting and reliance upon the Unseen
When William
Marconi
sitting among his instruments on the eastern coast of Newfoundland
with the great skeleton tower of wires rising high into the air
waited
confidently for his first message across the broad Atlantic by wireless
telegraphy
— waited
and got it
— he furnished to all time a home
illustration of faith in an unseen reality. And so
when a message from God
comes to the believer's soul
though God is unseen and the message unrecorded
save upon the unseen tables of his heart
none the less — not one particle the
less — does the believer perfectly confide in it. Nothing can do more for a
person than this reliance on an unseen world. It more than doubles his
resources. It adds the other and greater world to this
and makes him master of
both.
Oh
impatient
one! Did the leaves say nothing to you as they murmured when you came hither
today? They were not created this spring
but months ago; and the summer just
begun will fashion others for another year. At the bottom of every leaf stem is
a cradle
and in it is an infant germ; and the winds will rock it
and the
birds will sing to it all summer long; and next season it will unfold. So God
is working for you
and carrying forward to the perfect development all the
processes of your life.
(H. W. Beecher.)
I saw the
proprietor of a garden stand at his fence
and call to his poor neighbour
"Would you like some grapes?" "Yes; and very thankful
" was
the ready answer. "Then bring your basket." The basket was quickly
handed over the fence. The owner took it and disappeared among the vines; and I
remarked that he deposited in it rich clusters from the fruitful labyrinth in
which he hid himself. The woman stood at the fence quiet and hopeful. At length
he reappeared with a well-filled basket
saying
"I have made you wait a
good while; but there are all the more grapes." To the soul that seeketh
Him. — "How good to those who seek"! — I do not know whether it has
ever struck you what a grand man Jeremiah was. It is the prophet Jeremiah
in
his Book of Lamentations
who says to you who are seeking the Lord
"The
Lord is good to the soul that seeketh Him." You do not need to take any
discount off his words of cheer. Depend upon it
what he says is true. If he of
the weeping eyes
if he of the sorrowful spirit
yet nevertheless
in all the
bitterness of his misery
bears testimony that the Lord is good to the soul
that seeketh Him
then
depend upon it
it is so.
I. DESCRIBE A SEEKING SOUL.
1. He is under a sense of need
— a need which he could hardly
describe
but which
nevertheless
weighs very heavily upon him. He wants
something very great
but he hardly knows what it is. He feels guilty
and He
wants pardon. He feels sinful
and he wants renewing. He feels everything that
he ought not to be
and he wants to be changed
to be made a new man.
2. This seeker
also
is one who
though he does not know it
has a
measure of faith
for he believes
deep down in his heart
that if he could
once get to God
all would be well with him.
3. Further
this seeker sometimes seeks very unwisely. When a soul
wants God
and wants salvation
it will begin to seek the Lord by its own
doings
by its own feelings
by its own strange eccentricities
perhaps. Some
of you think that you must have a remarkable dream
others expect an angelic
vision
some are waiting to hear a very extraordinary sermon
and to feel very
singular emotions. This is the nature of seekers
that they often seek in a
very unwise way; but still
they do seek; and it is a mercy that they do seek
for "the Lord is good to the soul that seeketh Him."
4. I will tell you what true seekers do when they act wisely. I
notice that they often get alone. When a stag is wounded
it delights to hide
in the recesses of the forest
that it may bleed and die alone; and when God
has shot His arrow of conviction into a human heart
one of the first signs of
the wounding is that the man likes to get alone.
5. I will tell you another thing about the true seeker. You will
find that he begins to bring out his Bible
that much-neglected book.
6. And as
perhaps
in his study of the Scriptures he meets with
difficulties
you will find that this seeking young man is anxious to go and
hear the Word preached; for the Word rightly preached has a warmth about it
and a vividness
which are not always so manifest to the seeker in his reading
of the Word.
7. And there is another sign of the true seeker that I always love
to see; he 1ikes to get into godly company.
8. There is another mark of a seeker that is better still:
"Behold
he prayeth." Possibly
he used to repeat a form of prayer;
but he has given that up
and now he talks to God straight out of his heart
and asks for what he really wants; and he not only does that morning and
evening
but he is praying during most of the day.
9. I think there will be one more mark that you will see upon a
sincere seeker: he will quit all that is evil as much as possible
and he will
seek after that which is good
and especially
he will seek after faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ. You will see him now trying to believe
very much like a
little child tries to take his first steps in walking alone. If
poor trembling
seeker
your faith should bring you no comfort
because it is so weak
yet keep
on trusting to Christ.
II. ASSURE THE SEEKING SOUL THAT THE LORD IS GOOD TO HIM. "The
Lord is good to the soul that seeketh Him."
1. It is good of Him to have set you seeking at all. He might have
left you in your sins as He has left so many thousands of your fellow men.
2. God is also good to the seeker in giving him some gleams of
comfort. Did you say that you had been seeking the Lord for months? Well
how
is it that you have kept on seeking! I think it must be because you have
sometimes had a few rays of light.
3. I think that He is also good in not letting us rest short of
Himself. Often
the surgeon
when he has a bad case
will not let the wound
heal. "No
not yet
" says he; "if that wound heals too soon
there will be more mischief coming from it." So he lets in his lancet
again
and cuts out a bit of proud flesh; and our Lord will not let us close up
the wound that sin hath made lest it be but a sorry healing that will end in a
worse wound than before.
4. But He is much better to them that seek Him than you have ever
imagined
for He has given such rich promises to seekers. Oh
the blessed
invitations of Christ!
5. He is also good to seekers because He has made the way of
salvation so plain. A man with an intellect not much above that of an idiot may
understand this Gospel
and enjoy it
while a man with the greatest mental
powers cannot understand it any better; nay
he cannot understand it at all
unless the Spirit of God shall reveal it to him.
6. Then
once more
is it not very good of the Lord in being found
of seekers in due time?
III. But
lest I weary any seeker where I want to win him
I shall
close by FURTHER CHEERING HIM ON IN HIS SEEKING.
1. Friend
be of good comfort
Christ is seeking you. You are
drawing nearer to each other every hour
and it will not be long before your
arms are about His neck
and His arms about yours; you will be rejoicing in
Him
and He will be rejoicing over you.
2. It may not be long before you find the Saviour; it may
indeed
be so little a while
that
before the clock strikes again
you will have found
Him.
3. And mark you this
when the blessing comes
it will be worth
waiting for. The joy and peace through believing which come from Christ are a
wonderful offset against the tears and sorrows that we have endured while we
have been seeking Him.
4. This is my closing thought: thou hast no need to go about seeking
Christ any longer. Thou hast no need to wait even five minutes ere thou findest
Him
for it is written
"He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting
life." Dost thou know what it is to believe on Him
to trust Him? Do so
now. "It would be a great venture
" says one. Then venture on Him.
"Would He save me?" Try Him. You have heard
I dare say
of the
African who came over to England. Before he came
the missionary told him that
sometimes it was so cold in England that the water grew hard
and men could
walk on it. Now
the man had heard a great many things that were not true which
he had believed; but this
he said
he never would believe. It was "one
great big lie; for nobody ever could walk on water." When he woke up
one
December morning
and the stream was frozen over
he still said that he would
not believe it. Even when his friend went on the ice
and stood there
and
said
"Now you can see that what I told you was true; this is water
yet
it is hard
and it bears me up
" the African would not believe it
till
his friend said to him
"Come along
" and he gave him a pull
and
dragged him on the ice
and then he said
"Yes
it is true
for it bears
me up."
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
Hope and
quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord.
Having struck a
rich vein
our author proceeds to work it with energy. He sees that he is not
alone in enjoying the supreme blessedness of the Divine love. The revelation
that has come to him is applicable to other men if they will but fulfil the
conditions to which it is attached. In the first place
it is necessary to
perceive clearly what those conditions are on which the happy experience of
God's unfailing mercies may be enjoyed by any man. The primary requisite is
affirmed to be "quiet waiting." The passivity of this attitude is
accentuated in a variety of expressions. It is difficult for us of the modern
western world to appreciate such teaching. No doubt if it stood by itself it
would be so one-sided as to be positively misleading. But this is no more than
must be said of any of the best lessons of life. The Church has learnt the duty
of working — which is well. She does not appear so capable of attaining the
blessedness of waiting. Our age is in no danger of the dreaminess of quietism.
But we find it hard to cultivate what Wordsworth calls "wise
passiveness." And yet in the heart of us we feel the lack of this spirit
of quiet. The waiting here recommended is more than simple passiveness
however
more than a bare negation of action It is the very opposite of
lethargy and torpor. Although it is quiet
it is not asleep. It is open-eyed
watchful
expectant. It has a definite object of anticipation
for it is a
waiting for God and His salvation; and therefore it is hopeful. Nay
it has a
certain activity of its own
for it seeks God. Still
this activity is inward
and quiet; its immediate aim is not to get at some visible earthly end
however
much this may be desired
nor to attain some inward personal experience
some
stage in the soul's culture
such as peace
or purity
or power
although this
may be the ultimate object of the present anxiety; primarily it seeks God — all
else it leaves in His hands. Thus it is rather a change in the tone and
direction of the soul's energies than a state of repose. Quiet waiting
then
is the right and fitting condition for the reception of blessing from God. But
the elegist holds more than this. In his estimation the state of mind he here
commends is itself good for a man. It is certainly good in contrast with the
unhappy alternatives — feeble fussiness
wearing anxiety
indolent negligence
or blank despair. It is good also as a positive condition of mind. He has
reached a happy inward attainment who has cultivated the faculty of possessing
his soul in patience. His eye is clear for visions of the unseen. To him the
deep fountains of life are open. Truth is his
and peace and strength also. To
his reflections on the blessedness of quiet waiting the elegist adds a very
definite word about another experience
declaring that "it is good for a
man that he bear the yoke in his youth." It is impossible to say what
particular yoke the writer is thinking about. The persecutions inflicted on
Jeremiah have been cited in illustration of this passage; and although we may
not be able to ascribe the poem to the great prophet
his toils and troubles
will serve as instances of the truth of the words of the anonymous writer
for
undoubtedly his sympathies were quickened while his strength was ripened by
what he endured. If we will have a definite meaning
the yoke may stand for one
of three things — for instruction
for labour
or for trouble. The sentence is
true of either of these forms of yoke. But now the poet has been brought to see
that it was for his own advantage that he was made to bear the yoke in his
youth. How so! Surely not because it prevented him from taking too rosy views
of life
and so saved him from subsequent disappointment. Nothing is more fatal
to youth than cynicism. The poet's reflections on the blessedness of quiet
waiting are followed by direct exhortations to the behaviour which is its
necessary accompaniment — for such seems to be the meaning of the next triplet
verses 28 to 30. The revisers have corrected this from the indicative mood to
the imperative
"Let him sit alone
" etc.
"Let him put his
mouth in the dust
" etc.
"Let him give his cheek to him that smiteth
him
" etc. Who is the person thus indirectly addressed? The grammar of the
sentences would invite our attention to the "man" of the
twenty-seventh verse. If it is good for everybody to bear the yoke in his
youth
it might be suggested
further
that it would be well for everybody to
act in the manner now indicated — that is to say
the advice would be of
universal application. We must suppose
however
that the poet is thinking of a
sufferer similar to himself. Now the point of the exhortation is to be found in
the fact that it goes beyond the placid state just described. It points to
solitude
silence
submission
humiliation
non-resistance. It is hard to sit
in solitude and silence — a Ugolino in his tower of famine
a Bonnivard in his
dungeon; there seems to be nothing heroic in this dreary inactivity. It would
be much easier to attempt some deed of daring
especially if that were in the
heat of battle. Nothing is so depressing as loneliness — the torture of a
prisoner in solitary confinement. And yet now there must be no word of
complaint because the trouble comes from the very Being who is to be trusted
for deliverance. There is a call for action
however
but only to make the
submission more complete and the humiliation more abject. The sufferer is to
lay his mouth in the dust like a beaten slave. A yet more bitter cup must be
drunk to the dregs. He must actually turn his cheek to the smiter
and quietly
submit to reproach. We cannot consider this subject without being reminded of
the teaching and example of our Lord. It is hard to receive even from His lips
the command to turn the other cheek to one who has smitten us on the right
cheek. But when we see Jesus doing this very thing the whole aspect of it is
changed. What before looked weak and cowardly is now seen to be the perfection
of true courage and the height of moral sublimity. What a Roman would despise
as shameful weakness
He has proved to be the triumph of strength. This advice
is not so paradoxical as it appears. We are not called upon to accept it merely
on the authority of the speaker. He follows it up by assigning good reasons for
it. The first is that the suffering is but temporary. God seems to have cast
off His afflicted servant. If so
it is but for a season. The second is to be
found in God's unwillingness to afflict. He never takes up the rod
as we might
say
con amore. Therefore the trial will not be unduly prolonged. Since God
Himself grieves to inflict it
the distress can be no more than is absolutely
necessary. The third and last reason for this patience of submission is the
certainty that God cannot commit an injustice.
(W. F. Adeney
M. A.)
The advantage of hoping and waiting for the salvation of
God
I. WHAT IS INCLUDED IN THE SALVATION HERE SPOKEN OF.
1. A salvation from every kind and degree of evil — sin
temptations
the troubles of this world
and future everlasting miseries (Revelation
21:3
4).
2. The being put into the possession of all good (2
Timothy 2:10; 1 Peter 1:4
5). Every desire filled up
every
prayer answered
and all changed into the most exalted
everlasting praise and
thanksgiving.
II. WHY IS IT CALLED THE SALVATION OF THE LORD?
1. It is a salvation worthy of Him (Hebrews
11:16).
2. It is designed
prepared
and promised by Him (Revelation
2:10).
3. It is a salvation that will consist in the enjoyment of Him.
III. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN HOPING AND PATIENTLY WAITING FOR IT?
1. Having the heart fixed by faith on the salvation of God as real
though out of sight (Hebrews 11:1).
2. A full persuasion that the salvation of God will come at last
though for a time deferred.
3. Expecting the salvation of God in His time; depending upon His
wisdom to choose the fittest season
and His faithfulness to remember us when
that season comes.
4. Serious care to be found ready
whenever called to enter upon the
salvation of God
which we have been waiting for.
IV. IN WHAT RESPECTS IT MAY BE SAID TO BE GOOD
THUS TO HOPE AND
QUIETLY WAIT FOR THE SALVATION OF GOD.
1. It is good
as it redounds to God's glory; as it is a testimony
of his power and grace.
2. As it may encourage others to look
and wait for this salvation.
3. As it will be comfortable to ourselves
disposing us to meet the
will of God in a becoming manner.
(Pulpit Assistant.)
I. WHAT IS MEANT BY THE "SALVATION OF THE LORD." The
"salvation of the Lord" here is something else than the first view
which a sinful man obtains of pardon and peace
through "the great God our
Saviour." It is the salvation which a man needs in any crisis of life
where he suffers under trial or is threatened with it. And
in these trials
hope and quiet waiting do not come at once into their fullest exercise. As long
as human means can avail
it is a man's duty
trusting to Divine help
to
employ them. To sit and wait
where effort can avail
is to insult God's
providence. The "salvation of the Lord" is when all conceivable means
have been employed
and have failed. We may struggle on with a blind despair
and
as long as strength remains
we must struggle on; but this power
too
seems to be failing. It is then that the ease rises distinctly into "the
salvation of the Lord." Nothing can save us but His marked interposition
and the heart must put itself in the attitude of "hope and quiet
waiting" for it. There may be some who are using every endeavour to secure
subsistence and an honourable position for themselves and those dependent on
them; and yet all their efforts are unsuccessful. If some change does not
quickly come
they feel that temporal ruin is on them. It is a time not to
relax effort
but to look out more intently for deliverance from God
and to
have the heart resting on it. Or there may be some one who has the presence of
a constant difficulty in the spiritual life
— perhaps the want of that sense
of religious comfort which is felt to be so desirable
or the obtrusion of some
painful doubt about doctrine or duty
through which no present light can be
seen. No exertion to reach light is to be neglected
but there may be a more
implicit confidence in Him who is the Father of lights
— holding steadfastly
to what is felt to be true
and waiting for illumination on what is doubtful —
"casting out the anchor and wishing for the day." Perhaps there are
some who are deeply interested in the spiritual welfare of a soul dear to them
as their own. Their prayer has been rising
like that of Abraham for Ishmael
"O that he might live before God!" But all means have appeared to
fail. Then this remains to us
— to take all our endeavour
and leave it with
God
in whose hand are the hearts of all men
who can follow the wanderer
wherever his feet or his thoughts may carry him
and can bring him again to
himself
and to his Father's house. Or it may be there is some life which has
lost all the relish it once possessed
— where wasting sickness has undermined
the strength
— or friends who were the hue and perfume of it have been taken
away
— or hopes that hung on its horizon like a coming glory have melted into
thin air
— and existence seems to have no more an object
and duty sinks into
a dull mechanical round
and the night comes down dark and starless
and the
morning rises cold and colourless. It is hard to say what can restore to such a
life its vigour and freshness
for the mind comes oftentimes to have a morbid
love of the gloom which is its misery
and to reckon it treason to its past
hopes to turn its eye from their sepulchre. God only knows the remedy
and it
is a special time to call up higher duty to our aid — the duty of turning to
Him
and striving to feel that He has it in his power
though we may not see
how
to save us over the grave of our most cherished hopes
without causing us
to forget them
and to shine in with a reviving light upon the dullest and
bleakest of earthly walks.
II. WHAT IS MEANT BY THESE EXERCISES OF THE SOUL TOWARDS GOD'S
SALVATION
— "TO HOPE
AND QUIETLY TO WAIT." Every one of us knows
without any laboured definition
what it is to hope. But if we are to set
ourselves to practise it in a Christian way
it may be useful to look at some
of its elements. The foundation of hope may be said to lie in desire. It
differs from desire in this
that desire pursues many things that can never be
objects of hope to us. We can only hope for that which is felt to be possible
and reasonable. This
then
is the first thing for us to do
if we would
strengthen hope
to see that its objects are right and good
— that is
accordant with the Divine will
and beneficial for us. We may learn this by
consulting God's Word
and our own thoughtful experience. The next element in
Christian hope is faith. Hope differs from faith in this
that we believe in
many things in regard to which we do not hope. Hope is faith with desire
pointing out the objects. If we have sought to make these desires Christian and
reasonable
then we may consistently call in the aid of faith. "The Lord
shall give that which is good." When we have sought to purify our desires
and to make them the subject of faith
as far as they are right and good
there
is still a third element to be added to make our hope strong — that of
imagination. It is that power of the soul which gives to hope its wings. Let it
but rise from the desire of what is true and good
and be chastened by the
faith of what God has promised
and it can lift up the soul above the most
terrible trials
and put it already in possession of the unseen and heavenly.
Every true Christian has the soul of the poet latent in his nature
and if many
are kept depressed and earth-attracted
it is because they do not strive enough
to free this power from sinful and worldly encumbrances
and to give it wings
to soar to its native home. The next exercise of soul which we are to cherish
toward God's interpositions is "quiet waiting." It is the part of
hope to seek the future; it is the duty of patience to rest calmly in the
present
and not to fret — to be satisfied to be where God appoints
and to
suffer what God sends. It is fitly pieced after hope
because it follows it in
the natural course of an educated Christian life. Hope belongs to youth;
patience is the lesson of maturity. As there are means for stimulating hope
so
there are also for strengthening patience
and there is
in some measure
a
correspondence in them. One means is common to both — the employment of faith.
It will enable us more quietly to wait if we have confidence in the all-wise
and all-merciful arrangements of God. He can make all its wastes to be as Eden
and bring out the best spiritual results from what seem to us the most barren
spots. In other respects
the means for growing in patience are very different
from those that help hope. If hope is nursed by desire of what we have not
patience is maintained by contentment with what we have. Our duty may be
when
desire of something lost or longed for is consuming us
to bend our look more
intently on the present
and try to discover how many things
and how precious
God has left to us. Again
we must cultivate patience by a calm attention to
duties. Quiet waiting is not inaction. We may be waiting for one object
while
we are steadily working for another. It is a kind law of our nature
that
labour expended on any object gives an interest in it; and it is a still kinder
law of the kingdom of God
that the tamest and most insignificant of daily
duties may be made noble and Divine
when the thought of God and the will of
Christ are carried into them.
III. THE BENEFIT OF UNITING THESE — "It is good both to hope and
quietly to wait." Every Christian heart feels how it can be going forward
in thought to some blessing God has promised
and yet resting
while it is
withheld
in submission to the Divine will
— as John
in Patmos
walked the
streets of the heavenly city
and listened to its songs
and yet abode in his
solitary exile
and was satisfied to be there as long as God required.
1. The one is needful to save the other from sinking into sin. If
hope possessed the Christian heart alone
it would be ready to flutter itself
into impatience. On the other hand
if we had quiet waiting without hope
it
would be in danger of settling into stagnancy. The object of its waiting would
disappear
and trials without any end in view would benumb and paralyse it. The
one is needful to raise the other to his full strength. The Saviour still
leaves us
as He left His first disciples in the garden
with the words
"Tarry ye here and watch
" and promises to come again. If hope can
lay hold of this promise
and keep it fast
patience will maintain its post
like a sentinel who is sure of relief at the appointed hour
and if the hour
seems long
will beguile it with those words
which have passed like a
"song in the night" through many a weary heart
— "For yet a
little while
and He that shall come will come
and will not tarry." Then
as imps strengthens patience
patience in turn will strengthen hope. Patience
brooding over its own quiet spirit
which yet it feels is not its own
has the
presentiment and augury of an end beyond itself. In the deep well of a tranquil
heart
the star of hope is lying
— ever clearer as the calm is deepening
—
reflected down into it from God's own heaven. This is God's manner
first
to
give the inward peace of soul
and afterwards the final deliverance. He came
into the ship and calmed the disciples' fears
and then He spoke and calmed the
storm: "I will be with thee in trouble"; and then it follows
"I
will deliver thee." And now
if it be possible to unite these two
and if
it be so needful
it should be the lesson of our life daily to aim at it
to
hope without impatience
and to wait without despondency
— to fold the wing in
captivity
like a caged bird
and be ready to use the pinion when He breaks our
prison. We shall find increasingly "how good it is." It is good now
in the depth of the soul
— in the conscious assurance that it is better to
rest in the hardest of God's ways than to wander at will in our own.
"Behold
we count them happy who endure." We shall find it good in
the growth of all the Christian graces
under the shadow of patience. We shall
find how good is in the enhancement of every blessing for which we have to
wait. God's plan of providing blessings for us is to educate the capacity which
is to receive them. We are straitened in ourselves
and must be kept waiting
till our minds and hearts enlarge. "Ye have need of patience
that
after
ye have done the will of God
ye might receive the promise." Of all the
motives to hopeful endurance
surely this last is not the smallest
that He who
lays the duty upon us has Himself given the example of it. He asks nothing from
us that He has not done for us
and done by a harder road
and with a heavier
burden.
(John Ker
D. D.)
Whether it was
Jeremiah himself after he had taken refuge in a grotto near the Damascus gate
of Jerusalem
or as he stood over against the city in an attitude of grief
which a great artist has immortalised
or a godly man of the next generation
who poured out this dirge over the miseries of his country
it makes very
little difference in regard to the abiding value of the words
and therefore
also to their ever-recurring usefulness. They come from a very remote past
stamped with the finger of God; and they contain a bit of wisdom
in favour of
which might be quoted probably the whole experience of our race.
I. Apart from the actual contents of such a statement
beneath it
and running through it there is clearly implied AN INTENSE CONVICTION THAT GOD
RULES THIS WORLD
AND THAT HE RULES IT IN THE INTERESTS OF RIGHTEOUSNESS. In
verses like the 37th and the 64th
such a conviction finds vigorous expression:
And it is still true that
in order to bear mystery and sorrow in peace and
without any serious disturbance of thought or spirit
a man cannot do better
than cling to these fundamental truths. Nature in some of their moods will have
made most men feel
in the certainty of her processes
the inerrancy with which
her life unfolds in ever higher forms of fitness and beauty
that
—
The
whole round earth is every way
Bound
by gold chains about the feet of God.History
too
if it reveals anything
reveals the throne of God above the nations
and methods of government by which
in the long run righteousness is always vindicated. And unless conscience is to
be regarded as inexplicable
a haunting mystery whose immortal sanctions are simply
meaningless
there must be in this world
and over it
a living and active God
the primary source of all pure morals
whose rule in everything makes for
righteousness. It is not possible
indeed
always to see that such is the case.
For human experience is full of discords.
1. Occasionally all that men can do
in the assaults of doubt to
which they are inclined to give no place
is to cry unto God with the prophet
"Verily
Thou art a God that hidest Thyself
O God of Israel
the
Saviour
" and then the old assurance comes back
solving all difficulties
charming every doubt away: "That the righteous should be as the wicked
that be far from Thee: shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
Therefore "I will wait upon the Lord
that hideth His face from the house
of Jacob
and I will look for Him."
2. It is not difficult to determine the effect upon the feelings and
state of heart that ought in reason to follow this conviction and to be
produced by it. Here is a God whose rule is righteous
so absolutely righteous
that under His rule men always reap the fruit of their own ways. Just as
therefore
disaster must overtake the wicked
salvation must come to the
God-fearing man. Again
therefore
he may venture to regard it as certain
and
however unlikely it seems
to hope and quietly to wait for it. What particular
form the salvation assumes is of little importance
provided it is one which
relates to the real interests of the soul.
3. But this important little word "quietly" must not be
overlooked. There are some qualities or possible accompaniments of hope that
altogether spoil it
and make it anything rather than a minister to comfort and
salvation. Of these undesirable companions
the worst are perhaps impatience
and suspense
for indifference
as being almost the negation of hope and fatal
to vigour
need not be considered. Impatient hope
weary of slow process and
gradual growth
eager to grasp the prize before it has been fairly earned
and
to pluck the fruit before the sun and the showers have had time to ripen it —
it is met with often enough in the ordinary life. Most Christians will have
found themselves disposed now and again to complain that the influences of
grace have not more quickly perfected them
that the first brief prayer has not
been followed by the flight of every temptation. The Divine rule is
alike for
peace and for progress in religion
"Rest in the Lord
and wait patiently
for Him." God's care for His people
His effective interference for their
protection and safety
the completion of the work that is being done by His
sanctifying Spirit
— these things
as far as the Operation of His grace is
concerned
do not admit of any doubt. "Hope quietly" — that is
without any excitement and with full confidence of success. The salvation of
the Lord is certain; and accordingly the prophet bids us treat it as certain
not worry or make a noise about our difficulties
but go steadily on day after
day
doing our duty
making the best of our troubles
strangers to fear.
4. That
says the prophet
is "good" for a man — which
word
in his usage
which is not unlike the modern ethical usage
denotes the
blessed combination of dutifulness and personal satisfaction. In this verse
almost every phrase implies the possession of some main element of happiness.
He who hopes "quietly for the salvation of the Lord" will be tranquil
in spirit
exercising self-control
will have the sense of security and the
knowledge that a God is caring for him and is gradually disciplining him into
Godlikeness; and it is no wonder the prophet pronounced that to be good for a
man.
II. Jeremiah did not feel any necessity to limit and qualify his
advice
or to exclude any section of a sincere life from its application. It
sets forth therefore THE ATTITUDE WHICH A CHRISTIAN MAN MAY VENTURE TO MAINTAIN
UNIFORMLY TOWARDS MATTERS THAT MAY BE A SOURCE OF PERPLEXITY TO ALL
AND ALSO
TOWARDS THOSE WHICH ONLY HIS OWN TEMPERAMENT OR HIS OWN TENDENCIES OF THOUGHT
MAKE ALARMING. Not least of all does it apply to the controversies concerning
Church and faith
scripture and doctrine
which because of their complexity are
apt to be invested with needless terrors
and because of their connection with
personal religion seem sometimes to threaten and imperil the most sacred
convictions.
1. With respect to the unexaggerated difficulties in doctrine or in
organisation that do exist
such questions as those of inspiration
of the
authorship of various parts of the Old Testament and its bearing upon the
authority of the New
of the relationships of the Churches and the methods of
worship
this verse prescribes the way in which we should regard them — not
shut our eyes to their existence
or be frightened at them but "hope and
quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord."
2. With the political and social problems of the day
the cares of
enterprise
and of children and home
the perpetual disappointments and
troubles that are crowded into every man's life
the same rule holds good
that
Christian men should not worry
or despond
or doubt
but remember the throne
of God over all
and quietly wait for His salvation. If obedience to that rule
is not always easy
it is always reasonable and a blessed ministry of strength
and peace. Few troubles continue unendurable
when a man knows that through
them the grace of God will be with him
and that after them will come such a
blessed and permanent reversal of experience as will more than compensate for
all.
(R. Waddy Moss.)
The Christian's hope and patience
I. WHAT IS MEANT BY THE SALVATION OF THE LORD. Salvation literally
means the act of delivering any one from danger or misfortune; and implies at
once some misery or peril from which deliverance is needed
and some power
sufficient to work that deliverance out. And the statement that there is
salvation with God
is a declaration of the miserable condition in which we are
by nature
and an announcement that God has set before us a means whereby we
may escape
and that His mighty hand is put forth to render those means
effectual.
II. WHEREFORE IT IS GOOD THAT A MAN SHOULD HOPE FOR THIS SALVATION.
There are many who cannot be properly said to hope for it; — they appear to be
certain that they shall attain to it
although not one of the marks of Christ's
flock be visible upon them. Others
again
are manifestly utterly careless
about it; they pass through life without showing a single desire for salvation
or a single anxiety respecting the state of their souls. And others yet again
appear to despair; — they seem to acknowledge their need of salvation
but to
think that it is not possible that they can ever lay aside those sins which
separate them from God. Now
none of these can be said to hope; because hope is
a mixture of desire to obtain
of fear of coming short
and of belief in the
possibility of attaining the "salvation of the Lord"; — and those who
have not fixed their minds upon it
in the sense of their own guilt
and of the
power and willingness of the Lord to forgive
are as yet utterly destitute of
this Christian grace. But the awakened sinner
along with that conviction of
his sins which the Holy Spirit has wrought in him
receives the hope that God
will be merciful to him
for the sake of a crucified Saviour; and this draws
him to that Saviour.
III. WHEREFORE IT IS GOOD THAT A MAN SHOULD QUIETLY WAIT FOR THIS
SALVATION. This almost appears to contradict the former part of the text; —
because nothing can seem more opposed to hope than quietly waiting. But this
contradiction is only in appearance. The reason that there is so much
impatience connected with all human wishes and expectations is
that our hopes
with respect to this world are ever uncertain. But it is otherwise with respect
to "the salvation of the Lord." In it there is nothing doubtful; for
He Himself has promised to give it; — in it there is no deceit; for Jesus the
Author and the purchaser of our salvation is indeed "a friend that
sticketh closer than a brother." In clinging then to Him
and laying hold
on His salvation
the poor sinner finds that he receives the fulfilment of all
the promises; — and as the sweetest and the best of these hold out to us
deliverance not only from the punishment but from the dominion of sin
he looks
on the very disposition to wait quietly
so contrary to unconverted human
nature
as a part of the salvation for which he hopes. The Christian should
therefore "quietly wait"; but he should do so in the diligent use of
the means for growth in grace; stirring up the gifts which have already been
bestowed on him
of faith
whereby he lays hold on the promises
— of hope
whereby he looks for their fulfilment
of prayer
whereby he expresses that
faith and that hope to God
and seeks to have the crowning grace of love shed
abroad on his heart. And this he may well do
if taught by the Spirit of God
that his heavenly Father deals more wisely with him than he would deal with
himself
were the freedom of choice allowed him. It is true that it is not so
pleasant to remain in this state as it would be to have at once the fulness of
spiritual joy; but it is more profitable to the heir of immortality to be
trained to the habitual exercise of patience and submission to the Divine will
as this must be the best preparation for heaven
(R. W. Kyle
B. A.)
The advantages of a state of expectation
Our incapacity
of looking into the future has much to do with the production of disquietude
and unhappiness. Under the present dispensation we must calculate on
probabilities; and our calculations
when made with the best care and
forethought
are often proved faulty by the result. And if we could substitute
certainty for probability
and thus define
with a thorough accuracy
the
workings of any proposed plan
it is evident that we might be saved a vast
amount both of anxiety and of disappointment. Yet when we have admitted that
want of acquaintance with the future gives rise to much both of anxiety and of
disappointment
we are prepared to argue that the possession of this
acquaintance would be incalculably more detrimental. If we could know
beforehand whatever is to happen
we should
in all probability
be unmanned
and enervated; so that an arrest would be put on the businesses of life by
previous acquaintance with their several successes. We shall endeavour to
prove
by the simplest reasoning
that it is for our advantage as Christians
that salvation
in place of being a thing of certainty and present possession
must be hoped and quietly waited for by believers. We can readily suppose an
opposite arrangement. We can imagine that
as soon as a man were justified
he
might be translated to blessedness
and that thus the gaining the title
and
the entering on possession
might be always contemporary. But the possibility
of the arrangement
and its goodness
are quite different questions; and whilst
we see that it might have been ordered
that the justified man should at once
be translated
we can still believe it good that he "both hope and quietly
wait for the salvation of the Lord." Our text speaks chiefly of the
goodness to the individual himself; but it will be lawful first to consider the
arrangement as fraught with advantage to human society. We must all perceive
that
if true believers were withdrawn from earth at the instant of their
becoming such
the influences of piety
which now make themselves felt through
the mass of a population
would be altogether destroyed
and the world be
deprived of that salt which alone preserves it from total decomposition. Whilst
the contempt and hatred of the wicked follow incessantly the professors of
godliness
and the enemies of Christ
if ability were commensurate with malice
would sweep from the globe all knowledge of the Gospel
we venture to assert
that the unrighteous owe the righteous a debt of obligation not to be reckoned
up; and that it is mainly because the required ten are still found in the
cities of the plain that the fire showers are suspended. And time given for the
warding off by repentance the doom. Over and above this
it is undeniable that
the presence of a pious man in the neighbourhood will tell greatly on its
character; and that
in variety of instances
his withdrawment would be
followed by wilder outbreakings of profligacy. It is
however
the goodness of
the arrangement to the individual himself which seems chiefly contemplated by
the prophet. Now
under this point of view
our text is simpler at first sight
than when rigidly examined. We can see at once that there is a spiritual
discipline in the hoping and waiting
which can scarcely fail to improve
greatly the character of the Christian. We take the case
for example
of a man
who
at the age of thirty
is enabled
through the operations of grace
to look
in faith to the Mediator. By this looking in faith the man is justified: a
justified man cannot perish; and if
therefore
the individual died at thirty
he would "sleep in Jesus." But
after being justified
the man is
left thirty years upon earth — years of care. and toil
and striving with sin —
and during these years he hopes and waits for salvation. At length he obtains
salvation; and thus
at the close of thirty years
takes possession of an
inheritance to which his title was clear at the beginning. Now
wherein can lie
the advantageousness of this arrangement? We think that no fair explanation can
be given of our text
unless you bring into the account the difference in the
portions to be assigned hereafter to the righteous. We bring before you
therefore
as a comment on our text
words such as these of the apostle:
"Our light affliction
which is but for a moment
worketh for us a far
more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." We consider that when you set
the passages in juxtaposition
the working power
ascribed by one to
affliction
gives satisfactory account of the goodness attributed by the other
to the hoping and waiting. We are here
in every sense
on a stage of
probation; so that
having once been brought back from the alienations of
nature
we are candidates for a prize
and wrestlers for a diadem. It is not
the mere entrance into the kingdom for which we contend: the first instant in
which we act faith on Christ as our propitiation
sees this entrance secured to
us as justified beings. But
when justified
there is opened before us the
widest field for a righteous ambition; and portions deepening in majesty
and
heightening in brilliancy
rise on our vision
and animate to unwearied
endeavour. We count it one of the glorious things of Christianity
that
in
place of repressing
it gives full scope to all the ardour of man's spirit. It
is common to reckon ambition amongst vices: and a vice it is
under its
ordinary developments
with which Christianity wages interminable warfare. But
nevertheless
it is a staunch
and an adventurous
and an eagle-eyed thing: and
it is impossible to gaze on the man of ambition
daunted not by disaster
wearied not by repulse
disheartened not by delay
without feeling that he
possesses the elements of a noble constitution; and that
however
to be wept
over for the prostitution of his energies
for the pouring out this mightiness
of soul on the corrupt and the perishable
he is equipped with an apparatus of
powers which need nothing but the being rightly directed
in order to the
forming the very finest of characters. Christianity deals with ambition as a
passion to be abhorred and denounced
whilst urging the warrior to carve his
way to a throne
or the courtier to press on in the path of preferment. But it
does not cast out the elements of the passion. Why should it? They are the
noblest which enter into the human composition
bearing most vividly the
impress of man's original formation. Christianity seizes on these elements. She
tells her subjects that the rewards of eternity
though all purchased by
Christ
and none merited by man
shall be rigidly proportioned to their works.
She tells them that there are places of dignity
and stations of eminence
and
crowns with more jewellery
and sceptres with more sway
in that glorious
Empire which shall finally be set up by the Mediator. And she bids them strive
for the loftier recompense. She would not have them contented with the lesser
portion
though infinitely outdoing human imagination as well as human desert.
And if ambition be the walking with the staunch step
and the single eye
and
the untired zeal
and all in pursuit of some longed for superiority
Christianity saith not to the man of ambition
lay aside thine ambition:
Christianity hath need of the staunch step
and the single eye
and the unfired
zeal; and she therefore sets before the man pyramid rising above pyramid in
glory
throne above throne
palace above palace; and she sends him forth into
the moral arena to wrestle for the loftiest though unworthy of the lowest.
There would seem nothing wanting to the completeness of this argument
unless
it be proof of what has been all along assumed
namely
that the being
compelled to hope and to wait is a good moral discipline
so that the exercises
prescribed are calculated to promote holiness
and
therefore
to insure
happiness. We have perhaps only shown the advantageousness of delay; whereas
the text asserts the advantageousness of certain acts of the soul Yet this
discrepancy between the thing proved
and the thing to be proved
is too slight
to require a lengthened correction. It is the delay which makes salvation a
thing of hope
and that which I am obliged to hope for
I am
of course
obliged to wait for; and thus
whatever of beneficial result can be ascribed to
the delay may
with equal fitness
be ascribed to the hoping and waiting. Besides
hope and patience — for it is not the mere waiting which is asserted to be
good; it is the quietly waiting; and this quiet waiting is but another term for
patience — hope and patience are two of the most admirable of Christian graces
and he who cultivates them assiduously
cannot well be neglectful of the rest.
(H. Melvill
B. D.)
There are three
things named here
and they reach a sort of climax in the third — to hope
to
wait
and to wait quietly
or in silence. It is sometimes hard to hope when
there are no signs of promise
and no break in the clouds; it is harder to
wait. And the heart gets sick with deferred hope
and still the end seems no
nearer; but the hardest thing is to wait without a word of anger
reproach
or
impatience
though the eyes have got wearied with watching — watching for what
never comes. And yet this hardest thing is the best if we can attain to it.
"It is good that a man should both hope and wait
" and wait in
silence.
I. PATIENT WAITING. This is a Divine virtue. It is that quality in
man which makes him most like God. It is commended to us in every part of the
Bible as the distinguishing quality of the faithful. It is needed in every age
but we especially need it in this particular age
for the times in which we
live are characterised by rush
fever
and haste. That is the paramount feature
of the time. We want to force the pace
to break the record
and to make God's
machinery
as well as human machinery
move faster. It is a fast age; life is
in a ferment of activity
the nerves are too highly strung
the brain is in a
whirl
and we cannot bear delays. We want to see the dawn breaking while it is
still midnight
and to clear away all our obstructions
difficulties
and
troubles by one stroke. We want to be rich without any loss of time; to reach
to top places without the disagreeable necessities of slow climbing
and oh!
that some prophet would fix the day and the hour for us; how handsomely we
would pay him if he would fix it early and antedate God's time
for the
"mill of God" does grind so slowly
so slowly. But here comes the
sweet
tender
chiding answer. "It is good that a man should both hope and
quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord."
II. HOPE DEPENDENT ON WAITING. Without hope life has no sky; it is a
plant which virtually dies for want of nourishment
light
and air. When hope
goes
energy goes
and all earnest hope
and any emotion of joy
and there is
nothing left to live for. The pessimist says
"Is life worth living?"
and I answer him emphatically
"No
it is not — to one in your mood."
Hope always perishes where there is no patient waiting. If you cannot bear to
have your hopes delayed
you soon come to the conclusion that every hope is a
deception
every promise is a delusion
and every prayer a mockery; and then
presently you are found repeating with grim despair that most dismal of all
proverbs
"Blessed is the man that expecteth nothing." Pessimists are
always men who have lost their hopes and lost their hearts because their hopes
have not been speedily fulfilled.
III. WAITING THE TEST OF MANHOOD. It marks the highest type of man
it
distinguishes the man from the child
the thinking man from the intellectual
weakling
the higher races from the lower races
the civilised man from the
savage. The savage is always like a child
impatient; you can hardly persuade
him to till the ground
because he would have to wait six months for the
harvest; he kills the goose which lays the golden eggs
because he cannot wait
for a slow return. And there are hundreds of young men who are as senseless as
the savage in that respect: they burn the candle of pleasure at both ends
and
in the middle too
heedless of darkness that is coming in future years
if they
can only make a big glaring flame at the present moment. But as soon as ever
you lift men up in the scale of being
they begin to build and plant and
labour
though the results may not be seen for years; and you can always
measure the strength and nobility and the very magnitude of a man by this: Does
he know how to wait? We are told of the astronomer Kepler that when his great discoveries
were announced
but rejected and scorned by all the learned and religious
world
he quietly said
"If the Almighty waited six thousand years for one
man to see what He had made
I may well wait two hundred years for one man to
understand what I have seen." There was a great soul behind that
utterance.
IV. The BLUNDERS OF IMPATIENCE. Men become like wild creatures in
their hurried haste to be rich; they want to win in a day what honest industry
would only win in years
and then craft takes the place of toil; astute cunning
and sleight of hand the place of diligence and perseverance; madness engulfs
sober reason
greed devours all human feeling
and manhood perishes; and often
the only end of it is bankruptcy
ruin
and disgrace. These are the works of
impatience; and am I not right in saying that nearly all the follies of
political life and the blunders Which great nations commit are the result of
impatience? Just think what a wretched coil of trouble was made for us in the
Transvaal some years ago by the strong-headed men — nay
the hot-headed boys —
who raided and failed: mad haste and long repentance for them and others — that
is what comes of it. And now through all this crisis we hear voices urging the
same mad haste. Strong and sober and level headed men have been saying
throughout
and are saying now
"Be firm
press your just claims
do not
draw back
but above all things be patient." It is patience that wins in
these difficulties
and especially when justice is on its side.
V. THE REWARD OF WAITING. If you labour on and do not lose heart
and bind yourselves fast to that hard
just master
Duty
you win your proper
place in time. If God sees the fitness in you
the world will see it by and by.
Nothing can keep a man permanently down if the higher voice is bidding him
"Come up higher." It is only a question of time and patience
if you
labour and do always the thing that is right. The Christian work that has been
so disappointing and unprofitable will at last yield the fruits of righteousness.
And your own besetting sins
too
against which you fought and prayed so long
will at last be trampled down by Him who subdues all things unto Himself.
(J. G. Greenhough
M. A.)
It is good for
a man that he bear the yoke in his youth.
The best burden for young shoulders
Yoke bearing is
not pleasant
but it is good. It not every pleasant thing that is good
nor
every good thing that is pleasant. Sometimes the goodness may be just in
proportion to the unpleasantness. Even apart from the grace of God
and apart
from religion
it is a great blessing for a man to bear the yoke in his youth!
that is to say
first
it is good for us when we are young to learn obedience.
It is half the making of a man to be placed under rule
and taught to bear
restraint. It is good for young people to bear the yoke
too
in the sense of
giving themselves in their early days to acquire knowledge. If we do not learn
when we are young
when shall we learn? It is good for young people
too — we
are now talking about the natural meaning of the passage — good for them that
they should encounter difficulties and troubles when they begin life. The
silver spoon in the mouth with which some people are born is very apt to choke
them. It is not
however
my business to preach about these matters at any
length; I am not a moral lecturer
but a minister of the Gospel. I have
fulfilled a duty when I have given the first meaning to the text
and now I
shall use it for nobler ends.
I. IT IS GOOD TO BE A CHRISTIAN WHILE YOU ARE YOUNG. It is good for
a man to bear Christ's yoke in his youth.
1. For
see
first
the man whose heart is conquered by Divine grace
early is made happy soon. That is a blessed prayer in the psalm
"O
satisfy us early with Thy mercy
that we may rejoice and be glad all our
days"
2. Besides
while early piety brings early happiness
let it never
be forgotten that it saves from a thousand snares. Eleventh hour mercies are
very sweet. But what a double privilege it is to be set to work in the vineyard
while yet the dew is on the leaves
and so to be kept from the idleness and the
wickedness of the market place in which others loiter so long.
3. It is good for a man to bear Christ's yoke in his youth
because
it saves him from having those shoulders galled with the devil's yoke. Sins
long
indulged grow to the shoulders
and to remove them is like tearing away
one's flesh.
4. There is this goodness about it
again
that it gives you longer
time in which to serve God. Blessed be His name
He will accept eventide
service; but still
how much better to be able to serve the Lord from your
youth up
to give Him those bright days while the birds are singing in the
soul
when the sun is unclouded
and the shadows are not falling; and then to
give Him the long evening
when at eventide He makes it light
and causes the
infirmities of age to display His power and His fidelity.
5. There is this goodness about it yet further
that it enables one
to be well established in Divine things. I bless God that a man who has
believed in Jesus only one second is a saved man; but he is not an instructed
man
he is not an established man. He is not trained for battle; nor tutored
for labour. These things take time.
6. And then
let me say
it gives such confidence in after life to
have given your heart to Jesus young.
II. IT IS GOOD FOR YOUNG CHRISTIANS THAT THEY BEAR THE YOKE OF JESUS.
1. It will be for your good as long as ever you live to render to
Jesus complete obedience at the very first. Every young Christian when he is
converted should take time to consider
and should say to himself
"What
am I to do? What is the duty of a Christian?" He should also devoutly say
to the Lord Jesus
"Lord
show me what Thou wouldst have me to do
"
and wait upon the Holy Ghost for guidance.
2. It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth
by
attaining clear instruction in Divine truth. We ought to go to the Lord Jesus
Christ to learn of Him
not merely about ordinances and actions
but about what
to think and what to believe.
3. It is good for young converts also to bear the yoke by beginning
to serve Jesus Christ early. There is work for every believer to do in Christ's
vineyard. "Ah
" says one
"I shall begin when I can
preach." Will you? You had better begin writing a letter to that young
friend with whom you went to school. You had better begin by dropping a tract
down an area
or by trying to speak to some young person of your own age.
4. It is also good that when we begin to serve God we should bear
the yoke in another sense
namely
by finding difficulties. It is a good thing
for a true worker for the devil to labour to put him down
because if God has
put him up
he cannot be put down
but the attempt to overthrow him will do him
good
develop his spiritual muscle
and bring out the powers of his mind.
5. It is good to meet with persecution in your youth. A Christian is
a hardy plant. Many years ago a larch was brought to England. The gentleman who
brought it put it in his hothouse
but it did not develop in a healthy manner.
It was a spindly thing
and therefore the gardener
feeling that he could not
make anything of it
took it up and threw it out upon the dunghill. There it
grew into a splendid tree
for it had found a temperature suitable to its
nature. The tree was meant to grow near the snow; it loves cold winds and rough
weather
and they had been sweating it to death in a hothouse. So it is with
true Christianity. It seldom flourishes so well in the midst of ease and luxury
as it does in great tribulation.
6. I believe it is good for young Christians to experience much soul
trouble. It is much better on the whole that a man should be timid and trembling
than that he should early in life become very confident. "Blessed is the
man that feareth always" is a scriptural text — not the slavish fear
nor
yet a fear that doubts God
but still a fear. These ordeals are of essential
service to the newborn believer
and prepare him alike for the joys and the
sorrows of his spiritual career.
III. Practically WE ARE ALL OF US IN OUR YOUTH. None of us will come
of age till we enter heaven. We are still under tutors and governors
because
we are even now as little children.
1. It is good that we who have gone some distance on the road to
heaven should still have something to bear
because it enables us to honour
Christ still. If we do not suffer with Him
how can we have fellowship with
Him? If we have no crosses to carry
how can we commune with our Lord
the
chief cross-bearer?
2. It is good for us all to bear the yoke
too
because thus old
Adam is kept in check. Sheep do not stray so much when the black dog is after
them; his barkings make them run to the shepherd. Affliction is the black dog
of the Good Shepherd to fetch us back to Him
otherwise we should wander to our
ruin.
3. Besides
it makes you so helpful to others to have known
affliction. I do not see how we can sympathise if we are never tried ourselves.
4. Once more
is it not good to bear the yoke while we are here
because it will make heaven all the sweeter? What a change for the martyr
standing at the stake burning slowly to death
and then rising to behold the
glory of his Lord! What a change for you
dear old friend
with all those aches
and pains about you
which make you feel uneasy even while you are sitting
here!
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
Good to bear the yoke in youth
The figure is
taken from farm life. If a ploughing ex is to be well adapted for its labour
and make a good furrow
it must be disciplined while it is quite young. If this
be neglected
it is vain to attempt it by and by; the beast will only be
fretted and irritated
and any work it is put to will be a failure. A traveller
in the East graphically describes
as an eyewitness
the difficulty of getting
an untrained ox to perform agricultural work. "I had frequent
opportunities
" he says
"of witnessing the conduct of oxen
when for
the first time put into the yoke. They generally made a strenuous struggle for
liberty
repeatedly breaking the yoke
and attempting to make their escape. At
other times such bullocks would lie down upon their side or back
and remain so
in defiance of the drivers
though they lashed them with ponderous whips.
Sometimes
from pity to the animal
I would interfere
and beg them not to be
so cruel. 'Cruel!' they would say
'it is mercy; for if we do not conquer him
now
he will require to be so beaten all his life.'"
I. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of SUBJECTION
TO AUTHORITY. The unkindest thing you can do to a child is to throw the reins
over his shoulders
and let him do as he likes. If you wish to ruin his
prospects
and to develop a mean
selfish
overbearing nature
never contradict
him
never oppose him
let his every freak and fancy be gratified. But it is
not only for little children that the yoke of subjection to authority is
wholesome. It is quite possible that the yoke may be removed Coo soon. Until
the character is fairly formed
and the judgment is stronger than the will
and
the mind and conscience have ascendancy over the lower nature
the controlling
influence of another should be felt.
II. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of
SELF-RESTRAINT. However widely we may differ in appetite and temperament —
some
of course
finding the needful self-control much harder than others —
there are
with all of us
desires and tendencies which we have sternly to
resist
and the denying of which is part of the training by which we are fitted
for a noble and useful life. The very lusts
passions
appetites
and tempers
of which
more or less
we are all conscious
may be turned to real service in
our moral equipment for life; for
in the steadfast resistance of them
and
victory over them
we become stronger men than had these been no conflict at
all.
III. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of DIFFICULTY
AND TOIL. Nothing like having to "rough it a bit" in early life. It
is very far indeed from being an advantage to a man to have been "born
with a silver spoon in his mouth." It is good for us all to have to work
for our bread. Our Creator intended us for labour
and not for indolence. Many
is the prosperous man of business who will tell you that he can never be too
thankful for having had to bear in his youth the yoke of genuine hard work. It
was this that developed his energies
strengthened his muscle
and
under God
made his life successful and happy.
IV. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of LIVING
GODLINESS. It is to this that our blessed Saviour invites us when He says
"Take
My yoke upon you
and learn of Me." It is good for a man to become a
decided Christian in early life. Now it is perfectly true that
as Christ says
"this yoke is easy
and this burden light"; and yet it would not be
called a yoke at all if it did not mean something that the flesh does not
readily take up — something that is contrary to our fallen nature. It is not
natural to us to be Christians. Like the bullock
we have to bend
we have to
stoop
that the yoke may be put upon us; and this stooping is what none of us
like. Our proud wills must be humbled; our old self must be crucified.
V. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of a PUBLIC
CHRISTIAN PROFESSION. The first thing
of course
is to be a Christian; but the
next thing is to avow it. It is good in a thousand ways — good for yourselves
now; good for others; good for the cause of Christ; good for the glory of God;
good for your own future comfort and joy
that
without delay
you step right
over to the ranks of the Lord's people
and openly attach yourselves to the
Christian Church.
VI. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of CHRISTIAN
SERVICE. It will help your own faith wonderfully to be engaged in some real
labour for the Lord. Drop a solemn word in the ear of some careless companion
and see how the Lord helps you in that. Link your arm with some thoughtless
young fellow
and try to bring him with you to the house of God. Write a kind
letter to your cousin who is getting tinged with infidelity
and tell him of
the nobler and better way.
VII. It is good for a man to bear in his youth the yoke of PERSONAL
AFFLICTION. Many an one has thanked God all his days for some heavy cross he
had to carry when he was young. In the memoir of Dr. Norman M'Leod it is stated
that nothing produced a greater effect upon him during the whole course of his
life
than the death of a favourite brother
when they were both quite young
men. There are many other forms of trial
as you well know: there is the
breaking up of a happy home; the coming away from all the tender associations
and hallowed scenes of infancy; the solitude of a great city where all are
strangers to you; the loss of a situation
or disappointment in your efforts to
obtain one: all these things are trying
and may prove a heavy yoke to bear;
but
believe me
it is good to bear them in one's youth. You may be the better
all your days for the bitter discipline.
(J. T. Davidson
D. D.)
1. There is
for example
the yoke of home. Woe to that home which
lays no yoke upon its inmates! That is the very office of the family towards
its young and inexperienced members. To turn the current of the young life into
a right channel — to make good habitual by use
and (to that end) to insist
upon conformity to a good rule — to require
as the condition of maintenance
as the condition of protection
as the condition of life
that this and not
this shall be the conduct and the speech and the temper and (down to very
minute particulars) the mode of living — this is the duty of a home
in order
that it may bring after it God's assigned and certain blessing. Now all this
implies compulsion; for it demands of the young life that which it cannot give
and cannot be
without constraint.
2. But the home must at last send out its sons and its daughters
into a rougher school of experience
and the hallway house on this journey is
first
the school
with its discipline
longer or shorter as the case may be
either of elementary or classical learning
and then in some form or other that
which comes for most young men afterwards
the more special training for a particular
profession or trade. Here too there is a yoke
and a yoke bearing; or else a
refusal of the yoke
with many sad consequences of sorrow and shame. A day is
coming for you
even in this life
when you will give God thanks for every
day's trial
for every day's privation
for every day's hardship
which you
have honestly and bravely borne.
3. Many suffer seriously throughout their life by not having borne
in their youth the yoke of a Church. It is not well to be entirely at large in
these matters. Who is the person looked to for counsel
who is the person
privileged to advise
who is the person bound to reprove — and do not all young
people need these offices from some one? — if the young Christian is sometimes
at church
sometimes at chapel — sometimes at this church or this chapel
sometimes at that — thus evading
by a perpetual shifting of the scene
all the
responsibilities and all the accountabilities of each and of all?
4. There is One who uses this very figure concerning His own Divine
office
"Take My yoke upon you
and learn of Me." Certainly of this
yoke it must be true that it is good for a man to bear it in his youth. No age
is too young for it: He Himself declared that infant children were not too
young to put it on: He Himself dealt tenderly and lovingly with the young man
who came to Him to be taught the way of life: and there is no doubt that
unless it is put on in youth
it never will sit quite easily
and it never will
be without some galling pressure in later years
just because there is always
some spiritual wound in the shoulder
or some effeminate softness in the arm of
him who has tried other yokes first
of him who has begun by serving self
sin
or the world
and only comes late and in pain to submit himself to the healing
and guiding and saving hand of Christ.
(Dean Vaughan.)
1. Men rarely if ever feel prepared to bear the good yoke the moment
it is presented to them.
2. The qualification for bearing the yoke is obtained in bearing it.
Practical skill comes only by practice.
3. Those who refuse to gain qualification for a place by working in
that place
always fall of qualification and of usefulness anywhere. He who
will be a tramp in religion must not expect the glory of immortality.
4. It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth
because
then he will not suffer from having wasted time.
5. In view of all this
how beautiful the Saviour's call
"Take
My yoke upon you
" for if men take not the yoke of Christ
then they must
take the yoke of sin and everlasting despair.
(O. T. Lanphear
D. D.)
There is a
threefold yoke which it is good for a man to bear in his youth.
I. The yoke of AFFLICTION.
1. Good for all kinds of men.
2. Enlightening.
3. Preparatory to grace and conversion.
4. Strengthens spiritual convictions.
5. Stirs up the heart to prayer.
6. Teaches the emptiness of the creature.
II. The yoke of CONVICTION OF SIN.
1. The sooner it is borne the easier it is borne.
2. Those who are subjects of early convictions grow rich in grace.
III. The yoke of SUBJECTION AND OBEDIENCE TO CHRIST.
1. He has yoke.
2. It is the concern of every one to take his yoke in youth
because
of the call of God
the claims of Christ
the invitation of the Spirit; sin
gets advantage by continuance; the earlier the easier; it has the kindest
acceptance with God; it is the fittest season for religion; the danger of
delay.
(M. Mead.)
I. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN BEARING THE YOKE HERE SPOKEN OF. We naturally
run wild
like a wild ass's colt upon the mountains; with respect to our
understanding
in speculation and error; our will
in stubbornness
dis.
obedience
and rebellion; our affections
in irregular and inordinate love
desire
hope
joy
etc. True religion
when put on in reality
and
as it were
buckled close upon us by faith
restrains our disposition to wander from God.
1. The subjection to which it obliges us. Naturally we wear Satan's
yoke
and are in subjection to him (Ephesians
2:2); to the world (Galatians 1:4); to the flesh (Romans 7:5
28); to sin (John 8:34); to death
and the fear of it (Hebrews
2:15). True religion delivers us from these other lords
and brings
us into subjection to Christ
whose loyal subjects we become
and He reigns in
us by His grace
and over us by His laws (Romans
14:17).
2. The service in which it engages us. We are yoked
not to lie down
and sleep
or stand still
but to work
not only in the use of every means of
grace
for our own salvation
especially prayer
watchfulness
self-denial
faith
obedience to all known duty
and a "patient continuance in
well-doing"; but for the glory of God
in endeavouring to make Him known
and feared by all men; and for the good of our neighbour
in all works of
justice
mercy
charity.
3. The associates with which it connects us. A bullock is not yoked
that it may draw alone. We are united to the people of God
and in conjunction
with them
should serve the Lord in the fore-mentioned particulars.
4. The patience and submission to which it obliges us
under our
various chastisements (Jeremiah 31:18). Oxen
when brought under the
yoke
are untoward
or refractory
or lazy
and
therefore
have need of the
goad. We have need of it also for similar reasons. "The words of the wise
are as goads"; and so are the various trials and troubles which we meet
with.
II. HOW IT APPEARS THAT IT IS GOOD FOR A MAN TO BEAR THE YOKE AND
THAT EVEN IN HIS YOUTH.
1. It is reasonable. It becomes us
trod is our duty
that we should
come under the restraint before described; that we should be in subjection to
and the servants of Christ; that we should be united with God's Church; and be
patient and submissive under His chastisement.
2. It is honourable. A yoke of some kind we must wear
and a yoke we
do wear; and is it not more honourable to wear that of Christ
than that of
Belial? Is it not an honourable thing to be a subject of a very great
powerful
and gracious King? a servant of a rich
noble
and benevolent Master?
a friend
a brother
nay
and the spouse of the Prince of the kings of the
earth?
3. It is advantageous.(1) As to this life. "Godliness hath the
promise of the life that now is." Does the husbandman feed his bullocks
and shall not God provide for those that draw in His yoke? They shall have all
things needful (Matthew 6:32
33); all things useful (Psalm
84:11); evils turned into good (Romans
8:28).(2) As to the life to come
they enjoy the favour of an
infinite and eternal Being; they are adopted into His family; restored to His
image; hold communion and fellowship with Him; have peace of mind; a lively
hope of eternal life; and an earnest thereof in their hearts
"until the
redemption of the purchased possession"; but they will reap still greater
advantages after death
in the intermediate state
at the day of resurrection
and final judgment
and forever.
4. It is easy and pleasant. What; to bear a yoke? Yes; a yoke lined
with love. "His commandments are not grievous" to a loving heart
to
a new nature.
III. HOW WE MAY BE ENABLED TO DO SO.
1. Come out from among the carnal and wicked
and be separate. For
"a companion of fools shall be destroyed."
2. Associate with the people of God (Proverbs
13:20).
3. Use much retirement
and read
and meditate on the Scriptures (2
Timothy 3:15).
4. Pray. The wisdom and strength of man is utterly insufficient; but
"they that wait on the Lord
" etc. (Isaiah
40:31).
5. Be always watchful and circumspect (Ephesians
5:15).
6. Deny yourself
and take up your cross daily (Matthew
16:24).
(J. Benson.)
On the duty of restraining the young
I. The restraints of which I speak at present
are only THOSE WISE
AND NECESSARY RESTRAINTS WHICH SERVE TO GUARD THE INNOCENCE AND TO DIRECT THE
ACTIVITY OF THE EARLY MIND. Even a child soon learns to distinguish the
restraints that are dictated by a sincere regard to his happiness
from those
which have their origin in caprice. To the former
indeed
he may not at all
times submit with becoming cheerfulness; but against the latter he will
perpetually rebel. One of the worst effects which excessive severity produces
on the minds of the young is
that it tempts them to the violation of truth; and
hence it sometimes happens that parents are less acquainted
than even the most
indifferent persons
with what passes in the minds of their children. Beware of
this fatal error. Provoke not your children to wrath; tempt not your children
to falsehood. I am aware
however
that this is not the extreme in which
parents are most apt to err. Their natural affection for their children will
generally be sufficient
without any other motive
to preserve them from too
rigorous an exercise of authority. The danger is that this affection may
transgress its proper bounds
and betray them into an opposite error
not less
fatal to the interests of their children. It is surely necessary that the young
be restrained from every species of vice
and directed to such pursuits and
studies as may prepare them for being useful in the world. For this purpose
they must be early taught that they have serious duties to perform; they must
be accustomed to submit to discipline
and limited even in those innocent
pleasures which would interfere with their more important concerns. Let the
rules
which you prescribe
be such as are proper in themselves; and let them
be uniformly and steadily executed. Steadiness and consistency of conduct is
the great secret in the management of the young. It begets respect and
reverence
and ensures a willing obedience. When the duty of the child is
clearly marked out to him
and the performance of it regularly exacted
he is
in no case
at a loss to discover what will please
and what will offend. In proportion
as his faculties open
he perceives the propriety of the discipline through
which he is maple to pass. He admires the wisdom and consistency of the plan by
which his most important interests are promoted. He finds that the authority
which
in his youth
he hath been taught to acknowledge
is the mild and
regular dominion of reason; and is prepared
as his years advance
to exchange
the dominion of reason in the breast of his parent
for the dominion of reason
in his own mind.
II. SOME OF THE ADVANTAGES WHICH THIS DISCIPLINE IS FITTED TO YIELD.
Even in our maturer years
our industry needs often to be animated by looking
forward to the distant advantages which it is fitted to yield. This
however
is a reflection which seldom occurs to the young. They think only of the
moments as they pass. They perceive not how much their characters
and their
advancement in the world
depend on their present application. But you
who are
parents
perceive it. Your observation hath long ago taught you that attention
and diligence in youth are the only sure foundation on Which a respectable
manhood can be reared. To you
therefore
it belongs
by the judicious exercise
of authority
to remedy the inexperience of the young
and to urge them on in
the path in which
at present
perhaps
they walk with reluctance
because they
see not the end to which it leads. The success of your children in the world is
an object which deserves your attention; but it is not the only object that is
worthy of a parent's care. Their virtue is their highest interest; and this
also
is most likely to be promoted by discipline. In order that the mind may
be formed to virtue
it must be accustomed to submit to restraint; for what
else is virtue but the habit of self-government
the power of regulating our
affections and passions by the dictates of reason and conscience? To live
according to rule is not a task for the young alone; it is a duty incumbent on
all; it is that which
in every period of life
distinguishes the virtuous from
the vicious. Now
this is the very habit to which the mind of the child is
formed by the exercise of parental authority. How many useful lessons doth he
learn from the discipline of his father's house! He is prepared
by obedience
to his parents
to obey his conscience and his God. He will be meek
for he
hath learned to bear contradiction; he will be just
for he hath learned to
moderate his desires; he will be temperate
for he hath learned to resist the
solicitations of pleasure; he will be generous
for he hath learned
at the
call of duty
to forego his own ease and comfort
and he is prepared for every
sacrifice which benevolence may require him to make. Happy
surely
is the man
who hath thus borne the yoke in his youth!
(W. Moodie
D. D.)
To bear the
yoke is to be in subjection: to be compelled to walk in certain lines at the
will of another
to be prevented from choosing for ourselves and being our own
masters. The compulsion which is most commonly felt in youth is the compulsion
of circumstances. Without being in absolute poverty
the majority of young men
find that they have no choice
but must at once try to earn a livelihood. And
the limitations thus prescribed by circumstances are often very serious
and
press very heavily on the mind of the aspiring youth. Still
if there is a
spark of real manhood
a leaven of generosity in the spirit
it will be found
good to bear this yoke. To throw a boy into the water is a rough-and-ready
lesson in the art of swimming
but with a boy of spirit it is likely to be
successful. The training which straitened circumstances give is one which no
money can purchase. A lad is put upon his mettle
and if there is grit in him
at all
it will appear. He is conscious that it depends entirely on himself
whether he is to succeed or to fail. He feels himself face to face with the
world
and is compelled to use all his faculties and powers to save himself
from defeat. The habits of industry
the love of work
the delight in mastering
difficulties
the ability to put pressure on himself
and the independence of
character which a lad thus acquires
pass into his nature as its permanent and
most valuable ingredients. It must also be considered that the privations which
press so heavily on some families
and which in some unhappy instances benumb
affection
do in the main afford opportunities for self-sacrifice and considerateness
and concern for the common good which bind families together
and give a
richness and beauty to the family life which you might have sought in vain had
circumstances been easy and calling for no sacrifice. But in other senses it is
good that a man bear the yoke in his youth. He must put himself under control
and discipline if he is to get the full benefit of his youth. All this control
and discipline is intended to fit him for liberty afterwards
as all drill and
gymnastics are meant to give the body freedom of movement
and to give a man
the perfect use of all his powers. To allow passions
cravings
propensities
to rule us and govern and determine our conduct is to become the worst of
slaves. Freedom comes through discipline; through absorbing into our own will
the laws which govern our life; to be our own master is to exercise
self-control
and allow that in us to rule which was intended to be supreme.
When we submit ourselves to the rule of conscience and come into harmony with
God's laws
approving them in our heart
then only are we free. You yourself
are something nobler and better than any of your members or any faculty in you;
these are your organs and instruments whereby you work on the world around you
but you yourself are different from these
and are called to rule all these.
Thus only is it possible to become your own master. Coming to detail
then
we
must exercise self-control in respect of all unworthy pleasures. The youth of a
certain kind and brought up in certain companies thinks he is scarcely a man
till he has tasted pleasures which he knows to be forbidden. The very fact that
they are forbidden makes them objects of desire. The true corrective of this
bias towards unworthy pleasures is to be found in filling our life with worthy
pursuits. Of course knowledge also helps. When one has seen a little more of
life
the pleasures which attract the mass of young men seem so very childish
so false and tawdry
so positively repulsive in many respects
that one wonders
where the charm is. In the cloakroom of many a place of entertainment you must
with your coat leave your self-respect
and all respect for humanity
and
necessarily come out a poorer man
with less fitness for life. But even when
the pleasures that attract are recognised to be such as no men of any real
stature and dignity could possibly stoop to
our self-control needs some other
aid than that of knowledge. It is good to say to ourselves
these scenes I am
asked to join are degrading and delusive. Instead of proving my manhood by
entering them
I show distinctly that my manhood is poor and weak
easily
deceived
easily led
ignorant and undeveloped. It is good to cherish and
strengthen our self-control thus
and by reading such healthy writers as
Thackeray
whose scorn of all that is base and foolish and filthy and profane
communicates itself to the reader and makes that seem contemptible which is
contemptible
and that be repulsive to us which in itself is repulsive. But the
true safeguard is to fill the heart and life with higher things
to commit
ourselves cordially to the Christian life
recognising its attractiveness and
finding in it enough and more than enough to interest
to stimulate
to
satisfy. It is in Christ's service you find true life and true freedom and true
manhood. Another detail in which self-control must be exercised is in the books
we read. Happily
English literature is rich enough to make it quite
unnecessary for us to open one suspected volume. Form your taste on Scott and
Thackeray
Carlyle and Emerson
and you will have no relish for unclean and
corrupting literature. Here again
if you feel you are losing something by not
reading what others read
exercise self-control
and remember that what you
lose is well lost
a tainted mind
a lowered tone
a polluted imagination
while you gain self-respect
manliness
and purity. But again
those who have
too much self-respect to find any attraction in such undesirable knowledge
sometimes show a similar craving
but in a higher and purer sphere. It is not
uncommon to meet with persons who have a silly ambition to be recognised as
having passed through a severe struggle with doubt and spiritual perplexity.
Now there are two kinds of doubt which are very different in their origin and
character
and which must be treated differently. There is the doubt which is
almost invariably begotten in a strong and independent mind when that mind
first applies itself to the solution of the mysteries of nature
of life
and
of God. There is also the doubt which is assumed
like any other manner or
habit which finds favour in society; sometimes there is an affectation of
weariness and ennui
sometimes of indifference
and so in some circles there is
an affectation of doubt. It is "the thing" to talk disparagingly of
traditional belief
and to assume a sceptical attitude towards miracles and
other objects of faith. The fictitious or imitative doubter may always be
distinguished from the true doubter by his frivolous and ignorant manner of
meeting proposed solutions of his doubts. He who merely apes doubt and seems to
consider it a desirable mental condition
shrinks from conviction and seeks to
perpetuate his uncertainty. To such as fancy that sceptical difficulties are
symptoms of enlightenment may be commended the words of the great philosopher
who may be said to have consecrated doubt. After describing how he stripped
himself one by one of all beliefs
he goes on to say
"For all that
I did
not imitate the sceptics who doubt for doubting's sake
and pretend to be
always undecided; on the contrary
my whole intention was to arrive at
certainty
and to dig away the drift and sand until I arrived at the rock
beneath" (Descartes in Huxley
122). It is not through the understanding
so much as through the conscience and the heart that a man becomes a Christian.
And so long as any one is loyal to Christ because he is conscious that in Him
he is brought into harmony with God
and because he desires to live in
fellowship with Christ and to serve Him
it is not essential that he should
believe all that he has been taught. There is room in the Church of Christ for
questioning spirits as for docile and credulous spirits; and as there is work
for the one class
so is there work for the other. What is wanted much more
than acceptance of traditional belief is tolerance
based on the clear
perception that many articles of our creed are not certain
and that thoughtful
men cannot but have different opinions regarding their truth. Until we fight
against sin as the allies and subjects of Christ
as well as for our own sake
we seem to fight not in Christ's strength
but in our own. And if we think of
our sin as mainly our affair
if we hate it mainly for the shame it brings upon
us
then when we are tempted by it and when our own view of it is changed
the
advantage and pleasure of it being now clear and the shame of it remote and
dimly seen
there is absolutely nothing to restrain us from it. But if we
habitually live with Christ and consider His will in all things
and that our
sin brings grief to Him
when we are tempted
though our own view of sin is
altered
we are conscious that His view of it remains the same
and in sympathy
with His judgment we also condemn it. Every evil habit you suffer to find place
in you lowers your energy throughout life
weights and burdens you
and holds
you back from what you aspire to. The sin you admit into your life is not like
a stone in a horse's hoof
that cripples for a few steps but can easily be
knocked out and leave no trace: it is a morbid growth
it is in your blood
it
taints your whole system
and is a weakness to the end. Turn then from all that
is low
and defiling
and secretive
and ungenerous
turn from what is ungodly
— be sure you are gladly living under the great law of human life
dependence
on Jesus Christ
and with Him there will enter your life
"whatsoever
things are true
whatsoever things are
honourable
...just
...pure
...lovely
...of good report."
(M. Dods
D. D.)
Homiletic
Magazine.
I. A BROAD ASSERTION WHICH REQUIRES TO BE QUALIFIED. It is not good
to bear the yoke of —
1. Civil despotism.
2. Spiritual despotism.
3. Sinful despotism.
II. AN ASSERTION TO BE READILY RECEIVED.
1. The yoke of affliction.
2. The yoke of genuine religious principle.
3. The yoke of Christ.
III. WHY IT IS SO GOOD TO BEAR THIS YOKE IN YOUTH.
1. It is a check to the presumption of youth
which
like a vessel
without ballast
would soon be endangered.
2. It is a safeguard against the dangers of youth.
3. It often proves a fitting preparation for eminent usefulness.
4. It is often the precursor of high character and of exalted
enjoyment.
IV. HINTS TO THOSE WHO HAVE TO BEAR THE YOKE.
1. Place your mercies over against your trials.
2. Recollect that God has wise and kind designs.
3. Let affliction lead you to God as your proper and changeless
portion.
4. Recollect the brevity of the season in which the yoke is to be
borne.
(Homiletic Magazine.)
I. THERE IS A YOKE WHICH IT IS NOT GOOD FOR A MAN TO BEAR IN HIS
YOUTH.
1. The yoke of civil bondage.
2. The yoke of ceremonies and superstitions.
3. The yoke of sin. A bad habit acquired in youth grows with a man's
growth
and strengthens with his strength.
II. WHAT YOKE IS IT GOOD FOR A MAN TO BEAR IN HIS YOUTH?
1. The yoke of affliction. There is a natural exuberance in youth
which needs to be reduced — a luxuriousness which requires pruning — an
impetuosity which needs to be checked. And what will effect this like
affliction when sanctified by God?
2. The yoke of subjection to legitimate authority.
3. The yoke of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This is a yoke which
every man must take upon him at some period of his life
or perish
everlastingly.
(John Hambleton
M. A.)
(with Matthew
11:29): — The yoke! The very word has a sound of severity in it! Yet
Christ spake it — He
whom all ages since His advent have accepted as the ideal
of gentleness! He who alone
amid the boasted culture of the nineteenth
century
can bestow real liberty. "Where the Spirit of the Lord is
there
is liberty" — there alone. We gain freedom from false dominions by
accepting the kingship of Christ.
I. YOUNG MEN WHO ACCEPT THE YOKE OF CHRIST ARE BEST FITTED FOR AN
EARTHLY CITIZENSHIP. England prospers or perishes by character! Selfishness
slew Sparta. Cruelty corrupted Athens. Lust laid low the power of Rome. Material
wealth does not constitute our prosperity
nor the genius of statesmanship
nor
the facilities for commercial intercourse — character makes a nation! and to
this hour is I know of no power which can create holy character
purify the
heart
cleanse the conscience
and inspire a truly heroic life but the Gospel
of Christ — it is the power of God unto salvation
and as such it manifests no
over-weening confidence to say "I am not ashamed of the Gospel of
Christ." Upon its social side
our earthly citizenship will be beautiful
just in the proportion that Christ reigns in our hearts! Your safety is in
making harmony with the spirit and purpose of Christ
the ruling law of all
II. YOUNG MEN WHO ACCEPT THE YOKE OF CHRIST ARE FULFILLING THE
HIGHEST IDEAL OF LIFE. Each man has some ideal of life. It is natural to
suppose that we do not eat
work
and sleep
with no other aim than the day
contains; we were unworthy of the majesty of manhood not to have some
conceptions of duty and destiny. Christ found men full of the ideals of life.
There was the pharisaic ideal
which combined ecclesiastical hauteur and Jewish
privilege; there was the publican ideal
that "money makes the man
"
and that once wealthy
men could invite wit
genius
and learning to their
board; there was the Roman ideal
which was prowess in arms
pride of military
pomp and glory of military fame; there was the Philosophic ideal
which mingled
contempt for ignorance
with superiority in the schools; there was the
commercial ideal
which meant illimitable luxury
and a merchant prince's
palace on the Tiber banks; there was the gladiator's ideal
which meant earnest
eyes looking down upon the fight
and beauty and fashion craving the victor's
love. Everywhere around the Christ were ideals of life! and what was His own?
"The cup which my Father hath given Me to drink
shall I not drink
it
" "Father
not as I will
but as Thou wilt." This was
Christ's ideal of life I an ideal that had in it the only true happiness.
"My meat and my drink is to do the will of Him that sent Me."
III. YOUNG MEN WHO ACCEPT THE YOKE OF CHRIST PRESERVE THEIR MORAL
INDEPENDENCE. They are bound by the law of Christ
and the law of Christ alone.
They are not compelled to accept all the yokes
either sanctioned by Puritan
custom
or by Ecclesiastical tradition; nor will they look to the law of Christ
as to a legal statute book. "Thou shalt not's" would fill not only
this world
but the whole stellar system with books which they could not
contain. The spirit of Christ is our only safeguard
our only life
our only
law
and it is enough.
IV. YOUNG MEN WHO ACCEPT THE YOKE OF CHRIST PASS THE GREAT CRISIS OF
LIFE. All things are ready! The Atonement has opened wide the door of mercy
the Spirit of the living God has awakened the conviction of sin
righteousness
and judgment to come; the soul is close to the Kingdom — almost saved. Oh!
moment of appalling interest; here is an act we can delegate to none
the
acceptance or rejection of Christ
on that moment hangs for each soul all the immortal
sanctities of heaven
or the wailings of infinite grief. If probation come
again in some future state
it is revealed in some Bible of which I have no
copy and is a Divine secret of which I have no key. Viewed in such a light as
this
are you prepared now
yes! now; whilst Christ looks with the wistfulness
of Divine love in your face
to obey His voice
"Take My yoke upon
you."
V. YOUNG MEN WHO ACCEPT THE YOKE OF CHRIST MAKE A BLESSED USE OF THE
FORMATIVE PERIOD OF LIFE. "It is good for a man to bear the yoke in his
youth." He is supple and sinewy in mind and body. Moreover it is not only
the age of a rare enthusiasm
but of unenriched experience
the age when we too
often obey a quick impulse
rather than a quiet conscience; an age too when we are
apt to despise service as service. Let men be proud of work
proudest of it
when it takes the form of service. Let us never forget that our Master came not
to be ministered unto
but to minister; that the Lord of angels took on Him
"the form of a servant." Never let service be considered vulgar! It
is good to bear the yoke in youth; good not to begin where our father's left
off
good that we should have something better than an ignorant physical
athleticism
and be moral athletes
able to cope with difficulty
preferring an
escutcheon with a spade on it to a purchased coat of arms. If
however
it is
good to bear the yoke early
in earthly duties
it is good to give of our time
strength
and substance in early youth to the cause of the Redeemer. The great
day alone can reveal how much depends upon our enlisting the rising manhood of
England in the intelligent service of the Church. May God the Holy Ghost
inspire the conviction
that loyalty to Christ demands not only the mental
admission of His claims
but the moral wearing of His yoke.
VI. YOUNG MEN WHO PUT ON THE YOKE OF CHRIST GIVE PROMISE OF THE
OUTCOME OF SALVATION. The age is not wanting in appreciation of Christian life.
The Church
however
in some of its most fervent Evangelical teachers
has made
justification the only tenet in its creed. Christianity is life in God; it is
more than the first paroxysm of penitential grief
more than the most
passionate confession of sin
more than the thrill of a first love
more than
occasional rhapsodies of glad emotion
more than an exquisite appreciation of
the life of Christ: by this alone can the world know we are Christ's disciples
that "we keep His commandments." This is the true outcome of
salvation
the test is not emotive in our feelings
nor mental in our intellectual
belief alone
but practical
in yoke bearing after Christ.
(W. M. Statham
M. A.)
We adopt the
principle of yoke-bearing in youth in the matter of intellectual education: why
not in the matter of the higher moral training and chastening? Who puts off the
learning of the alphabet until he is well advanced in life? Who at middle life
could begin to commit to memory the things which almost seem to grow up in the
mind of childhood and to abide there forever? Yet the child must be constrained
to undergo the discipline needful to the acquisition of elementary knowledge. His
play must be curtailed
his inclinations must be rebuked
his indolence must be
overcome; it is for the child's good that his parents should insist upon the
acceptance of the yoke
otherwise the child will grow up to be an ignorant man.
Is it not also true that in youth passion is most violent
and might hurry the
young life into the uttermost excesses were it not curbed or cooled or in some
degree restrained? Hence it is important that young life should be filled with
work
should be almost exhausted at times by long-continued labour. The profit
is not seen in the labour alone; behind all the labour there are moral
advantages which can hardly be described in words: passion is subdued
pride is
mortified
the energy of the will is turned into the right direction
and
labour so treated becomes in the end pleasant
as music is pleasant
and easy
as breathing is easy. What may be expected from one who has borne the yoke well
in his youth Chastened but not extinguished energy. Paul the apostle must be as
energetic as was Saul of Tarsus
but the energy must be expressed along
different lines. Mature saints are not expected to be demure
exhausted
feeble
indolent
or lacking in interest in the pursuits and ambitions of
youth: they are expected to take a right view of those pursuits and ambitions
to set a proper estimate upon them. No man has borne his own yoke well who has
lived without sympathy for those who are still feeling the burden.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
This is as good
as a promise. It has been good
it is good
and it will be good for me to bear
the yoke.
1. Early in life I had to feel the weight of conviction
and ever
since it has proved a soul-enriching burden. Should I have loved the Gospel so
well had I not learned by deep experience the need of salvation by grace? Jabez
was more honourable than his brethren because his mother bare him with sorrow
and those who suffer much in being born unto God make strong believers in sovereign
grace.
2. The yoke of censure is an irksome one
but it prepares a man for
future honour. He is not fit to be a leader who has not run the gauntlet of
contempt. Praise intoxicates if it be not preceded by abuse. Men who rise to
eminence without a struggle usually fall into dishonour.
3. The yoke of affliction
disappointment
and excessive labour is
by no means to be sought for; but when the Lord lays it on us in our youth it
frequently develops a character which glorifies God and blesses the church.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
The necessity and advantage of early afflictions
The crosses we
meet with are not the effects of blind chance
but the results of a wise and
unerring providence
which knoweth what is fittest for us
and loveth us better
than we can do ourselves. There is no malice or envy lodged in the bosom of
that blessed being whose name and nature is love. He taketh no delight in the
troubles and miseries of His creatures: He doth not afflict willingly
nor
grieve the children of men. Holiness is the highest perfection and greatest
happiness we are capable of: it is a real participation of the Divine nature
the image of God drawn on the soul; and all the chastisements we meet with are
designed to reduce us to this blessed temper
to make us like unto Himself
and
thereby capable to be happy with Him to all eternity.
I. This will more clearly appear if we reflect on THE NATURAL TEMPER
OF OUR MINDS AND THE INFLUENCE WHICH PROSPEROUS OR ADVERSE FORTUNE IS WONT TO
HAVE UPON THEM.
1. We are naturally proud and self-conceited; we have an high esteem
of ourselves
and would have everybody else to value and esteem us. This
disease is very deeply rooted in our corrupt nature: it is ordinarily the first
sin that betrays itself in the little actions and passions of children; and
many times the last which religion enables us to overcome. Pride alone is the
source and fountain of almost all the disorders in the world; of all our
troubles
and of all our sins: and we shall never be truly happy
or truly
good
till we come to think nothing of ourselves
and be content that all the world
think nothing of us. Now
there is nothing hath a more natural tendency to
foment and heighten this natural corruption
than constant prosperity and
success. Sanctified afflictions contribute to abate and mortify the pride of
our hearts
to prick the swelling imposthume
to make us sensible of our
weakness
and convince us of our sine.
2. Another distemper of our minds is our too great affection to the
world and worldly things. We are all too apt to set our hearts wholly upon
them; to take up our rest
and seek our happiness and satisfaction in them. But
God knows that these may well divert and amuse a while
they can never satisfy
or make us happy; that the souls which He made for Himself can never rest till
they return unto Him
and therefore He many times findeth it necessary either
to remove our comforts or imbitter them unto us; to put aloes and wormwood on
the breasts of the world
that thereby we may wean our hearts from it
and
carry them to the end of their being
the fountain of their blessedness and
felicity.
3. Another bad effect which prosperity is wont to produce in our
corrupt natures
is
that it makes us forgetful of God
and unthankful of His
mercies: We put very little value on our food and raiment
and the ordinary
means of our subsistence
we have been sometimes pinched with want. We consider
not how much we are indebted to God for preserving our friends
till some of
them be removed from us. How little do we prize out health
if we have never
had experience of sickness or pain! Where is the man who doth seriously bless
God for his nightly quiet and repose! And yet
if sickness or trouble deprive
us of it
we then find it to have been a great and invaluable mercy
and that
it is God who giveth His beloved sleep.
4. Prosperity rendereth us insensible of the miseries and calamities
of others. But afflictions do soften the heart
and make it more tender and
kindly; and we are always most ready to compassionate those griefs which
ourselves have sometime endured: the sufferings of others make the deepest
impressions upon us
when they put us in mind of our own.
II. TAKE NOTICE OF THE SEASON WHICH IS HERE MENTIONED AS THE FITTEST
FOR A MAN TO BEAR AFFLICTION. It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his
youth. We are all willing to put off the evil day; and
if we must needs bear
the yoke
we would choose to have it delayed till we grow old. We think it sad
to have our morning overcast with clouds
to meet with a storm before we have
well launched forth from the shore. But the Divine wisdom
which knoweth what
is fit for us
doth many times make choice of our younger years
as the most
proper to accustom us to the bearing of the yoke.
1. It is then most necessary. For youth is the time of our life
wherein we are in greatest danger to run into wild and extravagant courses: our
blood is hot
and our spirits unstayed and giddy; we have too much pride to be
governed by others
and too little wisdom to govern ourselves. The yoke is then
especially needful to tame our wildness and reduce us to a due stayedness and
composure of mind.
2. Then also it is most supportable. The body is strong and
healthful
less apt to be affected with the troubles of the mind; the spirit
stout and vigorous
will not so easily break and sink under them. Old age is a
burden
and will soon faint under any supervenient load. The smallest trouble
is enough to bring down grey hairs with sorrow to the grave. And therefore
since we must meet with afflictions
it is certainly a favourable circumstance
to have them at the time of our life wherein we are most able to endure them.
3. And
lastly
the lessons which afflictions teach us
are then
most advantageous when we learn them betimes
that we may have the use of them
in the conduct of our after lives.
III. THE PARTICULAR ADVANTAGE OF AFFLICTIONS WHICH IS MENTIONED IN THE
TEXT: "He sitteth alone and keepeth silence
because he hath borne it upon
him." The words are capable of a twofold interpretation
and both suit
well with the purpose: for we may either understand them properly
of solitude
and silence; or metaphorically
of patience and quiet submission; both of which
are the good effects of sanctified and well-improved afflictions: and
accordingly we shall say something to both.
1. Nature hath made us sociable creatures: but corruption hath
carried this inclination unto excess; so that most persons think it an
intolerable burden to be any considerable time alone. Though they love
themselves out of measure
yet they cannot endure their own conversation; they
had rather be hearing and discoursing of the most naughty and trivial things
than be sitting alone and holding their peace. Outward prosperity heightens
this humour. When the heart is dilated with joy
it seeketh to vent itself in
every company. Crosses
on the other hand
render a man pensive and solitary;
they stop the mouth
and bind up the tongue
and incline the person to be much
alone.(1) He who considers
on the one hand
the guilt we are wont to contract
and the prejudice which we sustain
by too much conversation with others
and
on the other hand
the excellent improvement we may make of solitude and
retirement
will account it a good effect of afflictions
that they incline and
dispose us unto it. In considering the evils of frequent conversation
we are
not to prosecute the grossest and more scandalous vices of the tongue. We
rather choose to mention such evils as are wont to be less noticed
and can he
more hardly avoided. And
first
experience may teach us all
that much
conversation doth ordinarily beget a remissness and dissolution of spirit; that
it slackeneth and relaxeth the bent of our minds
and disposeth us to softness
and easy compliances. Another prejudice we receive by society
is
That it
fills our minds with noxious images
and fortifies our corrupt notions and
opinions of things. When we are alone in a sober temper
and take time to
reflect and consider of things
we are sometimes persuaded of the vanity and
worthlessness of all those glittering trifles whereunto the generality of
mankind are so sadly bewitched: but when we come abroad
and listen to the
common talk
and hear people speak of greatness
and fiches
and honour with
concern and admiration
we quickly forget our more sober and deliberate
thoughts
and suffer ourselves to be carried away with the stream of the common
opinion. And though the effects be not so sudden and observable
yet these
discourses are still making some secret and insensible impressions upon us.
Thus also is our judgment corrupted about the qualities and endowments of the
mind. Courage and gallantry
wit and eloquence
and other accomplishments of
this nature
are magnified and extolled beyond all measure; whereas humility
and meekness
and devotion
and all those Christian graces which render a soul
truly excellent and lovely
are spoken of as mean and contemptible things: for
though men have not the impudence formally to make the comparison
and prefer
the former; yet their very air
and way of discoursing about these things
sufficiently testifies their opinion. I shall mention but another of those
evils wherewith our conversation is commonly attended. The most ordinary
subject of our entertainments are the faults and follies of others. Were this
one theme of discourse discharged
we would oft-times find but little to say. I
scarce know any fault whereof good persons are so frequently guilty
and so
little sensible.(2) But solitude and retirement do not only deliver us from
these inconveniencies
but also afford very excellent opportunities for
bettering our souls. The most profane and irreligious persons will find some
serious thoughts rise in their minds if they be much alone. And the more that
any person is advanced in piety and goodness
the more will he delight in
retirement
and receive the more benefit by it. Then it is that the devout soul
takes its highest flight in Divine contemplations and maketh its nearest
approaches to God. Little doth the world understand those secret and hidden
pleasures which devout souls do feel when
having got out of the noise and hurry
of the world
they sit alone and keep silence
contemplating the Divine
perfections
which shine so conspicuously in all His works of wonder; admiring
His greatness
and wisdom
and love
and revolving His favours towards
themselves; opening before Him their griefs and their cares
and disburdening
their souls into His bosom; protesting their allegiance and subjection unto
Him
and telling Him a thousand times that they love Him; and then listening
unto the voice of God within their hearts
that still and quiet voice
which is
not wont to be heard in the streets
that they may hear what God the Lord will
speak: for He will speak peace unto His people
and to His saints
and visit
them with the expressions of His love.(3) But I would not be mistaken
as if I
recommended a total and constant retirement
or persuaded men to forsake the
world
and betake themselves unto deserts. No
certainly; we must not abandon
the stations wherein God hath placed us
nor render ourselves useless to
mankind. Solitude hath its temptations
and we may be sometimes very bad
company to ourselves. It was not without reason that a wise person warned
another
who professed to delight in conversing with himself. Have a care that
you be keeping company with a good man. Abused solitude may whet men's
passions
and irritate their lusts
and prompt them to things which company
would restrain. And this made one say
that he who is much alone
must either
be a saint or devil. Melancholy
which inclines men most to retirement
is
often too much nourished and fomented by it; and there is a peevish and sullen
loneliness
which some people affect under their troubles
whereby they feed on
discontented thoughts
and find a kind of perverse pleasure in refusing to be
comforted. But all this says no more
but that good things may be abused; and
excess or disorder may turn the most wholesome food into poison. And therefore
though I would not indifferently recommend much solitude unto all; yet
sure
I
may say
it were good for the most part of men that they were less in company
and more alone.
2. Thus much of the first and proper sense of sitting alone and
keeping silence. We told you it might also import a quiet and patient
submission to the will of God; the laying of our hand on our mouth
that no expression
of murmur or discontent may escape us. We cannot now insist in any length on
this Christian duty of patience
and submission to the will of God; we shall
only say two things of it
which the text importeth.(1) That this lesson is
most commonly learned in the school of afflictions.(2) That this advantage of
afflictions is very great and desirable; that it is indeed very good for a man
to have borne the yoke in his youth
if he hath thereby learned to sit alone
and keep silence when the hand of the Lord is upon him. There is nothing more
acceptable unto God
no object more lovely and amiable in His eyes
than a soul
thus prostrate before Him
thus entirely resigned unto His holy will
thus
quietly submitting to His severest dispensations. Nor is it less advantageous
unto ourselves; but sweeteneth the bitterest occurrences of our life
and makes
us relish an inward and secret pleasure
notwithstanding all the smart of
affliction: so that the yoke becomes supportable
the rod itself comforts us;
and we find much more delight in suffering the will of God than if He had
granted us our own.
(H. Scougal
M. A.)
The necessity for early yoke-bearing
If a bullock is
not broken in when it is young
it will never be worth much for the plough. The
work will be galling for itself
and most unsatisfactory for the husbandman. If
this be neglected
it is vain to attempt it by and by; the beast will only be
fretted and irritated
and any work it is put to will be a failure. A traveller
in the East graphically describes
as an eyewitness
the difficulty of getting
an untrained ox to perform agricultural work. "I have frequent
opportunities
" he said
"of witnessing the conduct of oxen when for
the first time put into the yoke. They generally made a strenuous struggle for
liberty
repeatedly breaking the yoke
and attempting to make their escape. At
other times such bullocks would lie down upon their side or back
and remain so
in defiance of the drivers
though they lashed them with ponderous whips.
Sometimes from pity to the animal I would interfere
and beg them not to be so
cruel. 'Cruel
' they would say
'it is mercy
for if we do not conquer him now
he will require to be so beaten all his life."
(J. Thain Davidson.)
Deferring the yoke leads to regret
in after years
It was the
sorrow
of Samuel Rutherford's. later years
as it was of St. 's
that he
allowed himself to reach manhood before he yielded his heart to God. "Like
a fool as I was
" he says
"I suffered my sun to be high in the
heaven
and near afternoon." Few things in the "Letters" are
more beautiful than the earnestness with which he beseeches the young to consecrate
their freshest hours to eternity. "It was a sweet and glorious thing for
your daughter Grissel to give herself up to Christ
that tie may write upon her
His father's name and His own new name." "I desire Patrick to give
Christ the flower of his love; it were good to start soon in the way." He
would have none to imitate him
"loitering on the road too long
and
trifling at the gate."
(Alexander Smellie.)
Youth the time for taking Christ's yoke
Live the
bullock
we have to bend
we have to stoop
that the yoke may be put upon us
and this stooping is what none of us like. Our proud wills must be humbled; our
old self must be crucified. There are few men who enter into the light and
liberty of happy believers without knowing something of this inward conflict.
It is well to have it over in early life. I remember an old and godly man who
was much tried in the latter years of his life with spiritual depression
saying to me
"Ah
sir
it is not good to have to bear the yoke in one's
old age."
(J. Thain Davidson.)
Writing upon
"Uppingham School" a recent author says: "Here a boy drops rank
wealth
luxury
and for eight or ten years
and for the greater part of these
years
lives among his equals in an atmosphere of steady discipline
which
usually compels a simple and hardy life
and in a community where the prizes
and applause are about equally divided between mental energy and spiritual
vigour. Here respect and obedience become habitual to him; lie learns to regard
the rights of others and to defend his own; to stand upon his feet in the most
democratic of all societies — a boy republic. Above all
he escapes the mental
and moral suffocation from which it is well-nigh impossible to guard boys in
rich and luxurious homes."
(H. O. Mackey.)
He sitteth
alone
and keepeth silence
because he hath borne it upon him. He putteth his
mouth in the dust
if so be there may be hope.
Thus the
prophet describes the conduct of a person in deep anguish of heart. When he
does not know what to do
his soul
as if by instinct
humbles itself. He gets
into some secret place
he utters no speech
he gives himself over to moaning
and to tears
and then he bows himself lower and yet lower before the Divine
Majesty
as if he felt that the only hope for him in the extremity of his
sorrow was to make complete submission to God
and to lie in the very dust
before Him.
I. In the time of great trouble HOLY SOLITUDE is commended to us.
"Let him sit alone." I earnestly advise you who are under concern of
soul to seek to get alone
and to be quiet and thoughtful in your solitude; not
merely to be alone
but to sit by yourself like a person in the posture of
thought.
1. I commend solitude to any of you who are seeking salvation
first
that you may study well your case as in the sight of God. If a true
shepherd will not neglect his flocks and his herds
should not a wise man care
about his thoughts
his feelings
and his actions? I implore you
do not let
your ship go at full steam through a fog; but slacken speed a bit
and heave
the lead
to see whether you are in deep waters or shallow. Sit alone a while
that you may carefully consider your case.
2. Get alone again
that you may diligently search the Scriptures.
Alas
the dust upon many men's Bibles will condemn them! I beseech you
as
sensible and reasonable beings
do not let God speak to you
and you refuse to
hear.
3. Get alone
further
that you may commune with your God. After we
have once learnt the way
we can commune with God anywhere
— amidst the roar
and turmoil of the crowded city
or on the top of the mast of a ship; but
to
begin with
it is best to be alone with the Lord. Oh
speak with Him at once!
Perhaps five minutes' earnest speech with Him may be the turning point of your
life.
4. Get alone also
that you may avoid distraction. How often may
even godly and gracious people talk upon some theme that may rob their fellow
believers of all the good they have received in God's house; and
as for
unconverted persons
I am sure that
if they ever feel impressed under the Word
it will be their utmost wisdom to take care of that first impression
and not
let it be driven away by foolish or frivolous conversation. Some of us are old
enough to recollect the day before there were matches of the kind we now use
and early on a frosty morning some of us have tried to strike a light with
flint and steel
and the old-fashioned tinder box. How long we struck
and
struck
and watched
and waited
and at last there was a little spark in the
tinder
and then we would hold the box up
and blow on it very softly
that we
might keep that little spark alight till we had kindled the fire that we
wanted. That tenderness over the first spark is what I invite everyone to
practise in spiritual matters.
II. The text goes on to say
that we should practise SUBMISSIVE
SILENCE. "Let him sit alone and keep silence."
1. If the burden of sin is pressing upon thee
be sure to abstain
from all idle talk
for if the idle talk of others
as I have reminded thee
can distract thy thoughts
how much more would thine own!
2. Keep silence also in another respect. Do not attempt to make any
excuse for your sin. Oh
how ready sinners are with their excuses! There was a
man who used to get drunk and he said that it was his besetting sin; but his
brother said
"No
it is your upsetting sin;" and so it was. He that
does not want to get wet should not go out into the rain. Instead of your
excuse making your case any better
it makes it worse; therefore
keep silence
before thy God.
3. Keep silence from all complaining of God. No man is truly saved
while he sets himself up as the judge of God; yet this is the practice of many
men. Go
thou guilty one
sit thee still
and hold thy tongue
and bring thy
rebellious heart to submission. Shall the flax contend with the fire
or the
stubble fight with the flame? What canst thou do in warring with thy Maker?
4. Sit thou alone
and keep silence
next
from all claims of merit.
There is no way of mercy for any one of us until we shut our mouths
and utter
not a single boastful word
but stand guiltily silent before the Lord.
5. I think it is well
too
when a poor sin-burdened soul is silent
before God
and unable to make any bold speeches. It would have been well if
Peter had been silent when he said to his Lord
Although all shall be offended
yet will not I." I like a man who knows
not only how to speak
but how to
sit still; but that latter part is hard work to many. There came a young man to
Demosthenes to learn oratory; he talked away at a great rate
and Demosthenes
said
"I must charge you double fees." "Why?" he asked.
"Why
" said the master
"I have first to teach you to hold your
tongue
and afterwards to instruct you how to speak." The Lord teaches
true penitents how to hold their tongues.
III. Now I shall ask your special and patient attention to the third
point
which is
PROFOUND HUMILIATION. What can this expression mean? "Let
him put his mouth in the dust
if so be there may be hope."
1. It means
first
that there must be true
humble
lowly
confession of sin. You say that you have been praying
yet you have not found
peace; have you confessed your sins? This is absolutely necessary. Do not cloak
or dissemble before the Almighty. Let all your sins appear. Take a lowly place;
not simply be a sinner in name
but confess that thou art a sinner in fact and
deed.
2. Further than that
when it is said that we are to put our mouths
in the dust
it means that we are to give up the habit of putting ourselves
above other people
and finding fault with others. I believe a sincere penitent
thinks himself to be the worst man there is
and never judges other people
for
he says in his heart
"That man may be more openly guilty than I am
but
very likely he does not know so much as I do
or the circumstances of his case
are an excuse for him."
3. It also means that we realise our own nothingness in the presence
of God.
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
The Lord will
not cast off forever.
Expository
Outlines.
I. A CHEERING ASSURANCE GIVEN.
1. That God's abandonment of His people is only temporary.
2. That the favour with which he will visit them will be signal and
abundant.
II. AN IMPORTANT REASON ADDUCED. "For He doth not afflict
willingly
" etc. This may be inferred from
1. His character. He is a God of love.
2. The relationship He sustains to His people. He is their Father.
3. Their sufferings are attended with many alleviations. Had He any
pleasure in punishing us
so much mercy would not be mingled with judgment.
4. The object He has in view in afflicting His children. It is for
their profit
that they might be partakers of His holiness.
5. His readiness to remove His chastening hand when the visitation
has answered the end intended.
III. A GRACIOUS LIMITATION SUBJOINED. "To crush under His feet
all the prisoners of the earth
to turn aside the right of a man
" etc.
Whenever He afflicts
it is —
1. Within the bounds of moderation. To "crush
" expresses
what is extreme and destructive (Isaiah 27:8; Jeremiah
10:24; Jeremiah 46:28).
2. Never in violation of the principles of equity. "To subvert
a man in his cause
the Lord approveth not." He is the righteous Lord
that loveth righteousness
and all He doeth is in accordance therewith.
(Expository Outlines.)
Divine mercy in human affliction
Homilist.
I. THE RELUCTANCE WITH WHICH THE AFFLICTION PROCEEDS FROM GOD.
"He doth not afflict willingly." Suffering is repugnant to His
benevolent nature
why then does He allow it to come?
1. Because it is according to the benevolent laws of the universe.
Love has linked indissolubly suffering and sin together. The greatest calamity
that could happen to the universe would be a dissolution of this connection.
2. Because sufferings have a disciplinary influence. They tend to
quicken spiritual thought
loosen interest in the material
and throw the soul
back upon itself
the spiritual and the everlasting.
II. THE LOVING KINDNESS WITH WHICH AFFLICTIONS ARE EVER ATTENDED.
"Yet will He have compassion according to the multitude of His
mercies." Divine mercy is always seen in sufferings.
1. In the slightness of the suffering compared both with the deserts
and the enjoyments. How much misery does the sinner deserve? Let his own
conscience answer. How little are his sufferings
compared with this l How much
happiness does he enjoy every day! What are his pains
compared with the bulk
of his enjoyments?
2. In the alleviations and sustaining ministries afforded under
suffering. How much to alleviate suffering has the greatest sufferer
how many
relieving ministries at hand — loving friends
medical science
etc.
etc.
(Homilist.)
He doth not
afflict willingly
I. AFFLICTIONS ARE PECULIARLY INSTRUCTIVE. Griefs and pains are very
unacceptable. Most men find it difficult to bear them with commendable
patience. And as the mind is troubled under them
nothing is more natural than
to inquire whence they come and why they are sent. And thus the mind is led
away to God
and reminded of the justice of His character. If there had been no
suffering here
if all around us was fair
and bright
and happy
every face
dressed in smiles
and every heart bounded with joy
men would have asked where
is there any proof of God's anger? of His aroused and operative justice? of His
great displeasure against sinners? And by such courses of thought the natural
atheism of the human heart would have fortified itself against the truth.
II. GOD SENDS AFFLICTIONS UPON MEN FOR THE SAKE OF THEIR INFLUENCE AS
THEY BEAR UPON THE PASSIONS AND PURPOSES OF LIFE.
1. Amid the prosperities of life
when pains
disappointments
and
distress are strangers
pride is very apt to be strong and influential. The
miseries of this life are sent to repress this pride. They rebuke it. They
check it. They stand in its way and hinder its influences. Pain and pride do
not thrive well together. Far from it. There is little manifest arrogance and
haughtiness
or even ambition
on Caesar's bed of sickness. When amid the
burnings of his fever he cries: "Give me some drink
Titanius
" like
a sick girl
he is a very different man and different example from what he was
at the head of his legions
his strong hand upon his sword. He cares very
little now for his eagles — very little for glory.
2. These afflictions of life also repress worldliness of spirit.
What a lecture a fever gives to it! or a funeral! What a lesson the graveyard
reads in its ears! What a rebuke when the man bears to the tomb the son for
whom he thought he was hoarding his thousands!
3. These miseries
too
have an influence upon disappointed
ambition
envy
and such like. They are seen to be impartial.
4. Our miseries
too
affect our purposes. Indeed there are very few
of our lost purposes that are formed without them.
5. Our afflictions tend strangely to impress us with a sense of our
dependence on God.
III. THE AFFLICTIONS EXPERIENCED BY THE PEOPLE OF GOD FURNISH
OPPORTUNITY AND MEANS FOR THE CULTIVATION OF THE HIGHEST AND MOST DIFFICULT
VIRTUES. If there were no instances of distress
we should have nothing to
excite our pity. If there were no instances of want
there would be nothing to
call forth our charity. If nobody injured or offended us
we should have nobody
to forgive. Aside from something to distress or annoy us
the virtue of
patience would not be called into action and cultivated. Our fortitude
if not
much of our faith
could never be exercised at all
if there were no burdens to
bear
no distresses to endure
no furnaces of trial to burn upon us.
IV. HOW COULD YOU
THEN
JUDGE WHETHER YOU WERE A CHILD OF GOD OR
NOT? The temper we have and the demeanour we exhibit in afflictions
and toward
the afflicted
constitute more just criterions of our character than any other.
If there were no afflictions here
we should have no "good Samaritan"
to copy
and no priest and Levite
whose irreligious example to shun. God may
have sent us trials and filled His world with sorrows
not willingly
but to
furnish us opportunity to test our faith and find whether we are on the way to
heaven.
V. AFFLICTIONS MAKE DEMONSTRATIONS OF MEN
PROOFS
EXHIBITS TO THE
WORLD
OF THE POWER AND DIVINITY OF FAITH. The world needs such demonstrations.
The wicked are not to be convinced by principles merely. In trial grace
brightens — it shines — it demonstrates. For this reason God sends trials.
VI. IT IS JUST IN TIMES AND BY MEANS OF AFFLICTIONS
THAT GOD BESTOWS
UPON YOU HIS MOST PRECIOUS GIFTS.
(I. S. Spencer
D. D.)
I. THE SOURCE WHENCE THEY PROCEED. "He causes grief." not
the enemy of souls
but the Friend of sinners; not the tyrant of the hour
but
the eternal Sovereign of the skies. Not a needless sigh ascends from the human
bosom; not one unnecessary tear
which God originates
flows down the face of
man. We are sure of this —
1. From the infinite benevolence of His nature
and the mercy that
characterises all His dispensations.
2. From the fewness of our afflictions compared with our deserts.
3. From the large aggregate of happiness which we all enjoy.
4. From the fact that many of our sorrows are self-originated.
5. From the direct statements of the written revelation.
II. THE DESIGN FOR WHICH THEY ARE SENT. Their ordinary uses are —
1. To discipline character. "This is all the fruit
to take
away sin." While we are under affliction
we are under a process of cure.
2. To prove principle. It does this to ourselves and to others.
3. To increase usefulness. Who visits the sick? Chiefly those who
have suffered affliction.
4. To detach from the vanities of earth
and prepare the soul for
heaven.
III. THE ALLEVIATIONS BY WHICH THEY ARE ACCOMPANIED.
1. In the appointment of them you are privileged to discern and acknowledge
the Divine hand.
2. In the endurance of them you are often favoured with peculiar
supports and consolations.
3. In the final review you will assuredly have occasion to bless God
for all.
IV. THE SPIRIT IN WHICH THEY SHOULD BE MET.
1. An inquiring spirit. "Show me wherefore thou contendest with
me." Inquire into their causes
their tendency
and especially the
influence which they exert upon your character.
2. A prayerful spirit. There is no time more favourable for the
exercises of devotion
no time in which we are more likely to obtain the
richest blessings
than the time of affliction. This is eminently a time in
which God may be found.
3. A submissive spirit.
4. A thankful spirit.
5. A spirit of cheerful expectation and hope of better days hereafter.
(S. Thodey.)
I. THE EXISTENCE OF MISERY RECONCILED WITH THE BENEVOLENCE OF GOD.
1. You were created happy
by your own faults you became miserable;
your Creator
notwithstanding
redeemed you from this state; and the only
penance for your guilt is a mixture of misery with happiness
in that short
interval which passes between the cradle and the grave.
2. Those sufferings to which we are exposed in this world
are
absolutely necessary for the recovery of that perfection in which we were first
created
and for the regaining of that dignity and purity which we forfeited by
the fall.
II. THE UNREASONABLENESS AND INGRATITUDE OF DISCONTENT AND
DESPONDENCY.
1. They were not originally designed for us
but having been
introduced by the folly and guilt of our first ancestor
they are necessary and
unavoidable; and not only so
but they are in a high degree salutary and
medicinal.
2. Though it must be allowed that some portion of misery will fall
to the share of all men; that no prudence
virtue
or good fortune can entirely
escape it: yet I believe that it may he assumed
and will hold true for the
most part
that the hours which we spend in ease and happiness are greatly
superior
in number
to those which are passed in misery and pain.
3. Many of the evils which are the subject of our hasty complaints
are brought on us by our own imprudence; disappointments frequently arise from
unreasonable expectations; poverty is the general product of idleness; sickness
is
in many instances
caused by intemperance; the loss of reputation
by vice
or folly: in these cases
shame
one would think
should silence our murmurs
and prevent us from attributing to the constitution of human affairs what is
only to be imputed to ourselves.
(G. Haggitt
M. A.)
Nature and design of affliction
I. ALL AFFLICTION COMES FROM GOD. Every arrow which wounds the sons
of men receives its commission from the skies
and never fails to strike its
appointed mark: while infinite wisdom appoints
unerring power executes. and so
it is
whether intermediate instrumentality be employed or not. Wicked men and
wicked spirits arc continually made the unconscious instruments of furthering
the merciful designs of Almighty God
in this world of irregularities. They
mean evil; but He overrules their agency for good: and so long as his watchful
eye is upon them
and they act under His control and permission
in afflicting
the children of men
the Church may say
with her Redeemer
in the depths of
His expiatory sufferings' "The cup which My Father hath given Me
shall I
not drink it?"
II. AFFLICTION SHOULD BE REGARDED BY CHRISTIANS AS NEEDFUL
DISCIPLINE
OR AS SALUTARY CHASTISEMENT. It is true that if God saw fit
He
could as effectually carry on the work of grace in the hearts of His people
and as speedily ripen them for the bliss of heaven
without
as with
the
instrumentality of affliction: but then
we know that His general plan is to
convey the promised influences of His Spirit through the medium of naturally
operating causes. He brings persons under the sound of the Gospel
and then He
makes the faculty of hearing a means of their becoming wise unto salvation: He
softens a man's heart by affliction
and then
as in a prepared soft
He sows
that precious seed which springs up in a rich and abundant harvest. And this is
all that we mean
when we speak of trials as necessary for the people of God:
they are necessary on the principle of that analogy which pervades the various
dispensations of the Almighty
both in Providence and in grace. His watchful
eye detects some irregular desire beginning to operate in the breast
or some
evil passion which
like a flower m the bud
only waits to be acted upon by the
influence of temptation
in order to be brought to maturity: and hence
like a
wise and affectionate parent
He kindly interposes to prevent the threatening
danger.
III. AFFLICTION
WHETHER IT COMES UPON THE BELIEVER IN THE WAY OF
DISCIPLINE OR OF CHASTISEMENT
IS REGULATED
FROM FIRST TO LAST
BY INFINITE
WISDOM AND UNBOUNDED MERCY. To Him all hearts are open: He is intimately
acquainted with the peculiar temperament of individual experience: and He
determines
with unerring accuracy
when
and how
and to what extent
the discipline
or the chastisements of His grace are necessary
in each separate instance.
(W. Knight
M. A.)
The infliction of evil upon mankind
Sorrow
pain
change
and death
affecting ourselves
affecting others
everywhere prevail.
This fact we cannot alter. But in the manner in which we view it
our
happiness
our improvement
are deeply concerned. That God could terminate such
a state of things
is certain. That He does not
is equally certain. And yet
"He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men."
I. THE PROOFS OF THIS DOCTRINE.
1. The first proof that He cannot afflict willingly
or
as it is in
the Hebrew
"from His heart
" is found in His nature. Love can take
no delight in our afflictions
and must ever be ready to mitigate or remove
them.
2. We can trace all misery up to causes independent of the will and
appointment of God.
3. In all cases we find more of mercy than judgment. You have
sickness
but how much more health! pain
but how much more ease!
disappointment
but how many gratifications! You sigh for a good which you have
not; but how many do you actually enjoy!
4. The success of prayer in removing afflictions.
II. MUCH AFFLICTION WILL BE FOUND TO REMAIN AFTER ALL; AND WE STILL
WANT THE REASON OF IT.
1. To keep man in mind that God notices his sins
although He may
delay their final punishment
Sin is no trifling evil.
2. To give a spiritual direction to our affections
by showing to us
the vanity of the world.
3. To call good principles into exercise
and thus to prepare us for
heaven. Faith
patience
sympathy for others
are all strengthened in
affliction.
III. THE LIMITATIONS BY WHICH IT IS GRACIOUSLY REGULATED.
1. He does not so afflict and grieve
as to crush under His set the
prisoners of the earth. Oh no. Our Lord has purchased liberty for the prisoners
of the earth
and the Gospel is the proclamation of it. We are called forth
into light and liberty
into joy and hope.
2. He doth not so afflict as "to turn aside the right of a man
before the face of the Most High." The face of the Most High; the
Shechinah
or visible glory of the Lord; symbolising the throne of grace in
heaven; God accepting the oblation and offering of His Son for our sake
and
appointing Him our Mediator
and giving us the covenant right of approaching to
Him
with all our guilt and misery
that we may obtain the provided
deliverance. And never does God turn away the exercise of this gracious right.
In darkness
ask His light; in sorrow
inward joy; in temptation
strength and
victory; in all pressing circumstances
help in thy time of need; in sickness
patience; in death
life; in all
submission.
(R. Watson.)
I. MANY OF THE EVILS WITH WHICH MEN ARE VISITED
BEING THE
INSEPARABLE ATTENDANTS OF VICE AND FOLLY
ARE TO BE ASCRIBED TO THEIR OWN
MISCONDUCT. Whence
for example
the disease and wretchedness of the
voluptuous? Whence the ignominy that overwhelms the false and the unjust?
Whence the fears that disturb the breasts of the guilty
and the heavy
punishment that follows atrocious wickedness? Are they not evils into which men
wantonly plunge? and do not they form a great proportion in the number of human
woes? But while the evils which follow guilt are to be ascribed to the
misconduct of the guilty
they serve an important purpose in the moral
government of the world; they set bounds to the destructive progress of vice
and often are the source of unspeakable good to the guilty themselves. Often
they destroy our relish for sinful enjoyments
and turn the heart into another
course. By withdrawing us for a little from the hurry of our guilty pursuits
they give us time to pause and consider
and thus the careless may be led to
sober thought
and the criminal stopped in the midst of a career which would
have ended in irrecoverable ruin. Even when remorse is awakened
though its
pangs be severe
it is often the commencement of a new era in a man's life
and
the forerunner of virtue and peace.
II. WITH RESPECT TO THOSE EVILS WHICH DO NOT ARISE FROM GUILT
BUT
ARE COMMON TO THE GOOD EQUALLY WITH THE BAD
THEY ARE USEFUL FOR THE
IMPROVEMENT OF OUR MINDS
AND FOR THE TRIAL AND CONFIRMATION OF OUR VIRTUE.
Were there no hardships in our lot
no dangers to be encountered
no injuries
nor calamities to be experienced; our contentment
our fortitude
our
forgiveness
our resignation
virtues which so adorn the human character
would
be untried and unknown. We may add on this point
that the frequent repetition
of evils
sometimes in a milder
and sometimes in a more formidable shape
not
only calls forth but confirms the virtue of good men. It is well known that
when frequent returning opportunities of sinning are indulged
they produce a
general tendency to vice: the heart becomes enslaved to corruption
and the
fetters which retain it in bondage become too strong to be broken
without the
most vigorous efforts. In like manner with respect to our good qualities
each
succeeding act of virtue promotes the general tendency to goodness
and by
repeated exercise
virtuous dispositions at length acquire a prevailing
influence.
III. THE EVILS OF LIFE ARE OFTEN THE IMMEDIATE SOURCE OF SOME OF OUR
MOST REFINED ENJOYMENTS
CALLING FORTH THOSE EXERTIONS OF SYMPATHY WHICH ARE SO
GRATEFUL TO THE SUFFERER. Visit the abode where such a man is labouring under
the pressure of calamity
and where will you find a more improving spectacle?
Are they not the best feelings of the heart
which dictate the prayer of
resignation that ascends to God? Are they not the most sacred and endearing
exertions
when affection marks the supplicating eye
and hastens to relieve
shares and alleviates the weight of sorrow
watches perhaps the last moments of
the departing spirit
and sweetens the slumber of death?
IV. THE EVILS OF LIFE SERVE A FURTHER IMPORTANT USE
BY LESSENING OUR
ATTACHMENT TO THE PRESENT WORLD. Were heaven revealed in its full splendour
it
would excite a fervour of mind amidst which the world would be utterly
forgotten. But it is the will of God that our present duties be fulfilled
and
therefore He hath drawn a veil over the glories of immortality. On the other
hand
lest we should sink law amidst the pleasures of this life
and rest
satisfied with them
we are visited with disappointment and calamity. Thus
without overwhelming us with the view of heavenly felicity
means are provided
to make the prospect welcome to us
means peculiarly suited to a state of moral
discipline; and think how much the hope of immortality would be banished from
men's minds
if nothing occurred to weaken their attachment to the world. You
may observe
moreover
the wise accommodation of sufferings to the period of
life which we have attained. In youth
some strokes of adversity are sent to
touch and awaken our minds. But as we advance in life
cares multiply
the
things of this world present themselves in their true light
and we discover
that trouble and uncertainty are part of the lot of man. When old age comes
and the period of our departure is at hand
the prospect is more and more
clouded. Our earthly hopes fail
and what remains but to look beyond the
approaching limits of our pilgrimage
and steadily to fix our wishes on the
world to come? Of how much importance it is
that while we continue under our
present preparatory discipline
our views should be directed forward to what
finally awaits us
must be abundantly obvious. It assists us in opposing the
power of temptation; it provides a rich treasure of pure enjoyment
it imparts
an elevating and sanctifying influence to our minds
and thus corresponds with
the great purposes for which our present state is appointed.
(T. S. Hardie
D. D.)
A more
melancholy
dirge-like plaint than that of this heart-broken prophet never fell
from human lips. The lofty confidence of this suffering man in the fidelity and
compassionate rule of God
his own bitter grief notwithstanding
is not less
majestic than his sorrow is plaintive (vers. 22-26). Then comes this grand
prophecy of a triumphant faith in the providence of a Divine compassion
under
which all suffering is being ministered with a purpose and mixed with a
tenderness out of which emerge definite and healing results
as it is given in
the text: "For the Lord will not cast off forever: but though He cause
grief
yet will He have compassion. For He doth not afflict willingly."
This apparent contradiction between the Divine compassion and our human griefs
is today what it has been from the beginning
the standing problem
the bitter
tragedy of human life. It has but one solution. Man as he actually is
is under
a providential training for what it is possible for him to become. There are
not two Gods
as the old Persian theosophy imagined
one good and the other
evil
contending for man; but one God
contending with the evil that is in man.
I. HERE
THEN
IS THE FACT THAT GRIEF IS THE HERITAGE OF MAN.
1. "The whole creation
" said the apostle
"groaneth
and travaileth in pain together until now." Things have not altered much
in their outer aspect in this matter since the apostle's time. Life is still
the natural history of sorrow — man's life the bitterest of all. Man is born
into a world where he does not so much find the trouble
as the trouble finds
him. He is born into it
as the insect is born into the air. There are troubles
which belong to the lot of individual man. And in this form they are the
impartial inheritance of the race. All men
in whatever other things they may
differ
agree in this
that they are alike born heirs to a patrimony of sorrow.
If we escape it in one form
it meets us in another. There are the troubles
which afflict the community
which fall upon the mass in its aggregation of
families
neighbourhoods
communities
and nations; in which men
indiscriminately seem to be the victims of a common affliction
of which no
account can be given. The air gets contaminated
and chokes them wholesale with
its pestilential fevers. Then there are the troubles which overtake us not
unfrequently in the form of sudden calamities
the "terrible things"
which
in the shape of accidents
explosions
fires
and shipwrecks
strike
dumb a nation's heart. The judgments of God
or some strange license in the
physical agencies of the universe
seem embattled against the interests and the
safety of man. Suffering
like sin
has no vacation: it keeps no holiday. If in
this huge complex of human grief it were true that the guilty only suffered
or
that the profane and the incorrigible were chiefly its victims
one might
suppose that a natural providence were somehow at work to guard the rights of
the virtuous against the wrongs of the sinning. But as we have seen
"there is no discharge in this war." "There is one event to the
righteous
and to the wicked."
2. Let us bear in mind that we have been speaking only of facts
not
of causes or theories. And
further
let it be remembered that these facts are
independent of any belief or disbelief as to their origin or purpose
and as to
the relation
if any
which man holds to a moral government. They are not the
creations of our Christian philosophy; and they are not the coinage of our
Christian faith. They are a difficulty to the Christian philosopher; but they
are equally so to the sceptic. They are to both equally facts. They pertain as
much to the newest infidelity
as they do to the oldest Christian belief. Nor
will atheism itself
the doctrine that chance or fate rules the destinies of
men
afford its advocates even a momentary relief from the perplexing enigmas
of fact. That doctrine
indeed
deprives us of a personal God
and
consequently
of all intelligent provision in the arrangements of the universe;
it cuts us adrift from all relation to a fatherly providence. Instead of
"the living God
" "our Father in heaven
" whose
"tender mercies are over all His works
" it gives us an unconscious
unintelligent
and eternal nature. In the place of creative law and a final
purpose
it sets up a grim and remorseless fate. But it mitigates no evil;
alleviates no pang; dries no tear in the sorrowful history of man. You ask:
Why
if there be not only goodness but an Almighty justice reigning over the
world and men
does it not stretch forth its hand to rescue and save from
suffering? But why
if there be an Almighty chance
or fate
does it not do
that? If thinking matter
or materialised thought be God
still it is a God
under whose creative auspices man is born into a world of trouble. "By one
man
sin" entered into the world and death by sin; and so death passed
upon all men
for that all have stoned. Man is a fallen being
a self-ruined
intelligence — poised and quivering between two infinities; from the one of
which he is banished
for the other of which he is being trained. He is God's
child
in exile. He suffers as a discrowned king. That is the one
interpretation. Suffering and guilt are correlated facts. They mutually involve
and explicate each other.
II. WE HAVE
SECONDLY
THE DIVINE COMPASSION
IN ITS RELATION TO
SUFFERING. "He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of
men."
1. And here
first
it is claimed that all human suffering comes
within the fore. knowledge
and is under the control of God. While
as a fact
suffering in its origin and infliction does always hinge on to secondary causes
in the fatalities and falsities of man; those secondary causes in their action
do always
immediately or remotely
fasten on to the purpose of God. Afflictions
are not an accident. "The curse causeless shall not come." The
writers of the Old Testament Scriptures are never more emphatic than in their
assertion of this double parentage of human sorrow. If they knew but little of
the scientific set up and mechanical movements of the laws of nature
they knew
a great deal inspirationally of the supreme life
of which those laws were the
appointed expression. They never ignore the immediate presence of God in His
works; they never unfasten His governing hand from the smallest or the greatest
events. They neither substitute the sovereignty of the Divine will for natural
law; nor put natural law in the place of the Supreme will. As these writers
uniformly teach
the plan of Providence takes in the universe as a whole. The
individual is never forgotten in the multitude or the magnitude of the Divine
cares. The interests of the man have a place in the complications of his
actings in the world. "His eyes behold
his eyelids try the children of
men." Even in what are held to be the accidents of life
those strange
unforeseen
and as we are apt to think
purely fortuitous events
which
anticipate all our foresight and calculation
and which entail so constantly so
large a measure of suffering upon the man and the community
the inspired
writers have a place for the anticipation and the activity of a prescient
providence. They are contingencies to us
a mere chapter of accidents; but not
to the foreplanning and all-seeing mind of God. Surely there can be no
absenteeism
no indifference
no incapacity in the all-perfect infinite God.
Along the myriad antecedent lines of concatenated human agency at any point of
space or time
He
indeed
is alone able to look. But that the first link and
the last link and each intermediate link in the chain of human causes leading
to that and similar catastrophes fasten on to the foreknowledge and governing
will of God
we can accept on the testimony of His Word. We are speaking of
foresight
of that prescient outlook of Providence
which takes all human
occurrences out of the run of chance surprises
and puts them amongst foreseen
and permitted events. There can be no accidents in the scheme of infinite
thought; there can be no surprise to the intelligence that infinitely knows We
see only results. To God the beginning
with its antecedents all hidden and
remote
is a presence.
2. Many of our troubles
probably most of them
have their causes in
ourselves. They come within the Divine plan not as visitations which God
foreordains
or directly inflicts; but as actualities which He foresees
emergent in the history of man. They would be equally facts if they were not
foreseen: that they are foreseen does not necessarily make them facts. This is
not to shut out all direct intervention on the part of God from the sufferings
of man; it only puts in a protest against the notion that makes all suffering
the direct and arbitrary infliction of God. Providence is the action of God
through law; and
as a general rule
providential laws work best for him who
works the best with them. They work — it may be silently and in secret — but
they work surely against the man who works against them. There are laws of
health
physical
and mental which
if a man wilfully disregard or habitually
transgress them
will work directly against and not for him. A man is
intemperate in his habits; he lives in excess. Very well. Subsequent temperance
may alleviate
but it cannot wholly exonerate him from the penalty of a long
course of riotous living. In how many ways
and with what a perverse tenacity
of wilful ignorance
we are violating these laws and are suffering bitterly and
hopelessly in consequence
can be known only to God. That we do violate them
that many of our sad experiences are due to such violations
it would be idle to
dispute. This suicidal raid on the economies of life
in spite of the warnings
and protests of God
is one of our deadly sins. So
too
in what is called the
mystery of sudden death. In the case of many a successful man of business
the
cup is dashed from his lips just when its fragrant sweetness is being filled to
the brim. Of course
everyone is shocked at the mystery of Providence which
in
so arbitrary a manner
puts its arrest on the life of such a man. To God
it
may be
all the mystery of the case is explained in that man's dogged
determination to crowd the work of two lives into one. The engine. work of the
brain was driven at high pressure; and so the machinery broke down.
3. But now there are troubles and afflictions — and these not few —
which we must consider only as the punishment of sin. "The Lord doth not
afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men." But then He does
afflict and grieve them
when they offend. "He will not cast" them
"off forever. He will have compassion according to the multitude of His
mercies." But the compassion is in the use of the rod
not in the
withholding of it. We thus suffer because we sin. And
presumably
we all
suffer in some form and at some time
because we have all sinned against some
law or commandment of God. Do a wrong thing
with a bad intent
— and though
you put the breadth of creation between you and it
the penalty will reach you.
"Though hand join in hand
the wicked shall not be unpunished." In
the Old Testament Decalogue we have a summary of the moral statues under which
man is placed. And as these were intended to determine the actions of men and
do determine them
all men keeping or breaking
or alternately breaking and
keeping them; so the providence of God
as the guardian of law
deals retributively
with men. May we not expect that God will claim the right to be heard
and to
vindicate Himself and His works against the insults of men? No: God will not
abdicate His throne because of the atheism of men. We may refuse to see any
convincing proofs of His busy presence with us. We may openly deny that any
such presence exists; or we may distress ourselves with a superficial reading
of the many mysteries which are burdening the air with shrieks or breaking
human hearts with grief. But that presence
if unseen and unrecognised by men
is immanent and real God works in silence. He works and waits
on lines that
stretch into the eternal And now
what
in view of these conclusions
is the
first sentiment with which we ought to fill our minds? Is it not that of
profound thankfulness for that revelation in which the origin and the purpose
of all human suffering are made known? In the meantime
let us always recollect
this
— that the dealings of God with men are regulated and are to be
interpreted by the fact that we are a race of sinners. And
finally
let us
also remember that the issues of this strife between God and man are not all
played out in the present world. They do not expire always in the waste of
health
in the loss of friends
the wreck of property
the crumbling down of
the pride of man. The last settlement will cover all the future; as it will
explain all the past. Let us then be patient and submissive. "The Lord is
at hand."
(John Burton.)
God's afflictive dealings with His people
Whoever will
consider the state of the world and human experience cannot but conclude that
God is more concerned to make men holy than happy; for many are able to rest in
their sorrows for the sake of their use and end
but no one finds rest in
unholy delights. In sinful pleasure God follows man with a scourge; in sorrow
with balm.
(J. Pulsford.)
God has no delight in human suffering
God is the
greatest of Kings and potentates
but yet has nothing of a tyrant in His
nature. It is no pastime to Him to view the miseries of the distressed
to hear
the cries of the orphans or sighs of the widow. He seems to share in the
suffering while He inflicts it
and to feel the very pain of His own blows
while they
fall heavy upon the poor sinner. Judgment is called God's
"strange work
" a work that He has no proneness to
nor finds
complacency in. He never lops and prunes us with His judgments
because He
delights to see us bare
but because He would make us fruitful. Common humanity
never uses the lance to pain and torture
but to restore the patient. But now
the care and tenderness of an earthly parent or physician is but a faint shadow
and resemblance of that infinite compassion which God bears to His children
even in the midst of His severest usage of them.
(R. South.)
To turn aside
the right of a man.
Homilist.
I. MAN HAS RIGHTS.
1. Man has an inalienable right to the enjoyment of that happiness
for which he was created. What is necessary to this?(1) Physical health. Where
there is a diseased
enfeebled body there cannot be happiness. But what
millions in this free country of ours
who have committed no crime
are doomed
by the tyrannic force of commercial cupidity
and by the injustice of
legislation
to spend their time in filthy garrets and in foetid alleys.(2) Intellectual
culture is essential to happiness. We have a mind as well as a body; nay
we
are mind. There is no paradise for man where the tree of knowledge does not
bloom
knowledge gives a new interest to life
a new meaning to the universe
a
new sphere for the full play of our faculties. If
then
knowledge is essential
to happiness
what is necessary to knowledge is a right.(3) A good conscience
is a necessary element of happiness. He who surrenders his conscience to the
dictates of others
degrades his nature; and he who is forced to lend his
support to principles contrary to his own convictions is an insulted and an
injured man.(4) Social respect is another element in happiness. Whatever tends
to degrade a man in the estimation of his contemporaries is an infringement of
this right.
2. Man has an inalienable right to those conditions essential to the
discharge of his obligations. Duty meets us everywhere
it is ubiquitous
it
meets us at home and abroad
in solitude and society
in business and in pleasure.
The cardinal duties of our being may be put into three groups
domestic
civil
and religious.(1) The domestic group
The duty of filial reverence and love
meets us at the beginning of our history
and is enjoined both by nature and
the Bible. "Honour thy father and thy mother
" is a mandate that not
only rings in the Decalogue
but echoes ever more through natural reason and
conscience. It is not incumbent on any child to honour morally ignoble parents
or to love those whose characters arc false
and mean
and corrupt. Nor could
they do so. Parental government
therefore
is based upon the right that
children have to expect from parents the spiritually noble and pure.(2) The
civil group. Outside of the domestic sphere
out lying close to its door
there
is the great world of our fellow creatures which we can society. This society
has its institutions
its laws
and government. We live in this world
and we
cannot live without it. Whoever is the chief administrator of the laws that
govern society
whether placed in his supreme position by lineage or suffrage
for his whole life or for a certain period
he is the king
and we are
commanded to honour and obey him. But this duty implies that the king is
honour-worthy
and that his laws are righteous.(3) The religious group. The
great duty that grows out of our relation to our Maker is this
"Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God
" etc. But this supreme obligation of humanity
implies rights on man's raft. If the Supreme Being requires me to love Him supremely
He must furnish me with a revelation of Himself
and with capacities capable of
understanding and appreciating that revelation. He must appear as the
infinitely lovely One
the altogether beautiful
in order to kindle my highest
affections. Now in relation to Him our rights are equal to our obligations. He
has given us all that we require to fulfil the duties He demands.
II. MAN HAS WRONGS. His wrongs are the antitheses — or rather
deprivations and violations of his rights.
1. How man's wrongs are inflicted. The despoilers of his rights may
be divided into two classes
the external and the internal.(1) The external.
Who and what outside of man deprive him of his rights? Unrighteous government.
Who can look at some of the laws of England without denouncing them as
unrighteous. Take the laws in relation to land. Take the laws in relation to
labour. Honest labour is an institution of heaven. And is not that law
unrighteous which
to support regal luxuries
and gorgeous pageantries
government pensions
huge naval and military establishments
despoils the
honest worker of much of the produce of his labour? Secular monopoly. Vast as
are the resources of this earth
they are not boundless. It is the purpose of
our Maker that all men should have an adequate
if not an equal participation
in them. He
therefore
who appropriates to his own personal use an amount
which would be sufficient supply the wants of a number
is a monopolist
and
interferes with the rights or the multitude. Social chicanery. It has been said
that so rife is the ravenous greed and the unscrupulous dishonesty in society
that one can scarcely have a business transaction with any man without the
liability of being cheated. Justice between man and man is generally torpid
and often extinct. The spirit of fraud and falsehood fills the air.(2) The
internal. There are elements or forces in the human soul that are perhaps
greater despoilers of rights than any that are without: in fact
the external
tyrants derive their energy and continuance from them
outward despots would
scarcely live were it not for the inward. Indolence. Perhaps in most men
naturally the desire for rest is stronger than that for action. The lazy hang
on others
they will fawn on and flatter tyrants
only let them have a little
more "folding of the hands in sleep." Servility. This
indeed
is an
offspring of the former. It means the loss of all sense of manly independency.
Credulity is also the child of indolence; not until men rouse themselves to
intellectual study so as to become qualified to form an independent judgment
will they free themselves from those fraudulent forces and impostures that
"turn aside the right of a man." Intemperance in either form
eating
or drinking
is one of the greatest despoilers of human rights.
2. How man's wrongs arc to be removed.(1) Not by violent declamation
against existing authorities. Demagogism has ever done more harm than good.(2)
Nor yet can you regain your rights by physical force. The real chains that
fetter men are too subtle to be cut by the sword.(3) How then? By the promotion
of sound knowledge. Popular ignorance is the cradle of tyrannies. By sound
knowledge I mean primarily
a knowledge of the ethics of Christ.
(Homilist.)
I. PITY SHOULD ALWAYS TEMPER PUNISHMENT.
1. To prevent despondency. Despondency unmans men.
2. Punishment should always be tempered with pity that it may prove
a discipline. The good have that comfort in adversity
that the worst that
meets them here is intended for their good.
3. Punishment should always be tempered with pity
in consideration
of the dignity and great possibilities of man's nature. He was created in God's
image; he may be restored to the same image again. God punishes us in pity
"for our profit
that we may be partakers of His holiness."
II. RIGHT SHOULD ALWAYS GUIDE MIGHT.
1. Because the right will be just to a man's physical needs and his
moral powers. To trample upon those who are down is brutal conduct. That is to
let might crush the right. Those who are down should excite our pity
not
incite us to perpetrate cruelty.
2. Because the right will respect man's religious requirements.
3. Because the right will teach men to respect the claims of their
fellow men and the truth.
III. JUSTICE SHOULD ALWAYS BE THE AIM OF LAW.
1. Because the Lord is an eyewitness of all we do. Our most secret
thoughts before ever they become actions are known to Him.
2. Because the Lord is pleased or pained with all we do. If we
really and devoutly considered this how differently would we act frequently.
3. Because God will punish all wrong-doers.
(D. Rhys Jenkins.)
There is a
general impression that God does as He pleases without any reference to
sanctions or immunities of ours. This
however
is far wide of the truth. God
is never arbitrary.
I. One of our rights with respect to God is LIFE. This is a natural
right. It is written that when God created man He breathed into his nostrils
the breath of life so that he became a living soul. In this particular man was
created in the Divine likeness. His life was like a spark thrown off from the
infinite life of Deity. It is impossible
therefore
to think of annihilation
or of "conditional immortality" in connection with him. Our life is
the only created thing in the universe that has not in it the seed and
certainty of death. An oak may resist the storms of a thousand years
but it
falls at last. Our bodies are never free from disease; it is only a question of
time when each shall return to the dust as it was. But the soul has in it no
seeds of decay. Its eyes never grow dim
its blood does not stagnate
and
whenever the query is propounded
"If a man die
shall he live
again?" its answer is instant
"I shall live and not die!"
II. The second of our rights before God is FREEDOM. This again is a
natural right. It belongs to us by virtue of the fact that God created us in
his own likeness. In this again man is unique among all created things. The sun
goes forth out of its chambers in the morning to run its race
and has no
alternative. God speaks and it obeys. The sea rolls to and fro as He directs.
But to you and me He says
"Thou shalt
" and if I please I may make
answer
"I will not." If would win me He must reason with me. If He
would capture me He must draw me with the cords of a man. If
notwithstanding
His goodness
we persist in sin
He can only suffer us to have our way.
"Ye will not come unto Me that ye might have life."
III. We are entitled to THE FULL BENEFIT OF THE MORAL LAW. This also
is a natural right. We are normal beings. As God Himself is the source and
centre of law
so we
being made in His likeness
are made under law; and we
may claim all the benefits and privileges of it. There is
however
little comfort
in claiming these privileges of the moral law. For what is law? "The soul
that sinneth
it shall die." And what is justice? Eternal separation from
God and goodness. We are sinners
all alike under the penalty of death. To
stand upon our rights just here is to court despair.
IV. Fortunately for us we have another right
not natural like the
foregoing
but conferred
to wit
the right of APPEAL FROM LAW AND JUSTICE TO
THE MERCY OF GOD. No one among us can presume to stand upon his merits. On Sir
Henry Lawrence's tomb at Lucknow is this inscription: "Here lies a man who
tried to do his duty. May God have mercy on his soul!" If he tried to do
his duty why did he not ask for justice? Because
no matter how earnestly he
had striven to live well
he had made a measurable failure of it. Mercy
therefore
was Sir Henry's only hope. He is a wise man who in like manner
after doing his best and being mindful of his shortcomings
casts himself with
an utter abandon on the mercy of his God.
1. This right of appeal is a conferred right. It is purely of grace.
But once conferred it is inalienable. "Him that cometh unto Me" — no
matter how scarlet his sins — "I will in no wise cast out."
2. This right is the purchase of the Saviour's blood. But for His
atoning work it could not
consistently with justice
have been conferred upon
us.
3. This right is conditioned upon the exercise of faith in Jesus
Christ. A man may do as he pleases about exercising this faith
but in default
of it he lives obviously under the law and must take the consequences.
(D. J. Burrell
D. D.)
The cultivation
of wisdom
courage
and temperance is necessary to the doing of justice
and
the cultivation of justice reacts favourably on the cultivation of these other
virtues. But
on the whole
those three first are personal; this is public. In
cultivating the first three virtues
a man is looking within; in cultivating
this fourth one
he is looking without and around. For justice is to render to
everyone his due. It is the virtue of a man
not as he stands alone
but as he
stands in society; and as he cultivates this virtue
he has to keep his eye
upon all his fellow creatures
his superiors
inferiors
and equals
and on all
the circles of society in which he stands
such as the family
the city
the
nation
and the Church. As man has relations to other creatures beneath him and
to other beings above him
as well as to his fellow creatures
it has sometimes
been proposed to include in justice the duties of man to animals
and the
duties of man to God. I notice in some of the newer books on ethics
that the
subject of cruelty to animals is discussed in connection with justice
and in
many of the older books
in the writings of the schoolmen
and especially in
the Summa of
the duties of man to God are not only included in justice
but
made the principal part of it: all parts of Divine worship
for instance
being
discussed under this head. But it seems to me that it is better to limit
justice to the duties of human beings to one another. This is a wide enough
field. It comprehends the mutual duties of parents and children
husbands and
wives
brothers and sisters
friends and neighbours
clergy and laymen
employers' and employed
rulers and subjects
and others too numerous to
mention. It anyone in all these relationships were a model man
then he would
be a perfect man
and hence
justice has often been treated as if it were the
whole of virtue; and even
in an unusual outburst of enthusiasm
says:
"It is more beautiful than the morning or the evening star." When
justice is defined as rendering to every one his due
that might seem a very
simple affair
but it is not so simple as it looks; and this you immediately
begin to realise if you ask what is due to any other person
because the
question always slips in
"And what is due to me?" That is what makes
it so difficult to keep the balance straight — the bias in favour of self. Note
I.The justice of the law of the land.
II.The justice of public opinion.
III.The justice of conscience.
IV.The justice of Christ.That everyone should get his due is so
essential to human welfare
that in every country
in the slightest degree
above the level of barbarism
the very best brains have been set to determine
what justice is
and the united strength of the community to enforce it. In
ancient Rome
for instance
the Twelve Tables were set up in the market place
that everyone might read them
and there
in the plainest words
the citizen
was told his duty
and was made acquainted with the penalties of transgression.
In our own country and in other civilised countries
picked men are brought
together in Parliament
who spend their time year by year
defining what
justice is. Law courts are set up; judges and juries sit; lawyers plead
to
bring special eases under the general laws which Parliament has enacted; and
prison and punishment exist for the purpose of bringing home to the general
mind the majesty of justice. These institutions in our midst form a school
to
which we are all sent
that we may learn to give to everyone his due. The law
of the land has been our schoolmaster
telling us what to do and what not to do
and telling us effectually; and the very unconsciousness of our minds as to our
having anything to do with the police and the prison
is just the evidence of
how well this schoolmaster has done his work. In all civilised countries the
justice of the law of the land is an inheritance from many centuries
during
which the best brains of the country have been set apart to determine what
justice is. In our own law
extremes of wisdom mingle
derived on the one hand
from the classical nations
and on the other hand from our Teutonic ancestors.
And yet
in spite of all that has been done
and is being done
from year to
year
the law of the land is a very imperfect embodiment of justice
and a man
may all his life keep out of the clutches of the police
and yet be an
extremely unjust man. If a man steals a pound note from his neighbours
the law
will set its whole machinery in operation to deal with him
but the very same
person may
by the arts of temptation carried on for many years
make the son
of his neighbour a drunkard
and his daughter something still worse
and yet
the law of the land may not say a single word. A man may all his life keep wide
of the clutches of the law
which may never have one word to say to him; yet
society may know him to be guilty of deeds which it intensely despises
and
will not allow to be committed with impunity. It does not fine or imprison
but
it turns its back on him. Thus
silently but sternly
society punishes the man
who is known to be breaking the eighth commandment
and especially the woman
who is known to be breaking the seventh commandment. It is often very cruel —
at all events
it looks cruel — and yet on the whole it is beneficent
and the
world is a far more habitable place because of the school of public opinion into
which all have to come. Then there is the school of conscience. There are holes
in the net woven by public opinion
just as there are in those woven by the law
of the land
far worse than that even. There are many cases in which public
opinion commands things it ought to forbid
and in which it forbids the things
that it ought to command. But perhaps a custom established in public opinion is
more difficult to deal with than a wrong statute. The appeal from it
however
is to the conscience of the individual
and this is the third school into which
we all have to pass. If a man is doubtful about what is right and what is
wrong
let him simply retire with the question into his own breast
and ask
What ought I to do? and if he is really willing to do what he knows to be
right
he will very seldom be without the right answer. This often is a far
sterner tribunal than either that of public opinion or the law of the land. The
great interest of religion is to strengthen the conscience
so that a man may
feel that in its presence he is standing before a more august judge than if he
were in any court of law
or than if he were surrounded by a whole theatre of
spectators. "Whatever ye would that men should do to you
do ye even so to
them." That is the soul of justice. As I have just quoted the golden rule
it might be thought we had already got to the justice of Christ. Jesus was a
moralist. He was the heir and successor of the prophets. He denounced wrong
with a plainness never elsewhere exemplified in the world. He emitted many
rules of justice
and the golden rule among them. Yet that was not the
principal lift He gave to justice. It is well to understand that. There are
things that make it easy to give to any one his due
or even perhaps a little
more than his due. There is not a town in the world where the well dressed do
not receive more courteous treatment than the ragged. That is human nature. I
dare say it is sometimes contemptible
but at all events it is a good thing to
take advantage of it for those at the opposite extreme of society. What Jesus
did to secure justice for the common man
was to raise the estimation of the
common man. If the poor receive scanty consideration because there is nothing
about them to attract attention
on the other hand
they will receive respect
and attention if they are invested with dignity
and none can take in the
teaching of Jesus Christ without recognising that the humblest belong to that
humanity which He took into His heart
and for which He sacrificed His life.
And if thus we look at our fellow creatures through the eyes of Jesus Christ
if we see God in them
then we have a new and the finest of all reasons for
treating them with justice. Let us take for an illustration that which we are
all thinking so much about in the present day
the relations of employers and
employed. What do these four kinds of justice say about what the employer owes
to the employed and what the employed owe to the employer? Take the law of the
land; what it says is very brief and to the point; it just says to the
employer: "Pay that thou owest
" and to the employed
"Thou
shalt not steal." There are multitudes both of employers and employed to
whom that is perfectly simple
but are there not others to whom these simple
statements are the very thunder of God? Then public opinion goes a good deal
further
although its voice in this case is divided. There is an opinion of
employers which employers
perhaps
listen to too exclusively
and there is a
public opinion of the employed to which they
perhaps
listen too exclusively.
But there is a wider public opinion that is more impartial
and I think I
should say that it frowns upon the employer of labour who is not endeavouring
to bring the conditions of labour in his business up to the best that has been
attained in the same business; and this wider public opinion frowns upon the
employee if he does not do his best. Outside public opinion in such eases is
apt to be only partially informed
and its decisions need correction by larger
knowledge; but I should say that on the whole they are wholesome; and it is
good for both sides that the voice of public opinion is to be heard. There is
the appeal
though
for both employer and employed
to conscience. A man can go
into his own breast and ask
What is my duty? What would God like me to do? And
then there still remains the justice of Christ. What would Christian principle
say in this case? It would remind the employer that what are called his
"hands" are in reality immortal beings
and therefore ought to be spared
as much as possible things such as Sabbath labour and excessive hours
which
secularise and brutalise; and bid servants hear the voice of Christ behind them
as they labour
"Whatsoever ye do
do it heartily
as unto the Lord and
not unto men." I am not saying that even with the help of all these four
kinds of light the problem of justice is always easy. I do not think it is. It
seems to me to be specially difficult where
not individuals
but large bodies
of men are concerned. But it is only by keeping these four lights streaming
down upon life that the relations of men will become more just
and so more
sweet
and that the individual will be prepared to appear before that tribunal
where all the judgments of this earth will be reconsidered
and where a decision
will be given from which there is no appeal.
(J. Stalker
D. D.)
Who is he that
saith
and it cometh to pass
when the Lord commandeth it not?
Here we are
called upon to produce instances in which man's word has prevailed against the
Word of God. Has any man commanded the sun to go backwards
and the sun has
obeyed the instruction? Has any man commanded the seasons to change the order
of their procession
and have they changed accordingly? Has any man been able
to reverse moral duties
moral actions
and moral consequences
so that evil
shall end in joy
and iniquity shall conduct to rest and heaven? The Lord asks
for the production of evidence by which people may be able to judge as to moral
duty and moral consequence. The interrogation assumes a gracious and initial
fact
namely
that the Word of the Lord alone can stand fast
and ultimately
and completely prevail in the direction and settlement of human affairs. Has
this assumption the justification of history? H so
see what wondrous
inferences may be drawn from that justification! Let us at once inquire for the
Word of the Lord
and study it
and exclude from our ears all other voices
because in the word of the Lord alone is complete wisdom
and in the testimony
of the Lord is an assured protection.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
Out of the
mouth of the Most High proceedeth not evil and good?
The eternal
problem of the relation of God to evil is here treated with the keenest
discrimination. That God is the supreme and irresistible Ruler
that no man can
succeed with any design in opposition to His will
that whatever happens must
be in some way an execution of His decree
and that He
therefore
is to be
regarded as the author of evil as well as good — these doctrines are so taken
for granted that they are neither proved not directly affirmed
but thrown into
the form of questions that can have but one answer
as though to imply that
they are known to everybody
and cannot be doubted for a moment by anyone. But
the inference drawn from them is strange and startling. It is that not a single
living man has any valid excuse for complaining. That
too
is considered to be
so undeniable that
live the previous ideas
it is expressed as a
self-answering question. But we are not left in this paradoxical position. The
evil experienced by the sufferer is treated as the punishment of his sin. What
right has he to complain of that? Quite a number of considerations arise out of
the curious juxtaposition of ideas in this passage. In the first place
it is
very evident that by the word "evil" the writer here means trouble
and suffering
not wickedness
because he dearly distinguishes it from the sin
the mention of which follows. That sin is a man's own deed
for which he is
justly punished. The poet
then
does not attribute the causation of sin to
God; he does not speculate at all on the origin of moral evil. Meanwhile a very
different problem
the problem of suffering
is answered by attributing this
form of evil quite unreservedly and even emphatically to God. Now
is there not
something reassuring in the thought that evil and good come to us from one and
the same source? There must be a singleness of aim in the whole treatment of us
by providence
since providence is one. Thus
if only as an escape from an
inconceivably appalling alternative
this doctrine of the common source of good
and evil is truly reassuring. We may pursue the thought further. Since good and
evil spring from one and the same source
they cannot be so mutually
contradictory as we have been accustomed to esteem them. They are two children
of a common parent; then they must be brothers. But if they are so closely
related a certain family likeness may be traced between them. This does not
destroy the actuality of evil. But it robs it of its worst features. If it is
so closely related to good
we may not have far to go in order to discover that
it is even working for good. Then if evil and good come from the same source it
is not just to characterise that source by reference to one only of its
effluents. We must not take a rose-colored view of all things
and relapse into
idle complacency
as we might do if we confined our observation to the pleasant
facts of existence
for the unpleasant facts — loss
disappointment
pain
death — are equally real
and are equally derived from the very highest
Authority. Neither are we justified in denying the existence of the good when
overwhelmed with a sense of the evil in life. Is it only by accident that the
poet says "evil and good
" and not
as we usually put the phrase
"good and evil"? Good shall have the last word. Evil exists; but the
finality and crown of existence is not evil
but good. The conception of the
primary unity of causation which the Hebrew poet reaches through his religion
is brought home to us today with a vast accumulation of proof by the
discoveries of science. The uniformity of law
the co-relation of forces
the
analyses of the most diverse and complex organisms into their common chemical
elements
the evidence of the spectroscope to the existence of precisely the
same elements among the distant stars
as well as the more minute homologies of
nature in the animal and vegetable kingdoms
are all irrefutable confirmations
of this great truth. Moreover
science has demonstrated the intimate
association of what we cannot but regard as good and evil in the physical
universe. Thus
while carbon and oxygen are essential elements for the building
up of all living things
the effect of perfectly healthy vital functions
working upon them is to combine them into carbonic acid
which is a most deadly
poison; but then this noxious gas becomes the food of plants
from which the
animal life in turn derives its nourishment. Similarly microbes
which we
commonly regard as the agents of corruption and disease
are found to be not
only nature's scavengers
but also the indispensable ministers of life
when
clustering round the roots of plants in vast crowds they convert the organic
matter of the soil
such as manure
into those inorganic nitrates which contain
nitrogen in the form suitable for absorption by vegetable organisms. The more
clearly we understand the processes of nature the more evident is the fact of
her unity
and therefore the more impossible is it for us to think of her
objectionable characteristics as foreign to her being — alien immigrants from
another sphere. Physical evil itself looks less dreadful when it is seen to
take its place as an integral part of the complicated movement of the whole
system of the universe. But the chief reason for regarding the prospect with
more than satisfaction has yet to be stated. It is derived from the character
of Him to whom both the evil and the good are attributed. We can go beyond the
assertion that these contrarieties spring from one common origin to the great
truth that this origin is to be found in God. All that we know of our Father in
heaven comes to our aid in reflecting upon the character of the actions thus
attributed to Him. The account of God's goodness that immediately precedes this
ascription of the two extreme experiences of life to Him would be in the mind
of the writer
and it should be in the mind of the reader also. The poet has
just been dwelling very emphatically on the indubitable justice of God. When
therefore
he reminds us that both evil and good come from the Divine Being
it
is as though he said that they both originated in justice. The last verse of
the triplet startles the reader with an unexpected thought. The considerations
already adduced are all meant to check any complaint against the course of
providence. Now the poet appends a final argument
which is all the more
forcible for not being stated as an argument. At the very end of the passage
when we are only expecting the language to sink into a quiet conclusion
a new
idea springs out upon us
like a tiger from its lair. This trouble about which
a man is so ready to complain
as though it were some unaccountable piece of
injustice
is simply the punishment of his sin! The deserts of the city are
only the deserts of her citizens. It will be for everybody to say for himself
how far the solution of the mystery of his own troubles is to be looked for in
this direction. A humble conscience will not be eager to repudiate the
possibility that its owner has not been punished beyond his deserts
whatever
may be thought of other people
innocent children in particular. There is one
word that may bring out this aspect of the question with more distinctness —
the word "living." The poet asks
"Wherefore doth a living man
complain?" While the sufferer has his life preserved to him he has no
valid ground of complaint.
(W. F. Adeney
M. A.)
Nothing could
be more dismal than the opening of this third lament over the ruin which had
befallen the Holy City
and the dire calamities which had overtaken her people;
but there is some radiant shining at the heart of it. One side of a mountain is
often wrapped in clouds
while the other is bathed in noonday brightness.
"I never have a chagrin
" said Goethe
"but I make a poem of
it." Some of the divinest poems we know have been the result of the
saddest mortifications of life. The author sings from the heart of a fiery
experience of his own
as well as that which he has shared with his nation. He
comprehends the depths if not the heights of human experience
and yet he has
"kept the faith." He can still declare that the Lord is his portion
and that his mercies are a "multitude
" "new every
morning." Ah! these are the men to speak to us about the compassion of
God: men who have had "to climb the climbing way
" and who declare
the truth in tones that were born in the darkness and sorrow of the night. It
is easy enough for most of us
whose lives have fallen in pleasant places
to
talk to the broken-hearted about the love of God
and to persuade ourselves
that He is the Father of us all and infinitely good. But if we have taken a light
skimming view of life
if we have lived where it is "always
afternoon
" it becomes us to be silent
or to speak only in the name of
those who have faced the sternest realities
and have yet believed. We can
listen with patience to these ancient seers. They speak without mocking the
world's trouble. They have stood where life wails its saddest notes and have
not lost hope. True
this man had been tempted to believe
in one dark moment
that though God was leading him
He was against him; but when we follow him
into the light when his night is past and "jocund day stands tip-toe on
the mountains
" we hear him speak of the compassions which "fail
not." Oh
this is faith
is it not
when a man can stand face to face with
all the contradictions of life
face to face with his own unbelief
and say
"I will not let Him go; I will have God in the whole of my life
in its
tragedies as well as in its bliss
in its broken fortunes as well as in its
sunny days? Out of the mouth of the Most High cometh there not evil and
good?" "For though He cause grief yet will He have compassion
according to the multitude of His mercies." This is the faith that
overcomes all repining. The Hebrew singer is one with the great prophets in
this
that he is in no confusion about the source and meaning of Israel's
trouble. He does not find the good hand of God in His deliverances alone. There
is mercy even in the exile; in the sweeping disasters which have overtaken the
nation. He who has been with His people in the calm is with them in the storm.
Nay
He creates the storm
and causes the grief
and the "living" man
has no ground of complaint though he be punished for his sins
for "the
wages of sin is death" and it is "of the Lord's mercies" that he
is "not consumed." And here is the key to the man's faith. These are
not songs of sorrow alone; they are songs of confession and repentance
and
therefore of hope. Here are the Jews in Babylon far away from the city they
love. Their hearts are broken and their eyes are dimmed with tears; but they
are tears of remorse leading to a searching of heart and a trying of their
ways. The author would have them believe that exile is the outcome of their
sin. It is not faithfulness that has compassed their downfall. The Lord has
afflicted Zion not "willingly
" but "for the multitude of her
transgressions." He has suffered His people to go into exile that it may
work its moral discipline and bring them back to confidence in Him
and to
righteousness of life. "Wherefore doth a living man complain
a man for the
punishment of his sins? Let us search and try our ways
and turn again to the
Lord." There is some suffering
it does not need to be said
that is not
for punishment. The sharpest pang of the singer as he thinks of the miseries of
Israel comes from the cry of suffering children. But thinking not of children
but of men and women
it is a commonplace to say that some of the noblest and
saintliest lives have been shaped in affliction. "It is the accent of
self-righteousness that finds in all your suffering the punishment of sin. A
man whose heart has never been broken should have little to say to another man
of his sins." And yet
surely
no man need ask why he suffers. If you have
sinned
your own heart will tell you plainly what is the sin for which you suffer.
If you have not sinned
you will have something still to do with your sorrow.
There were some devout Jews who were not the cause of Israel's exile
and they
too had lessons to learn which have enriched all posterity. But the lesson for
all of us is this: that transgression leads to exile; that the broad way
narrows; that to the man who persists in sin there must come a day when he will
be confronted by fearful threatenings and apprehensions
and when the judgments
of the Most High will breathe within him their Divine protest against his sin.
He whose compassions "fail not" can yet cause grief. The Most High
sends forth evil as well as good. In the heart of the Father dwells a most
exacting righteousness
that will "by no means clear the guilty"
until they have acknowledged their offence. Oh listen; there is suffering which
is for sin. This man is speaking of facts; addressing living men
conscious of
grievous wrongdoing
bidding them take all the punishment honestly and humbly
and count it a mercy "new every morning" that a throbbing heart and
beating pulse are God's assurance that He will have compassion
if they will
return to the Lord. The one hope of our coming to this faith in His compassions
is in confession and repentance. The Gospel of forgiveness and peace will never
find the man who does not know the bitterness and guilt of sin. The experiences
we have with conscience are to produce in us that "godly sorrow"
which "worketh repentance unto salvation." This
indeed
is the Gospel
for all of us. Whatever be our trouble repentance is our first need. You may
not be able to trace your sorrow to any particular sin. It may not be due to
any sin of yours at all; but I tell you
the one spirit to which God's reason
for causing any grief is never revealed
is the spirit that has not known and
will not know repentance. Who are we
the best of us
to say that this or that
trial of life has nothing to do with our sin? Nay
it sometimes troubled these
holy men of old
lest when they had confessed the sin of which they were
conscious
there should be lurking within them latent evil
beyond their
finding out
and only to be revealed to them by Him from whom nothing is
concealed
who will have "truth in the hidden parts." "Search
me
O God
" they cried
"and know my heart
try me and know my
thoughts
and see if there be any way of wickedness in me." It is only to
the penitent soul that the secret of the Lord's compassions can be revealed;
you cannot believe that "deep love lieth under these pictures of time
"
if you are among "the wise and prudent"; but if you are among the
"babes
" of a humble and receptive spirit
the day will come when you
can say
in the face of every perplexity
"even so Lord
for so it seemeth
good unto Thee." These
I say
are the men to speak to us about the
compassion of God. They know the love that passeth knowledge
for they know the
sin that love bears. And Divine love cannot further go than that. It was for
this He came
who was "a Man of Sorrows
and acquainted with grief";
for this that He stood in dark Gethsemane and died the death of the Cross. And
when you and I stand with Him there
and enter into the fellowship of His
suffering
then all life is transformed for us. There is something for the
heart to rest upon in the deepest distresses. We can go bravely to our
encounter with whatever shall come to us
for He is with us who has borne our
griefs and carried our sorrows. Has the Most High caused you any grief? Surely
He has! There is some pathetic thing concealed in every heart. Then what will
you do? Will you complain
will you resent it as a bitter and undeserved wrong?
Will you go on to the end remembering nothing but "the wormwood and the
gall"? Or will you say
"Search me
O God
and know my heart
try me
and know my thoughts
send whatsoever ordeal "Thou wilt
so that at the
last I may know thy salvation"? Then you are on the way to that attitude
of soul which is faith.
(John Holden
M. A.)
Wherefore doth
a living man complain
a man for the punishment of his Sins
Wherefore complain in affliction
This question
suggests two considerations; each of which demonstrates the injustice of the
complaint. Why should a living man complain? — a living man! Life is still left
thee; and of whatsoever thou hast been stripped
there is such a counterpoise
in the continuance of life that complaint must be groundless. "A man for
the punish. meat of his sins!" There hath nothing befallen thee saving the
just recompense of thy misdoing. How can a complaint against justice be itself
just! Thus are these two arguments of the text demonstrative of the unfairness
of human complaint when the dealings of the Most High pass under review. And
these two arguments we will apply
first
to God's general dealings; and
secondly
to His individual.
I. How easy and how common is to it discourse in A QUERULOUS STRAIN
ON THE FACT OF OUR BEING MADE TO SUFFER FOR A FOREFATHER'S TRANSGRESSIONS AND
ON THE FACT OF OUR DERIVING A POLLUTED NATURE FROM GUILT IN WHICH PERSONALLY WE
TOOK NOT ANY SHARE. And we do not deny that the question of original sin is one
of great difficulty; and that there requires a chastened and subjugated
intellect ere the doctrine can be received in its full and scriptural extent.
Nevertheless the transactions of paradise were not so dark and unintelligible
that we can decipher nothing of the fitness and justice of the present dispensation.
Let it be remembered that not only was Adam the natural parent of the human
race; he was also their federal representative; he stood forth as their head
so that by his obedience they were to stand
and by his disobedience to fail.
And no appointment could be presented unto the human population with so great a
likelihood of duty and blessing. Had the choice been in our power
we would
gladly have given our fate into the keeping of Adam; stimulated as he must have
been to obedience by so rich a deposit. For there was an infinitely greater
probability that Adam
with the fall of millions committed to his keeping
would have watched diligently against the assaults of temptation
than that any
lonely individual of his descendants
left to obey for himself
and disobey for
himself
should have maintained his allegiance and preserved his fidelity.
Therefore do we say
that in appointing mankind to stand or fail in Adam
God
dealt with them by a measure of the widest benevolence. No other arrangement
can be conceived which would have been equally likely to have advanced their
well-being. But if so
complaint is at once removed by the second consideration
which the text suggests. It is for the punishment of our sins that we are born
the children of wrath and condemnation; and
if for just punishment of our
sins
by what right do we complain? If it be in unison with the attributes of
God that we should all be reckoned to have taken share in Adam's transgression
it follows that whatever there be of bitterness in our birthright
it has been
imposed only as a punishment of sin; and all complaint at our condition is
complaint against justice
and therefore itself must be unjust. And this one
part of the question of Jeremiah applies itself to reproof of complaint at
God's general dealings with man; namely
the part which represents suffering as
the punishment of sin. Will not the other part do the same "Wherefore doth
a living man complain?" You learn that the threatening by which Adam was
warned in tasting the tree of knowledge was most explicit and decisive
whereas
the mode in which the threatening was executed seems hardly to accord with the
denunciation
"In the day that thou eatest thereof
thou shalt surely
die
" was the threatening; but Adam died not on the day that he ate
though
we believe
that he then became liable to death. And we may well
suppose that the actual infliction of death was suspended through the
interposition of the Mediator; and that when Adam sinned
and with him the
whole race of which he might be the progenitor
it was only because Christ
Jesus had undertaken from all eternity to achieve redemption that the guilty
pair were not immediately destroyed. And
therefore
I can never feel within me
the boundings of life
nor avail myself of the furniture of mental endowment
nor survey the varied loveliness of-creation
nor mark the springing of
flowers
nor hear the warbling of birds without being reminded that I am
reaping the fruits of the Mediator's passion; for unless there had been His omnipotent
interposition
the original curse might have received literal execution; and
the throbbings of life have ceased to beat throughout this creation. If our
very life have been given to us only in return for the marvellous humiliation
to which Deity was subjected by tabernacling in the flesh
we have all been the
subjects of a loving kindness so vast
so transcendent
so overpowering
that
it were base effrontery to describe ourselves as having cause of complaint
against God. Living men — living only because Christ died — "wherefore
should they complain?" Yes
you may argue
if you will
that to a great
mass of the human race life is no blessing at all; but we meet you upon this
point. We affirm
on the contrary
that life is so invaluable a blessing that
all of us have cause to join heartily in the general thanksgiving of our
Church
"We bless Thee for our creation." Is not life then a
blessing? Does it cease to be a blessing just because I may debase
and
prostitute
and desecrate it? Am I not rather warranted in declaring that life
is so vast a blessing that it is a counterpoise to all those disadvantages
which are consequent upon the fall
so that he who is disposed to arraign God's
general dealings with his race
may justly at once be silenced by the interrogation
of our text? Yes
it may in the first place most truly be said
that as the
children of a disobedient race
whatever suffering we have to undergo
we
endure it for the punishment of our sins. But this is not all: we are living
creatures; and not merely living a frail and mortal life
but baptised into the
faith of Him who is "the resurrection and the life"; so that we may
live forever in glory without measure; in happiness without bounds. Let
then
all murmuring be hushed. Who will dare to repine?
II. But having thus applied the considerations suggested by the text
to the complaints which are grounded on the ruin and sinful condition of
mankind
we proceed to make A LIKE APPLICATION TO THE COMPLAINTS CALLED FORTH
BY INDIVIDUAL AFFLICTION. Whosoever thou art
on whom God hath laid heavily the
rod of chastisement; and whatever the visitation beneath which thou art bowed
let all murmuring be hushed with the demand
"Wherefore doth a living man
complain
a man for the punishment of his sins?" When God sends
affliction
without doubt He designs that it should be felt as affliction. The
cross is a burden which we must carry on our shoulders
and not throw it into
the fire. But it is one thing to be sensible of affliction
and another to
complain of it. And while we may feel acutely
and yet not transgress; we
cannot murmur and be blameless. And it is against a repining and not against a
suffering spirit that our text must be considered as directing its censure.
And
therefore
it applies to none but those who would question the justice of
God's dealings; and not to those who resign themselves meekly
although deeply
wounded. But before we can bring the considerations suggested by our text to
bear upon this complaint
we must examine in what sense it may be affirmed that
affliction is allotted to us in punishment of our sins. There may often be an
error here. Wherever and whatever I suffer
I suffer as a sinner; but there is
no such nice proportion maintained between what I do as a sinner
and what I feel
as a sufferer
that for every grief inflicted
I shall be able to produce an
offence committed. Sometimes
indeed
it wilt happen that the judgment bears a
distinct and palpable reference to the iniquity
so that the particular cause
of God's wrath can hardly be overlooked; but we have no warrant for expecting
that sin and sorrow should thus necessarily correspond; or that we should be
able to calculate precisely the fault to which God hath apportioned present
calamity. And it is in exact accordance with these remarks that our text
represents affliction as a punishment
not of this sin
or of that sin
but
generally
for the punishment of a man's sins. And this should suffice to show
you the injustice of complaint. It is much
as we have already shown you
that
every one of us transgressed in Adam; that in virtue of his standing as our
federal representative
we have fallen from our first estate. It is much that
as the result of the earliest rebellion we are all involved in one vast
condemnation
so that when successive generations rise up and possess this
earth
there is between each individual and his God such a separation that he
has right to expect nothing but unmitigated wrath. But when you add to the
contemplation of original sin
all the complicated catalogue of actual sin;
when you remember that man is a transgressor
not only by imputation
but by
every positive and personal working of evil
surely the marvel must be not that
so much of wormwood should drug the cup of human life
but that so much of sweetness
should still have been left
and that so much of brilliancy should still
sparkle on the waters. Is it justice that man impeaches
or is it mercy
when
he utters complaints against the dispensations of God? Justice! which of us is
there unto whom
if he were dealt with by strict measure of justice
there
would not be assigned so stripped and wasted an inheritance that no solitary
flower should bloom on him
no smile of friendship gladden him
no voice of
affection cheer him? And as to mercy — shall mercy be impeached by those who do
daily a scornful despite to the attributes of God? Invert the calculation.
Measure the mercy not by what is denied
but by what is bestowed; not by what
is taken away
but by what is left — by what we have rather than by what we
have not; and mercy stands forth wonderful in its extent; putting out even on
behalf of a vast company
energies which are not to be expressed by all the
imagery of the material universe. And this too — far worse than this! — for a
being who has thrown himself
by his iniquities
out of the pale of loving
kindness
and who if he were left like a blasted tree on the mountain top
leafless and branchless — the sole survivor of a goodly forest
torn by the
tempest
and scathed by the lightning
might
nevertheless
be pronounced a
monument of mercy. And once more. We are living men. And whatever the woe and
bitterness of our portion
wherefore should living men complain? Ye all know
that this our mortal estate has been appointed by God as a probation for our
immortal. Ye all know that we suffer for a while in these houses of clay; that
when they shall have been demolished by the inroads of death
our souls must
unite and form anew and hasten to a sphere of new and untried being. And life
when regarded as the seed time of eternity — life must appear to be so enormous
in value that its sternest and most aggravated sorrows dwindle away into
comparative nothingness. Living is never so terrible that man does not shrink
from dying
and thus he practically owns that he retains the greater blessing
though he may have been stripped of the lesser. May it not then be said of him
with all the emphasis of an indignant remonstrance
Wherefore
yes
wherefore
dost thou a living man complain? And this gift of life should repress the
murmurings of the righteous as well as of the unrighteous
for a disposition to
complain shows that patience has not yet done its perfect work
and the
prolongation of life gives opportunity for this work to be completed. And
therefore
as the waters of the raging sea soothed themselves into calmness at
the mandate of the Redeemer
let every rebellious and unholy passion be hushed
before the Lord our Creator. "Be still
and know that I am God."
(H. Melvill
B. D.)
I. THE NATURE OF SINFUL COMPLAINTS.
1. Complaints as to our situation in life. Not satisfied with our
lot. Not content with the bounties of providence.
2. Complaints as to providential visitations. Disappointments in
business
blighted prospects
loss of friends
seasons of affliction
etc.
3. Complaints as to spiritual sorrows. Many are the afflictions of
the righteous
etc.
4. Disappointed prayers and expectations. David
for his child;
Paul
for the removal of the thorn.
II. THE EVIL OF SUCH COMPLAINTS.
1. It is a sin against reason. Who so fit to manage for us as God?
2. It is a sin against goodness. Then how ungrateful to complain!
3. It is a sin against Divine faithfulness and truth. God's
declarations run thus
that "He will withhold no good thing from them that
walk uprightly." "My God shall supply all your need
" etc. Now
to complain is the essence of unbelief
the essence of distrust.
4. It is a sin especially against Divine condescension and abounding
mercy.
5. It is a sin fraught with evil consequences to ourselves. It must
incur God's righteous displeasure. See the fire of the Lord consuming the
Israelites in the camp (Numbers 11:1). And for what? They complained
against the Lord. See
also
Jude 1:16. It deprives of all the enjoyment of
Divine goodness.
III. THE REMEDY FOR SINFUL COMPLAINTS.
1. Look within yourselves. See your utter unworthiness.
2. Look abroad. You are poor; others are destitute
naked
starving.
You are afflicted
but how lightly!
(J. Burns
D. D.)
Affliction considered a
punishment
I. IT COMES FROM GOD. The text points us to the moral Governor of
the world
to Him who has made us
and made us men
and who orders things with
reference to our condition and character as souls and as sinners. The Bible
of
course
traces all suffering to God. It teaches us that He creates evil and
good; that He causes light and darkness; that He appoints the rod; that if evil
is in the city He hath done it; that is
it ascribes trouble to Him
as it
ascribes everything else to Him
of whom
through whom
and to whom all things
are
who made all things
for Himself
even the wicked for the day of His
wrath. Apart from questions of inspiration
such language is natural. The
natural piety and scientific ignorance of men would delight
and be obliged
to
use it; piety longing to make as much of God as possible
and ignorance not knowing
what else to do. There is
no doubt
a sense in which God does all things. That
is
since He has a plan
and accomplishes that plan — in other words
since He
is all-wise and all-powerful
He must exercise a universal superintendence and
control. God may be said to bring about results
even in the case of the
voluntary acts of men
if He has so ordered the existing system that those
results shall follow those acts. For our present purpose it is enough that in
any true sense what happens to us is referable to His will; that it is His
pleasure that it should happen; that He knows of it
and either causes it
or
intentionally allows it. Our miseries
of every kind and source
are from Him;
that is
from a Being having intelligence and will; not from what we call
with
or without meaning
"chance
" or "fate"; a personal God
a
Father
a moral Ruler
means them. It is "punishment" — shall we
"complain"?
II. WE HAVE OURSELVES ONLY TO BLAME FOR OUR TROUBLES. It is quite
true
generally
that we suffer because we sin. We should not know trouble if
we were not guilty. We are not to vex ourselves
as good people often do
with
inquiries as to the individual reasons and designs of our troubles; we are not
to ask
in the sense of Job
"Show me wherefrom Thou contendest with me;
we are not to institute a particular search into the occasions of our trials
as if each had a special meaning
and indicated a special sin
after the manner
of Adonibezek's punishment. It is enough for us that we are sinful
and
therefore sorrowful; that we should not be where we are if we were not what we
are; that God has placed us in a world of thorns and briers as well as flowers
and fruits; in bodies whose organs pain as well as please; in a system of
"wicked and unreasonable men"; and many more very weak and
thoughtless
intercourse with whom must often vex and distress us
because we
were
in His foresight
creatures meriting chastisement
and able to profit by
it. But we may go much farther than this in reference to many of our troubles.
We cause them by our own acts. They are the direct results of our own conduct
of single deeds
or of courses of conduct. And we may know it
and ought to
know it. "Sins" are of many kinds
but they are always violations of
rule. "Sin is the transgression of the law." And law always has
penalty
sooner or later
milder or more severe. Take the case of physical
health. Many of our grievances are bodily. We have "trouble in the
flesh." And as Gideon "took thorns of the wilderness and briers
and
with them taught the men of Succoth
" so we learn from material
experiences
and they are often painful ones. Indeed
many people can learn no
otherwise. "The messenger of Satan
" is only in return for some
foolish message of our own; and "the thorn in the flesh" is there a
pressure we ought to have avoided. The father of a family is struck down by
paralysis; all the mystery of the case is in his persisting
in spite of
friends and feelings
in putting two days' work and worry into one. A young
woman has just died of consumption; the only marvel is that she let herself
and others let her
go out of a heated room into the cold air
or wear a dress
that compressed the action of her vital organs. A young man comes home from
school or university to die; there is nothing inscrutable about it
except in
the unnatural strain of brain or body by work or play. Wherefore should a man
"complain for the punishment of his sins"? And the same remarks apply
to the lowness and gloom of spirits
and a hundred evils of mind and soul
that
flow from a diseased or languid action of the bodily powers. Despondency
and
even despair
may come from indigestion. Unstrung nerves may make any one
"walk in darkness
and have no light." Many Christians go to the
Divine for comfort
when they should go to the doctor for cure. They think God
is "hiding His face
" when He is really showing Himself
showing His
love for them and for all men
in upholding the order of things
in which their
welfare and that of all men is concerned. Wherefore should "a man complain
for the punishment of his sins"?
III. TROUBLE
AS AND BECAUSE PUNISHMENT
MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORSE
AND
MAY BE BETTER. "Wherefore should a living man complain?" Stress is to
be laid upon this. The trouble
whatever it is
might have been greater. It has
exceptions and alleviations. The darkness does not cover the whole sphere of
vision. The ingredients of the cup are not all bitter. We are not afflicted in
all kinds
and in all degrees
like Job. We can imagine worse trouble. We can
find worse. We deserve worse. We cannot have the worst while
"living." There are sorer sorrows after death: the sorest here might
be but "the beginning of sorrows
" a foretaste and an earnest of the
uttermost wrath of God. While living
we are not wholly lost. "To him that
is joined unto all the living
there is hope" — hope of living even here
and hope of living in the fulness and infinitude of life hereafter. And this
punishment of the living is to prevent their ever dying
in the full import of
that awful word. This trouble
while it might have been worse
may be better —
may be best of all. In the highest sense we may say
"This sickness is not
unto death
but unto life. This loss is not unto ruin
but unto wealth. This
sorrow is not unto hopeless misery
but exceeding and eternal joy."
(A. J. Morris.)
The sin and unreasonableness of complaints against
providence
We will on this
subject meet at once the tenets of the boldest complainants.
1. It is asserted
then
by some
that
under all the circumstances
of this life
they. cannot consider creation as a blessing
and cannot offer up
thanksgivings for it; that
born into the world without their own consent
they
have a right to the good things of it; that
although a distant heaven may be
promised
yet
as a distant hell is also threatened
the hopes of the one are
more than counterbalanced by the fears of the other; and that it would be
better not to have been born
than to live so circumstanced. These are high
words against your Maker. They proceed
he assured
either from ignorance of
the true state of things
or from a mind perverted by some love of sin. When
you complain of being born into the world without your own consent
it should
seem that you consider yourself flung into it
by some blind necessity
or
senseless chance. But is this the real state of things? You know it is not.
From the moment of your birth
you became the care of an almighty
all-seeing
all-merciful God: in your progress through this world to that for which He
graciously designs you
there is not a step in your path but you are surrounded
by His presence
and upholden by His power!
2. But it is not
perhaps
under a distrust of the general
providence of God that you look upon life as no blessing; but under a view of
your own individual situation
as born
according to the scriptural
representation of you
subject to misery and death. Had that curse upon your
first parents
which subjected you to these calamities
left you under them;
had the future generations of mankind been
from that awful hour
devoted unto
wrath
anti forsaken
some excuse might be urged for pleading
— though even
then with the deepest reverence of Omnipotence
— "Why hast Thou made me
thus?" But search the Scriptures
and see whether such pleading will bear
you out. Earth at one and the same time heard the denunciation of death
and
the promise of redemption. Man was to be gradually fitted for that heaven
which
from the first
was designed him. The care of Omnipotence was
thenceforth exerted in preparing the world for the coming of Him
in whom the
nations of the earth were to be finally blessed.
3. Now
had Adam never fallen
or had it been ordained you to live
with him in his early days of innocence and peace; had it been your lot
after
a few years thus sojourning in peace in the garden of Eden
to have been
removed from the shadows of this world to the realities of a better; will you
say that creation would have been no blessing to you? that it would be nothing
to have been brought from the dust of the earth into the everlasting fruition
of spiritual bliss? I will not degrade your reason by thinking it capable of
harbouring a thought so low and so unworthy. Well
then
if a spiritual
immortality be deemed a blessing
what is there in the trials and sorrows of
this life to check your aspirings after it? Shall the land of your inheritance
be given up
because a boisterous Jordan rolls before you
and the sons of Anak
must be struggled with? I would require you
with the book of revelation in
your hand
to descend into your heart; to mark its pride
its sensuality
its
worldly-mindedness
and vanity; and would urge you to say whether anything was
ever more weak
more earthy
less fitted to mingle with the saints in light!
You will plead that this pride and vainly proceed from a corruption inherent in
your nature; and that their existence is no fault of yours. But it is your
fault that they are not corrected. The Almighty has promised His everlasting
Spirit to them that ask it. You have not asked it as you ought. Why
then
should a living man complain
— man for the punishment of his sins?
4. We may go yet farther
and even ranking you among those whose
errors are the most venial
and omissions of duty the fewest
may ask you
whether you ever felt real cause for lasting repining at the occasional mixture
of evil with your good. Indeed
the nearer you approach to fulness of
obedience
and to a perfect love of God
the more thankful you will be for
those warnings which tend to estrange you from the things of earth. Consider
therefore
this world m its true nature; consider it as a scene of preparation
for another: that no state is so dangerous as undisturbed prosperity; that
during our continuance here
we must be purified to qualify us for perfect
happiness in the presence of God: that such purification must be effected by
triads and temptations; and that trials and temptations necessarily suppose
troubles and afflictions. Let these considerations take place in the mind
and
at the brightness before them
clouds and darkness shall disperse
doubts and
difficulties shall vanish away.
(G. Mathew
M. A.)
Sinful man is a complaining creature
Observe here —
1. The fault taxed
complaining. It denotes an action that passeth
on a man's self
and intimates fretting
whereby one torments himself
increasing his own grief and sorrow for his affliction.
2. The unjustifiableness of this before the Lord. Losers think they
may have leave to speak; but religion teaches rather to lay our hands on our
mouths
and our mouths in the dust before the Lord
who does us no wrong.
3. On what accounts it is unjustifiable
what are these things that
may silence all our complaints? We are men that should act more rationally. We
are living men that might therefore be in a worse condition. We are Sinful men
whose hardships are the just punishment of our sins. We are men that have
another thing to do. Let each man complain for his sin.
I. THERE IS A SINFUL COMPLAINING UNDER CROSSES AND AFFLICTIONS.
1. Let them complain of themselves
as the causes of their own woe.
The sinful nature
heart and life
are father
mother
and nurse to all the
miseries that come u n us. These are the carcass to which these eagles gather
together. Remove that
and they would all quickly fly away. If the clouds
return after the rain
let us blame our own misguidance.
2. Let them complain to God and welcome (Psalm
102:1-11).(1) We must not complain of God.(2) We must not complain
of our lot
or murmur because better has not fallen to our share.(3) We must
not arrest our complaining eye on the unjust instruments of our afflictions
like the dog snarling at the stone
but looking not to the hand that casts it.
II. SINFUL COMPLAINING IS SELF-TORMENTING.
1. To God whose Spirit is grieved with it
and provoked to anger by
it.
2. To others
as marring the harmony of society
and often when
people give way to that black passion
God in His just judgment inhibits
others
that they have no power to help the complainer.
3. To a person's self it is disagreeable and tormenting. It is a
breach of the sixth commandment
a sin against one's own life
destructive to
the body. The sinful complainer puts a load above his own burden. For if one's
will were submitted to the will of God
how easy would it be to bear
afflictions; but when the proud heart cannot stoop
the apprehension magnifies
the cross
and of a molehill makes a mountain.
III. MAN
SINFUL MAN
IS A COMPLAINING CREATURE.
1. Men do not entertain due thoughts of the sovereignty of God
and
His awful majesty (Matthew 20:11-15).
2. Men
often see not the designs of holy providence
and they are
apt to suspect the worst
for guilt is a nurse and mother of fears.
3. Pride of heart is the cause of sinful complaining. Men are
naturally like a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke. An unsubdued spirit under a
cross makes a heavy burden.
4. Unmortified lust
when crossed with afflictions makes a fearful
mutiny. If men were not too much addicted to the creature
too closely wedded
to the things of time
they would not raise such complaints on the loss of
them. Grasp hard a man's hand that hath a sore finger
he presently cries out;
but if his hand was whole
he would take it kindly.
5. Want of a due sense of the evil of sin and of our unworthiness on
that account.
6. Overlooking our mercies.
7. Dwelling and poring upon crests and difficulties. This is just
taking an unbelieving lift of our own burden
which will certainly increase it.
8. Unbelief is the great cause of all It was the generation that
believed not that murmured in the wilderness. Faith brings the soul to rest in
God in all conditions. It satisfies the soul with a full Christ in the want of
all things (Habakkuk 3:17-19).
IV. BECAUSE WE ARE MEN WE OUGHT NOT TO COMPLAIN.
1. We are men and not brutes. We are endowed with rational
faculties
by which we may take up such considerations
from the sovereignty of
God and the demerit of our sins
that might silence our complaints.
2. We are men and not gods
creatures and not creators
subjects and
not lords
and therefore ought to submit and not to complain.
3. We are men and not angels. We are not inhabitants of the upper
regions
where no storms blow
where there is an eternal spring and
uninterrupted peace. Can we think that the rocks must be removed for us
that
God's unchangeable purpose in the management of the world must be changed for
us?
4. We are men and not devils. We
at our worst
in this world
are
not in that desperate
hopeless
and helpless state in which they are. But have
something to comfort us which they have not.
V. BECAUSE WE ARE LIVING MEN WE OUGHT NOT TO COMPLAIN.
1. Our life is forfeited yet continued
therefore there is no reason
to complain.
2. Living
we are not in hell
and therefore should we praise and
not complain (Lamentations 3:22).
3. Living
we have the means of grace and hopes of glory. So we have
access to better our estate in the other world
if it should never be better in
this.
4. Living
it may be worse with us ere we go out of the world than
it is
if we do complain.
5. Living
we may live to see our case better. While there is life
there is hope. We have to do with a bountiful God.
6. We have no surer hold of our life than of the comforts of life.
The latter are uncertain
so is the former. The stroke that takes away a
comfort might have taken away our life.
7. When other comforts are lost
and our life is continued
that
which is best is preserved to us.
8. The time of life is the time for all men's praising
because they
sit all at the common table of mercy
and therefore not for complaining.
VI. WE ARE SINFUL MEN JUSTLY PUNISHED FOR OUR SIN AND THEREFORE OUGHT
NOT TO COMPLAIN.
1. Our sins are the procuring causes of all afflictions. God hath
joined together the evil of sin
and the evil of punishment
hence drawing the
first link of this chain
we draw the other also on ourselves
why then do we
complain?
2. When our afflictions are at the highest pitch in this world
yet
they are not so great as our sins deserve.
3. We receive much undeserved good
while at the worst we get but
our deserved evil.
4. Our afflictions are necessary for us. Our hearts are hard to wean
from a frowning world
how would we do if it were smiling on every hand. Nay
there are many mercies in thy lot. there must be a mixture of crosses in it
something crooked
something wanting
to be a corrective. Why then should we be
so angry with our blessings?
5. We might get out from under them
if we would speedily answer the
design of them (Leviticus 26:41
42).
6. How often is the sin visibly written on the punishment
that men
may clearly see the cause of God's contending
and lay their mouths in the
dust.
VII. UNDER OUR AFFLICTIONS WE SHOULD TURN OUR COMPLAINTS ON OUR SINS.
1. Instead of complaining of God
let us complain of ourselves to God
instead of taxing a holy God with severity
let us charge ourselves with folly
before Him.
2. Instead of the heart's bleeding for trouble
let our hearts bleed
for sin.
3. Instead of tossing our cross in our minds to fret ourselves
let
us toss our sin there to humble ourselves.
4. Instead of labouring to get up our lot to our mind
let us labour
to get our minds brought down to our lot.
(T. Boston
D. D.)
I. SOME COMPLAINTS ALLOWABLE.
1. It is lawful to express what we feel and suffer in those ways
nature prompts us.
2. May complain to friends
relations
and acquaintances.
3. To God as well as to men.
II. COMPLAINTS PROMPTED BY IMPATIENCE WITH GOD'S DEALINGS CONDEMNED.
1. It is long before God takes the rod in hand to correct.
2. He is soon prevailed with to lay it aside.
3. He lays no more on us than our sins deserve.
4. We enjoy many mercies in the meantime by which the bitterness of
affliction is allayed.
5. God has a sovereignty of power and dominion to deal with us as He
pleaseth.
III. COMPLAINTS MAY BE SILENCED —
1. By keeping alive in your heart a sense of God's love in every
dispensation.
2. By labouring to have a fresh remembrance of your sins.
3. By considering the extreme danger of quarrelling with and
opposing God.
(D. Conant.)
Living men ought not to complain
Sketches of
Four Hundred Sermons.
I. STATE THE MOST COMMON CAUSES OF COMPLAINT.
1. Our circumstances in the world.
2. The sufferings to which we are doomed.
3. Our condition as moral agents.
II. SHOW THE IMPROPRIETY OF SUCH CONDUCT.
1. It is unreasonable.
2. Useless.
3. Impious and profane.
4. Endangers his immortal interests.
III. POINT OUT ITS MOST EFFECTUAL REMEDY.
1. Seek the regeneration of our natures.
2. Consider what pain and punishment we deserve.
3. Think of the sufferings of others.
4. Remember the design of God in afflicting us.
5. Pray that our day of strength may be as our day.
(Sketches of Four Hundred Sermons.)
Let us search
and try our ways
and turn again to the Lord.
Before it is
possible to return to God
before the desire to return is even awakened
a much
less inviting action must be undertaken. The first and greatest hindrance to
reconciliation with our Father is our failure to recognise that any such
reconciliation is necessary. If the soul's quarrel with her Lord is ever to be
ended it must be discovered. Therefore the first step will be in the direction
of self-examination. We are led to look in this direction by the startling
thought with which the previous triplet closes. If the calamities bewailed are
the chastisements of sin it is necessary for this sin to be sought out. The
language of the elegist suggests that we are not aware of the nature of our own
conduct
and that it is only by some serious effort that we can make ourselves
acquainted with it
for this is what he implies when he represents the
distressed people resolving to "search and try" their ways. The
externalism in which most of our lives are spent makes the effort to look
within a painful contradiction of habit. When it is attempted pride and
prejudice face the inquirer
and too often quite hide the true self from view.
Even when the effort to acquire self-knowledge is strenuous and persevering
and accompanied by an honest resolution to accept the results
however
unwelcome they may be
it often fails for lack of a standard of judgment. We
discover our actual characters most effectually when we compare our conduct
with the conduct of Jesus Christ. As the light of the world
He leads the world
to see itself. He is the great touchstone of character. We may be reminded
on
the other hand
that too much introspection is not wholesome
that it begets
morbid ways of thought
paralyses the energies
and degenerates into insipid
sentimentality. No doubt it is best that the general tendency of the mind
should be towards the active duties of life. But to admit this is not to deny
that there may be occasions when the most ruthless self-examination becomes a
duty of first importance. Then while a certain kind of self-study is always
mischievous — the sickly habit of brooding over one's feelings
it is to be
observed that the elegist does not recommend this. It is not emotion but action
that he is concerned with. The searching is to be into our "ways
"
the course of our conduct. The word "ways" suggests habit and
continuity. These are more characteristic than isolated deeds — short spasms of
virtue or sudden falls before temptation. The final judgment will be according
to the life
not its exceptional episodes. A man lives his habits. He may be
capable of better things
he may be liable to worse; but he is what he does
habitually. Our main business in self-examination is to trace the course of the
unromantic beaten track
the long road on which we travel from morning to
evening through the whole day of life. The result of this search into the
character of their ways on the part of the people is that it is found to be
necessary to forsake them forth. with; for the next idea is in the form of a
resolution to turn out of them
nay
to turn back
retracing the footsteps that
have gone astray
in order to come to God again. These ways are discovered
then
to be bad — vicious in themselves
and wrong in their direction. This is
a case of ending our old ways
not mending them. No engineering skill will ever
transform the path that points straight to perdition into one that conducts us
up to the heights of heaven. The only chance of coming to walk in the right way
is to forsake the wrong way altogether
and make an entirely new start. Again —
a very significant fast — the return is described in positive language. It is a
coming back to God
not merely a departure from the old way of sin. The initial
impulse towards a better life springs more readily from the attraction of a new
hope than from the repulsion of a loathed evil. The hopeful repentance is
exhilarating
while that which is only born of the disgust and horror of sin is
dismally depressing. Following up his general exhortation to return to God
the
elegist adds a particular one
in which the process of the new movement is
described. It takes the form of a prayer from the heart. The resolution is to
lift up the heart with the hands. Lastly
the poet furnishes the returning
penitents with the very language of the hearts prayer
which is primarily
confession.
(W. F. Adeney
M. A.)
The saving effect of suffering
Suffering only
fulfils its mission when it constrains a man to look within himself and search
and try his reins and ways that he may know how far he is sincere. Only
suffering can get at our hearts with any profound and saving effect. Joy
touches the surface
success hovers above us a singing bird: it is when we are
in the furnace of affliction that we discover what we really are
and what we
really need. The sufferers in this case come to wise decisions. No longer will
they murmur against the Lord
as if providence were fickle and arbitrary
as if
providence found a wicked pleasure in the torture of human life: the sufferers
say
The fault must be in ourselves; we carry the deadly poison within us; our
hearts are lacking in the spirit of loyalty and obedience; they are lifted up
in the ways of haughtiness
and they submit themselves to the rule of vanity;
the time has now come for a different discipline and a different policy; we
must lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens: we do not lift
up the heart alone
as if we were intending to be religious in one part of our
nature
and to reserve the liberty of self-service in another; nor do we lift
up our hands alone
as if we were willing to indulge in bodily exercise
in
ceremony
in ritual
or as if we were prepared to render in some degree the
service of a hireling; but we lift up both our heart and our hands in sign of a
complete consecration. Religious exercises cleanse and elevate the worshipper.
The very act of lifting up heart and hand unto God in the heavens is an act of
purification and ennoblement. All such exercises are valuable as parts of a
larger discipline. Herein is the value of public worship: man helps man; voice
increases voice; joy and sorrow mingle together
and produce a tender
melancholy that is the surest pledge of perfect and enduring delight.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
Self-examination a guard against sin
I. The work of self-examination has this advantage
that it is A
REAL
PERSONAL ACT; and in religion what a man does for himself is of much more
avail than what others do or can do for him. Other religious actions may be
"gone through
" as it were
with little thought and attention; but
self-examination
if performed at all
is performed with the mind; with a real
application of the faculties to the matter in hand.
II. Self-examination is a PRIVATE WORK. The public ordinances of
religion have their place and value. But the religious improvement of the heart
is entirely dependent on what passes in private; I mean
is measured by that.
What a man is in private
that he is; and it is in the personal interviews with
our Maker that the critical transactions of our religious history are
performed.
III. Self-examination is A REHEARSING OF THE JUDGMENT DAY
for it is a
having the soul up before conscience
and conscience is God's voice in the
heart. But in the judgment day
we are instructed to believe that there shall
be a bringing forth to the light of each man's every action
in its detail and
particular
and (which is much to be observed) in its motive and inward cause.
Now these are the things which cannot be discerned without much of careful
consideration and thought. The case
in short
is this
— in order to
repentance we must know what we have to repent of; for it were a mere trifling
with our Maker to use the language of contrition when not really thinking of
the things which we have done in disobedience to Him and disregard of His holy
will. Keep short accounts with thy soul; the dealers of this world can teach
thee thus much. A heathen found out thus much. "Let not sleep
" said
Pythagoras
"fall upon thy soft eyelids
until thou hast first gone over
thrice the actions
all and each of them
of the day; asking thus
Where have I
transgressed? what good have I done? and what duty have I left undone?"
IV. The practice of this careful and periodical self-examination will
most assuredly SOFTEN AND HUMANISE THE CHARACTER IN REGARD OF THE SOCIAL
INTERCOURSES OF LIFE; making him who is diligent in such practice
gentle and
merciful and forgiving toward his fellow creatures. The slight
the disrespect
the unthankfulness
and forgetfulness of promises
— just the things which are
taken so unkindly between man and man
which constitute the sting of injury
and alienate between heart and heart
— are the very same which we find that we
have to ask our Heavenly Father
having experienced at our hands
not to resent
but to forgive; for mercy's and for Christ's sake
to forgive. Therefore the
self-examiner is a merciful man.
V. And lastly
he is — what each one of us would desire to be
but
what the neglecter of self-examination will hardly be — A PROFITABLE ATTENDANT
ON THE SERVICES OF THE CHURCH. And he is so for this reason; that having
considered his ways
he knows what he has to confess when he comes into his
Maker's presence. The visits to God's house are stages in his life
are steps
from earth to heaven
to him whose thoughts have been rightly employed during
the interval between his visits there; whose one confession speaks to his
former confession
and (may be) rebukes it
but with a sweet rebuke
for it is
administered at the footstool of a merciful and forgiving God.
(C. P. Eden
M. A.)
Prayer
praise
the public ordinances
consistent walking
are obligations
laid though not
with equal depth
yet laid on the consciences of all who are taught of God. But
the point of deep and thorough consideration of our ways
is I fear
but little
reflected upon
as its deep importance demands.
I. THE EXHORTATION. How awfully affecting the description in Lamentations
2:5-17. Yet with all this
the great mass of the people remained
hard and impenitent. Ah
how little is it in the power of any judgment to turn
the heart. It is under this conviction that the prophet calls them to deep
searchings of heart.
1. The prophet includeth himself
"Let us." So Daniel
9:4
5. Have we not invariably found the most spiritual are the most
ready to take the low place?
2. Remark the expression
"Our ways." It is one of the
deepest incentives to self-condemnation
humiliation before God
and holiness d
heart
to mark diligently
prayerfully
watchfully
all the way by which we
have been brought. Let us note down our mercies
pray to have them continually
on our hearts
on our lips; this is no small part of the precept. But it refers
principally to "search and try the ways" in which we are walking. Am
I in the way? What a question! How important the answer. Walking in Jesus
the
way of pardon
the only way of salvation
of holiness
of happiness
the only
way to God
and heaven
the abode of God. And how am I walking in this way? By
faith? in dally repentance? in real
sincere
and honest obedience? happily? If
not
why am I not?
3. The expression implies difficulty in the act of obedience to the
precept
"Let us search and try our ways." Much is required to its
accomplishment.(1) Sincerity is needed (Jeremiah
17:9). Ah
what heavenly sincerity
honesty
integrity
are required
to investigate motives
try principles
decide practice.(2) Quiet is needed. A
piece of gold cannot be discerned in the unquiet waters of a turbid stream
so
the graces of the Spirit cannot be clearly discerned in the defilements of an
unquiet spirit.(3) Time is required. The viper sin that coils
and coils
and
coils beneath the verdure of the grass
cannot be seen in a moment's glance.(4)
Faith
too
is needed
laying the hand on the head of Jesus
or there is no
fair review.(5) Filial repentance is required. Legal repentance only extenuates
the sin.(6) Above all. there must be much real
fervent
persevering prayer (Psalm
139:23
24).
II. THE BLESSED CONSEQUENCES OF SEARCHING OUR WAYS AND TURNING TO THE
LORD. A man may
without this
be admired
courted
applauded
followed; as a
minister he may draw crowds
as a man
be flattered to the skies; but never can
he be a spiritually-minded man
a close walker with God
a happy
holy
and
consistent Christian. This inestimable good is bound up in it. It is the
certain
the necessary consequence. It is the mode of the Divine operation
the
order of the Divine Spirit (James 4:8). It is so in the first approach of
the sinner to God (Isaiah 55:7). It is so in every after approach (Jeremiah
3:1). The sinner is called to consider his ways (Haggai 1:5).
Real consideration leads to repentance (Ezekiel
18:28). It is the breath of spiritual life
it is the germ of the
new creation
the spark of heavenly fire.
(J. H. Evans
M. A.)
The importance of self-examination
I. THE ADVANTAGES THAT BY ARISE FROM IT. There is no possibility
either of viewing a bad action
in a full light
without abhorrence
or of
weighing its consequences without terror. Wickedness
therefore
always
banishes thought
and piety and virtue encourage it. A good man
far from being
driven to hide his inward condition from himself
though he find many things
that want still to be amended
yet finds at the same time
so many
which
through the aid of God's Holy Spirit
are already grown
and daily growing
better
that he feels no joy equal to that of his heart telling him what he is.
Therefore the Psalmist speaks of self-amendment as the immediate fruit of self-inspection
(Psalm
119:59
60). Nor doth it only excite in us good resolutions
but
furnishes directions how to put them in practice. Reflection will show us
and
nothing else can
by what defect within
or what opportunity without
each of
our faults got ground in our breasts: and which is the way to root it out
again. Another use of searching frequently into our past ways
is to preserve
ourselves from the secret approach of future dangers. All these are general
advantages flowing from the practice of self-inspection. But in many cases it
hath yet a more especial good influence. A distinct knowledge of ourselves will
greatly secure us from the iii effects of flattery
which would persuade us
that we are what we feel we are not; and enable us to bear unjust reproach
thinking it a very small thing that we should be judged of man's judgment
when
we can reflect with comfort that He who judgeth us is the Lord. Experience of
our infirmities will teach us humility
and move us to compassion and
forgiveness (Galatians 6:1). Experience where our strength
as well as our weakness lies
will show us how we are best able to serve God
and our fellow creatures; what we may attempt
what will be too much for us.
And strict observation of our own hearts will qualify us
beyond all things
to
give useful cautions to others
and direct their steps in the right way.
II. SOME RULES TO BE OBSERVED FOR CONDUCTING IT PROPERLY. Of these
the fundamental one is
that we consider it as a religious duty; perform it as
in the presence of God; and earnestly beg Him to show us in a true light to
ourselves (Psalm 19:12). Let us therefore neither be too
tender
nor too proud
to bear inspecting our hearts and lives: and
that we
may bear it well
let us learn to moderate
if we have need
the uneasiness
which it may give us. For every passion that we have may be raised so high as
to defeat its own end. And though we can dislike nothing so justly as our
faults; and very few dislike them near enough; yet if we dislike ourselves for
them too much to have patience to think of them
and mend them; that runs into
a new fault: and we should check ourselves for it
mildly indeed
but very
carefully; considering well both our natural frailty
and our Maker's goodness:
but especially the promises of forgiveness and grace
which He hath recorded
for our use in His Holy Word; not in order to reconcile us at all to sin
but
in a reasonable degree to ourselves. And how mortifying soever a needful
examination may still prove
it is surely worth while to support the most
painful reflections for the present
when it will secure us a succession of pleasing
and happy ones ever after. Nor must we examine only into the weak and
suspicious parts of our characters and conduct: but those which procure us the
most applause from others and ourselves: for want of which
even vices
a
little disguised
may pass upon us for great virtues; and we may be doing
with
entire satisfaction
what we should abhor
if we understood it right. Nor are
these general grounds of caution the only ones; but every person will find
on
inquiry
particular reasons for being watchful and distrustful of himself
in
some point or other; arising
perhaps
from unhappy experience of failures
at
least from conviction of the dangers
incident to his natural disposition
age
employment
company; and
which is a matter of no small consideration
rank in
the world. For they
above all
should be careful m searching their own
breasts
whose higher condition subjects them most to flattery
and removes
them farthest from hearing censure.
(Archbishop Secker.)
I. ITS USEFULNESS.
1. Teaches us to know ourselves.
2. We discover our sins.
3. Provides good company and comfortable employment.
II. ITS NEGLECT MISCHIEVOUS.
1. Hardens the heart.
2. A daily increase of sin.
3. Renders a man the more unwilling to reckon with himself.
III. DEMANDS DILIGENCE.
1. There is a natural reluctance to attend to the duty.
2. Many sins not easily discovered
unless diligent search is made.
3. A convenient time should be set apart for the work.
4. Affliction a time for heart searching.
5. Let not the difficulty of the work discourage you.
6. A work that must be often repeated.
IV. LEADS TO REPENTANCE. "Turn again to the Lord." Sin is
an aversion and turning away from God; repentance is a returning to Him.
1. Repentance must be speedy.
2. Thorough.
3. Resolute and steadfast.
(D. Conant.)
Set thyself in
good earnest to the work; beset thy heart and life around
as men would do a
wood where murderers are lodged; hunt back to the several stages of thy life
youth
and riper years
all the capacities and relations thou hast stood in;
thy general calling and particular
every place where thou hast lived
and thy
behaviour in them. Bid memory bring in its old records
and read over what
passages are written there; call conscience in to depose what it knows
concerning thee
and encourage it to speak freely without mincing the matter.
And take heed thou dost not snib this witness
as some corrupt judges
when they
would favour a bad cause or give it secret instructions
as David did Joab
to
deal gently with thee. Be willing to have thy conditions opened fully
and all
thy coverings turned up.
(W. Gurnall.)
Self-examination much neglected
Many either
search not at all (they cannot endure these domestic audits: it is death to
them to reflect and recognise what they have done)
or as though they desired
not to find. They search as men do for their bad money; they know they have it
but they would gladly have it to pass for current among the rest. Heathens will
rise up in judgment against such
for they prescribed and practised
self-examination. Pythagoras
once a day; Phocylides
thrice a day
if Stobaeus
may be believed.
(J. Trapp.)
Turn again to
the Lord
I. THE NATURE OF REPENTANCE. — that repentance which is "unto
salvation
and which needeth not to be repented of."
1. Repentance presupposes a knowledge of our previous condition.
Before we can sincerely turn to the Lord
we must be sensible of our alienation
from Him. They who have never felt the weariness and wretchedness of their
natural state; who have never
in any measure
experienced the misery and
guiltiness of their sins
are still destitute of that very knowledge which must
precede the exercise of scriptural repentance. Nay more
this sense of sin and
sinfulness must be no mere general and theoretic opinion — no mere notion; but
a heartfelt conviction of entire and aggravated sinfulness
humbling the sinner
in the dust
and depriving him of all fancied righteousness in the judgment of
his own conscience. Combined with this
there must be also some measure of
acquaintance with the character and perfections of that God with whom the
sinner has to do.
2. Godly sorrow has its seat in the affections. It is heartfelt
grief
a real and poignant sentiment of anguish on account of sin; and whilst
the soul of the repentant sinner does mourn over the bitter consequences of
sin
yet his mourning is not confined to the evils resulting from his iniquity.
There will be in the heart that truly seeks the Lord a commencement
at all
events
of hatred to sin
a sense of its hideousness and deformity.
3. Where the soul hath really sought the Lord as He is to be found
there will be manifested the Spirit's presence in efforts at a holy
a
spiritual and heartfelt conformity with the whole will of God.
4. Whilst the child of God experiences all this in turning from sin
he is called further to beware of regarding his repentance as in itself worthy
of God's acceptance; our very righteousnesses are even as filthy rags in the
presence of Him who sitteth on the throne
and our repentance not only flows
from the imparted grace of God
but at best can be acceptable in God's sight
only through the mediation of the Beloved.
5. The believer is further called on to feel that repentance is not
proper
simply to the first stage of his spiritual existence; that it holds not
only an elementary place in practical Christianity
but belongs to the whole
currency of his life on earth. Alas! when is the believer free from sin?
II. THE ENCOURAGEMENTS TO REPENTANCE HELD OUT TO US BY GOD. This is a
wide field; the Lord has not been sparing in the manifestation of such
encouragement. Does not the very existence of the Bible proclaim that God
waiteth to be gracious? Instead of selecting a series of striking invitations
from the fertile pages of the Divine record
I would rather seek to place
before you a few of the great truths which are embodied in the numerous and
very varied appeals to man's conscience contained in Scripture.
1. The foremost of these truths is the fact of God's mercy. Not only
do all the gifts of His hand bespeak a wondrous forbearance
a marvellous
compassion
but we owe our very existence
amid our sins
to the compassion of
the Eternal: we are all of us living monuments of His mercy; "because His
compassions fail not
" therefore are we not consumed. God has not
however
limited the manifestation of His mercy to the mere preservation of our
guilty race
and the bestowal of multiplied temporal blessings. "God so
loved the world as to give His only begotten Son
" etc.
2. The justice of God furnishes under the Gospel dispensation the
strongest of all encouragements to the exercise of this grace. Nor is there any
paradox in the assertion. In Christ
mercy and truth meet together
God's
righteousness and the sinner's peace are made to embrace each other.
3. The disquieted and dispirited sinner may be apt to exclaim
of
what service are all the encouragements to repentance
when repentance itself
involves in its very exercise feelings which I do not possess
and which I know
not how to obtain? There have issued from the mercy seat the promises
the
full
clear
and reiterated promises of all needful grace. It is in God Himself
that our succour lies.
III. THE PRACTICAL BEARINGS OF THESE CONSIDERATIONS ON THE CONDITION
AND CONSCIENCES OF MEN.
1. I would address myself
first
to the followers of Christ
those
who have known what it is "to turn unto the Lord"; who have been
quickened by His Spirit in the inner man
and "having the Son
"
"have life
" life indeed
life eternal. I would call upon them to
recognise not merely the duty
but the precious privilege of repentance. Let
him that standeth or that "thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he
fall." We are never more in need of grace than just when we think best of
ourselves. Self-complacency is the sure token of backsliding from the Lord.
2. With regard to those who have never yet experienced true
repentance
who may perhaps regret their sins at times when the evils flowing
from sin are felt by them
but whose regrets have been vain and fruitless — the
mere sorrow of the world that worketh death — I would beseech them
with all
earnestness
to "turn unto the Lord." In resisting the call to
repentance
the sinner is not simply putting away from him the only way of
peace and happiness
he is resisting
madly resisting
the expressed mind of
God — God's holy commands; and whether he be a profligate or a man of decent
life; whether an avowed atheist or a professed Christian; whether he defy God
or turn away to the things of this world in besotted infatuation
his course
in either case
is in direct opposition to the will of God.
(L. H. Irving.)
A minister
narrates the following: "While walking along one of the London streets a
Paris pastor came forward and accosted me thus
'Excuse me
but were you not in
Paris some time ago?' I said
'Yes
I was'; and then he inquired
'Did you not
in one of your addresses there
say that the latch was on our side of the
door?' 'Yes
I believe I did say so
' I replied. 'Well
' he answered
'I always
thought it was on the Lord's side
and I kept knocking
and knocking
and
knocking
until I heard your words
and what a joy came over me! I lifted the
latch. Since then all has been changed
my church
my congregation
my work
and everything about me!'" Remember that the latch is on your side of the
door.
In every
building the first stone must be laid and the first blow must be struck. The
ark was 120 years in building; yet there was a day when Noah laid his axe at
the first tree he cut down to form it. The temple of Solomon was a glorious
building; but there was a day when the first huge stone was laid at the foot of
Mount Moriah. When does the building of the Spirit really begin to appear in a
man's heart? It begins
so far as we can judge
when he first pours out his
heart to God in prayer.
(J. C. Ryle.)
Let us lift up
our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens.
The finest and
most sublime sensations of which the soul is susceptible are connected with the
principle of devotion.
I. THE SUBLIMEST BOOKS EXISTING ARE THOSE FROM WHICH WE LEARN OUR
FAITH. The writings of the inspired penmen abound with passages for which no
parallel can be found in the productions of mere genius. Rousseau once
exclaimed
"The majesty of the Scriptures fills me with astonishment; the
holiness of the Gospel speaks to my very heart. Behold the books of the
philosophers
with all their pomp
how little are they in comparison! Is it
possible that a book at once so wise and so sublime should have been the
production of mere men?"
II. SOME OF THE SITUATIONS OF REAL LIFE PROVE THE INTIMATE CONNECTION
BETWEEN DEVOTION AND THE SOURCES OF SUBLIME FEELING.
1. In studying the character of God and the works of nature.
2. In the changing circumstances of life
in adversity or
prosperity
the proper operation of religious thought is to call up sublime and
fervent feelings.
III. CONSIDER THE SUBJECT OF ADORATION — GOD
WHETHER WORSHIPPED IN
PRIVATE OR IN PUBLIC. If it be objected that in such an account of the effects
of devout feeling
we place religion too much under the dominion of the
imagination
it may be answered that though the abuse of a thing is dangerous
we are not therefore to relinquish its use. It is the soul that truly feels;
imagination is the effort of the soul to rise above mortality. Imagination as
well as reason is frequently appealed to in Scripture.
(R. Nares.)
The appeal of the saints go their God
We owe an
appeal to God on whatever concerns us
to —
I. THE THRONE OF GOD. Those things which you look upon as trivial
have been subjects of eternal thought
and of eternal purpose. Some men lay
stress entirely upon the decrees of God with respect to their conversion and
their salvation. But the right view of the Divine decrees is
to connect them
with everything — not merely with your conversion
and with your salvation
but
with the time of your birth
and the day of your death; with the hours of your
sickness
and the seasons of health; with the gain of your property
and with
the loss of your property; with the lives of those that are dear to you
and
with the deaths of those whom you love: even with the falling of sparrows.
II. THE PERSONAL PROVIDENCE OF GOD AND THE ACTUAL GOVERNMENT OF GOD.
For the superintendence of our affairs is not committed by God to some deputy.
This must be the case with all human rulers
with all creature governors; but
while God employs instruments
He personally superintends
not only the
instruments
but those for whom those instruments work
He Himself provides
and He Himself rules.
III. THE CHARACTER OF GOD. Think of His complete knowledge. Think of
His consummate wisdom. He never fails in anything
He never can fail
He sees
the end from the beginning
He counts all the steps between the beginning and
the end
and He can adjust every movement
every instrument
every influence.
He can make angels and devils
good men and bad men
things material
and
things spiritual
earth
hell
and heaven — He can make all work together for
some ultimate good.
IV. THE PATERNITY OF GOD. I say paternity; and would include in this
idea
not only fatherhood but motherhood: for God is as really mother as He is
father. And the Scriptures do not fail to represent this fact to us. While God
has all the masculine strength of the father
He has also the tenderness of the
mother.
V. GOD'S PROVISION FOR OUR FULL RECONCILIATION TO HIMSELF. For God
is by Christ reconciling the world unto Himself. He has provided for us a
propitiatory
where we may meet
and where He ever stands waiting to be
gracious; and His invitation is
"Come nigh." He is not satisfied
with our standing afar off; His invitation ceaselessly is
"Come
nigh." In the degree of your discipleship will grow your consciousness of
sonship: and just as you say in your heart
"I am a disciple of
Christ
" so will you say in your heart
"I am a son of God."
VI. THE DIVINE PRECEPTS
INVITATIONS
AND PROMISES. "Call upon
Me
" said God
"' in the day of trouble
I will deliver thee
and
thou shalt glorify Me." "Thou hast not called upon Me
O Jacob
"
said God. "Thou hast been weary of Me
O Israel." Might not God bring
this charge against some of you? Might He not say to some of you
"Thou
hast been weary of Me. Thou hast not called upon Me"?
VII. OURSELVES. This alone will keep the heart and mind in peace; this
is the chief means of deliverance from evil; this renders other means
effective; this carries out our principles; and this will keep us from the use
of sinful means.
VIII. EACH OTHER. In common affairs
for example
how can we really
help each other
unless we pray for each other?
(S. Martin.)
Can God listen
to and answer prayer? Will God listen to and answer prayer? Ought God to listen
to and answer prayer? Three points
you notice
are involved — ability
disposition
right.
1. Do our petitions
as a matter of fact
reach the throne
or is it
more likely that they die away upon the sir
never get beyond wall or roof; or
if spoken out of doors
go no further heavenward than the carrying power of the
speaker's voice avails to press them? Doubts of this sort might perplex us
fairly enough
were we tied to the child's notion of a God only to be really
found by going up and up and up in space. But this is not the true Christian
conception of the mode of the Divine presence. The King of heaven is indeed
what one of the prophets has called Him — a God that hideth Himself — but HIS
hiding place is close at hand
not far away. Even the heathen
for all their
dimness of spiritual vision
seem to have had some perception of this truth.
Smoke was their chosen symbol of prayer. Sometimes it went up from the burning
sacrifice upon the altar
sometimes from the swinging censer; but whether the
savour that it carried was that of the flesh of beasts or of sweet incense
they had the satisfaction of watching it melt away into nothingness. It has
gone out of the world visible
they said
this offering of ours
it has gone
out of the world visible into the world invisible
and has reached the waiting
God for whom we meant it. Modern discovery
instead of dulling our belief that
prayer may find a hearing
ought singularly to warm and quicken it. Only
consider the wonderful enlargement that has taken place of late in our notions
of what is possible in the way of transmitting intelligence from one mind to
another mind! It is within the memory of living men that instruments have been
invented to do for speech what long ago the telescope and the microscope did
for sight
namely
to extend its range. There is little reason to doubt that a
time will come
and that before very long
when our present means
of
communicating sound — marvellous
nay
almost miraculous as they seem — will be
superseded by adjustments and contrivances even more wonderful in their
effects. And shall we say of Him who has thus empowered us indefinitely to
extend the reach of the faculty of hearing
supplementing His original gift of
the sense itself with so generous an endowment
shall we say of Him that of
necessity eternal deafness is His portion? He that planted the ear
shall He
not hear? Consider what speech is. A word is an embodied thought. When this
word has been articulated and made audible
we call it spoken. So then speech
is thought going forth upon its travels. But midway between the thought just
born and the audible utterance of the lips
comes the as yet unspoken word. It
has left the mind
we will suppose. It has not yet reached the lips. Now who
can tell upon what other undulations besides those of the material atmosphere
that thought just now clothed upon with a word may not be going forth? For
man's benefit and that it may accomplish its earthly errand
it is committed to
the waves of the air; but how know we that there is no more subtle medium still
on which simultaneously it is borne to the auditorium of Almighty God? Human
hearing is dependent
at least under the conditions of this life present is
dependent
on the bodily organ of hearing
the ear; but Divine hearing may be
just as real as ours without any such dependence. There is good and sober reason
to believe that some of the brute creatures hear sounds that are wholly
inaudible to us
the instrument of hearing having in their case been
differently adjusted. But is there no intelligence
think you
anywhere in the
universe to which all sound is audible? I cannot easily believe it; but
were I
forced to do so
I should still hold fast my faith that to the spoken word of
man Divine audience would be lent
and should still keep on praying my prayers
to Him unto whom all hearts are open
all desires known
and from whom no
secrets are hid. He that planted the ear
shall He not hear?
2. But supposing it conceded that God is able to listen to our
prayers
can we think of Him as having also the ability to answer them? As a
matter of fact
we see and know that hundreds
thousands
millions of requests
that are made to God by the children of men
and made fervently
go ungranted.
A mother prays
with all the earnestness of which a mother's heart is capable
for the recovery of a sick child
— the child dies. But the pathetic thing
the
convincing thing
is that in spite of it all
great numbers of men
and they by
no means the least intelligent of their kind
keep on praying
keep on making
known their requests unto God. What inspires this unquenchable determination to
continue hoping against hope
this dogged resolve to believe in God's ability
not merely to hear
but also
if He will
to accede to the petitions His
children bring? It is
I think
the conviction lying deep down in the mind
and
fast rooted there
that God is a person
not a mere force
like magnetism or
heat or attraction
but a being possessed of what we know among ourselves as
reason
and will
and loving kindness
one capable of forming a purpose and
working out a plan. We are often told that it argues a downright puerility to
suppose that God either can or will answer our requests
because nature is
clearly and beyond all question an intricately contrived machine
no more able
to alter its motions and change its bearings in compliance with a spoken word
of request
than a steam engine or a clock or a loom. This would be an
unanswerable argument in favour of fatalism
and against the potency of prayer
were nature a machine of which we could see the whole
but it is not. There is
a background of mystery
a region none of our senses can penetrate
and there
wholly out of sight
lie the beginnings of power. It may be that behind the
veil which sunders the seen from the unseen
the hand which keeps the wheel
work all in motion
is turned this way rather than that
or that way rather
than this
because two or three believing souls have agreed on earth touching
some blessing they desire to have
some work they would see done.
3. There remains the question
Ought He always and invariably to
answer it
in the sense of never refusing to any petitioner any earnest
request? To this a sober-minded faith will assuredly answer
No. Fatherhood
involves governance
and governance involves the exercise of judgment
discrimination. The life of a well-ordered family is full of what we may call
earthly prayer. The children ask the parents questions of many sorts
and bring
to them requests of widely variant character; is it any argument against the
efficacy of this which I have called earthly prayer
that some of the questions
go unanswered
and not a few of the requests ungranted? No
the father
remembers what his responsibility with respect to the whole family is
and
certain of the favours the children ask he grants not
because he ought not.
And yet
who will deny that in the life of that household the right of petition
is a real thing
or that the exercise of it produces real results? So with our
Father in heaven and His family on earth. Possibly in the clearer light of the
heavenly life
should it be granted us to enter there
we shall find ourselves
thanking Him with greater fervency for withholding our heart's desire
than we
could possibly have thanked Him for conceding it. Moreover
God forbid that we
should confine our definition of prayer to the men begging for favours. Prayer
is more than petition
it is communion
intercourse
exchange of confidences.
The confiding to God the whole story of our troubles
of our disappointments
of our failures
of our well-meant endeavours
and last
not least
of our sins
— is there nothing of value in all this that we should leave it wholly out of
view in estimating the efficacy of prayer? Or again
think of how much a
grateful heart has to tell. Is it nothing that the soul should have the
opportunity given her to pour out before her Maker a glad offering of thanks?
Intercourse with a character richer and better than our own is commonly held to
be a great privilege. We can all of us recall friends to whom we have
as we
say
owed a great deal on the score of helpful influence. But is it supposable
that God has permitted personal intercourse between man and man to be such a
potent instrument in the building up of character
and yet has made all
intercourse with Himself impossible? If the spirit of man can
through the power
of influence and sympathy
bless and uplift the spirit of his fellow man
much
more
a thousand-fold more
shall God
who
be it remembered
is a Spirit also
aid by intercourse and influence the creature spirit whom He permits to call
himself His child. Wherefore
let us pray.
(W. R. Huntington
D. D.)
The uplifted hands of the penitent
Instead of
wrangling with God (ver. 39) let us wrestle with Him in prayer; this is the
only way to get off with comfort. Nazianzen saith
that the best work we can put our hands unto is
to lift them up to God in
prayer.
(J. Trapp.)
1. True repentance worketh in us most earnest and hearty prayer.(1)
Because we see our misery in ourselves
and what need we have to seek to God
for help.(2) It assureth us of God's love to us
and readiness to hear us.(3)
It encourageth us to call upon the Lord
who in our conversion hath given us
experience of His unspeakable mercies.
2. Prayer to God consisteth not in words
but in the fervent and
faithful lifting up of the heart.(1) God is a Spirit
and regardeth not the
outward action in His worship.(2) Divers have prayed aright
that have uttered
no words (Genesis 24:63; Exodus
14:15).
3. We may use all outward means
that have warrant in the Word
to
stir up our affections to be more fervent in prayer.(1) Because we are
naturally dull in it.(2) Our hearts are often moved with the things that our
outward senses do apprehend.
4. All our prayers are to be made unto God alone (Psalm
50:15; Romans 10:14).
5. The prayer of the faithful must never rest upon anything in this
world
but look unto the mighty God
the author of all things.
(J. Udall.)
We have
transgressed and have rebelled.
1. The time of affliction requireth a special kind of showing our
repentance both more fervent and with longer continuance than ordinary.(1)
Because God therefore afflicteth us
that we may be brought to a more thorough
repentance.(2) God's anger against us for our sins is manifested unto us by
afflictions; which must be turned away by our unfeigned repentance
or we shall
be consumed.(3) God hath usually brought His people to such special declaration
of repentance
and blessed them therein (1
Samuel 7:5
6; Nehemiah 1:2; Esther
4:16).
2. It is necessary for God's people to begin their prayers to God
with a free confession of their sins (Psalm 32:5;
Daniel
9:5; Nehemiah 1:6).(1) Else we obtain no
forgiveness.(2) Else we have no assurance that we have repented.(3) Otherwise
we cannot rightly and thoroughly condemn ourselves
and clear the Lord for
punishing us.(4) By the confession of our sins we are the more humbled
and
prepared the better to prayer.
3. It furthereth to thorough repentance that God's people do in
their prayers adjoin to their confession of sins a recital of the judgments
that are upon them for the same.
4. Every child of God is justly punished that faileth in any duty
whatsoever it be
that God hath commanded him in His Word.
5. It is rebellion against the Lord to despite any of His laws
though all human laws should approve us therein.
6. No excuse or privilege can shield any man from God's plagues for
sin.
(J. Udall.)
Thou hast
covered Thyself with a cloud
that our prayer should not pass through.
The demand for
response is a thing instinctive in us
native to our feelings. We are so made
that when any emotion is stirred in the heart
and breaks out into expression
there must be answer or we suffer. The very mechanism of Nature seems to have
been planned with reference to this spiritual fact
and
as it wore
in
illustration of it. Motion has its rebound
light its reflection
sound its
echo. Nature may be
and
as we have too good reason to know
is
upon the
highest topics
dumb to man
but to herself she is vocal. Action and reaction
play and counterplay
are the very groundwork of her being. When now we pass
over the invisible line that marks off the confines of external Nature from
those of human nature
and open our eyes upon the field of our own inner experience
what do we see? We see everywhere the same need of
the same demand for the
response; but we do not everywhere see the need satisfied
or the demand met.
On the contrary
appeal upon appeal
cry after cry
go out upon the air
and
there comes nothing back. And yet the call for response is as real a thing as
anything in us. What can the orator do with the unresponsive audience? lie may
be able to struggle through the sentences he has prepared himself to utter
but
if it is plain to him as he goes along that what he says is nowhere calling
forth assent on the part of the listeners
he is half-paralysed. Liturgical
worship
as an institution
may be said to rest upon this same principle. A
recognition of the mutual interest that lies between minister and people in the
act of worship is what makes The Book of Common Prayer the thing it is.
"Lift up your hearts
" that is well
but how much better to have the
reply come back
full and strong
"We lift them up unto the Lord."
These are but detached illustrations of the general principle that there is
rooted in human nature a craving for response. "As in water face answereth
to face
so the heart of man to man." The question arises
Has man a right
to demand
or to expect
from his Maker the responsiveness which he
instinctively looks for from his brother man? First
then
is it a reasonable
expectation on our part that God should take notice of our sorrows and our
griefs
and in some way speak
to us about them? The Bible warrants me in
answering
Yes. It is the teaching of the Christian religion that whatever
there is in man that is good is also in God
and more besides. This is a
general inference from the declaration that man was made in the image of God.
The original has many characteristics which the image has not. But still the
image has resemblance
even though it have not identity. If it had not
resemblance
it would not be the image. Hence when we find in the works of
Nature certain laws of number and proportion accurately followed; when we
discover by chemical process that the same substances always combine according
to the same fixed weights; when botany has shown us that the stalks and leaves
of a plant are arranged in a carefully adjusted numerical order
we infer that
a mind not unlike our own minds
in its general characteristics
must have
planned and calculated such results. Apply this reasoning to the facts of the
spiritual universe
and what have we as a result? Take the sentiment of pity
that compassionate feeling which strength may entertain towards weakness. It
may not be possible to define it satisfactorily in words
but we all know what
it is
and we know also that it is found most fully developed as a
characteristic in the noblest natures. But why stop at this point? Why make the
noblest man you can imagine the supreme illustration of this grace? God is
above man
for God made man
and must of necessity
therefore
be man's
superior. And shall we suppose that compassion ceases to be possible after we
have soared up above the level of man's being? Nay
ought we not to expect to
find in man's Maker a larger
deeper
broader compassion than we found in our
very noblest man? There is an immense wealth of argument hidden in that
question of the Psalmist. "He that formed the eye
shall He not see?"
With equal emphasis we have a right to ask
He that formed man's heart so that
it could be pitiful
shall not He pity? We do not hold our peace at the tears
of others
when we honestly and sorely grieve for them. Why then should He hold
His peace at our tears
if pity us He really does? Is there then any way of
satisfactorily accounting for the apparent dumbness of God's pity? Does He
really
as it might seem that He does
hold His peace at our tears? Instead of
directly answering these questions
I purpose to meet them indirectly by
suggesting a few thoughts to be pondered by all whom this inquiry in any degree
interests. Here is one such suggestion. A voice
in order to be real
need not
necessarily be an articulate voice
need not necessarily employ audible sounds.
Of our various teachers there are few indeed that speak to us more effectively
than the artists and the composers. They do it through the instrumentality of
forms of speech peculiar to themselves. So
then
let us not look to God for a
sort of utterance He has never vouchsafed
unless by miracle
and let us be
reconciled to the thought that if He is to speak to us
it will be in what must
seem to all except ourselves the deepest silence. Unquestionably there does
sometimes come to persons in affliction
when they take their sorrows
patiently
a certain quietness of soul
a calm tranquillity of which all about
them take notice. Why is it not a reasonable inference
at least for a
religious mind disposed to think the best rather than the worst things of God
why is it not a reasonable inference that this very stilling of the waves is
the direct result of God's having spoken? We charge Him impatiently sometimes
with holding His peace
when really the fact is that He has been bestowing His
peace
and in doing so has spoken in the very truest and most satisfactory
sense of all. Under the shadow of some weighty sorrow a group of friends sit
silent in one another's presence. Shall we say of them that because their grief
is speechless
therefore they are of no help to one another? Most assuredly
No. Do you tell me that the parallel fails
because in the case of the friends
their silent sitting in one another's presence is comforting and helpful wholly
because at other times
and in other places
they have spoken often and much?
And so
I answer
has God in the past spoken often and much
spoken more than
once
and more than twice. Through the lips of holy prophets
since the world
began
He has from time to time communicated to the human family messages of
reassurance. They tell of a new heavens and a new earth; they foretell the day
when God shall wipe away all tears from off all faces; they predict a triumph
over the grave
and the swallowing up of death in victory. No one can rob us of
our heritage in words like these; they have been spoken; they have never been
taken back; they are the common property of all of us; and while they stand we
have no valid reason for complaining that God holds His peace at our tears. But
I have kept the richest and most helpful suggestion till the last. CHRIST is
really God's word of answer to those who turn to Him in trouble
all eagerness
for His response. Baffled
disheartened
afflicted
distressed
we look at Him
and faith is born afresh. With what tenderness and graciousness
and at the
same time with what a masterful touch does He sketch for us the true likeness
of the Divine Majesty. Look at Him as the Good Shepherd leading His flock in
green pastures
and beside still
waters! Look at Him as the Man of Sorrows
a homeless
pilgrim
a seeker of mountain solitudes
misunderstood
plotted against
spitefully entreated
cursed
mocked
and scourged! See how full of pity He is
for all who sorrow and all who suffer!" These three are the great ills of
life: sin
disease
and sorrow. We note His attitude towards each of them
and
it is plainly that of pardoner
physician
consoler. If any word can be
imagined more full of meaning than this Word made flesh
speak it out
and let
us know what it is. Failing to do that
no longer think of God as one who will
not answer
who holds His peace at tears
but trust Him
trust Him as your
everlasting Friend.
(W. R. Huntington
D. D.)
Mine eye
trickleth down
and ceaseth not
without any intermission
till the Lord look
down and behold from heaven.
Mourning the absence of Christ
I. SHOW WHAT THIS IMPORTS.
1. That a child of God may be under the hidings of God's face
God
will have a difference betwixt the upper and lower houses. When the saints are
above
all the shadows flee away
but now clouds may intercept the light of His
countenance. When the Lord turns His back
conscience turns its face to the
soul
and tells that the Lord is displeased. And Oh! how bitter must God's
anger be to that soul that knows Him.
2. That the hidings of the Lord's face may continue long with a
child of God. God will have His people's faith and patience tried
and
therefore makes their clouds return after the rain.
3. A holy dissatisfaction with all things
while Christ hides His
face.
4. A wearisome longing after the Lord (Job 7:2
3;
Job
23:3
4). Duties are hard work
when Christ withdraws. Labour in
vain much more causeth weariness. Hope deferred makes. the heart sick. It
refresheth the labourer to think that when the sun goes down
he will go to his
rest; but the people of God
in this case
see not their signs
nor know the
time how long.
5. Some hope that the Lord will yet look down
and behold from heaven
(Psalm
43:5). Should they lose all hope
they lose all.
6. A resolute persisting in duty till the Lord return: The soul
resolves never to give over
and so holds on
till the Lord look down and behold
from heaven.
II. Some REASONS WHY THEY ARE THUS DISPOSED.
1. Felt need of Christ. The gracious soul cannot live without Him.
They say with Peter
"Lord
to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of
eternal life." Now
necessity hath no law
and hunger will dig through
stone walls. And if it cannot dig through them it will leap over them. The soul
still cries
Lord help me.
2. Superlative love to Him (Song of
Solomon 8:6
7).Use —
1. Hence we may see why so many professors fall short of Christ.
They are utter strangers to this disposition of the godly.(1) They have not the
living spirit of Christ in them
and so they cannot follow the Lord fully (Numbers
14:24; John 4:14).(2) There are difficulties in the way
of heaven which their hearts cannot digest.(3) The world and their lusts were
never made sapless to them
but still have the chief room in their hearts.
Hence
when Christ will not answer
they have another door to go to.
2. You are in earnest for Christ
yet under the hidings of His face
and all things else insipid to you without Him
you see here how you are to
behave; you must hold on seeking till the Lord look down from heaven.
(T. Boston
D. D.)
This is the
great need of all the members of our churches. If this consuming desire were in
the hearts of pastor and people there would be less time and thought for the
profitless discussion of technicalities in faith and practice. Dr. Mason said
that the secret of Dr. Chalmers' power was his "blood earnestness."
The seraphic Summerfield
just before his death
speaking of his recovery
said: "Oh
if I might be raised again
how I would preach! I have taken a
look into eternity." Think of Allein
of whom it is said that he was
insatiably greedy for the conversion of souls"; of Matthew
Henry
who said
"I would think it a greater happiness to gain one
soul to Christ than mountains of silver and gold to myself"; of Doddridge
who said
"I long for the conversion of souls more than anything besides.
I could not only labour for it
but die for it with pleasure"; of John
Knox
who broke the stillness of the night with his thrice-repeated cry
"O Lord
give me Scotland or I die." God gave him Scotland. No wonder
that Queen Mary "feared the prayers of John Knox more than an army of ten
thousand men." A passion for souls gives a man irresistible power. The
Chinese convert was right when he said
"We want men with hot hearts to
tell us of the love of Christ." All about us are souls in sin and death;
we may hear their death knell sounding. Men and women there are without God and
without hope — men and women soon to stand at the judgment seat of Christ. May
God help us to cry unto Him day and might for their rescue!
Mine eye
affecteth mine heart.
We are not to
look upon life with the eye of the statistician or the political economist or
the collector of facts so called; our heart is to be in our eye
and our
observation is to be conducted in the light of our tenderest sympathy. When the
prophet says "affecteth" he means harms
or causes grief
to my heart:
it is as if he said
What I see hurts me; does not merely hurt me outwardly
but hurts me within
strikes me at the very heart
gives me pain of soul
distresses the very springs of life. Note then how keenly sensitive was the
prophetic heart. Why is it that our hearts are so little affected by the
destruction that is wrought in the city? Simply because we are content to look
at surfaces
to look with the eye of science or art or social mechanism.
Prophets looked with the eye of the heart
and they could not bear the sad and
tragic visions of the streets. Were our hearts right with Christ
were we one
with the living God in all the tenderness of His love
a walk down the city
thoroughfares would crush us
disable us
and drive us into the utterest despair;
only then by some other vision — that is to say
by the very vision of the
Cross itself — could we be recovered from our dejection
and constrained to
renew our efforts at amelioration.
(J. Parker
D. D.)
1. The eye
in seeing the outward miseries that God layeth upon us
is a special mean to make us the more sorrowful in heart for it.(1) The sight
is the quickest of the senses.(2) Things seen are most surely and amply known
and understood
seeing a report may deceive us
but not the sight.
2. Natural affection of the most passionate woman can bring no such
grief of heart as the ministry of the Church of God doth often work in the
godly.(1) Those mourn for things temporal
these for spiritual.(2) Those have
nothing but natural affection to set them on work; these have God's Spirit also
that helpeth them herein
and worketh a greater affection to God's truth than
any affection of nature can work in a mother to the child of her womb.
(J. Udall.)
Mine enemies
chased me sore.
1. The true Church and faithful people of God do never want enemies
whilst they live here
who do most eagerly pursue them
by all means seeking to
overthrow them.(1) Many walk in the broad way
who being of contrary quality to
the godly do therefore hate them (2
Corinthians 6:14
15; Psalm
124:6
7; Psalm 129:1
3; Psalm 56:1).(2)
God's providence hath disposed that it should be so
for the use of just
condemnation of the wicked
and the greater good of His servants.
2. The godly of themselves are so simple and weak
that they can
neither prevent nor withstand the strength of their adversaries.
3. The wicked are moved by the malice of their own hearts to
persecute the godly
not having any cause given to move them thereto.(1) The
godly are fewer
weaker
simpler
and withdraw themselves from them.(2) Nothing
can be just cause to make one bitter against another but sin
which the wicked
hate not.(3) God in His providence hath appointed it to be so
to show His
righteousness in delivering His
and overthrowing the other.
(J. Udall.)
They have cut
off my life in the dungeon
1. The wicked are often so enflamed with malice against the godly
that nothing will satisfy them but their blood.
2. The wicked do not content themselves with ordinary means to seek
the life of the godly
but also practise often more than naturally seemeth
needful (Matthew 27:66).
(1)They
bear a deadly hate to the truth
and possessors thereof.
(2)The
sting of their evil conscience maketh them always fear they shall not prevail (Daniel
6:16
17).
(J. Udall.)
Waters flowed
over mine head
1. Many grievous and inevitable are the troubles and miseries which
God's faithful people suffer in this life.
2. The godly oppressed with miseries are often brought both to doubt
and despair for the time.(1) They judge according to their present feelings.(2)
Man's infirmity is naturally prone to infidelity.(3) God in His wisdom
withdraweth the feeling of His grace for a time
to let them see themselves
and to make them seek to Him the more earnestly.(4) To make them more thankful
for His grace when they feel it
and more careful to continue in it.
(J. Udall.)
I called...out
of the low dungeon.
1. The godly do pray unto the Lord for His grace and favour
even
when they are in such great extremity that all hope
in reason
is past. Moses
at Red Sea
Jonah in whale's belly
etc.(1) Reasons.(a) Their faith can never
be quailed
seeing it is that which overcometh the world (1 John 5:4).(b)
They rest upon God's truth that faileth not
and power that ruleth all
things.(2) Use: to teach us(a) to strive against that temptation which
persuadeth to surcease praying when our case seemeth desperate;(b) that their
profession was but temporary when troubles do quail;(c) to call still upon God
in the day of our troubles
yea
to increase in fervency
according to the
increase of danger and continuance therein.
2. There is no condition so miserable in this life
but the godly
may and do fall into it.(1) Examples. Abraham
for uncertain dwelling; David
for many enemies; Job for inward and outward miseries of all sorts.(2)
Reasons.(a) God will show His anger against sin in this life
even upon His own
servants.(b) That by afflictions they may be weaned from the delight in this
world
and made in love with heaven.(3) Use: to teach us(a) to reprove them
that judge according to the outward estate of any
what favour they are in with
the Lord;(b) not to promise ourselves any worldly success
but to look always
for the contrary.
(J. Udall.)
I. TO WHAT A STATE GOD'S MOST FAVOURED SAINTS MAY BE REDUCED. In the
prophet's experience
however
we see —
II. WHAT REMEDY IS OPEN TO THEM. The answer he received will lead us
to contemplate —
III. THE EFFICACY OF THAT REMEDY WHENEVER APPLIED.
(C. Simeon
M. A.)
Thou hast heard
my voice: hide not Thine ear.
1. The experience of God's former favour is a notable provocation to
cause us still to trust in Him again in our necessities (Psalm 4:1).(1)
It argueth that we are engrafted unto Christ
and therefore shall be loved unto
the end
seeing God changeth not.(2) God is always ready to show mercy and to
forgive; and therefore He will do it one time as well as another.
2. The prayer of the godly ought to come from the heart
and to be
with greatest fervency that may be.(1) God will not be dallied with
but
looketh to the inward affection.(2) We must groan under the burden of that we
would be rid of
and long for that we desire
before God will hear us.
(J. Udall.)
Thou drewest
near in the day that I called upon Thee: Thou saidst
Fear not.
A wonder explained by greater wonders
How different
are our experiences from our fears! This man of God had said
"When I cry
and shout He shutteth out my prayer." He had said again
"Thou hast
covered thyself with a cloud
that our prayer should not pass through." He
had added even to that
"Surely against me is He turned." But now he
corrects his misapprehensions. Neither was prayer shut out
nor had God turned
against him; for he joyfully confesses
"Thou drewest near in the day that
I called upon Thee: Thou saidst
Fear not." Brethren
if our experiences
have so far exceeded our expectations and belied our doubts
let us take care
that we record them. Do not let us suffer our lamentations to be written in a
book
and our thanksgivings to be spoken to the wind. Write not your complaints
in marble and your praises upon the sand. Whatever wonder there was in the
heart of Jeremiah that God should draw near to him
you and I must have felt
even greater wonder whenever God has drawn near to us. It is to us a standing
miracle that the great and glorious and thrice holy God should ever come and
reveal Himself in a way of love to us
insignificant
dishonoured
guilty sons
of men.
I. Let us set forth some sort of AN EXPLANATION OF THIS WONDER.
1. The first thought I would suggest to you is that men have ever
been in the thoughts of God. Of the eternal wisdom we read
"My delights
were with the sons of men." Long before man was created it was in the
eternal purpose that such a singular and specially favoured being should be
formed; and all things concerning covenant purposes and designs were written in
that book into which angels may not look. At this moment the whole conformation
of humanity on the face of the globe bears a direct relation to the ultimate
Church of God. Thrones and crowns must all be subordinate to the main purpose
of God concerning his elect; it has been
and it shall be so
even to the end.
2. God hath drawn nearer to us than we have as yet hinted at
in
becoming tenderly near in nature. If I were in trouble in a foreign land
it
would be pleasant to hear the voice of an Englishman; it would be even more
encouraging to spy out a neighbour
a fellow citizen of the same town; but most
of all would it be cheering to perceive that a dear friend
a brother
a
husband was to the front on our behalf. Such a near and dear friend is Jesus to
each one of those the Father hath given Him. His nature is love itself. He
will
He must
come to you that are in sorrow
and sorrow with you
and thus
cheer your hearts; for not in vain does He wear your nature
not in vain in
that nature has He suffered and died for you.
3. Nor is this all. The Lord Jesus was specially near to His people
in the days of His life on earth. Jesus was the most manlike of all men. He
draws us to Himself
and the nearer we come the more fully we appreciate Him.
If Jesus came thus near to men in His life on earth
do you wonder that He
draws near to them now?
4. Carefully notice that this was a nearness to sinful men. You and
I are sinners too
and our Redeemer's nearness to the sinners of Judea meant
nearness to us.
5. Jesus Christ came still nearer to us in His death. "For the
transgression of my people was He stricken." "He bare the sin of
many"; He was made "sin for us
who know no sin; that we might be
made the righteousness of God in Him." This is coming wonderfully near to
us.
6. He is now in heaven; turn your thoughts up to Him there. In
heaven He is still perpetually near us. He has carried our nature into heaven.
He is member of heaven's high Parliament for the sons of men
and He holds His
seat as such. He is head over all things to His church
which is His body
the
fulness of Him that filleth all in all. What is He doing in heaven? He is not
only representing us
but He is preparing a place for us: making a niche in
heaven for you
a place in heaven for me; and all the while He is continually
offering intercession for His people.
7. Jesus may well come near to His people
for there is a mystical
union which ensures it. A Divine doctrine this
of which Paul saith
"This
is a great mystery
but I speak concerning Christ and the Church
" and
this in relation to the marriage union. He went down to the depths with us
that
He might bring us up into the heights with Himself
that there His enthroned
bride should be forever with Him
a queen more glorious than eternity had ever
seen.
II. THE WONDER ITSELF.
1. By no means is this wonder at all contrary to expectation
when
expectation is founded upon an enlightened understanding. It is natural
it is
necessary
that Christ should come near to a people whom He loves so well.
2. But
if you have ever enjoyed this communion
let me help you to
describe it
that you may wonder at it. What is the manner in which God draws
near to His people in their time of trouble? At times He draws near to us by a
secret strengthening of us to bear up when we are under pressure. We may have
no marked joys
nor special transports; but quiet
calm
subdued joy rules the
spirit. Furthermore
the good Lord often vouchsafes to His people in their time
of great pain and weakness and weariness a doubly vivid sense of His love. At
such times the Lord grants us a sensible assurance of His sympathy with us. We
feel that every stroke of the rod comes distinctly from a Father's hand
who
doth not afflict willingly. The Lord draws near to His people's souls sometimes
by a very speedy and remarkable deliverance out of the trouble under which they
groan. Did He not bring up Joseph out of the prison house and set him on the
throne of Pharaoh? He can do the like with you if He wills
ere your sun has
gone down.
3. There seems to be some surprise concerning the memorable
graciousness of God. "Thou drewest near in the day that I called upon
Thee." Then
I suppose
there were other days in which he had not called
upon God
or at least had not done so so memorably; but in the first day when I
called upon Thee thou drewest near to me. Does not that give us a hint
as if
he said
"I had neglected my God
I had failed to apply to Him; my faith
had been asleep
but as soon as ever I awoke the Lord drew near to me."
4. There seems to me also to be a Nota bene
here
a kind of hand in the margin to point out the promptness of God.
"Thou drewest near in the day that I called upon Thee
" — the very
day he called God came; no sooner the prayer than the answer. Oh
the blessed
quickness of God.
5. Observe the extreme tenderness of all this. You remember that
text
"He giveth liberally
and upbraideth not." Here is an
illustration of it. He comes to His poor
suffering
downcast people
and what
He says to them is not — "You should not have done so-and-so; this is very
wrong of you; I must terribly correct you." No; but He says
"Fear
not
I have forgiven thee; and I will deliver thee."
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
I. THE CONDESCENDING VISITATION OF GOD'S PRESENCE AND GRACE.
1. It supposes all obstacles to His approach removed.
2. It asserts an actual intercourse with God.
3. It asserts that the tokens of His love were enjoyed; and nearness
and familiarity of friendly communication. It implies also the influences and
consolations of the Holy Spirit: for it is by His Spirit that God is pleased to
maintain converse with His people.
II. THE SEASON WHEN THIS APPROACH TO THE MIND WAS ENJOYED. "In
the day that I called upon Thee." Observe that this was a day of trouble.
1. This dungeon may be considered as a representation of temporal
adversity
or spiritual distress; to both of which the children of God are
subject.
2. A day of trouble ought to be a day of prayer. "Is any among
you afflicted? Let him pray."
3. God never treats with indifferences the prayers of His children.
4. When God
in answer to the prayers of His people
is pleased to
draw near to them
it must have a most reviving influence on the mind.
III. THE ANIMATING EFFECTS OF SUCH VISITATIONS FROM GOD ON THE MIND.
1. The best and most eminent believers may be the subjects of fear.
In the animal world
the lion is distinguished by his courage
the hare by its
timidity. And thus in human minds there is a vast diversity: some are bold and
unacquainted with the passion of fear; others are the contrary
and tremble
like an aspen leaf
and are liable to fear even where no fear is.
2. But there in everything is a consciousness of God's presence with
us to disarm these terrors. "Thou saidst
Fear not." God says this by
His word and spirit
and by His providence
and by the exhortations of
Christian friends. And if He be with you
what have you to fear? In concluding
this subject
first
admire the condescension and grace of the Divine Being
that
He is pleased thus to notice the circumstances in which we are placed
and to
afford relief under every painful dispensation.
3. We should be led to inquire whether we know anything of the
approach of God to the mind.
4. I infer the misery of those who are far from God
and strangers
to spiritual intercourse. "Behold all that are far from Him perish."
(G. Clayton.)
1. When the godly do rightly pray unto the Lord
they have most
notable experience of His favour towards them.(1) Reasons.(a) God performeth
His promise unto them (Psalm 50:15; Matthew
11:28).(b) Their affections are carried into heaven
where is the
fulness of joy
from earthly things that are full of vexations.(2) Uses(a) To
teach us that we
therefore
are not heard when we pray
because we call not
aright.(b) To teach us to labour with ourselves
that we may increase in
fervent and frequent prayer.(c) To reprove them that either account fervent
prayer needless
or are negligent in it.
2. The Lord doth give most notable encouragements and comforts unto
those that rightly worship Him.(1) Reasons.(a) He doth thereby manifest His
love unto His servants.(b) He will daunt the enemies by their wonderful
patience
constancy
comfort
and courage.(c) Others may be allured by their example
to trust in Him.(2) Uses.(a) To reprove them that account the patience of the
godly
sottishness; their courage
desperateness; their constancy
obstinacy.(b) To teach us that in walking uprightly
and calling upon God for
His assistance
we shall be assured that He will be with us
howsoever He seem
for a time to neglect us.
(J. Udall.)
O Lord
Thou
hast pleaded the causes of my soul; Thou hast redeemed my life.
God pleading for saints
and saints pleading for God
1. The prophet speaks experimentally as of a matter which he had
proved for himself in his own case. There is no true understanding of the
truths of God except by a personal experience of them.
2. Observe how positively he speaks. "Thou hast pleaded the
causes of my soul." Let us
by the aid of the gracious Comforter
shake
off those doubts and fears which so much mar our peace and comfort.
3. Observe how gratefully the prophet speaks
ascribing all the
glory to God alone. Earth should be a temple filled with the songs of grateful
saints
and every day should be a censer smoking with the sweet incense of
thanksgiving.
4. How joyful Jeremiah seems to be while he records the Lord's
mercy! How triumphantly he lifts up the strain!
I. DIVINE PLEADING.
1. The Lord pleads our cause in the Court of Providence. The
Christian may expect that in the course of providence
when he meets with
trouble
God will raise up for him at different times
and in unexpected
quarters
persons who will take an interest in him
and be the means of working
out his deliverance.(1) Sometimes God pleads the cause of His people by
silencing their enemies. When your foot has slipped — when you have spoken
unadvisedly with your lips
if you have deeply repented of the sin
you may
leave the matter before God
for He will either silence every dog's tongue
or
turn their barkings to His glory.(2) At other times our God has pleaded the
cause of His people
by raising up friends for them. He does not violate the
wills of their enemies
but He wisely turns those wills into the channel of
friendship.(3) You see thus
that either by silencing enemies
or else by
raising up friends
God can
in providence
plead the cause of your soul; or if
men should seem to have even less than this to do with it
He knows how
by
special providences
to bring you out of the depth of your difficulties. No
Christian man
methinks
can look back through many years of his life without
observing some strange and singular workings of the Divine hand
by which
in
an unexpected manner
God has wrought His deliverance.
2. Our text may be read with great comfort if we think upon the Court
of Divine Law. My soul
triumph thou in thy God! This day rejoice thou with all
thy might
for Christ hath prevalently pleaded thy cause
and thou art
acquitted — nay
thou art brought in as meritorious
and accepted in the sight
of God
through the plea of the Beloved.
3. In the third place
Jesus pleads the cause of my soul in the
court of conscience
which is a minor imitation of the great Court of Heaven.
Foul and vile I am
and yet I am perfect in Christ Jesus: lost
ruined
and
undone in the first Adam
but saved and redeemed — made to sit in heavenly
places
in the second Adam. Ah! doubts and fears! Where are ye now
when Jesus
pleads in my soul?
4. Jesus pleads our cause in the Court of Heaven. A poor man once
wished to have a favour of a great one. This great lord had a son — a very kind
and condescending one
who spoke to the poor man
and said
"If you will
write a petition to my father
he is very gracious
and he will be sure
to" grant it; but that you may have no doubts about the success of your
petition
give it to me
and I will take it in my own hand up to my father's
house for you
and make your case my own. I win say to him
"My father
hear this poor man's petition
not for his own sake
but consider it as mine;
do me the personal favour and kindness of hearing this man's prayer
as though
it were my prayer; for
indeed
I make it mine:" The poor man wrote out
his petition
but when he had finished it
"Alas!" he said to
himself
"this will never do to present before the great one; it is so
full of errors; I have blotted it with my tears
and where I have tried to
scratch out a word which I have spelt wrongly
I have made it worse
and have
so badly worded the whole petition
that! am afraid the great one will throw it
in the fire
or never notice it." "But
" said his friend
"I will write it out in a fair clear hand for you
so that there shall be
no blots and no blunders; and when I have done so
I will do as I have said — I
will take it in my own hand
put my own name at the bottom of it
with your
name
and will offer it as our joint petition; and I will put it upon this
footing
'My father
do it for me; not for him
but for me.'" When the
poor man saw his petition thus written out
and knew it was in such hands
he
went his way
and made sure that the answer must come; and come it did. This is
how Jesus Christ has done for you. He takes our poor unworthy prayers and
amends them.
5. Jesus will plead the cause of His people
and our heavenly Father
will do so too in the last great day of judgment. If you are a true Christian
and you are called to occupy a prominent post in the service of God
expect to
lose your character; expect not to have the good opinion of any but your God
and those faithful ones
who
like you
are willing to bear contempt. But what
joy it is for all these holy men to know that at the last God will plead the
cause of their souls!
II. IF THE LORD HATH PLEADED THE CAUSES OF OUR SOUL
WE SHOULD PLEAD
HIS CAUSE WHILE WE HAVE ANY BREATH TO PRAY
OR A TONGUE WITH WHICH TO BEAR
WITNESS FOR HIM. Beloved
there is a way of bearing witness for Christ which
you must adopt — that of witnessing by your consistency of conduct. Holiness
is
after all
the mightiest weapon which a Christian can wield. Ire ye holy as
Christ is holy. Lastly
we can all plead for God in a private way. Oh! there is
a great power in pleading for God with individuals. A man went to preach for
seven summers on the village green
and good was done. Joseph sometimes
listened to the preacher
but only to ridicule him. There were many souls
converted
but he remained as hard as ever. A certain John who had felt the
power of truth
worked with him in the barn
and one day
between the strokes
of the flail
John spoke a word for truth and for God
but Joseph laughed at
him
and hinted at hypocrisy and many other things. Now John was very
sensitive
and his whole soul was filled with grief at Joseph's banter; so
after he had spoken
feeling a flush of emotion
he turned to the corner of the
barn and hid his face
while a flood of tears came streaming from his eyes. He
wiped them away with the corner of his smock frock
and came back to his flail;
but Joseph had noticed the tears though the other tried to hide them; and what
argument could not do
and what preaching could not do
those tears through God
the Holy Spirit did effectually
for Joseph thought to himself
"What!
does John care for my soul
and weep for my soul? then it is time I should care
and weep for it too." Beloved
witness thus for Christ!
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
Roughly
classified
the causes that are tried in ordinary courts of law are of two
sorts
those in which the person accused is guilty and those in which he is
innocent. The effort of judicature
the end and aim of courts
judges and
juries
is to distinguish aright between these two classes of cases
to
determine whether
in any given instance
the man on trial is to be held
blameworthy or without blame. Under which of these two heads are we to count
the "causes of the soul"? It may surprise you to have me reply
Under
both of them.
I. TAKE
TO BEGIN WITH
THOSE CAUSES OF THE SOUL IN WHICH SHE
ACKNOWLEDGES HERSELF GUILTY. There are a great many ways of trying to explain
away the sense of guiltiness in the human heart. There is a rooted reluctance
in every soul to take upon the lips frankly
and in the spirit of genuine
contrition
the words
"Father
I have sinned." And yet deeper down
even than this reluctance lies the conviction that such confession ought to be
made. This is the acknowledgment of the men and women of fullest
strongest
ripest
nature. You say
Oh
no! I am acquainted with scores of people who have no such
consciousness
make no such acknowledgment. They think too well of God to
believe that He will ever punish
if indeed it must be conceded that He exists
which they doubt. Yes
it must be admitted that there are a great many such
people
and they are often very agreeable people
accomplished
versatile
cultivated it may be; at any rate
people who are
as we say
exceedingly
pleasant to meet. The question is
Do such people adequately represent human
nature in its heights and depths? Testimony is of weight in proportion to the
familiarity of the witness with the facts about which he testifies. To put the
ease strongly
picture to yourself an aged man
who has see
n much of the
trials and troubles of this mortal life
whose face is seamed with marks that
tell of mental struggle
of conflict with doubt
with difficulty
with pain
whose eye has lost the flash that once belonged to it
but keeps still the glow
and penetrative power that tell of active life within
call him a-Kempis
if
you will
or St. Augustine
or Keble
or Muhlenberg. Now set opposite him some
fresh-cheeked
light-hearted
cheery-voiced young fellow
who knows not very
much of life
to be sure
but is quick-witted and intelligent
thoroughly well
read
informed as to the very latest phase of contemporary thought
literary
social
political
able to instruct you on a thousand points of scholarship in
almost any department you may choose. To which of the two
let me ask
should
you the more naturally
or with the more confidence turn
were the question to
be discussed
not one about rocks or shells
or pictures
or pottery
or
artist's proofs
or first editions
but a question of the powers and
possibilities of the human heart? Which of them would be the best authority
say you
on such a point as this one before us now
namely
the soul's attitude
toward God its Maker as respects innocence and guilt? But now the question
comes up
and it is certainly worth looking at
Why should one whoso cause is a
guilty cause care to have it pleaded? Why not confess judgment
and take the
consequences? "O Lord
Thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul." Is
this a thing to be desired
that the Lord should take up or help forward the
cause of the offender? High-minded advocates sometimes refuse to defend a
criminal when it is perfectly evident that the offence charged was really
committed. Let the law take its course
they say. And ought it not to be so in
men's relations to their Maker? If they have really broken His law
ought they
not to be willing to meet the penalty
instead of expecting or desiring any one
to plead their cause? To all which I merely answer that if it be indeed so
then is the word Gospel emptied of meaning
and the title "our
Saviour" robbed of all its power to charm. For what element of good
tidings is there in the message
Do wrong
and you shall be punished? And what
need have we of a Saviour
if there be nothing evil from which it is possible
for us to be saved? That ancient sufferer whose words make the substance of our
text was reaching after
and had partly grasped
a truth which Jesus Christ
came into the world to make so clear that every one might grasp it
namely
this
that with God there is forgiveness
not
indeed
the weak-minded
easy-tempered condoning of sin which it is an insult to forgiveness to call by
that name
but a costly forgiveness involving intensest suffering. "O
Lord
Thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul." If sympathy and that intimate
identifying of one's self with another
which advocates know something of
when
seeking with all their might to save the life of a defendant in a capital ease
— if these can
as they sometimes do
involve keen suffering
can we wonder at
men's putting a similar interpretation on the agony and bloody sweat
the Cross
and Passion? The truth is
there is a feeling deep down in the human heart that
if we are to be helped at all
the help must come from some source higher than
our own level. It is all very well to say complacently that men ought to be
willing
and not only willing but glad
to bear the punishment of their sins
and so to expiate them. But is it quite certain that when we allow ourselves to
use language of this sort we at all appreciate what the punishment our sins
deserve would be
or what it would mean to bear it? That Christ came down into
human life
dwelt with us
shared our sorrows
toiled
suffered
and all in
order that He might be the more closely identified with us
and so the better
be our advocate
the better plead the causes of the human soul
— this is the
Gospel
this is the glad news
and how different it all sounds from the bare
Be good and thou shalt be rewarded
be bad and thou shalt be punished.
II. TAKE NOW THE CAUSE WHERE THE ACCUSED HAS BEEN THE VICTIM OF
SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES AND REALLY NOT THE GUILTY PERSON HE SEEMS TO BE. No
men escape wholly misunderstanding and misinterpretation. Perhaps it would not
be putting the matter too strongly to say that there is probably no time when a
man is not in a false position as regards some of those about him; no time
when
on all sides
and by every observer
he is seen precisely as he really
is. The atmosphere through which men look at the actions and the lives of the
other men about them is never so absolutely clear that there is no distortion
no undue foreshortening or misplacement in the picture received into the eye.
Ordinarily this is tolerable enough; we expect a certain measure of
misunderstanding
are prepared for it
and do not mind encountering it. But
there are times in the lives of some men when misapprehension and unjust
judgment seem to hem them in on every side. Innocent at heart
and sure that
they are innocent
they yet bend and waver under the crushing load of suspicion
which adverse circumstance has laid upon their shoulders. Then it is that the
soul
helpless to free itself from its calamitous entanglement
calls out to
God for aid. And how is it that the Lord does plead the cause of such a soul as
this environed one we have in mind? He does it by His providence
by His
ordering of events. Our help cometh from the Lord. It is not by cultivating an
introspective
self-analysing habit of mind that we are likely to find the way
to peace. We are living out these lives of ours too much apart from God. We
toil on dismally
as if the making or the marring of our destinies rested
wholly with ourselves. It is not so. We are not the lonely
orphaned creatures
we let ourselves suppose ourselves to be. The earth
rolling on its way through
space
does not go unattended. The Maker and Controller of it is with it
and
around it
and upon it. We cannot escape Him. Why should we desire to do so? He
knows us infinitely more thoroughly than we know ourselves. He loves us better
than we have ever dared to believe could be possible. Conscience-stricken
guilty
perplexed
spoken against
misjudged
there is no one we can turn to
with such confidence as to Him; no advocate so trustworthy. He pleads the
causes of the soul.
(W. R. Huntington
D. D.)
1. Observe how Let us
by the aid of the gracious Comforter
shake
off those doubts and fears which so much mar our peace and comfort. Be this our
prayer
that we may have done with the harsh croaking voice of surmise and
suspicion
and may be able to speak with the clear melodious voice of full
assurance.
2. Notice how gratefully the prophet speaks
ascribing all the glory
to God alone! You perceive there is not a word concerning himself or his own
pleadings. He doth not ascribe his deliverance in any measure to any man
much
less to his own merits; but it is "Thou." "O Lord
Thou hast
pleaded the causes of my soul; Thou hast redeemed my life." A grateful
spirit should ever be cultivated by the Christian; and especially after
deliverances we should prepare a song for our God. Earth should be a temple
filled with the songs of grateful saints
and every day should be a censer
smoking with the sweet incense of thanksgiving.
3. How joyful Jeremiah seems to be while he records the Lord's
mercy. How triumphantly he lifts up the strain! He has been in the low dungeon
and is even now no other than the weeping prophet; and yet in the very book
which is called "Lamentations
" clear as the song of Miriam when she
dashed her fingers against the tabor
shrill as the note of Deborah when she
met Barak with shouts of victory
we hear the voice of Jeremiah going up to
heaven
"Thou hast pleaded the causes of my soul; Thou hast redeemed my
life."
( C. H. Spurgeon.)
I am their
music.
I. THE TRIAL OF RIDICULE. There is hardly a trial that men feel more
severely than they do the test of ridicule. Livingstone tells us that "the
Africans cannot stand a sneer." They bear with wonderful fortitude the
most appalling torments
but they cannot endure ridicule. Poor Africans! How
much they resemble civilised men. A French writer speaks thus of his
countrymen: "Says Ridicule: 'You are gay
' and the fear of appearing
light-minded makes him heavy. 'You are sharp
' and the ambition to be strong
makes him uncouth. 'You are delicate
' and he becomes a realist. 'You are
honest
' and he becomes a wily politician. 'You are a believer
' and he plays
the sceptic and remains credulous — thinks it beneath his reason to believe in
God
whom he does not see
and makes and unmakes gods of men whom he does
see....And outsiders and foreigners judge us on these noisy demonstrations of
the few; for
after all
they are the few." But if a scoff drives the
Frenchman to hide his good qualities
and to boast of his vices
it is not less
true of the Englishman. We are most sensitive to ridicule; we cannot bear a
laugh. And we are sensitive to scorn and humour when they are directed against
our religious beliefs and hopes. The prophet felt this when he gave utterance
to the text. Jeremiah lived in days of national disaster
and endured the pangs
of exile
but amid all the tribulations of the period he seems to have felt
nothing more bitterly than the mockings of the heathen. They turned his
religious ideas and hopes into merriment. And the hardest thing that thousands
have to bear today in consequence of their Christian character and habits is
the derision of the ungodly. Sometimes this is encountered in the school. Youth
is peculiarly sensitive to ridicule
and many a lad finds the flouts and jeers
of his schoolfellows a veritable martyrdom. It is sometimes to be borne in the
family. And in the great outside world those who live a truly devout life often
excite sarcasm and raillery. The soldier in the barracks
the sailor in the
forecastle
the collier in the pit
the labourer on the farm
the assistant in
the shop
the clerk in the counting-house are liable to banter.
II. SEVERAL GROUNDS ON WHICH CHRISTIAN MEN ARE SUBJECTED TO RIDICULE
AND HOW FALSE THESE GROUNDS ARE.
1. They are derided on the ground that religion is unmanly. We laugh
at men who are wanting in manliness
and
perhaps
that is a legitimate use of
laughter
but is it a fact that the Christian man is lacking in manliness? Is
he wanting in sense
or courage
or force! "Oh!" it is said
"religion is childish." It is child-like
but not childish.
"Oh!" it is said again
"religion is womanish." When are we
to get rid of the puppyism that prates about religion being "fit only for
women
" and that taunts us with the assertion that "only women are
left in the Church"? Women have sufficiently vindicated their intellectual
eminence. It is folly to reproach the godly with unmanliness — no man is more
manly. Who in the Old Testament is held forth as the ideal man? "The man
of God." He is the manly man. Who is the ideal man of the New Testament?
"The Son of Man." He is the manliest of men. The faith of Jesus
Christ does not make craven
foolish
effeminate
impotent characters; it inspires
wisdom
valour
chivalry
strong purpose
and noble adventure.
2. Christian men are sometimes derided on the ground that religion
is irrational. They are supposed to be ignorant
credulous
superstitious
and
are laughed at accordingly. The cultured men of the early ages of Christianity
regarded it "not as a problem to be investigated
but an extravagance to
be laughed at." We are told that no one abreast of the culture of the day
will give it credence. Sometimes they scorn the doctrine of inspiration
or
miracles
or atonement; they scoff at the morality of revelation
at its great
names
at its glorious hope. Every sceptical scoffer is supposed to be a
thinker of independent understanding; the believer is treated amusingly as a
fossil of the geological age. But you have no need to be ashamed of revelation.
The greatest and best men of all generations have been its champions
and the
grandest deeds of successive ages have been wrought by its power.
3. Christian people are assailed on the ground that religion is
hypocrisy. Many critics of our faith are cynics at heart; they disbelieve in
goodness
and so they treat the profession of religion as so much canting
hypocrisy. How they love to discover and proclaim a stumbling saint! Hypocrites
prove nothing against religion. If you wished to give an enlightened opinion
upon Minton's or Doulton's ware you would not stir up their refuse heaps and
bring out the rejected shards that had been misshapen on the wheel
or been
cracked in the oven
and parade these as specimens of the potter's
unskilfulness and untrustworthiness. It is by the splendid vases
rich in
material
exquisite in grace
brilliant in colour
which adorn palaces and
galleries
and not by the wrecks of dust heaps
that you judge the artist.
III. A FEW WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT TO THOSE WHO ARE BEING TRIED BY THE
FIERY TRIAL.
1. If you are called upon to bear ridicule
you bear it with the
noblest of the race.
2. If you are assailed by ridicule for your Master's sake
remember
that in these days we are not called upon to suffer much for His sake. How
immense were the penalties in which the Christian name involved the primitive
saints!
3. If the Philistine does make music of you
have you no music? Do
not your faith and love and hope bring you discourse of sweet sounds? When the
moments of reflection come is there no music? When the day is over
and you
muse on your bed
is there no music? When the morning dawns
is there no music?
When you vanquish temptation
is. there no music? The conscience is an austere
organ
without painted or gilded pipes
but it yields delectable strains
and
are not these yours? The heart is a living lute
a many-stringed lyre
a golden
cymbal
and is not its magic melody yours?
4. He laughs best who laughs last
and your mouth shall be fined
with laughter and song at the last. The future is yours. Your faith and
righteousness flower in immortal blessedness
(W. L. Watkinson.).
──《The Biblical Illustrator》