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.8 .344
THE MINOE PEOPHETS.
:n9
A,
AUG 28 1957
THE
MINOR PROPHETS
/
By J. G. BELLETT,
Author of " The Jloral Glory of the Lord Jesus,"
&c., Ac.
LONDON:
llOBERT L. ALLAN, 15 PATERNOSTER ROW
And 75 SAUCHIEHALL STREET, GLASGOW.
DUBLIN: TRACT DEPOT, 13 Westland Row.
GUERNSEY: J. TUNLEY, IW Victobia Road.
BOSTON, U.S.: F. G. BROWN, 3 Tkbmont Row.
1870.
COIsTTEIsTTS.
Pack
HOSEA, 9
Joel, 19
Amos, 28
Obadiah, 31
Jonah, .39
MiCAH, . ■ . . .52
Nahum, 63
Habakkuk, 69
Zephaniah, 79
Haggai, 89
Zechariah, 99
Malachi, 115
HO SEA.
IIoSEA prophesied in the })i-ospect of the breakhig up
of the kiugdom of the ten tribes, and near the end of
the house of Jehu. lie is full of the thought of the
ruin that was at hand ; but he anticipates scenes of
restoration and g'lory beyond it. As I may express
it, the death and resurrection of Israel is contemplated
by him, and announced under different figm'es, in a
very abrupt and vi\-id style.
At the opening of the book, the prophet is directed
b}'' the Lord to take to him a wife and children. And
he might say of them, as Isaiah did of his two sons.
" Behold, I and the children whom the Lord hath
given me are for signs and for wonders."
The first child is " Jezreel" — the sign of the doom,
both of the house of Jehu, and of the house of Israel.
The second child is " Lo-ruhamah" — the sign that
God would withdraw His mercy from the house of
Israel. The third is " Lo-ammi"' — the sign that He
would disclaim Israel, so that they should be no more
10 THE MIKOR ITtOrHETS.
His people. But all this is followed by a promise of
final re-gatlienug", called " the day of Jezreel," when
the very same nation, now cast off, should be restored.
The strong- wind, the earthquake, and the fire, pass by
to do their appointed service ; but the still, small
voice closes the history'.
The second chapter then gives us a more expanded
view of this guilt and misery of Israel, and of their
final blessedness. The beautiful description of the
covenant made by the Lord for Israel, as between
them and the beasts of the earth, after lie has taken
them into covenant witli Himself, and the sight we
get of the Lord at one end of a magnificent system
of blessing and Israel at the other, after wilderness-
•days, are exquisite indeed. '• The valley of Achor" is
■also declared to be " a door of hope"^ — that is, judg-
ment ending in victory or glory, tribulation in joy.
(Joshua vii.) All these things bespeak the death and
resurrection of the nation.
Then, in chap, iii., the prophet is directed to take a
second wife. These marriages are emblematic actions,
reminding us of many things in Ezekiel, of Jeremiah
going to the Euphrates to hide his girdle there, and
of Agabus in the Acts of the Apostles, taking Paul's
HOSEA. 11
girdle and binding his own hands with it. All these
were actions emblematically or typically fitted to give
intimation of coming events.
The instruction of the Prophet's first marriage is
about the casting off of Israel as a nation, and their
return to blessedness in the last days. The instruction
couvej^ed to us by his second marriage is about the
political and religious history of the people ; and this
may well strike us as marvellous ; for with our eyes
we see this anticipation of the prophet verified and
■exhibited to the very life. They are, at this moment,
without a king, without a sacrifice,, without teraphim.
They have no political standing, and they are neither a
sanctified nor an idolatrous people. They are not iu
the knowledge and worship of God, nor in the service
of idols, as their fathers were. Our own eyes do indeed
see all this. But they are to revive politically and
religiously. xVs the prophet goes on to tell us : " They
shall retm'n and seek the Lord their God, and David
their king, and shall fear the Lord and his goodness
in the latter days." Surely this is again their present
death and coming resurrection.
Then, after these first three chapters, we get, in the
great body of the prophecy, details of the sins which
12 THE MIXOi: PROrilETS.
had provoked tliis judg-inent. " There is a sin unto
death," as we read in St. Johu. Israel, as a nation, I
may say, connnitted it. All the prophets, I may alsf»
say, tell us this. " This iniquity shall not be purged
from you till ye die," says Isaiali to them. But
Ezekiel's valley of dry bones is the leading- and the
best-known scriptni'e on this mystery. And the
Divine Prophet Himself talks to the Jews of His day
of the Lord God miserabl}' destroying- them as the
wicked husbandmen ; and says also to them, " Be-
hold your house is left unto you desolate." And
surely it is a death-stricken land and people we
see in them and their country at this moment. Surely
it all tells us, "There is a sin unto death." They
are as a nation in Ezekiel's valley, or in Ilosea's
graveyard.
But this death shall bo triumj^hed over. The nation
of the Jews shall have a resurrection, as the bodies of
the saints shall have a resurrection. And then, as
the saints in their g-lories shall fill and adorn the
heavens, so Israel shall blossom, and bud, and fill the
face of the world with fruit. '' "What shall the re-
ceiving of them be but life from the dead ?"
In spirit, as well as in circumstances, there shall be
IIOSEA. 13
revival, moral as well as national recovery, conA'ersiou
as well as restoration. Ilosea's last chapter lets n.s
see this, and all the prophets. ]V[icah, whose pro-
phecy we may consider m another place, gives
us this subject in a very vivid way, delineating- the
exercises of the soul very strikingly in his last two
■chapters.
Very various and broken are the notices which our
})rophet gives us of those iniquities which were leading
the people to their gxaves, or to the judgment of
death.
The land was to mourn— the people were to languish.
The Lord would be to Ephraim as a moth, to the house
of Judah as a worm ; as the fowls of the heaven He
would bring them down. They should be swallowed
up ; Memphis was to bury them ; their children should
be brought forth to the murderer ; they should use the
words prepared for the day of utter excision, '* moun-
tains cover us, hills fall on us."
Such words are used, such descriptions are given of
them. But the}^ were to revive, and of this w^e get
abrupt witness also. The Lord was God and not man,
ixnd His heart would turn within Him — His repentings
should be kindled ; there should be no full and final
14 THE MIXOn I'ROniETS.
destnictioii. Resnnectio;i, as in tlie third day (a
glauce at the resurrectiou of the Lord of Israel Iliin-
self) is spoken of. The coming- oiit from Egypt also,
as a I'enewal of their liistory, as thoitgh they were
beginning afresh, under the hand and grace of God.
and Jacob's history, are likewise referred to, with the
same intent. Birth from the Avomb, and resurrection
from the grave, are also called forth to set forth, as in
figures, the same story of this people. And, again.
the blighting force of the east wind, and then after-
wards the bloom aud beauty of spring, tell us of the
doom and the revival of the nation.
Such passages throughout the book gi\'e it its cha-
racter. I read it as that Avhich, under the Spirit of
God, keeps the judgment and redemption, the death
and resiu'rection, of Israel as a nation, constantly in
"\iew. The lauguage of resurrection itself is so cm-
ployed in chap, xiii., that the apostle can use it, when
he is making literal resurrection his subject, in 1 Cor.
XV. Here, however, it is the recovery of the nation.
Aud standing, as Ilosea was, ui the full prospect of
the Assyrian captivit3% and in the near approach of the
doom of the house of Jehu, it was natural and easy,
so to speak, that the Spirit should lead him to see ai.d
UOSEA. 15
speak of the deatli-strickeu state of Israel as just
about to begin.*
PrincipaUj, again I say, we have a detail of those
iniquities which were making such a process, judgment
unto death, necessary. But I welcome and fully ad-
mit the instructions of another, that, in a passing way.
we get a large view of truth in this book of llosea.
In addition to the present casting-off of the Jews,
and their future restoration, which, as Ave see, con-
stitutes the great subject, we get the grafting of the
Gentile on the Jewish root, intimated in chap. i. 10,
used to that end b}^ the apostle in Rom. ix. 2G. So
the idea, the scriptural idea, of a remnant in Israel is
conveyed in the "Ammi" and " Ru.hamah " of chap,
ii. 1, and thus we do get notices of other points of
truth beyond the leading ones. And, further still,
as he has said again upou this prophecy, "nothing can
be finer than the intermingling of the moral necessity
for judgment, the just indignation of God at such sin,
pleadings to induce Israel to forsake their evil way
and seek the Lord, God's recurrence to the eternal
counsels of His own grace, and, at the same time, the
^" In chap. xiii. 14 we get the thought of the apostle in Rom.
xi. 29 — that divine mercy shall gather Israel at the end, because
God's gifts and calliwi are without repentance.
16 THE ME^OR PKOrilETS.
touching remembrance of former relationshi[) with
His beloved people ; there is nothing more affecting
than this mixture on God's part of reproaches, of
loving-kindness, of appeal, of reference to happier
moments, that touching mixture of affection and of
judgment, wliich avc find again and again in this
prophet."*
In this Avay, v>'e get variety of matter in Hosea,
while, again I say, the death and resurrection of the
nation of Israel constitutes the great theme.
The closing verse draws the moral. It tells us
where wisdom, trae and divine wisdom, wisdom in
which the soul is concerned, and concerned for eternity,
is to be found. And surely it is in this mystery of
death and resurrection, judgment and redemption, sia
and salvation, the mystery, as I may say, of Adam
and of Christ, that the grand moral of the story of
this ruined world of ours lies.
All that is to be brought back to God, all that is to
stand in Christ, or under Christ, is to be in resurrec-
tion-character, in redemption from the judgment of
* Chap. vi. 7, sbould Lo translatcil, wo learn, " but they, liko
Adam, have tran.sgrcsFed the covenant." This tells us that
Adam and tho Jew were alike under law, and, therefore, became
transgressors. This is as the teaching of Rom. v.
HOSEA. 17
death ; and the Jew as well as everything else, the
iiatiou of Israel in the latter day, as Ilosea, and the
prophet and the apostle of the Gentiles himself teach
ns.
We might formally close with this reflection on the
closing' verse of our prophet, but I must add another
word.
Redemption leads to relationship. This is God's
Avay. lie only satisfies His own nature by this.
•' God is love." Whom lie redeems. He adopts. He
puts His ransomed ones into relationship to Himself.
It was thus among- the patriarchs. Isaac followed
Abraham. It was thus in Israel. God speaks to
Israel and of Israel, as betrothed and adopted. I
might refer to Isa. liv., Jer. iii., Ezek. xvi., Zeph. iii.,
and a multitude of other scriptures, in proof of this.
It is thus with us. We read this largely in the New
Testament. Eedemption from the curse of the law is
followed b^'' redemption from the hondage of it. In
other words, the blessing of justification is waited on
or followed by the Spirit of adoption. (Gal. iii., iv.)
And among the scriptures ^vhich show us that the
nation of Israel is to be in relationship as well as in
redemption, Hosea may be very principally cited.
18 THE MiNOE rr.ornETS.
For here, in the second chapter, the Lord, auticipat-
ing Ilis people in the coining days of the kingdom,
says to them by His prophet, " And it shall be at that
day, that thou shalt call me Islii, and shalt call me no
more Baali." Wonderful and jM'ecious I Eestored
and quickened Israel shall have communion with their
Lord in the grace and freedom of conscious relation-
ship of the dearest, nearest character! For thus
again speaks the Lord by Jeremiah, " Is Ephraim my
dear son ? is he a pleasant child ? for since I spake
against him, I do earnestly remember him still : there-
fore mj-- bowels ai-e troubled for him ; I will surely
have mercy upon him." (xxxi. 20.)
It is enough. Redemptiou leads to relationship,
and so to glory ; and in coming days, the heavens and
the earth shall witness it, iu its various, and excellent^
and wondrous exhibition.
JOEL.
The age of this prophet is not given to us. From this,
we might say, it matters not when he flourished : but
we may say tlie same also from the character of his
prophecy. And thus the silence of the Spirit on that
point is more than accounted for : it is justified.
He delivered the word of the Lord in some day of
sore national calamity, when either again and again
the adversary came in to waste and destroy, or year
after year famine was in the land by reason of plagues
upon it.
But through this present calamity, the great closing
calamities of Israel are seen, as by the far-seeing ej'e
of Him who laiows the end from the beginning", and
in the grace of Him who would fain sound an alarm
in the ears of the people, that they ma}' prepart^
themselves for a day of visitation.
Nothing is more common than this in the prophets.
They treat the present moment as the pledge of a
future. Indeed, the Lord does the same — taking up.
20 THE MixoK rrvoriiETS.
I may say, tliis style of the prophets in Liike xiii. ;
where, in the day of Pilate's cruelty to the Galileans,
and of the fall of the tower in Siloam, He says to the
j^'e novation, " Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise
j)erisli."
In Joel's day, the vine and the fig, the corn and the'
wine and the oil, palm-tree, pomegranate, and apiJe-
tree, all are withered ; and the priests and ministers
are summoned to weop, and a solemn fast is jiro-
( claimed, that the elders and all the people may gather
themselves. The services of God's house are sus-
pended, the meat-offering and the drink-offering are
withheld, and the joy and gladness that belonged to
the house is no more. The seed is rotten in the field,
and the garners at home are omiDty. Herds and
flocks share the misery of the times. The prophet
himself begins to cry to God under this sore sorrow.
lie leads the Avay, as it were, in the humiliation and
confessions which suit such a moment in the people's
liistory.
In the second chapter, we have again a detail of
national misei'ies, but with a near approach to that
great, final, judicial day, \\liirh is to close, in righteous,
wrathful visitation, the story of Israel in apostacy.
JOEL. 21
The call to repeutauce is reiJeated with the hope of a
turning of God's anger away. And however suitable
to the calamit}' of that day these calls of the prophet
may have been, we Ivnow that there will be this spirit
of humbling and confession in the coming days of his
nation, and on the eve of their deliverance. A spirit
of grace is then to be poured out, and every one is t( >
mourn apart. The punishment of the people's siu is
then to be accepted. If the trumpet have blown
''• an alarm," to tell of the enemy at hand, it will be
blowm, but not as an alarm, to call the people iu
assembly to the mourning. So that iu this feature of
the prophet's day, we may trace agaiu the snored
circumstances of the closing day. Calamity comes as
the judgment of the Lord in righteousness ; repentance
comes as the fruit of the Spirit in grace. And then, as
the fruit of this repentance, the whole system in Israel
is revivified ; all fruitfulness is pledged to .the land
now wasted ; times of refreshing and the restitution
of all things are anticipated ; and " my people," says
the Lord agaiu and again, " shall never be ashamed."
The gift of the Spirit is promised, and the times of
"the day of the Lord" are seen to end in the
destruction of the enemies, and the deliverance of the
■22 THE MiNOK rrioniETS.
Israel of God. lu all tliis we have Matt. xxiv. and
Acts ii. combined : the one giving us a sample of the
l)romised gift ; the other detailing the terrors of that
day which , is to make an end of the confederated
enemies of Israel, to deliver God's remnant who have
called oil tlie name of the Lord, and to bring in the
elect for whose sake th(jse days of terror are to be
shortened.
Indeed, all the great characteristics of this coming
day are clustered here. The pouruig out of the Spirit
— ^the deliverance of the elect brought to call on the
name of the Lord — the judgment of the apostate nation
by the hand of llieir great enemy, as in " llie great
tribulation" — the destruction of that enemy, the
confederated Gentiles, by the Lord Himself, when
sun, moon, and stars shall be disturbed — tlie peaceful
reign and glory of the King in Ziou, following all this ;
these things are together here, as we find them scat-
tered' through all the prophets. I say, we see them
here clustered together. We may not be competent
to settle them in their order, or to put them in the
presence of each other, and in tlieir relations, as they
will, by and by, be the Uving materials of the scene
around ; yeL do they contain rich principles of truth.
JOEL. 23
which we can be edified iu knowing, and in which we
can justify the ways of that wisdom that has ordered
them, which is now revealing them, and will iu due
season accomplish them.
Here I must turn aside for a moment, and observe
that the gift of the Spirit in the day of Acts ii., ac-
cording to this prophecy, was not followed by those
judgments on which the darkened sun and naoon and
the falling stars are thus solemnly to wait and to give
witness. Such was not the history in the Acts after
the gift of the Spirit there. Why? Israel was not
then obedient. These judgments will be in favour of
Israel. They will light upon the head of the op-
pressor, and close the day of Israel's tribulation.
But they did not follow the gift of the Spirit in
Acts ii., as they are spoken of in Joel ii., and again
I say, because Israel was not then repentant and
obedient. "If ye will not believe, neither shall ye be
established" is a standing oracle in the case of the
nations. (Isaiah vii. 9.) And being then unbelieving,
i-efushig (even to the slaying of Stephen) the testi-
mony of the then given Spirit, the nation was not
delivered nor established.
The Spirit, therefore, given at that Pentecost, led
24 THE MIXOR PROrHETS.
on iu a very different direction. He became the
baptizer of au elect people, Jewish or Gentile, into a
body destined to heaven, and to be the bride of the
Lamb iu the day of the glor^^, when again the Spirit
will be given. The remnant iu Israel, under that
gift, Mill be so led in faitli, repentance, and
obedience, as to let the full amount of this prophecy
of Joel spend itself in the behalf of the nations.
But I must say a little more on Joel ii. and Acts ii.
Iu what a profound and interesting' manner the
Spirit in au apostle fills out the word of the Spirit m
a prophet ! Mauj' an instance of this might be given,
as Ave generally know. But I am now looking only at
Peter's commentary on Joel : that is, at Peter's word
iu Acts ii. on Joel's word iu chapter ii.
Joel tells us of the SjDirit, the river of God, as we
will call it. He traces it, iu its course or current,
through the sons and daughters, the old men and.
young men, the servants and handmaids, of Israel ;
he speaks of it iu its rich and abimdant flowing, and
the fiiiitfulness it imi)arts.
Peter admits all this. In the day of Pentecost, as
he w^as preaching at Jerusalem, he looks at that same
river of God, charmed, as it were, at the wealth and
JOEL. 25
fruitfuluess of it, as it was, at that moment, under his
eye, taking its course through God's assembly. But
then, he does more than this, and more than Joel had
done. He traces this river backward and forward —
backward to its source and forward to its month.
He traces it to its source, and does so very care-
fully. This occupies him in his discourse on this
great occasion. He tells us of Jesus — ministering,
crucified, risen, and ascended ; how He had served
in grace and jDOwer here on earth ; how men with
wicked hands had crucified Hun ; how God had
raised Hhn from the dead ; and how He was now ex-
alted at the right hand of God in the heavens. These
things he proves dihgently and carefullyfrom Scripture.
And then, having thus followed the Lord Jesus thi'ough
life and death, and His resurrection up to heaven,
there, in Him — the ascended and glorified Man — he
discovers the source of this mighty river.
He traces it, likewise, onward to the end or issue
of its course. He tells us that it is to reach to the
children of that generation, and also to all that are
afar off, even to as many as the Lord shall call.
What a commentary by an apostle on a prophet is
this ! What enlargement of heart and understandiue:
26 THE MINOR PROrHETS.
in the ways of God is given to us by it ! In what an
affecting, and yet in what a wondrous and glorious
way, is Jesus brought in as having connexion with the
river of God ! He becomes the source of it as soon
as lie, who had once been the serving, crucified, re-
jected One, became the ascended One.*
And now we reach the third chapter. The Lord
comes with a recompence. Other scriptures speak of
this, and tell of the Lord's recompence of the contro-
versy of Zion — the recompence, too, of His temple.
But the same idea fills the mind on reading this chap-
ter. Now, as the end is contemplated, things are
changed. The last are first. The captive is tlie
spoiler. Israel is the head, and not the tail, as was
pledged In the patriarchal age of the nation, when
Abraham was sought by the Gentile, and he, in the
presence of the King of Gerar, the chief man of the
earth in that day, prepared the sacrifice, made the
covenant, and gave the gifts. (Gen. xxi.)
God has taken the whole of the interests of His
people upon Himself. He is summoning the hosts of
* Just as we leam from John vii. This same river is there
tracked in its course through the bellies of the saints. But it is
declared that it could not then begin to flow, for Jesus was not
then glorified. Here, in Acts ii., it has begun to take its coui'se,
because Jesus has now been glorified.
JOEL. 27
the nations to the battle, as once He did the host of
Sisera, captain of Jabin's anny, with his chariots and
his multitudes, to the river Kishon, (Judges iv.) to
meet their doom. The ploughshare must become a
sword, the pruuing-hook a spear, itntil the Gentiles, in
the height of their pride, and in the strength of their
resources, like Egypt at the Red Sea, meet the day of
the Lord — the judgment of God in the valley of
Jehoshaphat,* at the hand of his descending mighty
ones. And the sun and the moon and the stars shall
then be in darkness — not in the light, for which they
were formed, and by which they were filled ; and the
heavens land the earth shall then be shaken, instead of
pursuing their even, steady, staid course, in which
they had been making their roimds for thousands of
years : and all this to witness the terrors of that day.
For the end is come. Judgment is to clear the
scene, and then glory to fill it. The Lord is to dwell
in Zion, and Judah and Jerusalem to be at rest and in
safety. The days of Solomon the peaceful are to be
realised in their millennial fulness, and the eailh itself
be a quiet habitation.
* The judgment of God.
AMOS.
Amos was tlie j)ropliet who went before the earth-
quake in the days of Uzziah, king of Judah. (Chap.
i. 1.) We may say that he was the prophet of that
event (viii. 8 ; ix. 5.)
That earthquake is treated by Zechariah as typical,
as a notice of the Lord's conti'oversy with the workl,
when again there will be earthquakes and pestilences,-
ministers of judgment and vessels of wrath; (Zech.
xiv. 5.)
Accordingly, judgment is the great burthen of Amos'
prophecy, and it therefore served the purpose of
Stephen in Acts vii. — for that moment was also a
cnsis in the history of the Je"\vs. And Stephen there
quotes Amos. (See Acts vii. 42, 43 ; and Amos v.
25—27.)
But, again, Amos tieats the Gentiles as dealt with
by God, as well as the Jews. lie judges them all
alike. He brought the Plulistiues from Caphtor, and
the Syrians from Kir. as he had brought Israel from
AMOS. 29
Egypt. And in coming millennial days, He will
have all the Gentiles called hy His name, as surely as
He will bnild again the fallen tabernacle of David.
(See chaps, i. ii. ix. 7 — 12.)
In this character the word by Amos directly an-
swered for James in Acts xv. where the apostle
was insisting on the independence of Gentile saints,
and that they must not be required to be circum-
cised and to adopt the custom of Israel. Amos
intimates this, and James cites him, to show that
the Gentiles were to be adopted of God (or have
His name called on by them acceptabl}^) in a way
quite independent of the Jews ; or that the Lord
knew them before Israel knew them.
Thus, those two great occasions in the history of
the Church in the New Testament, Stephens' words
in Acts vii. and James' in Acts xv. were served by
the Spirit through Amos, Avho may be regarded as
somewhat a distant and unnoticed portion of the
word of God. But it is beautiful thus to see that
we are to live "by every word of God." We know
not in what obscure corner of the volume, so to
speak, that scriptm'e may lie, which is fitted and
destined by the Holy Ghost to stand by the soul
30 THE MINOR rEOrilETS.
in the trying houi-. Amos, ministering to Stephen
and to James, witnesses this.
I only add a verse or two from George Herbert,
which this finding of the words of Amos in Acts
vii. and again other words of his m Acts xv. may
call to mind. They are in his little piece called
"tlie Holy Scriptures."
" Oil that I knew bow all thy lights combine
And tbo conligurations of their glory !
Seeing not only how each verse cloth shine,
But all the constellations of the story.
T/iis verso marks fJiaf, and both do make a motion
Unto a third, which ten leaves off doth lie:
Then, as dispersed herbs do watch a potion,
These three make np some Christiain's destiny."
OBADIAH.
The Spirit iu the prophets constantly looks beyond
Israel and Judah, taking notice of the nations of the
Gentiles. " An ambassador," as Obadiah speaks " is
sent among the heathen," now and again. Thus,
Xahum was sent to Nineveh, and now Obadiah is
sent to Edom.
But from the very beginning, the Lord had a word
or controversy with Edom, as by His prophet He now
has. " I hated Esau, and laid his mountains and his
heritage waste for the dragons of the wilderness."
Esau was a profane one. He sold his interest in the
Lord for a mess of pottage. He was " a man of the
field" and " a cunnmg himter." He prospered in his
generation. He loved the field, and he knew how to
use it. He set his heart on the present life, and knew
well how to turn its capabilities to the account of his
enjoyments.
His history was destined to be a verj' singular one.
It was also to prove, again and again, the occasion of
32 THE MINOF. PROrHETS.
sorrow to God's people, though it will be found that
Israel had entailed this sorrow on themselves.
" The elder shall serve the younger " was the word
of God in favour of Jacob, ere the children were born.
But Jacob did not wait in patience of faith, till the
Lord in His own time and way made His promise
good. The promise, therefore, gets laden with re-
serves, and difficulties, and burthens. It shall assur-
edly be made good in the end ; but by reason of this
way of Jacob, his unbelief and policy, the elder shall
give the younger much trouble.
Accordingly, Esau got a promise from the Lord,
through his father Isaac, to this effect, " Thy dwell-
ing shall be the fatness of the earth, and of the dew
of heaven from above, and by thy sword shalt thou
live, and shalt serve thy brother ; and it shall come
to pass, when thou shalt have the dominion, thou
shalt break his j'oke from off thy neck." (Gen.
xx^^i.)
All this comes to pass. David, who came of Jacob,
set gan-isons in Edom, and the Edomites became his
servants and brought gifts. But Jehoram, who also
came of Jacob, afterwards loses the Edomites as his
servants and tributaiies. They revolted imder his
OBADIAH. 33
reign, and continue so to this day. (2 Sam. viii. 14 ;
2 Chron. xxi. 8.)
But still, "the elder shall serve the younger." This
promise is yea and amen. Amos is a witness of this
to us, when he says, Israel shall possess Edom.
(Chap, ix.) And our prophet, Obadiah, is another
witness of the same, telling us that by and by saviom-s
shall come to Zion, and judge the mount of Esau.
(See ver. 21.) In early days the Lord gave Mount
Seir to Esau for a possession ; and what He gave him
He would preserve to him; and accordingly. He
would not let Israel, as they passed along the bor-
ders of the laud of Edom, in their wilderness-
jom'ney, to touch with hostile hand a village or a
rood of it. But long after all this, not only after
the wdlderness-journey of the children of Jacob,
but after the times of David and of Jehoram,
Edom made fresh trouble for himself, as we read
in this prophet. He made meny in the day of
Jacob's captivity. He looked on his brother with
congratulation and malice, " in the day that he
became a stranger." He rejoiced in the fall of Jeru-
salem under the sword of the Chaldean. Even Moab
might have been a dwelling-place for the captives of
34 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Zion ; (Isa. xvi. 4 ;) but Edoni stood in the way to cut
them off.*
The Lord needs uo more. lie has a word for Edom
because of this, and He utters it through Obadiah.
For God's controversy -with tlie Gentiles is this, that
in the day when He was angry with His people, they
had helped foi-ward the affliction. This w^e read in
Zech. i. 15. How much more, then, may we expect
to find him angry with Edojn, Jacob's brother, for
looking on him in the day of his calamity !
And the Lord of hosts is jealous for Jerusalem with
great jealousy. Because Zion is His set on earth ;
He has linked His name wath Israel. " Lsrael is the
lot of His inheritance." He is " the God of Israel."
Despite of that people is, therefore, contempt of His
glory and defiance of His power. Accordingly,
Babylon and Edom may well be put together, as they
are in Psalm cxxxviii. Edom rejoiced in the ruui
which Babylon wrought. Ninirod and Esau may be
tracked in the same field, hunters before the Lord ;
the one the bold defier of the God of judgment, the
other the profane despiser of the God of blessing.
* No time is given to this prophecy, but it must have been
uttered between the destruction of Jenisalom and that of the
land of Edom by the Chaldeans, God's sword in that day.
OBADIAH. 35
Babylon is uever restored, neither is Edoin. The
judgment of the millstone awaits the one, perpetual
desolations the other. (Jer. li. ; Ezek. xxxv.) Nimrod
of the lions of Ham, and the circumcised Esau, who
comes even of Abraham according to the flesh, may
lie together as in the same pit.
Surely we may say again that this laying of hands
upon Israel, this despite and hatred of Zion, whether
by the xVssyiian, by Babylon, by Edom, or any other,
is a bold act, bespeaking contempt and defiance of God
Himself, because God Avas with Israel. As Ezekiel
expresses it, "God was there." (See xxxv. 10.)
And this fact the enemies of Israel ought to have
felt. Even had they been employed as the Lord's
rod upon His people, they should have executed
their commission under the sense of what Israel was
or had been ; just in the spirit of the mariners and
ship-master, when they were casting Jonah into the
sea. But this was not so. The Assyrian had once
said, "Shall I not, as I have done unto Samaria
and her idols, so do to Jeiaisalem and her idols'?"
The Chaldean had "brought the vessels of the
house of God into the treasiu-e-house of his god."
And now the Edomite "entered into the gate of
36 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
God's people in the day of their calamity." And
surely all this was after the pattern of apostate
Egypt in the first days, who said, " Who is the
Lord that I shoidd obey His voice to let Israel go?"
Thus it has been, and thus will it be, as the
judgment of the Son of man in tlie day of His
throne of glory lets us learn : " inasniucli as ye did
it not to one of the least of these my brethren, ye
did it not to me." (Matt, xxv.)
All the prophets who have spoken of Edom have
given that people the same character, and have found
in them the same causes of God's controversy with
them. Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Joel, Amos, Oba-
diah, and the Psalmist have a kindred burthen for
Edom. Profaneness or infidel suffering, pride, hatred
of Israel, these are Edom's common marks, the posts
upon Esau. Hatred of Israel is noticed in the history,
as well as by the prophets. (See 2 Chron. xxviii. 17.)
The world was Esau's portion, while Israel was
still a stranger and a pilgrim. His children had
their dukedoms, were kiugs also, and had their
cities; were settled, as in the clefts of the rocks,
where eagles made their nests ; and all this while
Jacob's children were still but houseless wandei*-
OBADIAH. 37
ers in lands that were not theirs, or in Avasted
deserts.
According to all the moral account given of them,
the Edomites are called the people of God's curse,
(Isaiah xxxiv.) and "the people against whom the
Lord has indignation for ever : (Mai. i. ) and, address-
ing Himself to the land of Edom, the Lord says,
" "\Mien the whole earth rejoice th, I ^vill make thee
desolate." (Ezek. xxsv.)
Amalek, I may observe, came of Esau ; and we
know what place Amalek fills in the page of Scripture.
Agag belonged to Amalek and Ilaman to Agag : Doeg
likewise. He was an Edomite, and so is he called ;
and a true Edomite, a man of blood he was. And
when the Lord arises for the avenging of Israel, for
the recompense of the controversy of His people, "the
day of the heathen," as it is called, the land of Edom
is presented to us by the prophets as the scene of that
solemn action, as the gathering-place of the confeder-
ated hostile nations, and where the Lord in judgment
meets them. (Isa. Ixiii.)
I think we may see, from all Scripture, that God
has a special question with this people. Edom was
kindred with Israel, a blood-relation, as we speak.
88 THE MINOR rROniETS,
Israel had spared Edom in theii" passage through the
wilderness, Under the direct command of the Lord.
God's claims on Edom, and that too in company
with Israel, were peculiar; and lie seems to be
treated as the servant who had earned many stripes,
having known his Lord's will, and yet did it not.
But short as Obadiah's word is, it does not close
without taking- notice of the kingdom that follows
the judgment. And this is so with all the prophets.
Resurrection follows upon death, the kingdom and
its glories succeed the judgments. Jesus the Lord
never speaks of Ills death alone, but of His i-esur-
rectiou after it. His prophets, Avho spake by His
Spirit, never speak, I may say, of the judgments
which are to cleanse the earth, witliout telling of
the glory that is to follow. .Vnd according to this,
here in Obadiah we see, at the end, Zion established
and had in admiration; her king, the king of glory,
seated in her when Edom has become a desolation.
AVhen the mount of Esau is judged, and salvation
shall rejoice on momit Zion, and holiness find its
sanctuary there.
JONAH.
OtTR moral corruption is verj^ deep. It is complete.
But at times it will betray itself iu very repulsive
shapes, from which, with all the knowledge of it
which we have we instinctively shrink, confoimded
at the thought that they belong to us. Privileges
under God's own hand may only sen-e to develop
instead of cm'iug this corruption.
The love of distinction was inlaid in us at the
veiy outset of our apostacy. " Ye shall be as
God," was listened to ; to this lust, this love of
distinction, we will, in cold blood, sacrifice all that may
stand in our way, without respect, as it were, to
sex or age, as at the beginning we sacrificed the
Lord Himself to it. (Gen. iii.)
We take God's gifts, and deck ourselves with
them. The Church at Corinth was such an one as
that. Instead of using God's gifts for others, the
brethren there were displaying them. But the man
who had the mind of Christ, in the midst of them,
40 THE MINOR rKOPHETS.
would say, " I would rather speak five words with
my understanding-, that others might be edified,
than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue."
The Jew — the fa^^oured privileged Jew — grievously
sinned iu this way. Rom. ii. convicted him on this
ground. His separation from the nations was of
God ; but instead of using this as witness to the
holiness of God in the midst of a revolted world's
pollutions, he took occasion to exalt himself by it.
He boasted in God and in the law ; but he dis-
honoured God by breaking the law.
Now, Jonah was of the nation of Israel, and
among the prophets of God. He was thus doubly
privileged. But the nature is quick in him to take
advantage of this, and to ser^•e her own fond ends
by this. Yea, and Jonah was a saint of God also ;
but this alone, imder pressure and temptation of the
flesh does not secure victory over nature.
As a prophet, the Lord sends him with a word
against Nineveh, a word of judgment. But he
knew, when he received it, that iu the bosom of
Him who Avas sendbig him,* mercy was rejoicing;
and he reckoned, therefore, that His word, which
* 2 Kings xiv. had given Jonab proof of this.
JONAH. 41
was to speak of judginent, would be set aside by
the grace that abounded in Him. (See chap. iv. 2.)
Was he prepared for this? Could he, a Jew,
suffer it, that a Gentile city should be favoured,
and share the mercy and salvation of God ? Could
he, a prophet, suffer it, that his word would fall to
the ground, and that too, in the presence of the
uncircumcised ■? This was too much. He goes
on board a ship bound for Tarsus, instead of cross-
ing the coimtry to Nineveh. But surely, when we
look at him under such conditions, we may say, it
is a proud apostate, another Adam, that is now in
the merchant-ship on the waters at the Mediterranean.
He was a transgressor like Adam, a transgressor
through pride, like Adam ; and, like Adam, he must
take the sentence of death into himself.
Simple, sure, and yet solemn, all this!
To accept the punishment of our sin is the first
duty of an erring soul. We are not to seek to
right ourselves by an effort of our own, when we
have gone wrong, lest Hormah (Numb, xiv.) be our
portion. Our fii'st duty is to accept, in the spirit
of confession, the pimishment of our sin, to be
humbled under the mighty or chastening hand of
D
42 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
God. (Lev. xxvi. 41.) David did this, and the
kingdom was his again. Jonah now does the same.
" Take me up and cast nie into the sea," said he
to the mariners, in the midst of the tempest, "so
shall the sea be calm unto you, for I know that
for my sake this great tempest is upon j^ou." And
they did so, but with a grace that might well shame
their betters, which bespeaks the hand of God with
them, as it was against Jonah. And Jonah is soon
wrapped among the weeds of the sea, down in the
bottoms of the mountains there.
Could Gentile Nineveh be in a worse plight? AVas
not Jonah's circumcision as uncircumcision ? A Jew
and a ])rophet in the depths of the sea, with the
Aveeds wrapped about his head, because of displeasure
of Jehovah ! Surely, such an one in such a state
may well cease his boastings, and no longer despise
others. Could any one be well lower ? Proud Adam
was behind the trees of the garden ; proud Jonah is
in the bottom of tlie sea.
The Lord by no means clears the guilty. The
Judge of the earth does right. But grace brings sal-
vation. And thus very soon, and it will be only
Jonah's sin that shall be in the bottom of the sea,
JONAH. 43
Jonah himself beiug deUvered, as his first father,
Adam, left his guilt and his covert behind him and
returned to the presence of God.
But Jonah was taught as well as delivered. In the
belly of the fish he finds out that, Jew as he was, he
stood in need of the salvation of God, just as much
as any Gentile could need it. Uncircumcised Nineveh
had been unclean and despised in his eyes, and he
gTudged her God's mei'cy. What would become of
himself now but for that mercy ? He was in prison,
and he deserved to be there. What could do for him,
what reach his condition, but mercy — free, fuU, and
sovereign ? " Salvation is of the Lord," he has to
say. It is not in himself as a privileged Jew, or a
gifted prophet, that he will now rejoice, but only in
Ilim to whom it belongs to bring salvation.
And then the exulting question arises, " Is He the
God of the Jew only? nay, but of the Gentile also."
Om" need of salvation, our dependence on the
sovereignty and grace of God, equalizes us all. " It
is one God that shall justify the chcmncision by faith,
and the imcircumcision through faith." The Jew
must come in on the very same mei'cy that saves the
Gentile. (Rom. xi. 30, 31.) Jonah must be as Nineveh.
44 THE MINOK TEOPHETS.
This is the lessoii the whale's belly taught Jouali,
the Jew. Let Nineveh be what it may, Gentile aud
uncircumcised, a stranger to the commonwealth of
Israel, or anything else, it could not stand more ui
need of the salvatiou of God than the favoured Jew
aud the privileged, gifted prophet at that moment
did, being as in hell for his transgression. It was all
over with him, but for that. But that he gets, and
the fish casts him up on the dry laud, when he had
learnt, and confessed, and declared, " Salvation is of
the Lord."
He was a sign to the Ninevites.
His nation, by and by, will have the like lesson.
No sign is now left with them, but that of this pro-
phet : and they will have to find out, as from the belly
of hell, or as from under the judgment of God, (where
now as a nation they are lying,) that grace and the
redemption it works is their only place and their only
refuge.
But this salvation of God, in which Jonah is
called to rejoice, we know gets all its authority
from the mystery of the cross ; because One who
could do so, for iis sinners, went down under the
dominion of death, under the judgment of sin, aud
JONAH. 45
of whom in that condition, as in the heart of the
earth for three days and three nights, Jonah himself
in the belly of the fish for the hke tune, is made
the type.
-\nd when we think of this, we may say. Scripture
may magnify its oflSce, as the apostle of the Gentiles
does his. It has to reveal God and His counsels ;
and surely it does this in marvellous and fruitful wis-
dom, delivering forth, as here, pieces of history for
our instruction, but at the same time making that his-
tor^r deliver forth samples, and pledges, and fore-
shadowings of further and richer secrets for our more
abundant instruction.
Jonah, as a sign, suits both the Lord Himself, and
Israel as a nation, as the Gospels let us know. Israel
must go through death and resurrection. Their ini-
quity is not to be purged till they die. (Isaiah xxii.)
AU scripture affirms this — the valley of diy bones
illustrates it. But they will be as a risen people in
the daj^ of the kingdom — all thanks and praise to the
death and resurrection of the Son of God for this
and every blessing! And Jonah's death and resur-
rection, as I may again say, applies significantly or
typically to the history of his nation, and to the
46 THE MiNOE rnorHETS.
historj'- of lais Saviour. (See Matt. xii. 40 ; Luke xi.
29, 30.)*
The story of our jiropliet is,' thus, a fruitful one.
True as a narrative, it is significant as a parable ; and
all of us, the elect of God as well as Israel, may,
in our "way, take our place with him, as dead and
risen, the only character that can be ours as saved
sinners.
Returning-, however, to the history itself, we may
now observe that as one that had been thus taught,
taught his need of God's grace, Jonah is sent on a
second message to Nineveh. lie goes, and with
words of judgment on his lips, he enters that gi'eat
citj'', that Ninirod-city, the representation, in that day,
of the pride and daring of a revolted world. "Within
forty days," he proclaims as a herald, " and Nineveh
shall be destroyed."
Thus he "moiu'ued." It was his commission. Re-
sponsively, Niueveh "lamented." The king rose from
his throne, and all the nation put tliomselves in sack-
cloth ; and in such condition, as humbled under the
* Jonah's sin, too, was the expression of the nation's. He and
they have ahko refused the thought of mercy to the Gentiles.
(1 Thoss. ii. 1().) When Paul began to speak of God's naercy to
the Gentiles, the Jews would listen to him no longer. (Acts
xxii. 21, 22.)
JONAH. 47
hand of God, a king- of Nineveh shall find the Lord
as a king' of Israel had before found Him. " I said,"
says David, " I will confess my transgression unto the
Lord, and thou forg'avest the iniquity of my sin."
"'\^'Tio can tell," says this royal Gentile, "if God will
turn, and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger,
that we perish not?" And so it was. "God re-
pented of the evil that he had said that he would do
unto them, and he did it not."
" Is he the God of the Jews only," again I ask
Avith the Apostle ? and with him again I answer,
" Nay, but of the Gentile also." Grace is divine.
Government may know a people, and order them as
such ; grace knows sinners just as they are, whoever,
Avherever. The earth has its arrangements, heaven
holds its court in sovereignty. Nineveh, like Jeru-
salem, is spared ; the hand of the destroying angel is
stayed over the one city as well as over the other.
(1 Chron. xxi. ; Jonah iii.)
But " tell it not in Gath." Let not the daughters
of the Philistines hear of Jonah the Jew in the 4th chap.
Did Lot go a second time to Sodom ? Did Ileze-
kiah, after the going back of the shadow upon the
sun-dial, sin through pride, with the ambassadors of
48 THE MINOE rROniETS.
Babylon ? Did Josiah, after his bumbliug and tender-
ness, go wilfully to the battle against the King of
Egypt? Did Peter, in spite of warnings from his
Lord, deny his Lord? Have you and I, beloved,
forgotten lessons learnt, and correctiugs endured ?
And is Jonah now to be unmindful of the whale's
belly? It is passing wonder; a lesson so sealed, so
stamped, so engraven, as we would judge, and yet so
quickly lost to the soul !
Jonah is displeased. The mercy shown to Nineveh
had made a Gentile important to the God of heaven
and earth ; and this was too mucli for the Jew. The
word of a prophet had suffered wrong, as pride sug-
gested, at the hand of the God of mere}''. Jonah
was very angry. He cannot exactly again take ship
and go to Tarsus ; but, in the spirit of him who lately
did so, he goes outside the city, and he says, " 0
Lord, was not this my saying, Avhen I was yet in my
country ; therefore I fled before unto Tarshish, for I
know that thou art a gracious God, and merciful, slow
to anger, and of great kindness, and repentest thee of
the evil : therefore, now, 0 Lord, take, I beseech thee,
my life from me, for it is better for me to die than to
live."
JONAH. 49
WTiat naughtiness of heart all this was ! Was he
preparing- another whale's belly for himself? He
well deserved it. What troubles we make for our-
selves ! Why did not Lot remain in the holy, peace-
ful tent of Abraham? and wh}^ did he prepare for
himself a first and second furnace in Sodom ? Why
did David bring a sword upon his house, which was
commissioned of the Lord to hang over it unsheathed,
to the day of his death ? "If we would judge
ourselves we should not be judged ; but when
we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord,
that we should not be condemned with the world."
The Lord's voice crieth to the city, and the man
of wisdom shall hear ; but Jonah was deaf. He
has forgotten the lesson of the fish's belly, and he
must now be put to learn the lesson of the withered
gourd.
Outside the city, Jonah prepares a booth for him-
self, that he may sit under it, in his moody, bad
temper, angiy as he Avas ^vith the Lord. The Lord
then prepares a gourd to overshadow Jonah in his
booth, and Jonah is very glad because of the gourd.
But, then, the Lord prepares a worm that eats and
withers up the gourd; and, the sun and the east wind
50 THE MINOR TROPHETS.
beating ou the unsheltered head of Jonah, he is very
angry, and wishes in himself to die.
The Lord, then, in mar\-ellous gentleness, turns all
these simple circumstances into a pag'e of the pro-
foundest and most affecting- instruction. " And God
said to Jonah, Doest thou well to be angiy for the
g'ourd ? And he said, I do well to be angny, even
unto death. Then said the Lord, Thou hast had pity
on the g'ourd, for the which thou hast not laboured,
neither madst it g'row, which came up in a nig'ht and
perished in a night ; and should not I spare Nineveh,
that great city wherein are more than sixscore thou-
sand persons that cannot discern between their right
hand and tlieir left hand, and also much cattle."
The prophet's delight in the gourd is but the faint
reflection of the Lord's delight in the mercy that visits
the creatures of His hand — be they -where they may,
at Nineveh, or Jerusalem, or elsewhere, it matters not.
And if Jonah would fain have the gourd spared, he
must allow rei)entant Nineveh to be spared. Out of
his own month he shall be judged: Jonah shall witness
for the Lord against himself.
»
It is, indeed, a ])recious and an excellent word.
Jonah had been sent down to learn the ffrace of God
JONAH, 51
in one character of it, and now has he been taught it
in another : i.e., his need of it, and God's delight in it.
The whale's belly, the belly of hell, where he once
was, had taught him his own need of " salvation," in
that sovereignty of it, in that magnificent height and
depth of it, that could stretch, as from the throne of
power in the highest heavens, doAvn to the bottom of
the seas in the lowest, to deliver a captive there under
the righteous judgment of God. The withered gourd
now teaches him (as all the parables in Luke xv. have
also taught us) how the blessed Lord, the Creator of
the ends of the earth, the Lord of the cattle on the
thousand hills, whether in Assyria or Judea, delights
in His creatures, the works of Ilis hands, finding His
rest and refreshment in the mercy that spares them,,
when they repent and turn to Him.
M I C A H .
This prophet is meutioned and quoted in Jer. xxvi. 18.
lie was called to be one of the Lord's watchmen, much
at the same time with Isaiah, and it was a marked
time. The history of things in Judah was taking a
.peculiar character, and things in Israel were ripening
for the sickle of the Assyrian. It was a day in im-
poi-tance only second to the day of the Chaldean ; but
it was second to that, I grant. For the captivity of
Israel, or the removal of the kingdom of the Ten
Tribes, did not involve the house of God as did that
of Judali. The glory was still in the land, though
Israel had gone away to the river Gozan. But the
(Jhaldean sacked the city of the king, and spoiled the
sanctuary of God ; and the glory had to depart when
Judah became a ca^itive and Jerusalem a desolation.
And as the pr(»i)hetic spirit was largely poured out in
that day of the Chaldean, as in Jeremiah, Ezekiel,
Daniel, Ilabakkuk, Zephaniah, and others, so was it
now, as in Isaiah, Ilosea, Micah, and others.
MICAH. 53
2 Kings xvii. is an important scripture in connexion
■vvitli Micah. It details the sins of Israel on the
ground of which the captivity of the Ten Tribes had
come. It gives us an account also of the beginniug
of that people who, in the New Testament, are called,
" Samaritans." It shows us their origin as a religious
sect, holding truth, which the Jew had corrupted by
a mixture with the various lies which the heathen con-
querors of Israel had brought -with them into the land.
As to this little book of Micah we may see it in
three parts :
Chaps, i. — iii. These chapters give us a gloomy bur-
then over the sins and consequent miseries of Israel
and Judah.
Chaps, iv., v. These chapters anticipate the political or
national recovery of the people.
Chaps, li., vii. These chapters exhibit their experience
or moral recovery.
Chaps, i. — iii. The strain begins with anticipations
of judgment, specially on Samaria, but not entirely
overlooking Jerusalem, and then details the sins which
led to this ; thus, in prophetic style, telling us what
we may have aheady read in the historic style, in
that chapter referred to, 2 Kings xvii.
54 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Judah had transgressed as well as Israel, and the
Assyrian rod, now prepared by the L(jrd in righteous
anger, is raised against Jerusalem as \vell as Samaria.
The day of Ahaz there, had been as the day of Hoshea
here. But Ilezekiah, who came after Ahaz, did right
in the sight of the Lord, and therefore the Lord de-
bated with His rod, and the Assyrian did not prevail
over Judah, as he had over Israel.
Such was the condition of things in those days, and
Micah spoke as the Lord's watchman.
Princes, priests, prophets, and people, are all seve-
rally challenged by him, and are all found guilty and
condemned. That land which had been redeemed out
of the hand of the Amorites, and been made the clean
vessel among the nations, and the Lord's dwelling
place, has now acquired for itself another character
altogether; and now, if there be any ear to hear, any
circumcised heart among the people, they are ad-
dressed in these words, concerning this land, " arise,
depart, for this is not your rest, it is polluted." Sti-ange
and humbling indeed ! IIow has the fine gold become
dim !
Waste and desolation are to follow in the train of
pollution. But in the midst of all this, the prophet
MICAH. 55
himself is full of power by the Spuit of the Lord, and
he talks of judgment in the hearing of the nations.
" Therefore shall Zion for your sake be ploughed as a
field ; and Jerusalem shall become heaps upon the
mountains of the house of Israel, and the mountain of
the house as the high places of the forest."
Chaps, iv., V. The very first expression of the
goodly estate of Zion in the days of the kingdom, here
called " the last days," which Micah gives us in these
chapters, is that fine one — presented also by Isaiah in
his second chapter — i.e., the peoples of the earth, all
the world over, coming up to her to learn the Avays or
statutes of the king of glory then seated there.
This is highly characteristic. Now, in this time of
the ministry of grace, the Saviour's messengers go
forth, carrj^ng glad tidings with them, and beseeching
sinners to be reconciled. For love is active in good-
ness ; it busies itself at its own cost about the blessing
of others. But royalty and judgment take a different
attitude. Judgment enthrones itself, and will he tvaited
upon and Mstened to. If a king reign in righteousness,
the people must be in attendance. His courts must
be fiUed. His will is to be learned and observed : and
thus it is here.
56 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
But if it be a sceptre of rig-hteousness, it sliall be
also of peace ; and a willing-, happy world shall wit-
ness that a niorning" has risen without clouds, and
that another Solomon, a greater than Solomon, has
taken nilc in Zion over the whole earth. (2 Sam.
xxiii. 3, 4.) The remnant now scattered are brought
home ; and in Jerusalem the Lord, the Messiah, reig'us
over them. His natural-born subjects.
The prophet speaks of all this, and then turning- to
Judah, leaves the Assyrian of his day for the Chaldean
of a coming da}- ; and the daughter of Zion is taught
to know that she nmst go to Babylon, ere she can bo
brought forth in the majesty that is to be hers in the
days of the kingdom. It is in Babylon her pains, her
travailing is to end ; but the progress of the delivery-
is noticed ; " Thou shalt go forth out of the city, and
thou shalt dwell in the field, and thou shalt go even to
Babylon, and there shalt thou be delivered, there the
Lord shall redeem thee from the hand of thine ene-
mies." Zion 'must reach her joy through captivity
and come to honour through soi-e sorrow. As it had
been told Abraham of old, that his seed should
sojourn in a strange land for centuries, ere thej'
came to their inheritance ; so it was — the brick-kilns
MICAH. 57
of Egypt went before the victories of Joshua. And
uow again, Babylon is as a second Egypt to the children
of Zion, ere "the first dominion" came to them,
ere the palmy days of David and Solomon be restored.
The day of the Chaldean leads the prophet to the
day of Israel's confederated enemies at the close.
(Jer. iv. lO,* 11.) This closing ^dsitation will be
severe, and the rejection of Christ is brought forward
as the occasion and the warrant for this. Judah in-
sulted Messiah when lie came to them. The Judge
of Israel was smitten on the cheek. (Mat. xxvii. 30.)
But the One whom they refused and insulted, shall be
their only hope. This is Joseph again, and Moses
again. Those whom the nation once refused, are their
only strength and expectation in the day of their
calamity. And thus, hecause of Messiah, whom they
once insulted, the Assyrian of the last days shall seek
to trouble Israel in vain.
The condition of the people under such a Messiah
is then detailed. The}'' shall be purified, while their
enemies shall be destroyed. The remnant shall uow
" abide," because their Messiah in streug-th and
* Between the times of these two verses there is a long interval.
not noticed, however, by Micah.
E
r)S THE MINOR rEOPHETS.
majesty "shall be great unto the ends of tlie earth."
They shall be also as "dew from the Lord," and as
" a young lion among the flocks," the occasion of
either blessing or judgment to all around them.
And in the midst of all this, Messiah the ruler is
presented in various glories, personal and oiEcial; and
poor Bethlehem, little in Judah, is honoured because
of Him. For as the poor carpenter's wife of Nazereth,
His mother, so the poor town of Bethlehem, His
buth-place, take honour and blessing because of Him.
This leaves us at the end of chap. v.
Chaps, vi., vii. The earlier chapters of this prophet
have been giving us a view of the Lord's hand with
Israel : here we get the way of His Spirit with them.
These two subjects very much occupy all the prophets
some way or another. They constitute the political
and the moral history of God's people, all the restor-
ation aud the conversion of Israel.
The work of the Spirit, in these chapters of Micah,
is given to us in th^ form of a dialogue. The exer-
cises of the soul are delineated as in a living person,
and the dealings of God in answer are given to us as
upon the voice of the Lord Himself ; and, therefore,
these chapters may remind us of the Psalms, where
MICAH. 59
the pulses of the heart are so coustantly felt, and the
path of the spu*it of a man as led of God is so
variously tracked. We get persomUitij here as there.
It is the Lord that opeus this dialogue, lie chal-
lenges the ways of His people ; aud this He does as
in the hearing of the mountains and the hills and the
foundations of the eaith. He refuses not, as it weie,
to let the whole creation be present when He judges.
The Judge of all the earth does right ; therefore let
heaven and earth wait as in the courts of His right-
eousness, aud before the throne of His judgments.
(See Deut. xxxii. 1.)
This challenge has been heard by a remnant, aud
they answer it in verses 6, 7. They are awakened
to know the sword of the Lord which has now been
lifted u}). They are alarmed, and would fain find a
refuge. Ignorance of God aud His ways and truth
mark their words. But no matter. It is no longer
the sleep or stupidity of the soul : there has been a
quickening.
The Lord shortly answers them. He lets the
awakened, enquiring ones learn what is " good " and
what is " lequired." That wh'ch is "good" is shown
to them. God reveals it, as we know, as belonging
60 THE MINOK PKOniETS.
to Himself. '• There is none g-ood but one, that is
God." The gosi'jel reveals this in its fulness. That
which is "required," or demanded, is nothing- of man's
cattle for offerbigs ; it is not rivers of oil, or the fmit of
his body : it is that only which is moralb/ fitting, that we
should do justly, love mercy, and walk lumibly . (Yer. 8. )
This is perfect in its place. But having- thus shortly
answered the remnant, (the " man." as he is here
called, the one tliat had ears to heai- in the midst of
the reprobate nation.) the Lord goes on with His
challenges of the nation, detailing still fui-ther, and
with awful disclosures, the Avays and iniquities of
Israel. For His voice was to the city, though He
will surely hear and answer the cry of His remnant,
who have heard His rod and Him that hath appointed
it. (Yer. 9— IG.)
The quickened ones then, at once, take up the
word, and seal the judgment which had been just
pronounced, owning that things were indeed as bad as
they could Ijc, that few were left to form a goodly
seed in the midst of the people, and that the nearest
and the dearest relationships were violated. But they
avoid where they had not found their refuge and relief,
even in God Himself, so that they could challenge all
MICAH. 61
that might oppose them. Aud yet, with all this
happy, holy boldness in the presence of their enemies,
they humble themselves imder the Lord's hand, know-
ing and owning that, as of a sinning, unclean people,
they had no answer f(jr llim. (Chap. vii. 1 — 10.)
To this the Lord again replies, and it is beautiful.
If the godly had just set their seal to the righteous-
ness of His judgments, lie now, in His way, sets His
seal to their expectations, and talks to them of the day
when their captivity should be turned — when they
should be re-established in their own land and city,
and the purposes of their adversaries be all frustrated,
and when they should be sought by the nations
arouiid them, aftei- their penal righteous desolations.
(Ver. 11—13.)
Again the remnant take up the word. Beuig en-
couraged, they seek for a restoration of those days,
when all the tribes were at home in their inheritance,
even in the distant eastern places of Bashan and
Gilead. (Ver. 14.)
The Lord, in answering', exceeds this desire ; for
grace, I may surely say, abounds over faith, as well
as over sin. Sin does not exhaust it — faith does not
measure it. The Lord here pledges that the da}' of
G2 THE MINOR TROPHETS.
tlie Exodus shall be reuewed, and that Ilis Israel shall
again enjoy strange and magnificent disjilays of His
power on their behalf, as once they did. when ITe
brought them forth from the laud of Egypt. (Ver.
15—17.)
These gracious words, however, the remnant inter-
rupt, insisting (as it were, when they had listened to
the stoiy of these mercies) on giving all the glory to
God, and that the secret of their deliverance ]ay in
the fear of Ilim, which their enemies were then to
know. This inteiTuption is seen in the last clause of
verse 17.
But then, having thus taken the words to them-
selves, ascribing the honour (^f these great, final^
delivering mei'cies to the Lord alone, they continue in
that strain ; and in fervency of spirit utter the praise*
of His grace and faithfulness. (Ver. 18 — 20.)
NAHUM.
The Ninevite was tlie first great man of the earth in
the age of the kingdom, as 1 may speak ; as Niinrod,
the ancestor, as to territory, of the Ninevite, had been
the great man of the earth in the earlier age of the
fathers. Nimrod had affected dominion and empire
then, when as yet things were in simpler, and prknitive
condition. Now that kuigdoms have been formed,
and nations rather than families overspread the earth,
the king of Nineveh, in Nimrod-pride and worldliness,
affects dominion and empire in the midst of them.
He is not one of the great imperial powers that are
looked at in Daniel. lie is neither the head of gold,
nor the breast of silvei-, nor the thighs of brass, nor
the legs of iron. Such an image had not begun to be
formed in the day of Nineveh, when the king of
Assyria was supreme in the world. But among the
kingdoms which were then formed, in days preceding
the day of the Chaldean head of gold, he was eminent.
Asshur had can-ied away captive many of them.
64 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Amaiek was then gone from the scene, and the
Kenites had been wasted until their full removal was
accomplislied by the Assj'rians (Num. xxiv. 20 — 22.)
And further, the Assyrians had insulted and reduced
that people' wlioni the Lord CJod of heaven and earth
had chosen as the lot of Ilis inheritance, and fonned
For Himself.
The Lord, in that action, had used him as a lod
upon His disobedient, rebellious Israel ; but '• he
meant not so." Ife purposed " to prey the prey, and
to spoil the spoil." Pride gives him his only language,
"Are not my princes altogether kings," he says — "as
my hand hath formed the kingdoms of the idols, and
whose graven images did excel those of Jerusalem
and of Samaria, shall I not, as I have done unto
Samaria and hei- idols, so do. to Jerusalem and her
idols ? " (Isa. X.) The Lord God was angry. He
pronounces a burthen upon him, and Nahum deliveivs
it. " The Lord is a jealous God and a revenger."
The ministry of Jonah, as Avell as of Nahum, had
respect to Nineveh. We have considered that already
in our chapter on Jonah's prophecy. Jonah pre-
ceded Nahum, it may be, about 120 years. Lender
the word of Jonah, Nineveh had repented; but the
NAHUM. 65
word which now follows by Nahum is a notice of
judgment, final judgment, judgment that is to make
an utter end. "Affliction," says the prophet, " shall
not rise up the second time."
What are we to say then of Nineveh's repentance
in the day of Jonah ? Was it, as the morning cloud,
or early dew, a goodness that passed away .' It may
have been such. Or, it may have been reformation^
and a [genuine work like that in another Gentile
world, the Christendom of this present age. It wor-
ked its fruit and had its blessing at the time, and it
would seem, left its witness behind it, even in this
distant day of Nahum (see i. 7.) There may have
been a I'emnant in Nineveh ! I say not otherwise.
But at the most it was biit a blesshig in the cluster.
" My leanness, my leanness," Nineveh surely had to
say. The repentance in the day of Jonah, Uke the
Reformation in Christendom, secured nothing — it did
not prepare Nineveh for glory, or for a place in the
kingdom of God. Whatever may have been the
moral fruit of it in a remnant in this distant day of
Nahum, Nineveh, as a city or kingdom, had returned,
like a sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the
mire, and ripened herself for the cutting off of the land.
66 THE MINOU PROPHETS.
This is a figure for ns to study, a voice for us to
hear.
What did Jeboshaphat-days, or Ilezekiah-days, or
Josiah-days, for Jerusalem ? Did judgment after such
(lays enter by the hand of the Chaldean, though
they were very fair and i)romising ? We know it did.
Did Nineveh want the day of the Lord, though onco
upon a time the king there descended from his throne
and sat in ashes, and man and beast were clothed in
sackcloth, and neither did eat nor drink? Yes, we
know this also. And I may ask again, What has
Reformation done for Christendom? Coming judg-
ments, and liot the Reformation, or progress, or
education for the million, will prepare tlie woi'ld for
the glory and kingdom of the Lord. But further.
The earlier history of God's deaUng with Nineveh by
the hand of Jonah may, in this day of judgment
announced by Nahum, witness to us that lie is " slow
to anger" — for lie sent a preacher then to warn, and
turn them to that repentance which lie i-eceived, and
spared them. But He that is slow to anger, does not
" acquit the wicked" (see ch. i. 3). There is a sepa-
rating between the precious and the vile. " lie knows
them that trust in Ilim." even the remnant in Nineveh
NAHUM. 67
if there be such, as we said before (chap. i. 7) ; but
the Judge of all the earth, like the Judge of Sodom
who stood of old before Abraham, " will do right."
" I doubt not," says auother, " that the invasion of
Sennacherib was the occasion of this prophecy ; but
most evidently it goes much beyond that event, and
the judgment is final. And this is another instance of
that which we so frequently observe in the prophets —
a partial judgment serving as a warning or an en-
couragement to the people of God, while it was only
a forerunner of a future judgment in which all the
dealings of God would be summed up and manifested."'
Surely the Assyrian is a mystic or representative per-
son, as well as a real individual. Isaiah so looks at
him. And this was easy and natural : for the
Assyrian began the captivities of God's people, and
in his day represented the enmity of the earth, the
enmity of the Gentile world, to God and His people.
The Spirit, therefore, in the prophets, sees the GentUe
in him, and looks along the vista which then opened,
to the very end of the earth's history imder the Gen-
tile or the man of the world, when the full-measured
and ripened itilquity of man shall call forth the closings
clearing judgments of God.
68 THE MINOR TROPHETS.
But does judgtneut close the story ? That never
has been, nor could it be. It only makes way for the
purpose of God. The judgment of this " present evil
world " Avill introduce the millenium or '"the world to
come." And Israel Avill be received as the seal and.
jiledge of that brii^ht and liappy age — as our prophet
says, '' though I have afflicted thee, I will afflict thee
no more ; and now will 1 break his yoke from olT
thee, and will burst thy bonds asunder. 0 Judah,
keep th}- solemn feasts, perform th}- aows, for
the wicked shall no more pass through thee, he is
utterly cut off" (see ch. i. 12—15). Or, in the
words of one of ourselves, the saints of Ood in this
day, " the vengeance of God is the deliverance of the
world from the ojipression ;i!id misery of the yoke of
the enemy and of lust, that it may flourish mider the
peaceful eye of its Deliverer."
Come, Lord Jesus ! Do not present doings of the
Spirit show a rapid gathering in of the elect unto
the hastening of that hour ?
HABAKKUK.
We must begin with God, as sinners, on the principle
of faith, and go on with Him to the end, as saints, ou
the same principle. " The just shall live by faith."
(See Eom. i. 17 ; Gal. iii. 11 ; Ileb. x. 38 ; taken from
Hab. ii. 4.)
This prophecy of Habakkuk has great moral value
for us. But besides this, it is seasonable now ; for in
this our day things are ripening to a crisis, as they
were in the day of Habakkuk.
His was a day when the iniquities of the professing
people of God were moving the holy anger and sor-
row of this man of God. And yet, while his soul was
thus vexed with their evil conversation, Ins heart
would feel for tlieir misery, and, he would earnestly
make their cause his own.
I would listen to him a little carefull}* for a few
minutes, and observe upon his woi'ds as they show
themselves to us in their natural parts and order.
Chap. i. 1 — 4. In these opening verses, as I noticed
70 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
already, the prophet's righteous soiU is vexed with the
evil couversation of his nation. He presents the sad,
reprobate scene that was lying under his eye to the
notice of the Lord. He cries out of violence, and
grievance, and spoiling', and strife, and such like
iniquity, found, as it was, in tlie very midst of God's
people.
Vers. 5 — 11. In His answer to this cry of Uis
servant, the Lord seems, at the first, to vindicate and
to join with it. He enters into the resentment of the
moral state of Israel, which Ilabakkuk was so deeply
feeling. lie challenges His people as "heathen" —
for such they would prove themselves to be, by not
believing the work that He himself was purposing to
work among them. lie counts their circumcision as
uncircumcision. The apostle, (juoting this word from
•our prophet, calls them " despisers." (Acts xiii. 41.)
The Lord, therefore, thus, at the first, follows the
story of Israel's iniquities, wliich the prophet had
been rehearsing; and anticipates their great crowning,
closing iniquity — the rejection of Ills word and work
through unbelief.
But having done this. He lets the prophet know,
that this iniquity which had been vexing his soul, and
HABAKKUK. 71
against which he had been crying- to Ilim, should not
go unpunished, for that the Chaldean sword should
soon enter the land to avenge the quarrel of His
holiness.
Vers. 12 — 17. Hearing this, Habakkuk is terribly
alanned. Like Moses, in such a case, he cannot be
prepared for this ; nor can his heart, that so cared for
his people, welcome the Chaldean, however his soul
may be angry with their evil ways.
In the deepest strain of fear and of feeling, and in
the skilfulness of an advocate whose affections were
making him eloquent, he pleads against the Chaldean,
assured that the Lord would not give over His own
people, however guilty they might be, to the reckless
wi'ath of those who were still more wicked than them-
selves. Moreover, he seeks that this terrible scourge
may in the Lord's grace, be only for connections and not
for destruction^ to Israel.
All this is a sweet state of soul in our prophet.
Habakkuk, perhaps, is more of a Jeremiah than any
of the prophets. He lives more personcdhj in the
scenes he was describing than is common. He feels
everything — and so did Jeremiah. They lived the
prophet, and not merely s-pohe as such.
V
72 THE MINOR rKornETS.
Chap. ii. I. And luiviiig- thus unburtheued his heart
and pleaded with tlie r.ord, he waits for the answer.
His heait is witli liis peoi)le, and he must watch for
" the end of the Lord." lie is no hireling ; he cares
for tlie flock, and cainiot flee. His service for Israel
had not been lightly taken up, and it cannot therefore
Ijo quickly laid down. lie must see the end of it ;
and for this, he sets himself uj^on the watch-towei'.
Vei's. 2 — 20. Here we read the Lord's answer — and
it is full of solemn, interesting meaning. Habakkiik
shall not be disappointed; he shall not be on his tower
for nothing. As Daniel's fasting for his twentj^-oue
days, so Habakkuk's watching on the tower shall be
rewai'ded.
The Lord, however, beguis his answer by stating
some strong', leading facts, or rather principles of truth.
1. That the vision or prophecy was to be clearly
aimounced.
2. That all was to remain in vision, or unfulfilled,
for a season.
3. That during that season the man of the world
would ripen himself in pride for the judgment of God.
4. That during the same season the saint should
live by faith.
HABAKKUK. 73
5. That iu due season, God's appointed time, the
vision sliould speak, the prophecy be fidfilled, so that
the end was surely worth waiting for.
Then, having laid down these facts or principles,
the Lord goes on to announce, to the welcoming ear
of the prophet, the awful judgments that were to
overtake the Chaldean.
Chap. iii. Having listened to this from his watch-
tower, the prophet, as I may say, descends to speak
\vith the Lord. Having been graciously visited and
answered on the tower, he will now enter the sanc-
tuar}^, as with the voice of prayer and praise, and iu
the power of that faith which had accepted the answer
of Grod, rejoiced in it, and counted on still further
blessing.
But these his closing words are very beautiful.
The answer he had just received seems at once to
put him in spirit, back to the earliest days of his
nation, or the time of the salvation of God, when He
was beginning to make Israel His people. The
Chaldean reminded him of the Egyptian and of the
Amorite. And he designs that the Lord would do for
Israel now iu the face of the Chaldean, what in those
primitive days He had done for them in the face of the
F
74 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Egyptian and the Amoiite. He seeks that there may
be "a revival" — that now iu the midst of the years
God would do the works which so woudrously marked
the heginning of the years. And with affecting beauty,
and iu the broken style of one who was following the
currents of a heart alive to its subject, he rehearses,
as in the divine presence, those early works of
Jehovah in behalf of Israel, whether accomplished in
Egypt, or in the wilderness, or in Canaan, that (if I
maj so speak), the Lord might look at those mighty
doings of His, and do the like in these present Chal-
dean times. It is as if Ilabakkuk were lifting up the
bow under the eye of God in the day of the cloud ; so
that, looking at it, lie might remember His covenant,
His grace, and His power for His saints. His promises
and His mercies, and save His people from this
threatened overwhelming.
For as yet the Lord had only promised judgment
on the Chaldean. (See chap, ii.) He had not spoken
of the final restoration and glory of Isi'aol ; but
Ilabakkuk must have this also promised and secured ;
and therefore he prays for " a revival " of His work
in behalf of Israel.
And then, at the very end, as the just man living by
HABAKKUK. 75
faith, whom the Lord's word had already told hun of,
(see chap, ii.) he utters his present fall coufidence in
God. He tells, indeed, how the Lord's word about
the couiiug- of the Chaldeau had frightened him, so
that he was as one astonished, or as a dead man ; but
that now, as a man of faith, he knows that he has but
to wait, through a season of discipline and patience,
assured that all will end in the salvation of God. And
in the joyous assurance of this, he slugs to the chief
singer on his stringed instrument; and as Jehoshaphat
entered the battle with the soug of victory on his lips,
so Habakknk now enters on the season of the \'isiou,
or of the exercise of faith and patience, in the joy of
the Lord, and with a song prepared as for a day of glory.
Now, upon this, we may again say, the present day
may put us much in company'' with Habakknk. The
man of God looks round, and sees everything in
Christendom to provoke the resentment of holiness,
or to vex the righteous soul. But while he resents
the thing, he would fain plead for the people, like
Habakkuk ; and, like him again, turn to God, with his
burthens and his expectations. But somewhat beyond
our prophet, the believer now, from the fuller instruc-
tions of God, ^jows there will be " a revival," and does
76 THE MINOli PROPHETS.
uot merely pray for it. I [e knows that the judgment.s
whicli are coming", more solemn than that by the hand
of the Chaldean, will only clear the earth of all that
offends, take out of it all that are corrupting it, and
thus lead to its redemption, and not to its destruction.
And he knows that a brighter, richer condition will
mark its end, thaii that which did its beginning — for
"the creation itself shall be delivered from the
bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of
the children of God." So that it will not be merely
a revival of early days in the history of either
Israel or the earth ; but their latter end, like that
of Job, will be moie than their beginning.
And I would add a practical word upon the ex-
perience of Ilabakkuk, which is so blessed at the
end. " I will rejoice in the Lord," he says, " although
the fig-trees shall not blossom, neither shall fruit
be in the vines."
To live happily in the love of God. through
Jesus, is the glory He seeks at our hand — sinner,
self-rained, as we are. And to do this, like Ilabakkuk
in spite of the contradiction of circumstances, makes
this service and worship still more excellent — the fruit,
as it surely is, of His grace and iuworking power.
HABAKKUK. 77
Man seeks to live plecmirahhj, but he has no care
to Hve happily. He would live pleasurably, or in
the sunshine of favouring-, flattering* circumstances;
but to live happily, or in the favour of God, in
the light of His countenance, the sense of His
love, and the hope of His presence in glory, this
is not what man cares about. And it is God's
work in the heart and conscience, when man is be-
thinking himself, and seeking to cease from living
pleasurably, that he may live happily — find his life
only iji the greatest of all circumstances, that is,
in his relation to God, having discovered, through
grace, that that relationship is settled for him for
ever, in the precious reconciliation accomplished in
the blood of Christ.
And let me still take on me to add another word
on w^hat the Lord says as to the Chaldean in chap,
ii. 14. "-The earth shall be filled with the knowledge
of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the
sea."
The pride of man, whether he be Chaldean or
any other, that would affect universal empire, has
ever been, and shall still be, judged and broken ;
and that dominion shall be reserved for Jesus ".the
78 THE MINOR PROPFTETS.
Lord," and for llim unly. lie shall be made higher
than the kings of the earth, and His kingdom shall
be from sea to sea, and I'rom tlie river to the
ends of the earth. Neither the past or jjresent im-
belief of Ilis own nation, Israel, nor the purposes
and attempts of any of the Gentiles, shall hinder
this. (See Num. xiv. 21 : Ilab. ii. 14.) For, in
the coming peaceful days of tlie sceptie of the
righteous One, this shall be accomplished. (See
Isa. xi. 9).
The people shall labour after this, but they shall
weary themselves for nothing, foi- " very vanity."
(Chapter ii. 13). But Jesus shall have it. " Blessed
be his glorious name for ever, and let the whole
earth be filled with his glory. Ameii and amen."
(Ps. IxxU).
ZEPHANIAH.
Veey cominonl J iu the propliets, glory touches judgment.
These are their themes, with the iniquity that pro-
vokes the judgment, and the characters that attach to
the glory that follows.
But these things, judg-ment on iniquity and glory
succeeding, have been, again and again, in the history^
as they are, again and again, iu the prophecy, of Scrip-
ture.
The day of Noah was siich a day — a day when
judgment introduced glory, or a new world. So the
judgment on Egypt was accompanied or waited on by
the deliverance of Israel, their triumphant song-, the
presence of the glory in the midst of them, and their
journey onward to the land of promise. So the
judgment on the Canaanites or Amorites was at once
followed by Israel's taking of their inheritance.
The day of Nebuchadnezzar was a kindred day of
judgment. The spirit of prophecy lingers over it.
Not only does it anticipate it in earlier prophets, as
80 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Isaiah and Micah, but it is, at the time, or about the
time, poured out very largely, as Jeremiah, Ezekiel,
Daniel, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah witness.
And that day, tlie day of the Chaldean invasion and
triumph, was truly a remarkable crisis. The iniquity
of the kingdom of Judah was then full, as that of the
Amorites had been in the day of Joshua. Sad, how-
ever, it is indeed, that things should have taken such
a turn; tliat the iniquity of the Jew was now full, and
that the Gentile was called out to judge it, as once
the iniquity of the Gentile had been full, and the Jew,
the man of God, was called out to judge it.
But the Chaldean was not only a real, but a repre-
sentative, or mysterious person. He stands forth in
the prophets as telling us of coming and final judg-
ments. His sword visited not only Judah and Jeni-
salem, but the surrounding nations. Ilis was a day
in which the God of all the earth was rising up, and
the world had to keep silence. It was a miniature or
inchoative judgment of all the nations. It was " the
day of the Lord," in spirit or in principle. The
sword was furbished for the slaughter. The domi-
nion went from " the daughter of Jerusalem," for
the house of David was reprobate, and the Chaldean
ZEPHANIAH. 81
took the throne under God, so to speak, away from
the Jew.
Judgment, however, never closes the scene. As
we said, giory touches judgment, in the ways of God.
Judgment cleans out the vessel, and then glory fills
it. It takes away what hinders tlie {jreseuce of the
Lord, and then the kingdom is established and dis-
played, as Zephaniah, together with all the prophets,
show us. The Apocalypse is the great closing wit-
ness of this. There judgment makes way for glory
again ; and that, finalhj — in other words, that which
offends and does iniquity, the great reprobate, apos-
tate energies, are all judged and removed, and the
day of millennium brightness begins to run its course.
It is judgment, judgment ; over them sing, over
them sing ; in continuous succession, because no
steward of God has been faithful, or given an ac-
count of his stewardship. Adam, the i^v^^^ the Gen-
tile, the candlestick, all, hi their day, have been
untrue to Him that appointed them ; and '- God
standeth in the congregation of the mighty, He
judgeth among the gods." The garden was lost by
Adam: the land of their fathers by their children,
or Canaan by Israel; the Gentile was as faithless
82 THE MINOR PROPHETS,
as they, and power passed from the head of gold
to the breasts and arms of silver, thence to the
belly and thig-hs of brass, and then to the legs
of iron, and the feet which were of iron and clay.
There was no delivering up to God of that which had
been received from Him. The stewards have been
removed, one after the other, and their stewardships
ha\'e been taken away from them, in the stead of
their delivering of them up, or giving a just account
of thein. Thus it has ever been, and thus is it still,
and there is no exception to this till we look at Jesus.
With Him all stewardships are accounted for ; for
which is committed to Ilim in the due season is
delivered np^ and not ial-en away. And, what a
volume, I may say, on the glories of Christ does
that one sentence in 1 Cor. xv. write for us : " then
Cometh the end, when he shall have delivered up
the kingdom to God." It signalizes Him in the
face of the whole world, and in contrast with all
the generations of the children of men, from the
very beginning to the very end. Every stewardship
committed to others is taken away, because of the
faithless hand that had betrayed it ; but He delivers
up His, as having fulfilled all the purpose of Him
ZEPHANIAH. 83
who had entrusted Ilim with it. In Christ, but hi
Christ only, all the promises of God are yea and amen.
When He takes the kingdom He will at the end,
or in the due moment, " deliver it up." Precious
words ! But we see the kingdom taken away from
Saul, ajid from the house of David ; and then, when
given to the Gentile, takeu away from him in like
manner, again and again, in a series of judgments
or overturnings, till He came whose right it is ; and
then for the first time we get a stewardship accounted
for, and a kingdom delivered up.
In this day of the Chaldean, on which we are now
looking, with Zephaniah, everything, as it were, is
judged. As in the Apocalyptic day, or as before
the great white throne, all is judged personally or indi-
viditalli/, so now in the light of the sword of Nebu-
chadnezzar, all is judged nationally. There is Judah,
and there is Jerusalem ; and the people around Edom,
the Philistines, the Ammonites, the Ethiopians and
the Assyrians ; north, south, east, and west, all come
in for this common and complete exposure, and that^
too, in all its minute distinctions ; the remnant of
Baal, the name of the Chemarims with the priests,
idolaters, those who swear by the Tjord and by
«4 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Malchain, the backsliders and the careless, and those
who wear strange apparel, are all severally visited ;
and the candle of tlie Lord searches out those who
are settled on their lees, and wlio despise the fear of
judgment. Nothing escapes. All is naked and open
to the eyes of ITim Avith wliom Ave have to do. ^Vnd
the Judge of all the world does right ; they that have
deserved many stripes get them, 'while others are
beaten with as few; for God is no respecter of
persons. He renders to every man according to
his deeds.
But, "the remnant accordhig to the election of
gi'ace" are recognised here in Zephaniah, as every-
where. " The meek of tlie earth," they are called ;
and they are told to wait on the Lord under the hope
that they shall be hid in the day of the Lord's anger.
(Chap. ii. 3 ; iii. 8.)
And then, as we said, glory comes in aftei- judg-
ment. Some features of millennial, blessedness are
presented to us. It is told us, that with one life or
language the nations of that kingdom, " the world to
come," shall worship the Lord the God of Israel.
The confusion of Babel shall be at an end ; a sample
of which was given at the Pentecost of Acts iii. The
ZEPHANIAH. 85
distant parts of the earth, those beyond the ^i^-ers of
Ethiopia, shall take part in the commou acknowledg'-
meut of the Saviour— God of Israel. Israel shall be
purified, saved from all fear of evil any more, aud
be glad with all tlie heart, because the Lord their
God is in the midst of them.
These are the days of the kiugxlom. The judg-
ments have cleansed the scene, the remnant have been
carried through them, the earth witnesses the salva-
tion of God, and the "name of the Lord is 0A\Tied in
the joy and service of His restored people.
The mourners iu Zion, moreover, have taken to
them the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
The lamentations of Jeremiah are heard no more ; for
the captive daughter of Ziou has been brought home
with every band that was about her broken off ; and
she that was led a captive, of whom it was written,
" This is Zion, whom no man seeketh after," is made
a name and a praise among aU people of the earth.
Such things are here, in the third chapter of our
prophet, and such things are the common themes of
aU the prophets, in anticipation of the kingdom of the
Lord following upon the day of the Lord.
Glory, however, shines here, iu one very attractive
86 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
character. The liarp of Zephaniah has oue note of
very peculiar sweetness. The personal deUght of the
Lord in His people is given to us in words which
savour of the Song of Solomon itself in its rapture
and affection. " The Lord thy God," it is said to
Zion, " will rejoice over thee with joy ; he will rest in
Ills love, he will joy over thee with singing."
This is the Bridegroom rejoicmg over the bride, as
had been anticipated by Isaiah, long before this day
of Zephaniah. (See Isa. Ixii. 5.) This is as if the
Lord were takiug the place which the rapturous song
of the King of Israel put Ilim into, when He says,
" How fair and how pleasant art thou, 0 love, for
deUghts ! " (Cant. vii. G.)
It is the jyersonal joy of the Lord in His people that
is thus anticipated by Zephaniah — the brightest, dear-
est article in all their condition. It may remind us of
a little sentence iu our oa\ti 1 Thess. iv. — " and so
shall we ever be w'ith the Lord." This is all that is
said of us there, after our translation. Glories might
have been detailed, and the various joy of the heaven
of the Church ; but it is only this, '• and so shall we
ever be with the Lord." It is personal, like this
passage in Zephaniah ; but, had we affection, we
ZEPHANIAH. . 87
should say, it is chief in the great account of our
blessedness.
One further thing I would notice. There are two
suppers laid out before us in llev. xix. — the supper of
"the Lamb," and the supper of "the great God."
The supper of the Lamb is a scene of joy in heaven :
blessed are they that are called to it. It is a marriage
supper. The supper of the great God is the fruit of
the solemn, terrific judgment that closes the history
of the earth as it now is, the judgment of this present
apostate world, when the carcases of the confederated
enemies of the Lord are made the food of the fowl of
the air.
Ezekiel notices the last of these two suppers, and
gives us as full a description of it as John in the
Apocalypse. Zephaniah just glances at it as he passes
on with his account of the acts of the Lord in the day
of His wrath. (Ezek. xxxix. ; Zeph. i. 7.)
" The day of the Lord is at hand," says Zephaniah;
'• for the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice, he hath bid
his guests." He does not, however, go into the scene,
as Ezekiel and John do. What the sacrifice or the
feast is, and who the guests that are bidden to it may
be, he does not let us know. For there are voices
88 TnE MINOR PROPHETS.
and under-tones in tlie perfect harmony of Scripture.
Certain truths and mysteries are g-iven a chief place
here and tliere, while at other times the same tniths
are only assumed, or passinglj', incidentally, touched
on. Rut all this does but yield us that grateful, art-
less unison, that lives in all the parts of the book,
giving us witness that it is but one hand that sweeps
all the chords of that wondrous harp which is the
present " harp of God," till other harps be formed by
the same hand to celebrate the glories of His own
name, and the fruit of His own work for ever. (Rev.
XV. 2.)
HAGGAI.
This book is a Avitness how rapidly declension sets in,
and fresh corruption follows upon restoration and
blessing.
Eeturn to Jerusalem from capti-\dty in Babylon was
made at the opening- of the Book of Ezra, ivith great
brightness and promise. Thousands left Babylon ; and
they Avho remained behind helped them with their
goads ; and a general awakening of the national heart
and energy was known.
The first business of the returned captives was to
build the house of the Lord ; and they laid the founda-
tion of it in the midst of such mingled and diverse
affections, as showed how thoroughly and personally
they had set themselves to it. Tears and joys,
shouts and wailings, told the living realities of the
moment, and gave promise that an earnest-hearted
work, then begun, would find its way happily and
prosperously to the end. But it was not so. The
promise was not made good. Is man's pledge, and
G
90 'I'HK MINOR PROPHETS.
l^romise, aud stewardship ever realised? The Gentile
seed which had been planted in the lands of the ten
tribes became the occasion of hindrance and difficulty;
and the building of the house is suspended, and that,
too, for so long a time as fourteen years ; during
wliich interval, self-indulgence and consultation about
their own things marked the moral ways of the people,
of that people who had started so earnestly and so
single-heartedly.
Under such conditions, the Spirit of God visits
Ilaggai, and by him the word of the Loi-d addresses
itself to Zerubbabel the chief of Judah, and to Joshua
the high priest, and to the congregation of returned
captives.
It was in the second year of Darius king of Persia,
that Haggai was thus called forth by the Spirit.
This notification of time has meaning in it. It be-
speaks the degiadation of Israel. The coin of the
Roman is by and by to go current through the land,
and Israel will then be taught by their land to accept
that badge of their vassal-state; and so now the
Spirit teaches them the like lesson, marking the eras
of their history by the reign of the Persians.
Ilaggai begins by challenging the people on account
HAGGAI. 91
tjf theii' ueglect of God's house, and couceru about
their own houses ; and he calls on them to take know-
ledge of then- present condition as the consequence of
this, and to mark how unequal the fruit they were
gathering out of their fields and vineyards was to the
toil they had spent upon them. And, under this rebulie,
the people are brought afresh to the fear of God ; and
fear being awakened, the conscience being reached, the
fallow-ground of nature ploughed up, the same voice of
God by Haggai begins its ministry of comfort and en-
couragement. •• I am with you, saith the Lord." But
the Spirit visited the heart of the people, as well as
the lips of the prophet, and the end of the ministry
was therefore reached. " And the Lord stirred up the
spirit of Zerubbabel the son of Shealtiel, governor of
Judah, and the spirit of Joshua the son of Josedech, the
high priest, and the spirit of all the remnant of the
people ; and they came and did work in the house of
the Lord of hosts, theh God."
Tlie heart of L>/dia, in other days, was opened by
the Jjord, as well as the Iq)s of Paul that spoke to her.
He spolvc to her and she attended to him ; and both of
these things were of God. How smiple, and yet how
needful ! The Lord lets us know the need of each of
92 THE MINOR TROPHETS.
those operations in His great discourse in John vi..
teaching us that if the Father gave not to the Son, if
He draw not, if He teach not, the ministry will be
lost upon the soul, and the bread of life, the true
manna of the desert, will be spread in vain.
Now, this As^as a revival, and reviving of God's
work in the midst of the years became the uecces-
saiy way, because of the tendency' to decline which
is found to be in us. The sumer's utter ruin, and full
incompetency to restore himself, is the ground of
needed sovereignty at the first ; (Isaiah i. 9 ;) the
saint's or the church's tendency to slacken, to grow cold
and dull, becomes the like ground of renewed, repeated
revivals afterwards. A fresh putting forth of reviving
virtue has been ever the way of maintaining a dispen-
sation in any condition worthy of itself. And this
day of Haggai was one of those revival seasons.
The subject of this proj^hetic word by Haggai
might lead us to observe hoAV perfect hi their
seasons the divine thoughts and purjioses are, though
so various and different. David proposed to build a
house for the ark of God, a house of cedars, costly
and stable, but the word of a i)rophet forbad him ; the
time had not come. There would have been moral
HAGGAI. 03
unfitness in the ark taking its rest before Israel had
reached theirs ; or seating- itself in a sure dwelling-
place in a laud as yet nnpurged of the blood of the
sword of battle. But in the day of Ilaggai, we find
the contrary of all this. Israel are rebuked by a pro-
phet for not building the house of the Lord. David
erred in saying that the time had come for such a
work; the returned captives now err in saying that
the time had not come. And the Spirit of the Lord
knew the times, and what Israel ought to do, whether
to build or not to build. "■ God is a rock. His work
is perfect." lie is true, though every man be a
liar.
But again, as we find also in the book of Ezra, the
returned captives had refused the Samaritans, rejected
alliance with people of such mixed blood and princi-
ples. They had done rightly in this — surely they had.
They had kept themselves pure. But this was a pro-
vocation, and under the suggestions of those Samaritan
adversaries, the great king, the Persian " breast of
silver," had stopped the building of the house.
This, however, becomes a temptation. As soon as
their hands get free of the work of the Lord's house,
the people go, every one to his own house. How easy
94 THE MINOK rROrHETS.
to understand tliis! Xature is ready to take all its
advantages. Wo know this every day. But faith acts
above nature. Paul, for instance, becomes a prisoner
after he had been for years a ser\ant. His activities
abroad are stoi)ped by the adversaries. But Paul,
though a prisoner, though stopped in his work abroad,
waits on the same Master still. There is prison-ser-
vice, as well as field or pulpit-service. He will receive,
at his o\m hired house, all that come to him, though
he be in chains, and talk with them from morning till
evening, expounding and testifying the kingdom of
God, and teaching the things concerning the Lord
Jesus Christ. This was faith, not nature. But tlio
retm-ned captives employ their hands for themselves ;
tied up from walkuig in God's house, the}' use them,
as free, for the work of their own house ; and thus
Satan masters them as well as the Samaritans. ,Vud
it is upon this condition of things the Lord breaks in
by the voice of Ilaggai.
The building of the house, as I observed, seems to
have been suspended for aljout fourteen yeai's ; but it
is very happy to find that it was resumed, not by
force of a decree in its favour by the great king, tlu-
Persian who had mile over the Jews at that time, but
IIAGGAT. 95
by the voice of the prophets of God, Haggai and
Zechaiiah. The Lord, indeed, did dispose the heart of
the king ; but this was not till His prophet had dis-
posed the heart of Israel. (See Ezra v. vi.) And
this is very much to be remembered in connexion with
our prophecy. The fresh spring in the heart of the
people was found to have been in God^ and not hi cir-
cumstances. It was God's voice by His prophets that
set them on work again, and not the royal favour of
the Persian. The Lord turned the heart of the king
their master to countenance them, when they had
taken again the place of faith and obedience.
Haggai is simply styled, "Haggai the prophet."
We have nothing about him more than that. The
word of the Lord was delivered by him on several
distinct occasions ; but all in the second year of Darius
the king of Persia : and all was directed to this end,
to set agoing and to further the building of the house
of the Lord.
I can look at them only in the most general way,
noticing the time of each, during this second year of
Darius the Persian.
nth raonth."^ Haggai arouses the careless, self-indul-
1st day. ) gent people — the returned remnant, who
9G THE MlXOli PliOrHETS.
Avere neglecting the Lord's house, and serving them-
selves.
Gth niontli.) He promises tliem that the Lord will be
24tli day. ) with them ; thus, as in the name of the
Lord, appreciating the fear that had been awakened ;
and, consequently, the people begin to work.
7th month.") In order to encourage them in their
21st day. ) work, Ilaggai tells them that the final
glory of the house which they had now begun to build
should be the brightest after the shaking of all things
by the hand of the Lord.
9th month,^ He leads the people to a humbling
24th day. ) sense of what they had been ere the
house of the Lord was attended to ; but he tells them
also of future blessing.
( He addresses Zerubbabel, telling him
Same day. -,
(again of the sliaking of everything, and
of the establishing of Zerubbabel as the Lord's
signet.
These are his utterances in their seasons. The
voice of the Lord by this jDrophet first awakens the
conscience of the people, and then, in various ways of
grace, encourages them in their revived condition and
energy.
HAGGAI. 97
Let me observe, that the Spirit of God in the pro-
phet does not take part, either ^^'ith the aged man,
who wei)t over the remembrance of the pctst^ or with
the younger ones who were rejoicing in the j)resent ;
(see Ezra iii. ;) but He bears the heart of the people
on to the future. Those tears had been real, and were
service to God ; but neither were perfect. The Spirit
who leads according to God indulges neither, but car-
ries heart and hope forward. Encouraging the people
in their work by His servant. He tells them of the
future glory of the house, and of the stability of the
true Zerubbabelj when all that has its foundation in the
creation, be it what it may, shall be shaken to its re-
moval and overthrow.
The Spirit again, in an apostle, comments upon this
of the prophet. (See Heb. xii.) He tells us, that all
that which is to be shaken is "all that is made" —
that is, as I judge, all that has not its root or it foun-
dation in Him in whom "all the promises of God are
yea and amen." He only is the rock. His work is
perfect. Christ the Lord can say, and will say,
" The earth and its inhabitants are dissolved ; I bear up
the pillars." What is of Huii cannot be shaken. It
remains. And in the faith and hope of what we have
98 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
in Him, aud from IILui, beloved, let us say to one
another, in tbe words of the apostle, " we, receiving a
kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have grace
whereby we may serve God acceptably, with reverence
and godly fear." Amen.
ZECHARIAH.
ZecHAEIAH was a companion witli Ilag'g'ai in that
energy and gift of the Spii'it which was animating the
returned captive in the building of the temple. But,
under that inspiration, Ilaggai applies himself more
exclusively to that one object. All he says he ad-
dresses to the captives by Avay of encouragement m
the work then immediately in their hand. Zechariah
looks out more widely, anticipating distant days in the
history of Israel and of the nations, with a purpose
beyond that of merely encouraging the builders in
their work.
This book opens with a kind of preface in which the
prophet, ere he details his visions, challenges the
people, warning them not to treat the Lord's words by
him as their fathers had treated other words of tht^
Lord by other prophets, and which, nevertheless, had
been fulfilled against them — had "taken hold of
them," as he speaks. (Chap. i. 1 — G.)
He then begins to record his visions. Ilaggai
100 THE MINOR PKOPHETS.
had no visions. Zecliariali is pi'incipally iiistnict-
ed by them. liut they both j^rophesied in the
same year, the second of the reign of Darius tlie
Persian.
Chap. i. 7 — 17. Tliis may be called "the vision of
the horses among the myrtle trees." The first of these
horses had a rider on it, the others were in the rear,
and, as far as we learn, were without riders.* The
prophet asks the angel that waited on him what this
meant. The rider upon the foremost horse tells him
that these unridden horses were the agents of the
Lord's pleasure in the earth. The unridden horses,
the representatives of the Gentiles, then speak and
say that the whole earth was still and at rest ; that is,
just as they would have it. For such, surely, was the
mind of the nations of the earth, whom God had set
up upon the degradation and fall of Jerusalem. So
would they have it — their exaltation upon the ruin of
God's people.
* They are -without riders, I believe, in order to represent the
senseless, brutish force which marked the Gentiles, unguided
as they were by the Spirit of God. The first horse was ridden
by a man, a symbol of the divine encriry that ruled the fortunes
of Israel. It was " the angel of the Lord" that was the i-ider.
Nebuchadnezzar had been already as an unridden horse. (Dan.
iv.) So now the remaining three Gentile powers. (See Psalm
xlix.20.) So, in the next vision, the Gentiles are "horns," sense-
less things; Israel's friends are "carpenters."
ZECHAKIAH. 101
The angel, who stood for Jerusalem, upon this, at
once takes the alarm, and pleads for the city of the
Lord and of Israel. The Lord having answered this
appeal of the angel, the angel seems to let the pro-
phet know the answer, telling him that the Lord was
displeased with the Gentiles, who Avere thus at ease,
though they had helped forward the affliction of Jeru-
salem ; that Jerasalem should be restored, the Lord's
house be built there again, and the cities of the land
be re-occupied.
Yer. 18 — 21. The second vision we may call, "the
vision of the four horns and the four carpenters." It
gave the prophet a view of the Gentile adversaries
that had dispersed Judah, and also of the friends who
were soon to avenge Judah at the hand of his Gentile
adversaries.
Chap. ii. This third division may be called, "the
vision of the man Avith the measuring line." The
prophet here has before him not only the angel w^ho
was attending hmi, but another angel and a man mth
a measuring line in his hand ; and moreover, he hears
the voice of the Lord ; or, it may be, the w^ord of the
Lord is rehearsed to hun. But the whole of this
teaches him, that Jerusalem is to be m its place,
102 'I'llE MINOR rROPHETS.
establislied and dignified again; and that after the
glory lias seated itself there, inquisition should be
made of those nations, who, in the day of their
calamity, troubled the Israel of God.* Zion, in
that day, is to sing for joy ; nations also sliall join
themselves to the Lord of Israel, and all flesh
shall see the salvation of God, and be subdued to the
sense of the presence of the IjOid in the earth
again.
Chap. iii. The fourth vision is that of " Joshua, the
high priest." Having just received a pledge of the
restoration of that city, vre ha^'e now, in another
vision, a picture of the justification of the people;
and this justification of Israel leads, in the end, to
the beauty and acceptance of Israel in the days of the
kingdom, when Messiah, " the Shepherd and Stone of
Israel," shall be exalted in providential authority over
the whole earth. But this j)icture is- so vivid, so
graphic, that it can be used as the delineation of the
stoiy of the justification of any smner, in the great
principles of it — as we kn<nv that justification itself
is one and the same for each and all of us. It is the
* We see this again, I may say, in i\Iattbe\v xxv., when tho
Son of ]\Ian is on the throne of His millennial glory.
ZECHARIAII. 103
sinner, tlie polluted one, tlie Joshua in filthy gannents,
chosen, cleansed, stripped and clothed again, all in
grace, in a gi-ace that acts as from itself on the war-
rant of the blood of Christ, while we, like Joshua,
are silent before it.
Chap. iv. The fifth vision is that of " the golden
candlestick." If, in the preceding vision, we saw the
great act of justification exhibited, the value of Christ
applied to the unclean condition of Israel, here we
find exhibited the communication of power, and the
application of the Spirit to the chcumstances of Israel.
It therefore follows in due order. And the power is
pledged not to be withdrawn till the needed grace be
accomplished, and the work begniu be completed ; till
what was entered on in that day of restoration under
Zerubbabel, be perfected in the day of the royal Mes-
siah, the true Zerubbabel, the revived heir and holder
of the honour and strength of the house of David,
the head of all oi'der throughout the earth, as in king-
dom-days.
Chap. V. 1 — 4. The sixth vision is that of "the
flying roll." This is an exhibition of curse or judg-
ment finding out sinners, whether sinners agaiust
their neighbours as thieves^ or sinners against God, as
104 THE MINOE PKOPHETS.
false sioearers.* The previous visious bad beeu of
mercy to Israel, either wider the i^rovidenco of God,
or under Messiah, or under the Spirit ; but now we
get visious of judgment.
Chap. V. 5 — 11. The seventh vision is that of "the
Ephah with the woman sitting in it." This is a pic-
ture of -wickedness — dw^ta — lawlessness. It is hid-
den— ^the woman in the ephah — and it is borne to the
laud of Shiuar, its base, where it began its course.
This we know ; for Nimrod was the first great repre-
sentative of the wicked or the lawless one, who is to
be destroyed hi the day of the Lord. This "wicked-
ness" is hidden as here in an "ephah;" or, as in
Matt, xiii., m "three measures of meal" — hidden, I
may say, under a profession, as of the religion of
Israel, or of the name of Christendom. But jt is
really Babylon at the end as at the beginning, " the
laud of Shiuar ;" as we again see in Rev. xvii., and
many other Scriptures.
Chap. vi. 1-8. The eighth vision is that of " the four
chariots." These symbolize the four great monarchies
so much spoken of by the prophet Daniel. These
* Curse follows law, (Gal. iii. 10.) As the law had its two
tables, the curso has its two sides, coiTcsponding, as we here see,
to the two tables.
ZECHAEIAH. 105
chariots, drawn by different horses, come forth from
between mountains of brass, and then take their ap-
pointed course over different parts of the earth, and this
may remind us of the first vision, or that of " the horses
among- the myrtle trees." Only we have a new fact here:
viz., that the second chariot has settled God's question
with the first; or, in the language of this vision,
" those that go forth to the north country have quieted
my spirit." saith the Lord, " in the north coimtry."
The Persian had, in the days of Zechariah, put down
the Chaldean.
Chap vi. 9 — 15. These closing" verses of the same
chapter seem to be a kind of ajDpendix to this vision
of the four chariots.* The prophet is instructed to
take certain children of the returned captives, and in
their presence to set crowns on the head of Joshua,
the high priest ; and then to address Joshua as a type of
the Branch, the destined builder of the Lord's temple,
the bearer of the g'lory, the combined priest and king-
who is to secure peace in the coming- days of His
kingdom. And having- g'one through this ceremony,
the prophet was ordered to lay up these crowns imder
* For it intimates a fifth kingdom wliicb. in season is to bo
revealed, tlie four kingdoms of the Gentiles having preceded it.
H
106 THE MJNOE PEOPHETS.
the hand of certain guardians, in the house of the
Lord, as a memorial of all this destined glory and
power which are to be displayed in the last days, in
the person of the Branch, that is, the Messiah of
Israel, the Christ of God.
But now we may observe, that on closing the sixth
chapter, we have done with Zechariah's visions. We
are also in another year, the fourth instead of the
second of Darius. But I would seperate these remain-
ing chapters into what appears to me to be their dis-
tinct portions, as I have done with the preceding.
Chaps, vii. viii. Tliese chapters must be read to-
gether, I judge. For chapter viii. 19, clearly seems
to refer to chapter vii. 3. They form the comnumica-
tion which was made by the Lord to the prophet,
when the returned captives sent to inquhe whether
their captivity-fasts were now to be continued. The
prophet begins his answer by a humbling word ad-
dressed to tlie conscience. They had, it is true, been
fasting statedly during .the years of their cajitivity;
but he now tells them to ask themselves, had this
been done to the Lord ?
The character of the answer which the prophet,
under the Holy Ghost, returns to the enquiring
ZECHAKIAH. 107
people is greatly worthy of thought; but it would
be too much to coiisider it iu its detail. I would,
bowever, say this upon it : that this word of Zecha-
I'iah reminds me of the method of the Lord Jesus iu
a like case. He never simply answered an enquiry,
but so took it up as to call the conscience and heart
of the enquirer into exercise. ' He looked rather to
the moral state of the enquu-er than to the subject of
the enquuy. So, Zechariah here. He humbles, exhorts,
and teaches, ere he gives the answer. But then, when
he does come to give the answer, he gives it fully and
blessedly indeed. He tells them that their fasts shall
become feasts ; and further, announces prophetically
the bright and palmy days which yet in the distance
awaited Israel.
Chaps, ix., X. These chapters, taken and read to-
gether, form another burthen of the prophet.
Syria, the Philistmes, Tyre and Sidon are to be
humbled, though a remnant may be spared, in the day
when Israel is protected and vindicated by God her
Saviour, and the eyes of men are towards the Lord.
This is first announced here. And then, the ap-
pearing, the royal glory of Messiah, is anticipated,
offered, as we know it was, in the day of Matthew xxi..
108 THE MINOR TEOPHETS.
but being* then refused, it remains for a coming day
wheu it will assert its place, and make good its
claims h/ judgment, as the prophet here goes on to tell
us.* But then, after that, the kingdom shall be dis-
played in its universalit}' of strength or peace. The
prophet then addresses Messiah, and jjledges to Him,
that by His own blood, which was the seal of the
covenant, His people, His prisoners in Israel, should
bo delivered. And he then, suitably, addresses ano-
ther word to Israel, preseutuig Messiah to them as
the object of their confidence, and the security to
them of victoiy aiid lionour.
The results of the recovery of Israel are then en-
larged upon, in great and various blessedness, in
chapter x.
Chap. xi. This chapter may be read by itself. It
gives us, as I believe, an anticipation of the ministry
of the Lord Jesus, as in the gospel by Matthew — in-
troduced, however, by some solemn premonitions of
judgment, as we see in verses 1 — 3.
Messiah begins to cite His commission under the
* The rejection of the King at His first coming lias made
judgment necessary to ihe future and final display of His glory
in Israel. Many other prophecies, beside this of Zechariah, tell
us this, as also the Lord's great prophetic word in Matt. xxiv.
ZECHAKIAH. 109
God of Israel, telling us, that He had come fortli to
fiud the sheep of Israel, for that they were m au evil
case, from their possessors, their vendors, and their
shepherds — that is, from such as the Romans, the
Ilerods, and the Pharisees.
He then tells us, that He took two staffs, in order
to fulfil this His commission. And these staffs were
significant or symbolic. Moses, in other days, had
his rod, Messiah now had His staffs. They signified
strength and beauty ; for Christ had to impart each
of these to Israel, to establish and adorn them, to
secure and dignify them. The inhabitants of the
land, the gi'eat body of the Jewish people, are found
to disappoint His service as much as any, so that He
has still to separate " the poor of the flock " from the
general " flock of slaughter."
His first service is then told us. After thus taking
up the flock of Israel, (as He does in the earlier
chapters of Matthew) He cuts off three of the
shepherds ' whom He found in the land. This we
see in Matt. xxii. : the Pharisees, the Herodians,
and the Sadducees, religious heads of the people,
being then silenced in controversy' with the Lord
Jesus.
no THE MINOR rEOPHETS.
Having done this, Messiah disclaims them, break-
ing His staff, " Beauty," as we st-e Ilmi doing in
Matt, xxiii. ; withdrawing Ilimself, which was the
taking away of their beauty from them ; for they lose
their glory when they lose Him. They were but a
crownless head without Him ; and that being so, aU
is gone for the present.
He then tells us that "the poor of the flock"
waited on Him as "the word of the Lord;" and this
we see, in perfect order and place, in Matt. xxiv. xxv.
And then, He anticipates the scene of His betrayal
and death, as in Matt. xxvi. xxvii. And this is fol-
lowed here by the Prophet, as we know it has been
historically, by the disruption of Israel. The other
staff, " Bands," is broken.*
A remarkable anticipation of Christ's ministiy, all
this is. But this being the history of the true Shep-
herd, the good Shepherd, at the hand of the flock, we
then get the history of the flock at the hand of the
foohsh shepherd, the idol-shepherd. This is retiibu-
tion, as many other Scriptures let us know, that the
raising up of Antichrist will be in judgment upon
* The Godhead, the Jehovah-ship, as I may speak of Jesus,
is fully set out in ver. 13. It was Jehovah who was priced at
30 pieces of silver.
ZECHAEIAH. Ill
Israel for their rejection of God's Christ, their own
Messiah. This is future. See verses 15 — 17.*
Chap. xii. xiv. These chapters form the last burthen
of our Prophet. It tells us of "the day of the Lord,"
or of that great action which is to introduce the king-
dom. It begins very significantly, celebrating God
in three characters of glory — the stretcher out of the
heavens, the layer of the foundations of the earth, the
power of the Spirit of man. For these three charac-
ters are such as the kingdom is destined to display.
For then, the God of grace and of glory will be seen
as ha-s-ing furnished the heavens, as having established
the earth, and as having renewed man. And the de-
tails of the prophetic burthen that follow this introduc-
tion, give witness of these thmgs.
It is, as I said above, "the day of the Lord" which
is delmeated here, in various virtues and features of it.
* The foolisli shepherd, thus raised up in judgment or retn-
hution on Israel, because of their rejection of Messiah, may-
remind us of Saul. He treated the flock very much as this
foolish shepherd is to treat them (1. Sam. viii.); and he was
given to the people, because they had rejected the Lord in the
person of His servant Samuel ; we may read Ezek. xxxiv. in
this connexion also. But I must add — that, though the good
and true Shepherd was at first refused, and in retribution the
foolish shepherd is to be raised up still, at the end, on the moun-
tains of Israel, and beside the rivers of Israel, the flock shall
again lie down and feed under the care of their Shepherd-king,
the true David, who will guide them by the skilfulness of His
hand, and feed them according to the integrity of His heart.
AU Scripture tells this.
112 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
The confederated enemies of Jerusalem sliall be
broken under the walls of Jerusalem m that day ; and
this shall be done after a manner and method which
is to have respect to certain moral results. But if
the liand of God work amid the circumstances of that
day, the iipivit of God shall Avork with the people of
that day also.
This is blessedly delineated here. The Spirit will
begin His work with them in the power of conviction.
They are brought to remember their sin against Jesus,
and to mourn bitterly. Then, they are led to discover
by faith, the remedy for sin in that very Jesus whom
once with wicked hands they crucified and slew. Then,
they consider their ways, and with Levite zeal, purify
themselves ; according to Deut. xiii., nothing is spared, •
though dear as near kindred. Then they hold com-
munion with Jesus about those very wounds which
once they themselves inflicted.* ,
The hand of the Lord shall then work in company
with His Spirit, the fire of persecution or of discipline
(the purging of the floor, as John the Baptist speaks)
* This commimion may lie introduced (after the zeal of v. 4)
by the Lord Jesus Himself breaking in, in Spirit, and saying,
" I am no prophet, but an husbandman, for man has acquired
me as a slave from my youth," for such is said to be the transla-
tion of verse 5.
ZECHAKIAH. 113
taking- its course, and then Judali shall be acknow-
ledged again by the Lord, and again the Lord shall be
ackno-wledged by Judah, according to the pattern or
precedent of Dent. xxvi. 17-19.
This leads us to the close of chap. xiii. At the
opening of the next chapter, the 14th and the last,
we have the great action around the city, which had
been anticipated at the beginning of chapter xii.,
further and more fully described, together with the
interference of the Lord Himself in the behalf of the
city, and the results of its deliverance, such as the
consecration of it as the centre of God's earthly pur-
poses, and the seat of His earthly glory; and then
the millennial or kingdom-joy of the nations holding
their feast-days there as the scene of jDublic, universal
festivation.
Solemnly, in the midst of all this, we are given to
see the judgment of those who had been fighting
against Jerusalem, and also of those who would not
go up there to worship in the days of the glory.
What ought to have been, but was not, shall then be
realized. Holiness shall give character to everything;
consecration to God. Nor shall there be blot or
exception then, as hitherto there has been. The
114 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
Canaanite was iu the land, and left there, after
Abraham had entered it ; but now, " there shall be
no more the Canaanite in the house of the Lord of
hosts." (See Gen. xii. 0 ; Zech. xiv. 21.)
As one of our own poets says,
"Days siii-passinp: fable, and yet h-ue."
M A L A C H I .
Malachi closes the writing's of the minor jDrophets,
as they are called, and -with them the volmne of the
Old Testament. This suggests and warrants a short
review of thing-s in the pre\dons story of Israel.
From the beginning the Lord had been, in various
ways, testing and proving that people, whom He had
made His people. After having delivered them from
Egypt, and borne them through the wilderness, under
Joshua, He set them in the land promisedto their fathers ;
and then, in a certain sense, began afresh with them.
This is seen in the days of the Judges who succeeded
Joshua. But what was the story ? The people trans-
gi-essed ; the Lord chastened ; the people wept under
the rod ; the Lord raised up a deliverer. Thus it was
again and again.
But during- all this tmie the Lord kept Israel'
before and imder Himself. In those days there
was no captivity of the people, or conquest of
the land. Israel was still at home. The land was
116 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
still their own, and Jehovah their king as well as
their God.
In due season, the Lord gave them the house and
the throne of David. 'I'hey flourished into a khig-
doni. ]5nt tlie kiiigoiu became untrue to Ilim as
the nation had been. Mucli long-suffering towards
the house of David tlie Lord exercised, as before He
had exercised towards the nation. The Books of
Judges and of 2 Chronicles shew us all this. But at
length, loss of home and country, with sore captivity,
ensued ; and a worse condition than had been known
under the rod of the Philistines, Midianites or
Canaanites, was now known under the kings of Assyria
and Babylon. Scattering of the people among the
Gentiles, and possession of their land by the Gentiles
uow takes place.
This was fearful. There is, howe^'er, restoration.
There is a return of captives from Babylon. Jeiiisa-
lem is regained, rebuilt, repeopled. The house of
God is raised up again, and the worship of His name
and the service of His altar are observed again. But
this state of things was something quite new. Israel
was not now a nation set in their own land, as they
had been under Joshua and the Judges; nor a king-
MALACHI. 117
doni with one of their own children on the throne,
(such a throne as the g'lory could accompany) as un-
der David and David's sons. The people were now
the vassals of the Gentile. They were debtors to the
Gentile for permission to occupy the land of their
fathers, and to observe the laws and do the service of
their God. They were the subjects of the Persian,
and their ruler was his vicegerent.
This, surely, Avas a new condition. But they are
put into it, that they may be again tested, tested to
the full, and thereby proved and convicted to the
uttermost. For so it comes to pass : when the
trial of them is made in their new circumstances,
failure ensues, as it had ever done. The book of
Judges had already witnessed against them as a
nation ; 2 Chronicles had already witnessed against
them as a kingdom; and now Ezra, and Nehemiah,
and this prophecy of Malachi -witness against them
as returned captives.
I must, however, turn aside from this for a mo-
ment.
The returned captives at their beginning", give
some beautiful samples of faith and service. They
are left, as we may see presently, by Malachi, iu a
118 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
veiy sad mortil condition. But there bad been
brighter, earlier moments. Great events, greater
than had been known for centuries in Israel, had been
■witnessed : such as their journey fiom Babylon, the
building of the temple, the building of the wall, the
purifying of the congregation again and again. Yet
there was no miracle : all was accomplished by force
of moral energy ; the Spirit of God working in the
people, rather than the hand of God working foi*
them. There was no cloudy pillar to conduct them
across the second desert ; but they went, the fast and
the prayer on the banks of the Ahava bespeaking the
virtue of the Spirit that was among them. They re-
fused Samaritan alliances, as a people that knew their
Nazaritism. The customs of the nations, the tradi-
tions of the elders, their own thoughts and wisdom,
had no place in forming their character or conduct.
The word of God was their law. Individual grace
and gift shine eminent, as in Ezra and Nehemiah.
The light that was in Ezra, the singleheartedness that
mark Nehemiah, could carry the peojDle through diffi-
culties, when the rod of Moses was no longer in the
camp to do its marvels, as in the sight of the enemy.
I speak not of Mordecai and Esther, though strange
MALACHI. 119
and admirable was their way, without a miracle iu
their behalf, because they represent Israel in the dis-
'persion^ and not as returned cajrilves*
But these brighter moments had now faded, and
Malachi gives us our last Old Testament sight of the
state of Israel, sad and humbling as indeed it is.
In due season, the hour of the New Testament
arrives, and we find the same before us, just as Mala-
chi had promised us it should be. Messiah, the Lord
of the temple, appears, iutroduced by John Baptist,
the messenger of Malachi iii. 1, and the EUas (if the
people would receive him) of Malachi iv. 5. The
series of tests which have been made from the day of
the Exodus to the day of the returned captives is
resumed now. Messiah is offered,f and He proposes
Himself, in full and varied forms, to the acceptance
of Israel. And, at last, the Spirit is given, and
apostles full oi the H<3ly Ghost call on Israel to re-
* The virtues which would have duly given character to the
remnant of Israel, or the retui-ned captives, showed themselves
to fierfection in the Lord Jesus, who was, as we may say, the
Remnant in His day. He would have His disciples refuse
Samaritan alliance, and yet bow to the Gentile. "Render to
Cffisar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that
are God's," may be read as the summary of the religion of
returned captives.
f " If j^e will receive it, this is Elias which was for to come,"
are words which clearly tell us, that the ministry of the Baptist
of Christ was a testinc/ time.
120 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
pent and believe, and thus enter the times of refresh-
ing and restitution promised and spoken of by all the
prophets. These aie the brightest, richest, visita-
tions : the last yet the best ; the closing, yet the
most promising; but, like all the rest, they fail.
Israel is not gathered. In Egypt, in the wilderness,
and in the land ; as a pilgrim-people, or as captives ;
as a nation, or as a kingdom ; as presented with
Messiah and His works, or as visited by the Spirit
and His virtues — still, from first to last, under all the
patient exercise of this long-sivffering, grace, and
wisdom, they are untrue still. " They always resist
the Holy Ghost," as one inspired voice says of them :
''they fill up the aneasure of their sins always," as
another inspired voice pronoimces against them.
The nation had been preserved, as we saw, and kept
iu their own laud till the king, the house of David^
was set up — and now they are restored to their own
land, and kept there till Messiah appear and offer
Himself to them. " The rod of tlie tribe of Judah
is preserved, in order that the Branch of the root of
Jesse may be presented."
At the opening of the gospels we find passages
from Malachi quoted, as belougmg to that moment of
JIALACHI. 121
the evangelists. The close of the Old thus liuks itself
with the openiug' of the New Testament. And these
connexions, simple, and striking-, and self-Avideniug- as
they are, illustrate the unity of the divine A'olume.
They display something of the moral glory of the
Book, and let us learn, what we learn from another
and a more direct witness, (that is, from a passage in
the Book itself,) that, " known unto God are all his
works from the beginning of the Avorld." (^Vcts xv.
18.)
We may briefly present this prophecy in the fol-
lowing manner :
Chap. i. It opens with a terrible exposure of the
moral condition of the returned captives. Was the
state of Israel ever worse 1 If idolatry had marked
it from the beginning hitherto, infidelity does now ;
the spirit of scorning,- the s^jirit that contemns and re-
pudiates all the claims of God, and only mocks His
pleadings and entreaties. So that, we may say, if the
unclean spirit have at this time of Malachi gone out,
a more wicked one has entered. We cannot say that
the old unclean spirit has returned, bringing with him
seven other spirits ; for Ave do not find, under the
word of this prophet, a i-eturu to idolat^3^ But we
1
122 THE MINOR TEOPIIETS.
may say tliat a spirit more wicked than the old one
has entered.
The " wlierein" of this chapter, used by the returned
captives again and again, as they answer the appeals
and rebukes of the Lord, sounds awfully in our ears.
Chap. ii. The Lord by the prophet, in tliis chapter,
addresses a word of rebuke to the priests now, as He
had done to the people before. The Si:)irit awakens
a word in the bosom <jf the prophet, challenging' the
abominations that were committed hi Judah and Jeru-
salem, the treachery against the nation's covenant —
letting the people know that they were not strait-
ened in the Lord avIio had provisions for them in the
Spirit to fulfil His part in that covenant, but that
they had been their own enemies, unfaithful to their
conditions in the same covenant. The covenant is
spoken of under the figure of a marriage-contract, oi'
marriage vows, according to the style of the prophets
generally. And it is such a figure as the Lord's own
Avords about LEimself and His people Lsrael would
warrant and suggest.
Chap, iii., iv. The Lord, continuing His controversy
with the evil estate of Israel, here lets them know,
that of a truth the Lord of the temple would come
MALACHI. 123
and His messenger before Ilim ; but that such a
mission would turn out to be a ver3^ different thing
from wliat tliey expected. They thought, to be sure,
that it would be in their favour, that it would flatter
and accredit them, set them up, and be deliverance
and glory to them. They sought it : delighted them-
selves in the prospect of it. (Ver. 2.) But the pro-
phet would have them undeceive themselves, and
learn that in judgment this mission would be ; neces-
sarily so, because of their evil condition. And the
present question with them should therefore be, who
will abide this coming of the Lord '? not, as it were,
who will tell its glories and its blessings, as they
might have thought, but, who will abide the search-
ing process that will attend it ?
Still there was patience in God thus insulted. Had
not this been so, had he not been God and not man,
Israel would have been already consumed. But even
ncnv, they might prove that He would bless them
beyond all expected measures, if they woiild but be
obedient.
In the midst of all this national iniquity, the rem-
nant are manifested. The Lord declares that He has
them and their ways iu His rememhmnce now, and
124 THE MINOR PROPHETS.
will have theiu as liis (UxpUajejl jewels by and by, in
that day wheu there shall be to some a sun with heal-
ing in his rays, to others a sun to burn up as an oven
— like the two in the bed, at the mill, or in the field,
of which the Lord Himself speaks in the Gospels.
The prophet then closes by addressing this remnant
witli advices and promises ; and as the Old Testament
thus closes, so does the New open ; foi-, at the very
beginning- of St. Luke, we see this renmant, in the
persons of Zechariah and Elizabeth, following this
advice of Malachi, obedient to the law of Moses, with
its statutes and [judgments ; and we see them also
receiving the Elijah in the person of their child John,
according to the promise of Malachi.*
I Avould add a little by waj' of postscript.
The John] Baptist of the Gospels is identified
(officially, not personally) with the Elijah of Malachi.
(Matt. xi. ; Mark i. ; Luke i., vii.) John Baptist stood
ready to fulfil the jiromise of the pr()})het to Israel.
* Tbo lemuant, lot me add. are not promised present deliver-
ance from the Gentile power, but they are tau.sht to hold Ijy the
word, to expect the judf:cincnt of the wicked and a new state of
things in due time. Our epistles, in like manner, do not promise
us a recovery of church beauty, but teach us to look for a new
and better thing: and the coming of the Lord will lind us as the
epistles leave us — just as the first coming of the Lord found
Malachi's remnant as Malachi had left them.
MALACHI. 125
He was as the messeng-er that went before the face
of the Lord of the temple ; aud as the one who would
turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the
hearts of the children to the fathers. But Israel was
unbelieving- ; and, as the ancient oracle is a stand-
ing- oi-acle in the story of that people — " If ye will
not believe, surely ye shall not be established," (Isa.
\u. 9), Israel remained unblest,
Elijah, in Ahab's day, was a restorer, as we see in
1 Kings x^■iii. But this was but for a season. His
light was rejoiwd ui by the peojile ; but Jezebel
forced him out into the wilderness again. So with the
Baptist. His light was rejoiced in also. But, again,
this was only for a season. The miiltitude were bap-
tized of him ; but the wicked hated him ; and there
was another Jezebel in that day that had him be-
headed ; and Israel was left unestablished, whether
by Elijah oi- the Baptist.
But the promised Elijah will still appear, and lead
on to the throne and power of Messiah. For God is
true, though every man be a liar. His gifts and call-
ing are without repentance. He will be faithful to
Israel, though, as we have seen, Israel under eveiy
trial has been unfaithful to Him. He wCl accomplish
126 THE MINOR PEOniETS.
His purposes in grace, be the world, be Israel, or man,
never so angry or never so perverted. '• God is un-
changeable both in righteousness and grace."
"All Israel shall be saved ; as it is written, there
shall come out of Zion the Dehverer, and shall turn
away ungodliness from Jacob." (Rom. xi. 2().)
" Behold the mountain of the Lord
In latter days shall rise,
On mountain-tops above the hills,
And draw the woud'ring eyes."