WEEK-DAY EVENING ADDRESSES
DELIVERED JN MANCHESTER.
WEEK-DAY EVENING
ADDRESSES
DELIVERED IN MANCHESTER
ALEXANDER^MACLAREN, D.D.
NEW EDITION.
bonbon :
MAC MILL AN AND CO.
1879.
The Right of Translation and Reproduction is Resei'vcd.
LONDON :
R. CLAY, SONS, AND TAYLOR,
BREAX) STREET HILL.
':^r^j Ci innc,
CONTENTS.
ADDRESS PAGE
I. ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD ... I
II. THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW II
III. THE PRAYING CHRIST I9
IV. THE ENCAMPING ANGEL 29
V. HEROIC FAITH ^y
VI. THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS . . 45
VII. CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS. 54
VIII. AN OLD DISCIPLE 63
IX. "THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB." 73
X. THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL . . 8 1
XL THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD 9I
XII. FEAR AND FAITH IO3
XIIT. WAITING AND SINGING 112
V. CONTENTS.
ADDRESS PAGE
XIV. QUARTUS A BROTHER 1 24
XV. SHOD FOR THE ROAD I32
XVI. TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD 142
XVII. SILENCE TO GOD . . I51
XVIII. THE VALLEY OF ACHOR 1 59
WEEK-DAY EVENING ADDRESSES
1.
ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD.
Kings xvii. i.
And Elijah the Tishbite . . . said ... As the Lord God of
Israel liveth, before whom I stand.
nPHIS solemn and remarkable adjuration seems to have
-^ been habitual upon Elijah's lips in the great crises of
his life. We never find it used by any but himself, and
his scholar and successor, Elisha.
Both of the men employ it under similar circum-
stances, as if unveiling the very secret of their lives, the
reason for their strength, and for their undaunted bearing
and bold fronting of all antagonism. We find four
instances in these two lives of the use of the phrase.
Elijah bursts abruptly on the stage and opens his mouth
for the first time to Ahab, to proclaim the coming of that
terrible and protracted drought ; and he bases his pro-
phecy on that great oath, "As the Lord liveth, before whom
I stand." And again, when he is sent to show himself
to Ahab once more at the close of the period, the same
mighty word comes, " As the Lord of Hosts liveth, before
whom I stand, I will surely show myself unto him this
day." And then again, Elisha, when he is brought before
the three confederate kings, who taunt, and threaten, and
2 ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD.
flatter, to try to draw smooth things from his lips, and get
his sanction to their mad warfare, turns upon the poor crea-
ture that called himself the King of Israel with a superb
contempt that stayed itself on that same great name, and
tells him, " As the Lord liveth, before whom I stand,"
were it not that I had regard for the King of Judah, I
would not look toward you or see you. And lastly,
when the grateful Naaman seeks to change the whole
character of Elisha's miracle, and to turn it into the
coarseness of a thing done for reward, once again the
temptation is brushed aside with that solemn word, " As
the Lord liveth, before whom I stand, I will receive none."
So at every crisis where these prophets were brought
full front with hostile power ; where a tremendous mes-
sage was laid upon their hearts and lips to utter ; where
natural strength would fail ; where they were likely to be
daunted or dazzled by temptations, either of the sweet-
ness or the terrors of material things, these two great
heroes of the Old Covenant, out of sight the strongest
men in the old Jewish history, steady themselves by one
thought,— God lives, and I am His servant.
For that phrase, " before whom I stand," obviously
means chiefly "whom I serve." It is found, for instance,
in Deuteronomy, where the priests' office is thus defined :
" The sons of Levi shall stand before the Lord to minister
unto Him." And in the same way, it is used in the
Queen of Sheba's wondering exclamation to Solomon,
" Blessed are thy servants, and blessed are the men that
stand before thy face continually."
So that the consciousness that they were servants of
the living God was the very secret of the power of these
men. This expression, which thus started to their lips
in moments of strain and trial, lets us see into the very
ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD. 3
inmost heart of their strength. These two great Hves,
which fill so large a space in the records of the past, and
will be remembered for ever, were braced and ennobled
thus. The same grand thought is available to brace and
ennoble our little lives, that will soon be forgotten but by
a loving heart or two, and yet may be as full of God and
of God's service as those of any of the great of old. We
too may use this secret of power, " The Lord liveth, before
whom I stand."
What thoughts then which may tend to lift and in-
vigorate our days are included in these words ? The first
is surely this — Life a constant visioji of God's presence.
How distinct and abiding must the vision of God have
been, which burned before the inward eye of the man
that struck out that phrase ! Wheiever I am, whatever I
do, I am before Him. To my purged eye, there is the
Apocalypse of heaven, and I behold the great throne,
and the solemn ranks of ministering spirits, my fellow-
servants, hearkening to the voice of His word. No
excitement of work, no strain of effort, no distraction of
circumstances, no gUtter of gold, or dazzle of earthly
brightness, dimmed that vision for these prophets. In
some measure, it was with them as it shall be perfectly
with all one day, " His servants serve Him, and see His
face," — action not interrupting the vision, nor the vision
weakening action. To preserve thus fresh and unimpaired,
amidst strenuous work and many temptations, the clear
consciousness of being " ever in the great Taskmaster's
eye," needs resolute effort and much self-restraint. It is
hard to set the Lord always before us ; but it is posr.ible,
and in the measure in which we do it, we shall njt be
moved.
How nobly the steadfastness and superiority to all
4 ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD.
temptations which such a vision gives, are illustrated by
the occasions, in these prophets' lives, in Avhich this ex-
pression came to their lips. The servant of the Heavenly
King speaks from his present intuition. As he speaks,
he sees the throne in the heavens, and the Sovereign Ruler
there, and the sight bears him up from quailing before the
earthly monarchs whom he had to beard, and in connec-
tion with whom three out of the four instances of the
use of the phrase occur. How small Ahab and his court
must have looked to eyes that were full of the undazzling
brightness of the true King of Israel, and the ordered
ranks of His attendants ! How little the greatness ! how
tawdry the pomp ! how impotent the power, and how
toothless the threats ! The poor show of the earthly king
paled before that awful vision, as a dim candle will show
black against the sun. " I stand before the living God,"
and thou, O Ahab, art but a shadow and a noise.
Just as we may have looked upon some mountain scene,
where all the highest summits were wrapt in mist, and
the lower hills looked mighty and majestic, until some
puff of wind came and rolled up the curtain that had
shrined andj-hidden the icy pinnacles and peaks that were
higher up. And as that solemn white Apocalypse rose
and towered to the heavens, we forgot all about the green
hills below, because our eyes beheld the mighty summits
that live amongst the stars, and sparkle white through
eternity.
My brethren, here is our defence against being led away
by the gauds and shows of earth's vulgar attractions, or
being terrified by the poor terrors of its enmity. Go with
that talisman in your hand, ''The Lord liveth, before
whom I stand," and everything else dwindles down into
nothingness, and you are a free man, master and lord of
ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD. 5
all things, because you are God's servants, seeing all
things aright, because you see them all in God, and God
in them all.
Still further, we may say that this phrase is the utter-
ance and expression of a consciousness that life was
echo'mg with the voice of the Divi?ie co?fimand. He stands
before the Lord, not only feeling in his thrilling spirit that
God is ever near him, but also that His word is ever
coming forth to him, with imperative authority. That is
the prophet's conception of life. Wherever he is, he
hears a voice saying, This is the way, walk ye in it.
Every place where he stands is as the very holy place of
the oracles of the Most High, the spot in the innermost
shrine where the voice of the god is audible. All circum-
stances are the voice of God, commanding or restraining.
He is evermore pursued, nay, rather upheld and guided,
by an all-embracing law. That law is no mere utterance
of iron impersonal duty,— a thought which may make men
slaves, but never makes them good. But it is the voice
of the' living God, loving and beloved, whose tender care
for His children modulates His voice, while He com-
mands them for their good. He speaks because He
loves ; His Law is life. The heart that hears Him speak
is filled with music.
Ahab and Jehoram, and all the kings of the earth, may
thunder and lighten, may threaten and flatter, may com-
mand and forbid, as they list. They and their words are
nought to him whose trembling ears have heard, and
whose obedient heart has received, a higher command,
and to whom, "across the storm," comes the deeper
voice of the one true Commander, whom alone it is a
glory absolutely to obey, even '' the Lord, before whom I
stand." People talk about the consciousness of "a
6 ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD.
mission." The important point, on the settling of which
depends the whole character of our lives, is — Who do
you suppose gave you your " mission " ? Was it any
perso7i at all? or have you any consciousness that any
will but your own has anything to say about your life ?
These prophets had found One whom it was worth while
to obey, whatever came of it, and whosoever stood in the
way. May it be so with you and me, my friend ! Let
us try always to feel that in the commonest things we
may hear the command of God, that the trifles of each
day — trifles though they be^ — vibrate and sound with the
reverberation of His great voice ; that in all the outward
circumstances of our lives, as in all the deep recesses of
our hearts, we may trace the indications and rudiments of
His will concerning us, which He has perfectly given us
in that Gospel which is the law of liberty, and in Him
who is the Gospel and the perfect Law. Then quietly,
A'ithout bluster or mock heroics, or making a fiiss about
our independence, we can put all other commands and
commanders in their right place, with the old w^ords,
■" With me it is a very small matter to be judged of you,
or of man's judgment ; He that judgeth me, and He that
commandeth me, is the Lord." In answer to all the
noise round about us we can face round like Elijah, and
say, " As the Lord liveth, before whom I stand." He is
my " Imperator," the autocrat and commander of my
life j and Him, and Him only, must I serve. What calm-
ness, what dignity that would put into our lives ! The
never-ceasing boom of the great ocean, as it breaks on
the beach, drowns all smaller sounds. Those lives are
noble and great in which that deep voice is ever domi-
nant, sounding on through all lesser voices, and day and
night filling the soul with command and awe.
ELI [All STANDING BEFORE THE LORD. 7
Then, still further, we may take another view of these
words. They are the utterance of a man to whom his
Hfe was not only bright with the radiance of a Divine
presence, and musical with the voice of a Divine com-
mand, but was also, on his part, full of conscious obedience.
No man could say such a thing of himself who did not
feel that he was rendering a real, earnest, though imper-
fect obedience to God. So, though in one view the
words express a very lowly sense of absolute submission
before God, in another view they make a lofty claim for
the utterer. He professes that he stands before the Lord,
girt for His service, watching to be guided by His eye,
and ready to run when He bids. It is the same lofty
sense of communion and consecration, issuing in authority
over others, which Elijah's true brother in later days, Paul
the apostle, put forth when he made known to his compan-
ions in shipwreck the will of " the God, whose I am, and
whom I serv^e." We may well shrink to make such a
claim for ourselves when we think of the poor, perfunc-
tory service and partial consecration which our lives
show. But let us rejoice that even we may venture to
say, " Truly I am Thy servant ; " if only we, like the
psalmist, rest the confession on the perfectness of what
He has done for us, rather than on the imperfection of
what we have done for Him ; and lay, as its foundation,
"Thou hast loosed my bonds." Then, though we must
ever feel how poor our service, and how unprofitable
ourselves, how little we deserve the honour, and how im-
possible that we should ever earn the least mite of wages ,
yet we may, in all lowliness, think of ourselves as set free
that we may serve, and lift our eyes, as the eyes of a
servant are towards his master, to " the living Lord,
before whom we stand."
8 ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD
Such a life is necessarily a happy life. The one misery
of man is self-will, the one secret of blessedness is the
conquest over our own wills. To yield them up to God
is rest and peace. If we " stand before God," then that
means that our wills are brought into harmony with His.
And that means that the one poison drop is squeezed out
of our lives, and that sweetness and joy are infused into
them. For what disturbs us in this world is not
" trouble," but our opposition to trouble. The true
source of all that frets and irritates, and wears away our
lives, is not in external things, but in the resistance of our
wills to the will of God expressed by external things. I
suppose we shall never here bring these wills of ours into
perfect correspondence with His, any more than we shall
ever, with our shaking hands and blunt pencils, draw a
perfectly straight line. But if will and heart are brought
even to a rude approach to parallelism with His, if we
accept His voice when He takes away, and obey it when
He commands, we shall be quiet and peaceful. We shall
be strong and unwearied, freed from corroding cares and
exhausting rebellions, which take far more out of a man
than any work does. " Thy word was found, and I did
eat it." When we thus take God's command into our
spirits, and feed upon it with will and understanding, it
becomes, as the psalmist found it, the "joy and rejoicing
of our hearts ; " Elijah-like, we shall go in the strength of
that meat many days. The secret of power and of calm is
— ^yield your will to the loving Lord, and stand ever before
Him with, " Here am I, send me."
We may add one more remark to these various views
of the significance of this expression, to which the last
instance of its use may help us. Here it is : " And
Naaman said, I pray thee, take a blessing of thy servant..
ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD. 9
But he said, As the Lord liveth, before whom I stand, I
will receive none."
The thought, which made all Elijah's life bright with
the light of God's presence, which filled his ear with the
unremitting voice of a Divine Law, which swayed and
bowed his will to joyful obedience, chilled and dead-
ened his desires for all earthly rewards, " I am not thy
servant. -I am God's servant. It is not your business
to pay my wages. I cannot dishonour my Master by
taking payment from thee for doing His work. I look
for everything from Him, for nothing from thee."
And is there not a broad general truth involved there,
namely, that such a life as we have been describing will
find its sole reward where it finds its inspiration and its
law ? The Master's approval is the servant's best wages.
If we truly feel that the Lord liveth, before whom we
stand, we shall want nothing else for our work but His
smile, and we shall feel that the light of His face is all
we need. That thought should deaden our love for out-
ward things. How little we need to care about any pay-
ment that the world can give for anything we do ! If we
feel, as we ought, that we are God's servants, that will
lift us clear above the low aims and desires which meet
us. How little we shall care for money, for men's praise,
for getting on in the world ! How the things that we
fever our souls by pursuing, and fret our hearts when we
lose, will cease to attract ! How small and vulgar the
" prizes " of life, as people call them, will appear ! " The
Lord liveth, before whom I stand," should be enough for
us, and instead of all these motives to action drawn from
the rewards of this world, we ought to "labour that,
whether present or absent, we may be well-pleasing to
Him."
lo ELIJAH STANDING BEFORE THE LORD.
Not the fading leaves of the victor's wreath, laurel
though they be, nor the corruptible, things as silver and
gold, whereof earth's diadems and rewards are fashioned,
but the incorruptible crown that fadeth not away, which
His hand will give, should fire our hope, and shine before
our faith. Not Naaman's gifts but God's approval is
Elisha's reward. Not the praise from lips that will
perish, or the " hollow wraith of dying fame," but Christ's
" Well done, good and faithful servant," should be a
Christian's aim.
May we, brethren, possess the "spirit and the power
of Elias ; " — the spirit, in that we know ourselves to be the
servants of the living God ; and then we shall have some
measure of his dauntless power and heroic unworldliness !
Still better, may we have the Spirit of Him who was
the Servant of the Lord, diviner in his gentle meekness
than the fiery prophet in his lonely strength ! Make yours
the mind that was in Christ, that you too may say, " Lo,
I come, in the volume of the book it is written of me, I
delight to do Thy will, yea, Thy law is within my heart."
II.
THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW.
Leviticus xxvi. lo.
Ye shall eat old store, and bring forth the old because of the new.
T^HIS is one of the blessings promised to obedience.
^ No doubt it, like the other elements of that " pros-
perity " which " is the blessing of the Old Testament,"
presupposes a supernatural order of things, in which
material well-being was connected with moral good far
more closely and certainly than we see to be the case.
But the spirit and heart of the promise remain, however
the form of it may have passed away. It is a picturesque
way of saying that the harvest shall be more than enough
for the people's wants. All through the winter, and the
spring, and the ripening summer, their granaries shall
yield supplies. There will be no season of scarcity such
as often occurs in countries whose communications are
imperfect, just before harvest, when the last year's
crop is exhausted, and it is hard to get anything to live
on till this year's is ready. But when the new wheat
comes in they will have still much of the old, and will have
to " bring it forth " to empty their barns, to make room
for the fresh supplies which the blessing of God has sent
12 THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW,
before they were needed. The same idea of superabund-
ant yield from their fields is given under another form in
a previous verse of this chapter (ver. 5) : '* Your threshing
shall reach unto the vintage, and the vintage shall reach
unto the sowing time, and ye shall eat your bread to the
full : " which reminds one of the striking prophecy of
Amos : " Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that the
plowman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader of
grapes him that soweth seed." So rapid the growth, and so
large the fruitfulness, that the gatherer shall follow close
on the heels of the sower, and will not have accomplished
his task before it is again time to sow. The prophet
clearly has in his mind the old promise of the law, and
applies it to higher matters, even to the fields white to
harvest, where he that soweth and he that reapeth shall
rejoice together. In the same way we may take these
words, and gather from them better promises and larger
thoughts than they originally carried.
There is in them a promise as to the fulness of the Divine
gifts, which has a far wider reach and nobler application
than to the harvests and granaries of old Palestine.
We may take the words in that aspect, first, as contain-
ing God's pledge that these outward gifts shall come in
unbroken conti?iiiity. And have they not so come to us
all, for all these long years ? Has there ever been a gap
left yawning ? has there ever been a break in the chain of
mercies and supplies ? has it not rather been that " one
post ran to meet another " ? that before one of the mes-
sengers had unladed all his budget, another's arrival has
antiquated and put aside his store? True, we are often
brought very low ; there may not be much in the barn
but sweepings, and a few stray grains scattered over the
floor. We may have but the handful of meal in the
THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW. 13
barrel, and be ready to dress it " that we may eat it, and
die." But it never really comes to that. The new ever
comes before the old is all eaten up ; or if it be delayed
even beyond that time, it comes before the hunger reaches
inanition. It may be good that we should have to trust
Him, even when the storehouse is empty; it may be
good for us to know something of want, but that dis-
cipline comes seldom, and is never carried very far. For
the most part He anticipates wants by gifts, and His good
gifts overlap each other in our outward lives as slates on
a roof, or scales on a fish.
We wonder at the smooth working of the machinery
for feeding a great city ; and how, day by day, the pro-
visions come at the right time, and are parted out among
hundreds of thousands of homes. But we seldom think
of the punctual love, the perfect knowledge, the profound
wisdom which cares for us all, and is always in time with
its gifts. It was that quality of punctuality extended over
a whole universe which seemed so wonderful to the
Psalmist : " The eyes of all wait upon Thee, and Thou
givest them their meat in due season." God's machinery
for distribution is perfect, and its very perfection, with the
constancy of the resulting blessings, rob Him of His
praise, and hinder our gratitude. By assiduity He loses
admiration.
" Things grown common lose their dear delight." If in
His gifts and benefits He were more sparing and close-
handed," said Luther, " we should learn to be thankful."
But let us learn it by the continuity of our joys, that we
may not need to be taught by their interruption ; and let
us still all tremulous anticipation of possible failure or
certain loss by the happy confidence which we have a right
to cherish, that His mercies will meet our needs, con-
14 THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW.
tinuous as they are, and be threaded so close together on
the poor thread of our lives that no gap will be discernible
in the jewelled circle.
May we not apply that same thought of the unbroken
continuity of God's gifts to the higher region of our
spiritual experience? His supplies of wisdom, love, joy,
peace, power to our souls, are always enough, and more
than enough for our wants. If ever men complain of
languishing vitality in their religious emotions, or of a
stinted supply of food for their truest self, it is their own
fault, not His. He means that there should be no
parentheses of famine in our Christian life. It is not His
doing if times of torpor alternate with seasons of quick
energy and joyful fulness of life. So far as He is con-
cerned the flow is uninterrupted, and if it come to us in
jets and spurts like some intermittent well, it is because
our own evil has put some obstacle to choke the channel
and dam out His Spirit from our spirits. We cannot too
firmly hold, or too profoundly feel, that an unbroken con-
tinuity of supplies of His grace — unbroken and bright as
a sunbeam reaching in one golden shaft all the way from
the sun to the earth — is His purpose concerning us.
Here, in this highest region, the thought of our text is
most absolutely true ; for He who gives is ever pouring
forth His own self for us to take, and there is no limit to
our reception but our capacity and our desire ; nor any
reason for a moment's break in our possession of love,
righteousness, peace, but our withdrawal of our souls
from beneath the Niagara of His grace. As long as we
keep our poor vessels below that constant downpour
they will be full. It is all our own blame if they are
empty. Why should Christian people have these dismal
times of deadness, these parentheses of paralysis ? as if
THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW. 15
our growth must be like that of a tree with its alternations
of winter sleep and summer waking? In regard to out-
ward blessings we are, as it were, put upon rations, and
that He gives us we gather. There He sometimes does, in
love and wisdom, put us on very short allowance, and
even now and then causes " the fields to yield no meat."
But never is it so in the higher region. There he puts
the key of the storehouse into our own hands, and we may
take as much as we will, and have as much as we take.
There the bread of God is given for evermore, and He
wills that in uninterrupted abundance the meek shall eat
and be satisfied.
The source is full to overflowing, and there are no
limits to the supply. The only limit is our capacity,
which again is largely determined by our desire. So after
all His gifts there is more yet unreceived to possess. After
all his Self Revelation there is more yet unspoken to
declare. Great as is the goodness which He has wrought
before the sons of men for them that trust in Him, there
are far greater treasures of goodness laid up in the deep
mines of God for them that fear Him. Bars of uncoined
treasure and ingots of massy gold lie in His storehouses,
to be put into circulation as soon as we need, and can
use, them. Hence we have the right to look for an end-
less increase in our possession of God ; and from the
consideration of an Infinite Spirit that imparts Himself,
and of finite but indefinitely expansible spirits that receive,
the certainty arises of an endless life for us of growing
glory ; a heaven of ceaseless advance, where in constant
alternation desire shall widen capacity, and capacity
increase fruition, and fruition lead in, not satiety, but
quickened appetite and deeper longing.
But we may also see in this text the prescription of a
i6 THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW.
duty as well as the announcement of a promise. There
is direction here as to our manner of receiving God's
gifts, as well as large assurance as to His manner of
bestowing them. It is His to substitute the new for the
old. It is ours gladly to accept the exchange, a task not
always easy or pleasant.
No doubt there is a natural love of change deep in us
all, but that is held in check by its opposite, and all
poetry and human life itself are full of the sadness born
of mutation. Our Lord laid bare a deep tendency, when
He said, " No man having tasted old wine, straightway
desireth new ; because he saith the old is better." We
cling to what is familiar, in the very furniture of our
houses ; and yet we are ever being forced to accept what
is strange and new, and, like some fresh article in a room,
it is out of harmony with the well-worn things that you
have seen standing in their corners for years. It takes
some time for the raw look to wear off, and for us to
" get used to it," as we say. So is it, though often for
deeper reasons, in far more important things. A man,
for instance, has been engaged in some kind of business
for years, and at last God shows him, by clear indications,
that he must turn to something else. How slow he is to
see it, how reluctant to do it ! How he cleaves to the
" old store " ! How he shrinks from cleaning out the barn,
to bring in the new ! Or a household has been going on
for many days unbroken, and at last a time comes when
some of its members have to pass out into new circum-
stances ; a son to push his way in the world, a daughter
to brighten another fireside. It is hard for the parents
to enter fully into the high hopes of their children, and
to accept the new condition, without many vain longings
for the old days that can never come back any more.
THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW. 17
So, all through our lives, wisdom and faith say, *' Bring
forth the old because of the new." Accept cheerfully
the law of constant change under which God's love has
set us. Do not let the pleasant bonds of habit tie down
your hearts so tightly to the familiar possessions that you
shrink from the introduction of fresh elements. Be sure
that the new comes from the same loving hand which
sent the old in its season, and that change is meant to be
progress. Do not confine yourselves within any mill-
horse round of associations and occupations. Front the
vicissitudes of life, not merely with brave patience, but
with happy confidence, for they all come from Him
whose love is older than your oldest blessings, and whose
mercies, new every morning, express themselves afresh
through every change. Welcome the new, treasure the
old, and in both see the purpose of that loving Father,
who, Himself unchanged, changeth all things, and
" fulfils Himself in many ways,
Lest one good custom should corrupt the world."
In higher matters than these, our text may give us counsel
as to our duty. " God hath more light yet to break forth
from His holy word." We are bound to welcome new
truth, so soon as to our apprehensions it has made good
its title, and not to refuse it lodgment in our minds
because it needs the displacement of their old contents.
In the region of our knowledge and of our Christian life,
most chiefly, are we under solemn obligations to " bring
forth the old store because of the new;" if we would not
be unfaithful to God's great educational process that goes
on all our lives. It is often difficult to adjust the re-
lations of our last lesson with our previous possessions.
There is always a temptation to make too much of a new
c
i8 THE OLD STORE AND THE NE.W.
truth, and to fancy that it will produce more change in
our whole mental furniture than it really will. No man
is less likely to come to the knowledge of the truth than
he who is always deep in love with some new thought,
" the Cynthia of the minute," and ever ready to barter
''old lamps for new ones." But all these things admitted,
still it remains true that we are here to learn, that our
education is to go on all our days, and that here on earth
it can only be carried on by our parting with the old
store, which may have become musty by long lying in the
granaries, to make room for the new, just gathered in the
ripened fields. The great central truths of God in Christ
are to be kept for ever ; but we shall come to grasp them
in their fulness only by joyfully welcoming every fresh
access of clearer light which falls upon them ; and gladly
laying aside our inadequate thoughts of God's permanent
revelation of Himself in Jesus Christ, to house and garner
in heart and spirit the fuller knowledge which it may
please Him to impart.
So the law for life is thankful enjoyment of the old
store, and openness of mind and freedom of heart which
permit its unreluctant surrender when newer harvests
ripen. And the highest form of the promise of our
text will be when we pass into another world, and its rich
abundance is poured out into our laps. Blessed they
who can willingly put away the familiar blessings of earth,
and stretch out, willingly-emptied, expectant hands to
meet the " new store " of Heaven !
III.
THE PRAYING CHRIST.
Luke xi.
As He was praying in a certain place, when He ceased, one of His
disciples said unto Him, Lord, teach us to pray.
TT is noteworthy that we owe our knowledge of the
■■- prayers of Jesus principally to the Evangelist Luke.
There is, indeed, one solemn hour of supplication under
the quiveiing shadows of the olive-trees in Geth-
semane which is recorded by Matthew and Mark as
wellj and though the fourth Gospel passes over that
agony of prayer, it gives us, in accordance with its
ruling purpose, the great chapter that records His priestly
intercession. But in addition to these instances the first
Gospel furnishes but one, and the second but two refer-
ences to the subject. All the others are found in Luke.
I need not stay to point out how this fact tallies with
the many other characteristics of the third Gospel, which
mark it as eminently the story of the Son of Man. The
record which traces our Lord's descent to Adam rather
than to Abraham ; which tells the story of His birth, and
gives us all we know of the " child Jesus ; " which records
His growth in wisdom and stature, and has preserved a
20 THE PRAYING CHRIST.
multitude of minute points bearing on His true manhood,
as well as on the tenderness of His sympathy and the
universality of His work ; most naturally emphasizes that
most precious indication of His humanity — His habitual
prayerfulness. The Gospel of the King, which is the
first Gospel, or of the Servant, which is the second, or of
the Son of God, which is the fourth, had less occasion to
dwell on this. Royalty, practical Obedience, Divinity,
are their respective themes. Manhood is Luke's, and he
is ever pointing us to the kneeling Christ.
Consider, then, for a moment how precious the prayers
of Jesus are, as hrmging Him very near to us in His true
maTiJwod. There are deep and mysterious truths in-
volved which we do not meddle with now. But there
are also plain and surface truths which are very helpful
and blessed. We thank God for the story of His weari-
ness when He sat on the well, and of His slumber when,
worn out with a hard day's work. He slept on the hard
wooden pillow in the stern of the fishing-boat, among the
nets and the litter. It brings Him near to us when we
read that He thirsted, and nearer still when the immortal
words fall on our wondering ears, " Jesus wept." But
even more precious than these indications of His true
participation in physical needs and human emotion, is
the great evidence of His prayers, that He too lived a
life of dependence, of communion, and of submission \
that in our religious life, as in all our life. He is our
pattern and forerunner. As the Epistle to the Hebrews
puts it. He shows that He is not ashamed to call us
brethren by this, — that He too avows that He lives by
faith ; and by His life — and surely pre-eminently by His
prayers — declares, '' I will put my trust in Him.'' We can-
not think of Christ too often or too absolutely as the
THE PRAYING CHRIST. 21
Object of Faith, and as the hearer of our cries ; but we
may, and some of us do, think of Him too seldom as the
Pattern of Faith, and as the example for our devotion.
We should feel Him a great deal nearer us ; and the fact
of His manhood would not only be grasped more clearly
by orthodox believers, but would be felt in more of its
true tenderness, if we gave more prominence in our
thoughts to that picture of the praying Christ.
Another point that may be suggested is, that the high-
est^ holiest life, needs specific acts and times of praye7's. A
certain fantastical and over-strained spirituality is not
rare, which professes to have got beyond the need of
such beggarly elements. Some tinge of this colours the
habits of many people who are scarcely conscious of its
presence, and makes them somewhat careless as to forms
and times of public or of private worship. I do not think
I am wrong in saying that there is a growing laxity in
that matter among people who are really trying to live
Christian lives. We may well take the lesson which
Christ's prayers teach us, for we all need it, — that no life is
so high, so holy, so full of habitual communion with God,
that it can afford to do without the hour of prayer, the
secret place, the uttered word. If we are to " pray with-
out ceasing," by the constant attitude of communion, and
the constant conversion of work into worship, we must
certainly have, and we shall undoubtedly desire, special
moments when the daily sacrifice of doing good passes
into the sacrifice of our lips. The devotion which is to
be diffused through our lives must be first concentrated
and evolved in our prayers. These are the gathering-
grounds which feed the river. The life that was all one
long prayer needed the mountain-top and the nightly
converse with God. He who could say, "The Father
22 THE PRAYING CHRIST.
hath not left me alone, for I do always the thmgs that
please Him," felt that He must also have the special
communion of spoken prayer. What Christ needed we
cannot afford to neglect.
Thus Christ's own prayers do, in a very real sense,
''teach us to pray." But it strikes me that, if we will
take the instances in which we find Him praying, and try
to classify them in a rough way, we may gain some hints
worth laying to heart. Let me attempt this briefly now.
First, then, the praying Christ teaches us to pray as a
rest after sej^nce.
The Evangelist Mark gives us in his brief, vivid way,
a wonderful picture in his first chapter of Christ's first
Sabbath-day of ministry in Capernaum. It was crowded
with work. The narrative goes hurrying on through
the busy hours, marking the press of rapidly succeeding
calls by its constant reiteration — "straightway," "im-
mediately," "forthwith," "anon," ''immediately." He
teaches in the synagogue ; without breath or pause He
heals a man with an unclean spirit ; then at once passes
to Simon's house, and as soon as He enters has to listen
to the story of how the wife's mother lay sick of a fever.
They might have let Him rest for a moment, but they are
too eager, and He is too pitying for delay. As soon as
He hears, He helps. As soon as He bids it, the fever
departs. As soon as she is healed, the woman is serving
them. There can have been but a short snatch of such
rest as such a house could afford. Then when the
shadows of the western hills began to fall upon the blue
waters of the lake, and the sunset ended the restrictions
of the Sabbath, He is besieged by a crowd full of sorrow
and sickness, and all about the door they lie, waiting for
its opening. He could not keep it shut any more than
THE PRAYING CHRIST. 23
His heart or His hand, and so all through the short twi-
light, and deep into the night, He toils amongst the dim
prostrate forms. What a day it had been of hard toil, as
well as of exhausting sympathy !
And what was His refreshment ? An hour or two of
slumber ; and then, " in the morning, rising up a great
while before day, He went out, and departed into a soli-
tary place, and there prayed" (Mark i. 35).
In the same way we find Him seeking the same repose
after another period of much exertion and strain on body
and mind. He had withdrawn Himself and His disciples
from the bustle which Mark describes so graphically.
" There were many coming and going, and they had no
leisure, so much as to eat." So, seeking quiet, He take?
them across the lake into the solitudes on the other side
But the crowds from all the villages near its head catch
sight of the boat in crossing, and hurry round ; and there
they all are at the landing-place, eager and exacting as
ever. He throws aside tiie purpose of rest, and all day
long, wearied as He was, " taught them many things."
The closing day brings no respite. He thinks of their
hunger before His own fatigue, and will not send them
away fasting. So He ends that day of labour by the
miracle of feeding the five thousand. The crowds gone
to their homes. He can at last think of Himself; and
what is His rest ? He loses not a moment in " constrain-
ing " His disciples to go away to the other side, as if in
haste to remove the last hindrance to something that He
had been longing to get to. " And when He had sent
them away, He departed into a mountain to pray" (Mark
vi. 46 ; Matt. xiv. 23).
That was Christ's refreshment after His toil. So He
blended contemplation and service, the life of inward
24 THE PRAYING CHRIST.
communion and the life of practical obedience. How
much more do we need to interpose the soothing and
invigorating influences of quiet communion between the
acts of external work, since our work may harm us, as
His never did Him. It may disturb and dissipate our
communion with God ; it may weaken the very motive
from which it should arise ; it may withdraw our gaze
from God and fix it upon ourselves. It may puff us up
with the conceit of our own powers ; it may fret us with
the annoyances of resistance ; it may depress us with the
consciousness of failure ; and in a hundred other ways
may waste and wear away our personal religion. The
more we work the more we need to pray. In this day
of activity there is great danger, not of doing too much,
but of praying too little for so much work. These two
—work and prayer, action and contemplation— are twin-
sisters. Each pines without the other. We are ever
tempted to cultivate one or the other disproportionately.
Let us imitate Him who sought the mountain-top as His
refreshment after toil, but never left duties undone or
sufferers unrelieved in pain. Let us imitate Him who
turned from the joys of contemplation to the joys of
service without a murmur, when His disciples broke in on
His solitude with, " all men seek thee," but never suffered
the outward work to blunt His desire for, nor to encroach
on the hour of, still communion with His Father. Lord,
teach us to work ; Lord, teach us to pray.
The praying Christ teaches us to pray as z, preparation
for important steps.
Whilst more than one Gospel tells us of the calling of
the apostolic twelve, the Gospel of the manhood alone
narrates (Luke vi. 12) that on the eve of that great epoch
in the development of Christ's kingdom, '' He went out
THE PRAYING CHRIST. 25
into a mountain to pray, and continued all night in
prayer to God." Then, '' when it was day," He calls to
Him His disciples, and chooses the twelve. A similar
instance occurs, at a later period, before another great
epoch in His course. The great confession made by
Peter, " Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,"
was drawn forth by our Lord to serve as basis for His
bestowment on the apostles of large spiritual powers, and
for the teaching, with much increased detail and clear-
ness, of His approaching sufferings. In both aspects it
distinctly marks a new stage. Concerning it, too, we read,
and again in Luke alone (ix. 18), that it was preceded by
solitary prayer.
Thus He teaches us where and how we may get the
clear insight into circumstances and men that may guide
us aright. Bring your plans, your purposes to God's
throne. Test them by praying about them. Do nothing
large or new — nothing small or old either, for that matter
— till you have asked there, in the silence of the secret
place, " Lord, what wouldest Thou have me to do ? "
There is nothing bitterer to parents than when children
begin to take their own way without consulting them.
Do you take counsel of your Father, and have no secrets
from Him. It will save you from many a blunder and
many a heartache ; it will make your judgment clear, and
your step assured, even in new and difficult ways, if you
will learn from the praying Christ to pray before you
plan, and take counsel of God before you act.
Again, the praying Christ teaches us to pray as the
C07idition of receiving the Spij'it and the Brightness of God.
There were two occasions in the life of Christ when
visible signs showed His full possession of the Divine
Spirit, and the lustre of His glorious nature. There are
26 THE PRAYING CHRIST.
large and perplexing questions connected with both, on
which I have no need no enter. At His baptism the
Spirit of God descended visibly and abode on Jesus. At
His transfiguration His face shone as the light, and His
garments were radiant as sunlit snow. Now, on both
these occasions, our Gospel,. and our Gospel alone, tells
us that it was whilst Christ was in the act of prayer that
the sign was given : " Jesus being baptized, and praying,
the heaven was opened, and the Holy Ghost descended "
(iii. 21, 22). "As He prayed, the fashion of His coun-
tenance was altered, and His raiment was white and
glistening" (ix. 29).
Whatever difficulty may surround the first of these
narratives especially, one thing is clear, that in both of
them there was a true communication from the Father to
the man Jesus. And another thing is, I think, clear, too,
that our Evangelist meant to lay stress on the preceding
act as the human condition of such communication. So,
if we would have the heavens opened over our heads,
and the dove of God descending to fold its white wings,
and brood over the chaos of our hearts till order and
light come there, we must do what the Son of Man did —
pray. And if we would have the fashion of our coun-
tenances altered, the wrinkles of care wiped out, the traces
of tears dried up, the blotches of unclean living healed,
and all the stamp of worldliness and evil exchanged for
the name of God written on our foreheads, and the re-
flected glory irradiating our faces, we must do as Christ
did - pray. So, and only so, shall God's Spirit fill our
hearts, God's brightness flash in our faces, and the vesture
of heaven clothe our nakedness.
Again, the praying Christ teaches us to pray^j the pre-
THE PRAYING CHRIST. 27
paration for sorrow. Here all the three Evangelists
tell us the same sweet and solemn story. It is not for us
to penetrate further than they carry us into the sanctities
of Gethsemane. Jesus, though hungering for companion-
ship in that awful hour, would take no man with Him
there; and He still says, "Tarry ye here, while I go and
pray yonder." But as we stand afar off we catch the
voice of pleading rising through the stillness of the night,
and the solemn words tell us of a Son's confidence, of a
man's shrinking, of a Saviour's submission. The very
spirit of all prayer is in these broken words. That was
truly "The Lord's Prayer" which He poured out beneath
the olives in the moOnlight. It was heard when strength
came from heaven, which He used in ** praying more
earnestly." It was heard when, the agony past and all
the conflict ended in \qctory. He came forth, with that
strange calm and dignity, to give Himself first to His
captors and then to His executioners, the ransom for the
many.
As we look upon that agony and these tearful prayers,
let us not only look with thankfulness, but let that kneel-
ing Saviour teach us that in prayer alone can we be fore-
armed against our lesser sorrows ; that strength to bear
flows into the heart that is opened in supplication; and
that a sorrow which we are made able to endure is more
truly conquered than a sorrow which we avoid. We have
all a cross to carry and a wreath of thorns to wear. If
we want to be fit for our Calvary — may we use that solemn
name ? we must go to our Gethsemane first.
So the Christ who prayed on earth teaches us to pi ay ;
and the Christ who intercedes in heaven helps us to pray,
and presents our poor cries, acceptable through His
28 THE PRAYING CHRIST.
sacrifice, and fragrant with the incense from His own
golden censer.
" O Thou by whom we come to God,
The Life, the Truth, the Way ;
The path of prayer Thyself hast trod ;
Lord ! teach us how to pray."
IV.
THE ENCAMPING ANGEL.
Psalm xxxiv. 7.
The Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear
Him, and delivereth them.
IF we accept the statement in the superscription of this
Psalm, it dates from one of the darkest hours in
David's Hfe. His fortunes were never lower then when
he fled from Gath, the city of Goliath, to Adullam. ^ He
never appears in a less noble hght than when he feigned
madness to avert the dangers which he might well dread
there. How unlike the terror and self-degradation of the
man who " scrabbled on the doors," and let " the spittle
run down his beard," is the heroic and saintly constancy
of this noble Psalm ! And yet the contrast is not so
violent as to make the superscription improbable. And
the tone of the whole well corresponds to what we should
expect from a man delivered from some great peril, but
still surrounded with dangers. There, in the safety of his
retreat among the rocks, with the bit of level ground
where he had fought Goliath just at his feet in the valley,
and Gath, from which he had escaped, away do^vn at the
mouth of the glen (if Lieutenant Conder's identification of
Adullam be correct), he sings his song of trust and praise;
30 THE ENCAMPING ANGEL.
he hears the lions roar among the rocks where Samson
had found them m his day ; he teaches his " children,"
the band of broken men who there began to gather around
him, the fear of the Lord ; and calls upon them to help
him in his praise. What a picture of the outlaw and his
wild followers tamed into something like order, and lifted
into something like worship, rises before us, as we follow
the guidance of that old commentary contained in the
superscription.
The words of our text gain especial force and vividness
by thus localizing the Psalm. Not only " the clefts of the
rock " but the presence of God's Angel are his defence ;
and round him is flung, not only the strength of the hills,
but the garrison and guard of heaven.
It is generally supposed that the " Angel of the Lord "
here is to be taken collectively, and that the meaning is
— the "bright-harnessed" hosts of these Divine messengers
are as an army of protectors round them who fear God.
But I see no reason for departing from the simpler and
certainly grander meaning which results from taking the
word in its proper force of a singular. True, Scripture
does speak of the legions of ministering spirits, who in
their chariots of fire were once seen by suddenly opened
eyes " round about " a prophet in peril, and are ever
ministering to the heirs of salvation. But Scripture also
speaks of One, who is in an eminent sense " the Angel of
the Lord;" in whom, as in none other, God sets His
" name ; '' whose form, dimly seen, towers above even the
ranks of the angels that " excel in strength ; " whose offices
and attributes blend in mysterious fashion with those of
God Himself. There may be some little incongruity in
thinking of the single Person as "encamping round about"
us J but that does not seem a sufficient reason for obhter-
THE ENCAMPING ANGEL. 31
ating the reference to that remarkable Old Testament
doctrine, the retention of which seems to me to add
immensely to the power of the words.
Remember some of the places in which " the Angel of
the Lord " appears, in order to appreciate more fully the
grandeur of this promised protection. At that supreme
moment when Abraham " took the knife to slay his son,"
the voice that " called to him out of heaven " was " the
voice of the Angel of the Lord." He assumes the power
of reversing a Divine command. He says, " Thou hast
not withheld thy son, thine only son, from Me," and then
pronounces a blessing, in the utterance of which one can-
not distinguish His voice from the voice of Jehovah. In
like manner it is the Angel of the Lord that speaks to
Jacob, and says, " I am the God of Bethel." The dying
patriarch invokes in the same breath " the God which fed
me all my life long," " the Angel which redeemed me from
all evil," to bless the boys that stand before him, with
their wondering eyes gazing in awe on his blind face. It
was that Angel's glory that appeared to the outcast, flaming
in the bush that burned unconsumed. It was He who
stood before the warrior leader of Israel, sword in hand,
and proclaimed Himself to be the captain of the Lord's
host, the leader of the armies of heaven, and the true
leader of the armies of Israel ; and His commands to
Joshua, His lieutenant, are the commands of " the Lord;"
and, to pass over other instances, Isaiah correctly sums up
the spirit of the whole earlier history in words which go
far to lift the conception of this Angel of the Lord out of
the region of created beings — " In all their affliction He
was afflicted, and the Angel of His face saved them."
It is this lofty and mysterious Messenger, and not the
hosts whom He commands, that our Psalmist sees stand-
32 THE ENCAMPING ANGEL.
ing ready to help, as He once stood, sword-bearing by the
side of Joshua. To the warrior leader, to the warrior
Psalmist, He appears, as their needs required, armoured
and militant. The last of the prophets saw that dim,
mysterious figure, and proclaimed, " The Lord whom ye
seek shall suddenly come to His temple; even the Angel
of the Covenant, whom ye delight in ; " and to his gaze it
was wrapped in obscure majesty and terror of purifying
flame. But for us the true messenger of the Lord is His
Son, whom He has sent, in whom He has put His name ;
who is the Angel of His face, in that we behold the glory
of God in the face of Jesus Christ ; who is the Angel of
the Covenant, in that He has sealed the new and ever-
lasting covenant with His blood ; and whose own part-
ing promise, " Lo ! I am with you always," is the highest
fulfilment to us Christians of that ancient confidence :
" The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them
that fear Him."
Whatever view we adopt of the significance of the first
part of the text, the force and beauty of the metaphor in
the second remains the same. If this Psalm were indeed
the work of the fugitive in his rocky hold at Adullam,
how appropriate the thought becomes that his little en-
campment has such a guard. It reminds one of the
incident in Jacob's life, when his timid and pacific nature
was trembling at the prospect of meeting Esau, and
when, as he travelled along, encumbered with his pastoral
wealth, and scantily provided with means of defence,
*' the Angels of God met him, and he named the place
Mahanaim," that is, two camps, — his own feeble company,
mostly made up of women and children, and that heavenly
host that hovered above them. David's faith sees the
same defence encircling his weakness, and though sense
THE ENCAMPIXG ANGEL. 33
saw no protection for him and his men but their own
strong arms and their mountain fastness, his opened eyes
beheld the mountain full of the chariots of fire, and the
flashing of armour and light in the darkness of his cave.
The vision of the Divine presence ever takes the form
which our circumstances most require. David's then
need was safety and protection. Therefore he saw the
Encamping Angel ; even as to Joshua the leader He ap-
peared as the Captain of the Lord's host ; and as to Isaiah,
in the year that the throne of Judah was emptied by the
death of the earthly king, was given the vision of the
Lord sitting on a throne, the King Eternal and Immortal.
So to us all His grace shapes its expression according to
our wants, and the same gift is Protean in its power of
transformation ; being to one man wisdom, to another
strength, to the solitary companionship, to tlie sorrowful
consolation, to the glad sobering, to the thinker truth,
to the worker practical force, — to each his heart's desire,
if the heart's delight be God. So manifold are the aspects
of God's infinite sufiiciency, that every soul, in every
possible variety of circumstance, will find there just what
will suit it. That armour fits every man who puts it on.
That deep fountain is like some of those fabled springs
which gave forth whatsoever precious draught any thirsty
li}j asked. He takes the shape that our circumstances
most need. Let us see that we, on our parts, use our
circumstances to help us in anticipating the shapes in
which God will draw near for our help.
Learn, too, from this image, in which the Psalmist ap-
propriates to himself the experience of a past generation,
how we ought to feed our confidence and enlarge our
hopes by all God's past dealings with men. David looks
back to Jacob, and believes that the old fact is repeated
D
34 THE ENCAMPING ANGEL.
in his own day. So every old story is true for us ; though
outward form may alter, inward substance remains the
same. Mahanaim is still the name of every place where
a man who loves God pitches his tent. We may be
wandering, solitary, defenceless, but we are not alone.
Our feeble encampment may lie open to assault, and we
be all unfit to guard it, but the other camp is there too,
and our enemies must force their way through it before
they get at us. We are in its centre — as they put the
cattle and the sick in the midst of the encampment on
the prairies when they fear an assault from the Indians, —
because we are the weakest. Jacob's experience may be
ours : " The Lord of Hosts is with us : the God of Jacob
is our refuge."
Only remember that the eye of faith alone can see that
guard, and that therefore we must labour to keep our
consciousness of its reality fresh and vivid. Many a man
in David's little band saw nothing but cold gray stone
where David saw the flashing armour of the heavenly
warrior. To the one all the mountain blazed with fiery
chariots, to the other it was a lone hill-side, with the wind
moaning among the rocks. We shall lose the joy and
the strength of that Divine protection unless we honestly
and constantly try to keep our sense of it bright. Eyes
that have been gazing on earthly joys, or perhaps gloat-
ing on evil sights, cannot see the angel presence. A
Christian man, on a road which he cannot travel with a
clear conscience, will see no angel, not even the Angel,
with the drawn sword in His hand, that bars Balaam's
path among the vineyards. A man coming out of some
room blazing with gas cannot all at once see into the
violet depths of the mighty heavens, that lie above him
with all their shimmering stars. So this truth of our text
THE ENCAMPING ANGEL. 35
is a tru-h of faith, and the beUeving eye alone beholds
the Angel of the Lord.
Notice, too, that final word of deliverance. This Psalm
is continually recurring to that idea. The word occurs
four times in it, and the thought still oftener. Whether
the date is rightly given, as we have assumed it to be, or
not, at all events that harping upon this one phrase in-
dicates that some season of great trial was its birth-time,
when all the writer's thoughts were engrossed and his
prayers summed up in the one thing — deliverance. He
is quite sure that such deliverance must follow if the
Angel presence be there. But he knows too that the en-
campment of the Angel of the Lord will not keep away
sorrows, and trial, and sharp need. So his highest hope
is not of immunity from these, but of rescue out of them.
And his ground of hope is that his heavenly ally cannot
let him be overcome. That He will let him be troubled
and put in peril he has found ; that He will not let him
be crushed he believes. Shaded and modest hopes are
the brightest we can venture to cherish. The protection
which we have is protection in, and not protection from,
strife and danger. It is a filter which lets the icy cold
water of sorrow drop numbing upon us, but keeps back
the poison that was in it. We have to fight, but He will
fight with us ; to sorrow, but not alone nor without hope ;
to pass through many a peril, but we shall get through
them. Deliverance, which implies danger, need, and
woe, is the best we can hope for.
It is the least we are entitled to expect if we love Him.
It is the certain issue of His encamping round about us.
Always with us. He will strike for us at the best moment.
" The Lord God is in the midst of her always ; the Lord
will help her, and that right early." So like the hunted
36 THE ENCAMPING ANGEL.
fugitive in Adullam we may lift up our confident voices
even when the stress of strife and sorrow is upon us ; and
though Gath be in sight and Saul just over the hills, and
no better refuge than a cave in a hill-side ; yet in pro-
phecy built upon our consciousness that the Angel of the
Covenant is with us now, we may antedate the deliver-
ance that shall be, and think of it as even now accom-
plished. So the apostle, when within sight of the block
and the headsman's axe, broke into the rapture of his
last words : " The Lord shall deliver me from every evil
work, and will preserve me to His heavenly kingdom : to
whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen." Was he
wrong ?
V.
HEROIC FAITH.
Ezra viii. 22, 23, 31, 32,
I was ashamed to require of the king a band of soldiers and horse-
men to help us against the enemy in the way ; because we had
spoken unto the king, saying, The hand of our God is upon all
them for good that seek him. ... So we fasted and besought
our God for thi^. . . The hand of our God was upon us, and
he delivered us from the hand of the enemy, and of such as lay
in wait by the way. And we came to Jerusalem.
npHE memory of Ezra the scribe has scarcely had fair
play among Bible-reading people. True, neither his
character nor the incidents of his life reach the height of
interest or of grandeur belonging to the earlier men
and their times. He is no hero, or prophet ; only a
scribe ; there is a certain narrowness as well as a prosaic
turn about his mind, and altogether one feels that he is a
smaller man than the Elijahs and Davids of the older
days. But the homely garb of the scribe covered a very
brave devout heart, and the story of his life deserves to
be more familiar to us than it is.
This scrap from the account of his preparations for the
march from Babylon to Jerusalem gives us a glimpse of
high-toned faith, and a noble strain of feeling. He and
his company had a long weary journey of four months
38 HEROIC FAITH.
before them. They had had little experience of arms
and warfare, or of hardships and desert marches, in their
Babylonian homes. Their caravan was made unwieldy
and feeble by the presence of a large proportion of women
and children. They had much valuable property with
them. The stony desert, which stretches unbroken from
the Euphrates to the uplands on the East of Jordan, was
infested then as now by wild bands of marauders, who
might easily swoop down on the encumbered march of
Ezra and his men, and make a clean sweep of all which
they had. And he knew that he had but to ask and have
an escort from the king that would ensure their safety
till they saw Jerusalem. Artaxerxes' surname, " the long-
handed," may have described a physical peculiarity, but
it also expressed the reach of his power ; his arm could
reach these wandering plunderers, and if Ezra and his
troop were visibly under his protection, they could march
secure. So it was not a small exercise of trust in a
higher hand that is told us here so simply. It took some
strength of principle to abstain from asking what it would
have been so natural to ask, so easy to get, so comfort-
able to have. But, as he says, he remembered how con-
fidently he had spoken of God's defence, and he feels
that he must be true to his professed creed, even if it
deprives him of the king's guards. He halts his followers
for three days at the last station before the desert, and
there, with fasting and prayer, they put themselves in
God's hand ; and then the band, with their wives and little
ones, and their substance, — a heavily-loaded and feeble
caravan, — fling themselves into the dangers of the long,
dreary, robber-haunted march. Did not the scribe's robe
cover as brave a heart as ever beat beneath a breast-
plate ?
HEROIC FAITH. 39
That symbolic phrase, " the hand of our God," as ex-
pressive of the Divine protection, occurs with remarkable
frequency in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah, and
though not peculiar to them, is yet strikingly character-
istic of them. It has a certain beauty and force of its own.
The hand is of course the seat of active power. It is on
or over a man like some great shield held aloft above him,
below which there is safe hiding. So that great hand
bends itself over us, and we are secure beneath its hollow.
As a child sometimes carries a tender-winged butterfly in
the globe of its two hands that the bloom on its wmgs
may not be ruffled by its fluttering, so He carries our
feeble unarmoured souls enclosed in the covert of His
Almighty hand. " Who hath measured the waters in the
hollow of His hand ? " " Who hath gathered the wind in
His fists ? " In that curved palm, where all the seas lie
as a very little thing, we are held ; the grasp that keeps
back the tempests from their wild rush, keeps us, too,
from being smitten by their blast. As a father may lay
his own large muscular hand on his child's tiny fingers to
help him, or as " Elisha put his hands on the king's
hands," that the contact might strengthen him to shoot
the arrow of the Lord's deliverance, so the hand of our
God is upon us to impart power as well as protection ;
and our " bow abides in strength," when " the arms of
our hands are made strong by the hands of the mighty
God of Jacob." That was Ezra's faith, and that should
be ours.
Note Ezra's sensitive shrinking from anything like in
consistency between his creed and his practice. It was
easy to talk about God's protection when he was safe
behind the w^alls of Babylon; but now the push had
come. There was a real danger before him and his un-
40 HEROIC FAITH.
v/arlike followers. No doubt, too, there were plenty of
people who would have been delighted to catch him
tripping ; and he felt that his cheeks would have tingled
with shame if they had been able to say, " Ah ! that is
what all his fine professions come to, is it ? He wants a
convoy, does he ? We thought as much. It is always so
with these people who talk in that style. They are just
like the rest of us when the pinch comes." So, with a
high and keen sense of what was required by his avowed
principles, he will have no guards for the road. There
was a man whose religion was, at any rate, not a fair-
weather religion. It did not go off in fine speeches about
trusting to the protection of God, spoken from behind the
skirts of the king, or from the middle of a phalanx of his
soldiers. He clearly meant what he said, and believed
every word of it as a prose fact, which was solid enough to
build conduct on.
I am afraid a great many of us would rather have tried
to reconcile our asking for a band of horsemen with our
professed trust in God's hand ; and there would have
been plenty of excuses very ready about using means as
well as exercising faith, and not being called upon to
abandon advantages, and not pushing a good principle to
Quixotic lengths, and so on, and so on. But whatever
truth there is in such considerations, at any rate, we may
well learn the lesson of this story — to be true to our pro-
fessed principles ; to beware of making our religion a
matter of words ; to live, when the time for putting them
into practice comes, by the maxims which we have been
forward to proclaim when there was no risk in applying
them ; and to try sometimes to look at our lives with the
eyes of people who do not share our faith, that we may
bring our actions up to the mark of what they expect of
HEROIC FAITH. 41
US. If " the Church " would oftener think of what " the
world " looks for from it, it would seldomer have cause
to be ashamed of the terrible gap between its words and
its deeds.
Especially in regard to this matter of trust in an unseen
hand, and reliance on visible helps, we all need to be
very rigid in our self-inspection. Faith in the good hand
of God upon us for good should often lead to the aban-
donment, and always to the subordination, of material
aids. It is a question of detail, which each man must
settle for himself as each occasion arises, whether in any
given case abandonment or subordination is our duty.
This is not the place to enter on so large and difficult a
question. But, at all events, let us remember, and try to
work into our own lives, that principle which the easy-
going Christianity of this day has honey-combed with so
many exceptions, that it scarcely has any whole surface
left at all ; that the absolute surrender and forsaking of
external helps and goods is sometimes essential to the
preservation and due expression of reliance on God.
There is very litde fear of any of us pushing that prin-
ciple to Quixotic lengths. The danger is all the other
way. So it is worth while to notice that we have here an
instance of a man's being carried by a certain lofty en-
thusiasm further than the mere law of duty would take
him. There would have been no harm in Ezra's asking
an escort, seeing that his whole enterprise was made
possible by the king's support. He would not have been
" leaning on an arm of flesh " by availing himself of the
royal troops, any more than when he used the royal
firman. But a true man often feels that he cannot do
the things which he might without sin do. " All things
are lawful for me, but all things are not expedient," said
42 HEROIC FAITH.
Paul. And the same apostle eagerly contended that he
had a perfect right to money support from the Gentile
Churches ; and then, in the next breath, flamed up into,
'* I have used none of these things, for it were better for
me to die, than that any man should make my glorying
void." A sensitive spirit, or one profoundly stirred by
religious emotion, will, like the apostle whose feet were
moved by love, far outrun the slower soul, whose steps
are only impelled by the thought of duty. Better that
the cup should run over than that it should not be full.
Where we delight to do His will, there will often be more
than a scrupulously regulated enough ; and where there is
not sometimes that " more," there will never be enough.
*'Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore
Of nicely calculated less or more."
What shall we say of people who profess that God is
their portion, and are as eager in the scramble for money
as anybody ? What kind of a commentary will sharp-
sighted, sharp-tongued observers have a right to make on
us, whose creed is so unlike theirs, while our lives are
identical ? Do you believe, friends, that " the hand of
our God is upon all them for good that seek him " ?
Then, do you not think that racing after the prizes of
this world, with flushed cheeks and labouring breath, or
longing, with a gnawing hunger of heart, for any earthly
good, or lamenting over the removal of creatural defences
and joys, as if heaven were empty because some one's
place, here is, or as if God were dead because dear ones
die, may well be a shame to us, and a taunt on the lips
of our enemies. Let us learn again the lesson from this
old story, — that if our faith in God is not the veriest sham,
it demands, and will produce, the abandonment some
HEROIC FAITH.
43
times, the subordination always, of external helps and
material good.
Notice, too, Ezra's preparation for receiving the Divine
Help. There, by the river Ahava, he halts his company
like a prudent leader, to repair omissions, and put the
last touches to their organization before facing the wilder-
ness. But he has another purpose also. " I proclaimed
a fast there, to seek of God a right way for us." There
was no fool-hardiness in his courage ; he was well aware
of all the possible dangers on the road ; and whilst he is
confident of the Divine protection, he knows that, in his
own quiet, matter-of-fact words, it is given " to all them
that seek Him." So his faith not only impels him to
the renunciation of the Babylonian guard, but to earnest
supplication for the defence in which he is so confident.
He is sure it will be given — so sure, that he will have no
other shield ; and yet he fasts and prays that he and his
company may receive it. He prays because he is sure
that he will receive it, and does receive it because he
prays and is sure
So for us, the condition and preparation on and by
which we are sheltered by that great hand, is the faith
that asks, and the asking of faith. We must forsake the
earthly props, but we must also believingly desire to be
upheld by the heavenly arms. We make God responsible
for our safety when we abandon other defence, and com-
mit ourselves to Him. With eyes open to our dangers,
and full consciousness of our own unarmed and unwarlike
weakness, let us solemnly commend ourselves to Him,
rolling all our burden on His strong arms, knowing that
He is able to keep that which we have committed to
Him. He will accept the trust, and set His guards about
us. As the song of the returning exiles, which may
44 HEROIC FAITH.
have been sung by the river Ahava, has it : " My help
Cometh from the Lord. The Lord is thy keeper. The
Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand."
So our story ends with the triumphant vindication of
this Quixotic faith. A flash of joyful feeling breaks
through tlie simple narrative, as it tells how the words
spoken before the king came true in the experience of
the weaponless pilgrims : " The hand of our God was
upon us, and He delivered us from the hand of the
enemy, and of such as lay in wait by the way ; and we
came to Jerusalem." It was no rash venture that we
made. He was all that we hoped and asked. Through
all the weary march He led us. From the wild, desert-
born robbers, that watched us from afar, ready to come
down on us, from ambushes and hidden perils. He kept
us, because we had none other help, and all our hope was
in Him. The ventures of faith are ever rewarded. We
cannot set our expectations from God too high. What
we dare scarcely hope now we shall one day remember.
When we come to tell the completed story of our lives,
we shall have to record the fulfilment of all God's pro-
mises, and the accomplishment of all our prayers that
were built on these. Here let us cry, " Be Thy hand upon
us." Here let us trust Thy hand shall be upon us. Then
we shall have to say, " The hand of our God was upon us."
And as we look from the watch-towers of the city, on the
desert that stretches to its very walls, and remember all
the way by which He led us, we shall rejoice over His
vindication of our poor faith, and praise Him that " not
one thing hath failed of all the things which the Lord
our God spake concerning us."
VI.
THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS.
Ezra viii. 29.
Watch ye, and keep thevi, until ye weigh the^n ... at Jerusalem,
in the chambers of the house of the Lord.
'^HE little band of Jews, seventeen hundred in number,
-L returning from Babylon, had just started on that long
pilgrimage, and made a brief halt in order to get every-
thinc^ m order for their transit across the desert; when
their leader, Ezra, taking count of his men, discovers
that amongst them there are none of the priests or
Levites. He then takes measures to reinforce his httle
army with a contingent of these, and entrusts to their
special care a very valuable treasure in gold, and silver,
and sacrificial vessels, which had been given to them for
use in the house of the Lord. The words which I have
read to you are a portion of the charge which he gave to
those twelve priestly guardians of the precious things,
that were to be used in worship when they got back to
the Temple. " Watch and keep them, until ye weigh
them in the chambers of the house of the Lord."
So I think I may venture, without being unduly fanci-
ful to take these words as a type of the injunctions which
are -iven to us Christian people ; and to see in them a
46 THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS.
Striking and picturesque representation of the duties that
devolve upon us in the course of our journey across the
desert to the Temple-Home above.
And, to begin with, let me remind you, for a moment
or two, what the precious treasure is which is thus en-
trusted to our keeping and care. We can scarcely, in
such a connection and with such a metaphor, forget the
words of our Lord about a certain king that went to
receive his kingdom, and to return ; who called together
his servants, and gave to each of them according to their
several ability, with the injunction to trade upon that
until he came. The same metaphor which our Master
employed lies in this story before us, — in the one case,
sacrificial vessels and sacred treasures ; in the other case,
the talents out of the rich possessions of the departing
king.
Nor can we forget, either, the other phase of the same
figure] which the Apostle employs when he says to his
" own son " and substitute, Timothy ; '^ That good thing
which was committed unto thee, keep by the Holy Ghost
which dwelleth in us." Nor that other word to the same
Timothy, which says : " O Timothy, keep that which was
committed to thy trust, and avoid profane and vain
babblings, and oppositions of science, falsely so called."
In these quotations, the treasure, and the rich deposit,
is the faith once delivered to the saints ; the solemn
message of love and peace in Jesus Christ, which was
entrusted, first of all to those preachers, but as truly to
every one of Christ's disciples.
So, then, the metaphor is capable of two applications.
The first is to the rich treasure and solemn trust of our
own nature, of our own souls ; the faculties and capacities,
precious beyond all count, rich beyond all else that a
THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS. 47
man has ever received. Nothing that you have is half
so much as that which you are. The possession of a soul
that knows and loves, and can obey; that trusts and
desires; that can yearn and reach out to Jesus Christ, and
to God in Christ ; of a conscience that can yield to His
command; and faculties of comprehending and under-
standing what comes to them from Jesus Christ — that is
more than any other possession, treasure, or tmst. That
which you and I carry with us, — the infinite possibilities of
these aA\ful spirits of ours,— the tremendous faculties which
are given to every human soul, and which, like a candle
plunged into oxygen, are meant to burn far more brightly
under the stimulus of Christian faith and the possession
of God's truth, are the rich deposit committed to our
charge. You priests of the living God ! you men and
women, who say that you are Christ's, and therefore are
consecrated to a nobler priesthood than any other— to
you is given this solemn charge : " That good thing which
is committed unto thee, keep by the Holy Ghost that
dwelleth in you." The precious treasure of your own
natures, your own hearts, your own understandings, wills,
consciences, desires— keep these, until they are weighed
in the house of the Lord in Jerusalem.
And in like manner, taking the other aspect of the
metaphor— we have given to us, in order that we may do
something with it, that great deposit and treasure of truth,
which is all embodied and incarnated in Jesus Christ our
Lord. It is bestowed upon us that we may use it for our-
selves, and in order that we may carry it triumphantly all
through the world. Possession involves responsibility
always. The word of salvation is given to us. If we
go tampering with it, by erroneous apprehension, by un-
fair usage, by failing to apply it to our own daily life ;
48 THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS.
then it will fade and disappear from our grasp. It is
given to us in order that we may keep it safe, and carry
it high up, across the desert, as becomes the priests of the
most high God.
The treasure is first — our own selves, — with all that we
are and may be, under the stimulating and quickening
influence of His grace and spirit. The treasure is next —
His great word of salvation, once delivered unto the saints,
and to be handed on, without diminution or alteration in
its fair perspective and manifold harmonies, to the genera-
tions that are to come. So, think of yourselves as the
priests of God, journeying through the wilderness, with
the treasures of the temple and the vessels of the sacri-
fice for your special deposit and charge.
Well, then, a word next as to the co?nmand, the guardian-
ship that is here set forth. " Watch ye, and keep them."
That is to say, I suppose, according to the ordinary
idiom of the Old Testament, Watch, in order that you may
keep. Or to translate it into other words : The treasure
which is given into our hands requires, for its safe preserv-
ation, unceasing vigilance. Take the picture of my text :
These Jews were four months, according to the narrative,
in travelling from their first station upon their journey up
to Jerusalem across the desert. There were enemies
lying in wait for them by the way. With noble self-
restraint and grand chivalry, the leader of the little band
says : " I was ashamed to require of the king a band of
soldiers and horsemen, to help us against the enemy in the
way ; because we had spoken unto the king, saying,
The hand of our God is upon all them for good that
seek Him ; but His power and His wrath is against all
that forsake Him." And so they would not go to him,
cap in hand, and ask him to give them a guard to take
THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS. 49
care of them ; but " We fasted and besought our God for
this ; and He was mtreated of us."
Thus the little company, without arms, without protec-
tion, with nothing but a prayer and a trust to make them
strong, flung themselves into the pathless desert with all
those precious things in their possession ; and all the pre-
caution which Ezra took was to lay hold of the priests in
the little party, and to say : " Here ! all through the march
do you stick by these precious things. Whoever sleeps,
do you watch. Whoever is careless, be you vigilant.
Take these for your charge, and remember I weigh them
here before we start, and they will be all weighed again
when we get there. So bethink yourselves."
And is not that exactly what Christ says to us ?
*' Watch ; keep them ; be vigilant, that ye may keep ; and
keep them, because they will be weighed and registered
when you arrive there."
I cannot do more than touch upon two or three of the
ways in which this charge may be worked out, in its ap-
plication for ourselves, beginning with that first one which
is implied in the words of the text — unshunbering vigil-
ance; then trust, like the trust which is glorified in the
context, depending only on " the good hand of our God
upon us ; '' then purity, because, as Ezra said, '' Ye are
holy unto the Lord. The vessels are holy also ; " and
tlierefore ye are the fit persons to guard them. And
besides that, there is in our keeping our trust, a method
v.hich does not apply to the incident before us ; namely,
use, in order to their preservation.
That is to say, first of all, no slumber ; not a moment's
relaxation ; or some of those who lie in wait for us on the
way will be down upon us, and some of the precious
things will go. While all the rest of the weaned camp
£
50 THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS.
slept, the guardians of the treasure had to outwatdi
the stars. While others might straggle on the march,
lingering here or there, or resting on some patch of
green, they had to close up round their precious charge ;
others might let their eyes wander from the path, they
had ever to look to their care. For them the journey
had a double burden, and unslumbering vigilance was
their constant duty.
We likewise have unslumberingly and ceaselessly to
watch over that which is committed to our charge. For,
depend upon it, if for an instant we turn away our heads,
the thievish birds that flutter over us will be down upon
the precious seed that is in our basket, or that we have
sown in the furrows, and it will be gone. Watch, that ye
may keep.
And then, still further, see how in this story before us
there are brought out very picturesquely, and very simply,
deeper lessons still. It is not enough that a man shall be
for ever keeping his eye upon his own character and his
own faculties, and seeking sedulously to cultivate and
improve them, as he that must give an account. There
must be another look than that Ezra said, in effect, " Not
all the cohorts of Babylon can help us ; and we do not
want them. We have one strong hand that will keep us
safe;" and so he, and his men, with all this mass of
wealth, so tempting to the wild robbers that haunted the
road, flung themselves into the desert, knowing that all
along it there were, as he says, " such as lay in wait for
them." His confidence was : " God will bring us all safe
out to the end there ; and we shall carry every glittering
piece of the precious things that we brought out of
Babylon right into the Temple of Jerusalem." Yet he
says, " Watch ye and keep them."
THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS. 51
What does that come to in reference to our religious
experience ? Why this : " Work out your own salvation
with fear and trembling ; for it is God that worketh in
you, both to will and to do of His own great pleasure."
You do not need these external helps. Fling yourself
wholly upon His keeping hand, and also watch and keep
yourselves. " I know in whom I have believed, and that
He is able to keep that which I have committed unto
Him against that day," is the complement of the other
words, ''That good thing which was committed unto
thee, keep by the Holy Ghost."
So guardianship is, first, unceasing vigilance ] and then
it is lowly trust. And besides that, it is pimctilious
purity. " I said unto them, Ye are holy unto the Lord ;
the vessels are holy unto the Lord. Watch ye, and keep
them."
It was fitting that the priests should carry the things
that belonged to the Temple. No other hands but con-
secrated hands had a right to touch them. To none
other guardianship but the guardianship of the possessors
of a symbolic and ceremonial purity, could the vessels
of a symbolic and ceremonial worship be entrusted ; and
to none others but the possessors of real and spiritual
holiness can the treasures of the true Temple, of an
inward and spiritual worship, be entrusted. " Be ye clean
that bear the vessels of the Lord," said Isaiah long after.
The only way to keep our treasure undiminished and
untarnished, is to keep ourselves pure and clean.^
And, lastly, we have to exercise a guardianship which
is not only unslumbering vigilance, lowly trust, punctilious
purity, but also requires the constant use of the treasure.
"Watch ye, and keep them." Although the vessels
which those priests bore through the desert were used for
52 THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS.
no service during all the weary march, they weighed just
the same when they got to the end as at the beginning ;
though, no doubt, even their fine gold had become dim
and tarnished through disuse. But if we do not use the
vessels that are entrusted to our care, they will not weigh
the same. The man that wrapped up his talent in the
napkin, and said, " Lo, there thou hast that is thine," was
too sanguine. There was never an unused talent rolled
up in a handkerchief yet, but when it was taken out and
put into the scales it was lighter than when it was com-
mitted to the keeping of the earth. Gifts that are used
fructify. Capacities that are strained to the uttermost
increase. Service strengthens the power of service ; and
just as the reward of work is more work, the way for
making ourselves fit for bigger things is to do the things
that are lying by us. The blacksmith's arm, the sailor's
eye, the organs of any piece of handicraft, as we all know,
are strengthened by exercise ; and so it is in this higher
region.
And so, dear brethren, take these four words — vigilance,
trust, purity, exercise. Watch ye, and keep them, until
they are weighed in the chambers of the House of the
Lord.
And, lastly, think of that weighing in the House of the
Lord. Cannot you see the picture of the little band
when they finally reach the goal of their pilgrimage ; and
three days after they arrived, as the narrative tells us,
went up into the Temple, and there, by number and
by weight, rendered up their charge, and were clear of
their responsibility? '' And the first came and said. Lord,
thy pound hath gained ten pounds. And he said, Well,
thou good servant, because thou hast been faithful in a
very little, have thou authority over ten cides."
THE CHARGE OF THE PILGRIM PRIESTS. 53
Oh, how that thought of the day when they Avould
empty out the rich treasure upon the marble pavement, and
clash the golden vessels into the scales, must have filled
their hearts with vigilance during all the weary watches,
when desert stars looked down upon the slumbering
encampment, and they paced wakeful all the night.
And how the thought, too, must have filled their hearts
with joy, when they tried to picture to themselves the
sigh of satisfaction and the sense of relief with which,
after all the perils, their " feet would stand within thy
gates, O Jerusalem," and they would be able to say,
" That which thou hast given me I have kept, and nothing
of it is lost."
A lifetime would be a small expenditure to secure that ;
and though it cannot be that you and I shall meet the
trial and the weighing of that great day without many a
flaw and much loss, yet we may say : " I know in whom
I have believed, and that He is able to keep my deposit —
whether it be in the sense of that which I have committed
unto Him, or in the sense of that which He has com-
mitted unto me — against that day." We may hope that,
by His gracious help and His pitying acceptance, even
such careless stewards and negligent watchmen as vre
are, may lay ourselves down in peace at the last, saying,
*' I have kept the faith ; " and may be awakened by the
word, " Well done, good and faithful servant."
VII.
CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS.
Mark ix. 19.
He answereth him, and saith, O faithless generation, how long shall
I be with you ? how long shall I suffer you ?
' 1 ^HERE is a very evident, and, I think, intentional
-*■ contrast between the two scenes, of the transfigura-
tion, and of this healing of the maniac boy. And in
nothing is the contrast more marked than in the de-
meanour of these enfeebled and unbelieving apostles, as
contrasted with the rapture of devotion of the other
three, and with the lowly submission and faith of Moses
and Elias. Perhaps, too, the difference between the
calm serenity of the mountain, and the hell-tortured
misery of the plain — between the converse with the
sainted perfected dead, and the converse with their un-
worthy successors — made Christ feel more sharply and
poignantly than He ordinarily did His disciples' slowness
of apprehension and want of faith. At any rate, it does
strike one as remarkable that the only occasion on which
there came from His lips anything that sounded like im-
patience and a momentary flash of indignation was, when
in sharpest contrast with " This is my beloved Son : hear
Him/' He had to come down from the mountain to meet
CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS. 55
the devil-possessed boy, the useless agony of the father,
the sneering faces of the scribes, and the impotence of
the disciples. Looking on all this, He turns to His fol-
lowers— for it is to the apostles my text is spoken, and
not to the crowd outside — with this most remarkable
exclamation : " O faithless generation, how long shall
I be with you ? how long shall I suffer you ? "
Now, I said these words at first sight looked almost
like a momentary flash of indignation, as if for once a
spot had come on His pallid cheek — a spot of anger —
but I do not think it is so if we look a little more closely.
The first thing that seems to be in it is not anger, in-
deed, but a very distinct and very pathetic expression of
Christ's infinitQ J>ai;i, because of man's faithlessness. The
element of personal sorrow is most obvious here. It is
not only that He is sad for their sakes that they are so
unreceptive, and He can do so little for them — I shall
have something to say about that presently — but that He
feels for Himself, just as we do in our poor humble
measure, the chilling effect of a:, atmosphere where there
is no sympathy. All that ever the teachers and guides
and leaders of the world have had to bear — all the misery
of opening out their hearts in the frosty air of unbelief
and rejection — Christ endured. All that men have ever
felt — of how hard it is to keep on working when not a soul
understands them, when not a single creature believes in
them, when there is nobody that will accept their mes-
sage, none that will give them credit for pure motives —
Jesus Christ had to feel, and that in an altogether singular
degree. There never w^as such a lonely soul on this |
earth as His, just because there never was another so '
pure and loving.
" The little hills rejoice together^'' as the Psalm says,
56 CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS.
" on every side," but the great Alpine peak is alone there,
away up amongst the cold and the snows — the solitary
Christ, the uncompreh ended Christ, the unaccepted Christ.
Let us see in this one word how humanly, and yet how
divinely, He felt the loneliness to Avhich His love and
purity condemned Him.
The Plain felt soul-chilHng after the blessed communion
of the Mountain. There was such a difference between
Moses and Elias and the voice that said "This is my
beloved Son : hear him ; " and all the disbelief and slow-
ness of spiritual apprehension of the people down below
there ; that no wonder that for once the pain that He
generally kept absolutely down and silent, broke the
bounds even of His restraint, and shaped for itself this
pathetic utterance : " How long shall I be with you ? how
long shall I suffer you ? "
Oh, dear friends, here is "a little window through
which we may see a great matter" if we will only think of
how all that solitude, and all that sorrow of uncompre-
hended aims, was borne lovingly and patiently, right away
on to the very end, for every one of us. I know that
there are many of the aspects of Christ's life in which
Christ's griefs tell more on the popular apprehension ; but
I do not know that there is one in which the title of " The
man of sorrows " is to all deeper thinking more pathetic-
ally vindicated than in this — the solitude of the uncom-
prehended and the unaccepted Christ — His pain at His
disciples' faithlessness.
And then do not let us forget that in this short sharp
cry of anguish — for it is that — there may be detected by
the listening ear not only the tone of personal hurt, but
the tone of disappointed and thwarted love. Because of
their unbelief He knew that they could not receive what
CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS. 57
He desired to give them. We find Him more than once
in His hfe hemmed in, hindered, balked of His purpose,—
thwarted, as I say, in His design,— simply because there
was nobody with a heart open to receive the rich treasure
that He was ready to pour out. He had to keep it
locked up in His own spirit, else it would have been
wasted and spilled upon the ground. " He could do no
mighty works there because of their unbelief;" and here
He is standing in the midst of the men that knew Him
best, that understood Him most, that were nearest to Him
in sympathy ; but even they were not ready for all this
wealth of affection, all this infinitude of blessing with
which His heart is charged. They offered no place to put
it. They shut up the narrow cranny through which it
might have come, and so He has to turn from them,
bearing it away unbestowed. Like some man that goes
out in the morning with his seed-basket full, and finds the
whole field where he would fain have sown covered al-
ready with the springing weeds or burdened with the hard
rock, and has to bring back the germs of possible life to
bless and fertilize some other soil. Ah ! " He that goeth
fort*h weeping, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come
again with joy;" but He that comes back weeping,
bearing the precious seed that He found no field to sow in,
knows a deeper sadness, which has in it no prophecy
of joy. It is wonderfully pathetic and beautiful, I think,
to see how Jesus Christ knew the pains of wounded love
that cannot get expressed because there is no heart to
receive it.
Here I would remark, too, before I go to another
point, that these two elements— that of personal sorrow
and that of disappointed love and balked purposes—
continue still, and are represented as in some measure
58 CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS.
felt by Him now. It was to disciples that He said, " O
faithless generation ! " He did not mean to charge them
with the entire absence of all confidence, but He did
mean to declare that their poor, feeble faith, such as it
was, was not worth naming in comparison with the
abounding mass of their unbelief. There was one light
spark in them, and there was also a great heap of green
wood that had not caught the flame, and only smoked
instead of blazing. And so He said to them, " O faithless
generation ! "
Ay, and if He came down here amongst us now, and
went through the professing Christians in this land, to
how many of us — regard being had to the feebleness of
our confidence and the strength of our unbelief — He
would have to say the same thing, " O faithless genera-
tion ! "
The version of that clause in Matthew and Luke adds
a significant word, — "faithless dca^ perverse generation."
The addition carries a grave lesson, as teaching us that
the two are inseparably united \ that the want of faith is
morally a crime and sin ; that unbelief is at once the
most tragic manifestation of man's perverse will, and also
in its turn the source of still more obstinate and wide-
spreading evil. BHndness to His light, and rejection of
His love. He treats as the very head and crown of evil.
Like intertwining snakes, the loathly heads are separate ;
but the slimy convolutions are twisted indistinguishably
together, and all unbelief has in it the nature of per-
versity— as all perversity has in it the nature of unbelief
'' He will convince the world of sin, because they believe
not on me."
May we venture to say, as we have already hinted, that
all this pain is, in some mysterious way, still inflicted on
CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS. 59
His loving heart? Can it be that every time we are guilty
of unbelieving, unsympathetic rejection of His love, we
send a pang of real pain and sorrow into the heart of
Christ? It is a strange, solemn thought. There are
many difficulties which start up, if we at all accept it.
But still it does appear as if we could scarcely believe in
His perpetual manhood, or think of His love as being in
any real sense. a human love, without believing that He
sorrows when we sin ; and that we can grieve, and wound,
and cause to recoil upon itself, as it were, and close up
that loving and gracious Spirit that delights in being met
with answering love. If we may venture to take our
love as in any measure analogous to His— and unless we
do His love is to us a word without meaning — we may
believe that it is so. Do not we know that the purer our
love, and the more it has purified us, the more sensitive
it becomes, even while the less suspicious it becomes ?
Is not the purest, most unselfish, highest love, that in
which the least failure in response is felt most painfully ?
Though there be no anger, and no change in the Love,
still there is a pang where there is an inadequate per-
ception, or an unworthy reception, of it. And Scripture
seems to countenance the belief that Divine Love, too,
may know something, in some mysterious fashion, like
that feeling, when it warns us, '' Grieve not the Holy
Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of
redemption." So we may venture to say. Grieve not the
Christ of God, who redeems us ; and remember that we
grieve Him most when we will not let Him pour His
love upon us, but turn a sullen, unresponsive unbelief
towards His pleading grace, as some glacier shuts out the
sunshine from the mountain-side with its thick-ribbed ice.
Another thought, v/hich seems to me to be expressed
6o CHRTSrS LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS.
in this wonderful exclamation of our Lord's, is — that their
faithlessness bound Christ to earth, and kept Him here.
As there is not anger, but only pain, so there is also, I
think, not exactly impatience, but a desire to depart,
coupled with the feeling that He cannot leave them till
they have grown stronger in faith. And that feeling is
increased by the experience of their utter helplessness
and shameful discomfiture during His brief absence.
That had shown that they were not fit to be trusted alone.
He had been away for a day up in the mountain there,
and though they did not build an altar to any golden calf,
like their ancestors, when their leader was absent, still
when He comes back He finds things all gone wrong
because of the few hours of His absence. What would
they do if He were to go away from them altogether?
They would never be able to stand it at all. It is im-
possible that He should leave them thus — raw, immature.
The plant has not yet grown sufficiently strong to take
away the prop round which it climbed. " How long
must I be with you ? " says the loving Teacher, who is
prepared ungrudgingly to give His slow scholar as much
time as he needs to learn his lesson. He is not im-
patient, but He desires to finish the task ; and yet He is
ready to let the scholar's dulness determine the duration
of His stay. Surely that is wondrous and heart-touching
love, that Christ should let their slowness measure the
time during which He should linger here, and refrain
from the glory which He desired. We do not know all
the reasons which determined the length of our Lord's
life upon earth, but this was one of them, — that He could
not go away until He had left these men strong enough
to stand by themselves, and to lay the foundations of the
Church. Therefore He yielded to the plea of their very
CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS. 6i
faithlessness and backwardness, and with this wonderful
word of condescension and appeal, bade them say for
how many more days He must abide in the plain, and
turn His back on the glories that had gleamed for a
moment on the mountain of transfiguration.
In this connection, too, is it not striking to notice how
long His short life and ministry appeared to our Lord
Himself? There is to me something very pathetic in
that question He addressed to one of His Aposdes near
the end of His pilgrimage. " Have I been so long time
with you, and yet hast thou not known Me ? " It was
not so very long — three years, perhaps, at the outside —
and much less, if we take the shortest computation ; and
yet to Him it had been long. The days had seemed to
go slowly. He longed that the fire which He came tc
fling on earth were already kindled, and the moments
seemed to drop so slowly from the urn of time. But
neither the holy longing to consummate His work by tlie
mystery of His passion, to which more than one of His
words bear witness, nor the not less holy longing to be
glorified with the glory which He had with the Father
before the world was, which we may reverently venture
to suppose in Him, could be satisfied till His slow
scholars were wiser, and His feeble followers stronger.
And then again, here we get a glimpse into the depth
of Christ's patient forbearance. We might read these
other words of our text, " How long shall I suffer
you?" with such an intonation as to make them almost
a threat that the limits of forbearance would soon be
reached, and that He was not going to " suffer them "
much longer. Some commentators speak of them as
expressing " holy indignation," and I quite believe that
there is such a thing, and that on other occasions it was
62 CHRIST'S LAMENT OVER OUR FAITHLESSNESS.
plainly spoken in Christ's words. But I fail to catch the
tone of it here. To me this plaintive question has the
very opposite of indignation in its ring. It sounds rather
like a pledge that as long as they need forbearance they
will get it ; but, at the same time, a question of " How
lo-ng that is to be ? " It implies the inexhaustible riches
and resources of His patient mercy. And oh, dear
brethren, that endless forbearance is the only refuge and
ground of hope we have. His perfect charity " is not soon
angry ; beareth all things," and never faileth. To it we
have all to make the appeal — •
*' Though I have most unthankful been
Of all that e'er Thy grace received ;
Ten thousand times Thy goodness seen,
Ten thousand times Thy goodness grieved ;
Yet, Lord, the chief of sinners spare."
And, thank God, we do not make our appeal in vain.
There is rebuke in His question, but how tender a
rebuke it is ! He rebukes without anger. Plainly He
names the fault. He shows distinctly His sorrow, and
does not hide the strain on His forbearance. That is
His way of cure for His servants' faithlessness. It was
His way on earth ; it is His way in heaven. To us, too,
comes the loving rebuke of this question, " How long
shall I suffer you ? "
Thank God that our answer may be cast into the words
of His own promise : " I say not unto thee, until seven
times ; but until seventy times seven." Bear with me till
Thou hast perfected me ; and then bear me to Thyself,
that I may be with Thee for ever, and grieve Thy love no
more. So may it be, for with Him is plenteous redemp-
tion, and His forbearing " mercy endureth for ever."
VIII.
AN OLD DISCIPLE.
Acts xxi. i6.
One Mnason of Cyprus, an old disciple, with whom we should
lodge.
THERE is something that stimulates the imagination
in these mere shadows of men that we meet in the
New Testament story. What a strange fate that is to be
made immortal by a line in this book — immortal and yet
so unknown ! We do not hear another word about this
host of Paul's, but his name will be familiar to men's ears
till the world's end. This figure is drawn in the slightest
possible outline, with a couple of hasty strokes of the
pencil. But if we take even these few bare words, and
look at them, feeling that there is a man like ourselves
sketched in them, I think we can get a real picture out ot
them, and that even this dim form crowded into the back-
ground of the apostolic story may have a word or two to
say to us.
His name and his birthplace show that he belonged to
the same class as Paul, that is, he was a Hellenist, or a
Jew by descent, but born on Gentile soil, and speaking
Greek. He comes from Cyprus, the native island of
Barnabas, who may have been a friend of his. He was
64 AN OLD DISCIPLE.
an " old disciple/' which does not mean simply that he
was advanced in life, but that he was " a disciple from the
beginning," one of the original group of believers. If we
interpret the word strictly, we must suppose him to have
been one of the rapidly diminishing nucleus, whc thirty
years or more ago had seen Christ in the flesh, and been
drawn to Him by His own words. Evidently the men-
tion of the early date of his conversion suggests that the
number of his contemporaries was becoming few, and that
there was a certain honour and distinction conceded by
the second generation of the Church to the survivors of
the primitive band. Then, of course, as one of the
earliest believers, he must, by this time, have been
advanced in life. A Cypriote by birth, he had emigrated
to, and resided in, Jerusalem ; and there must have had
means and heart to exercise a liberal hospitality. Though
a Hellenist, like Paul, he does not seem to have known
the Apostle before, for the most probable rendering of the
context is, that the disciples from Caesarea, who were
travelling with the Apostle from that place to Jerusalem,
*' brought us to Mnason," implying that this was their first
introduction to each other. But though probably un-
acquainted with the great teacher of the Gentiles — whose
ways were looked on with much doubt by many of the
Jerusalem Christians — the old man, relic of the original
disciples as he was, had full sympathy with Paul, and
opened his house and his heart to receive him. His
adhesion to the Apostle would no doubi carry weight with
*' the many thousands of Jews which believed, and were
all zealous of the law," and were as honourable to him as
helpful to Paul.
Now if we put all this together, does not the shadowy
figure begin to become more substantial ? and does it not
AN OLD DTSCirLE, 65
preach to us some lessons that we may well take to
heart ?
The first thing which this old disciple says to us out of
the misty distance is — Hold fast to your early faith ^ and
to the Christ whom you have known.
Many a year had passed since the days when perhaps
the beauty of the INIaster's own character and the sweet-
ness of His own words had drawn this man to Him. How
much had come and gone since then ! Calvary and the
Resurrection, Olivet and the Pentecost. His own life
and mind had changed from buoyant youth to sober old
age. His whole feelings and outlook on the world were
different. His old friends had mosdy gone. James
indeed was still there, and Peter and John remained until
this present, but most had fallen on sleep. A new
generation was rising round about him, and new thoughts
and ways were at work. But one thing remained for him
what it had been in the old days, and that was Christ,
" One generation cometh and another goeth, but the
Christ abideth for ever."
*' We all are changed by still degrees;
All but the basis of the soul. "
And the " basis of the soul/' in the truest sense, is that
one Qod-laid foundation, on which whosoever buildeth
shall never be confounded, nor ever need to change with
changing time. Are we bi.ilding there ? and do we find
that life, as it advances, but tightens our hold on Jesus
Christ, who is our hope.-
There is no fairer nor happier experience than that of
the old man who has around him the old loves, the old
confidences, and some measure of the old joys. But who
can secure that blessed unity in his life, if he depend on
66 AN OLD DISCIPLE.
the love and help of even the dearest, or on the light
of any creature for his sunshine ? There is but one
way of making all our days one, because one love, one
hope, one joy, one aim binds them all together ; and
that is by taking the abiding Christ for ours, and abiding
in Him all our days. Holding fast by the early convic-
tions does not mean stiffening in them. There is plenty
of room for advancement in Christ. No doubt Mnason,
when he was first a disciple, knew but very little of the
meaning and worth of his Master and His work, compared
with what he had learned in all these years. And our
true progress consists, not in growing away from Jesus,
but in growing up into Him ; not in passing through and
leaving behind the first convictions of Him as Saviour ;
but in having these verified by the experience of years,
deepened and cleared, unfolded and ordered into a
larger, though still incomplete, whole. We may make our
whole lives helpful to that advancement; and blessed
shall we be, if the early faith is the faith that brightens
till the end ; and brightens the end. How beautiful it is
to see a man, below whose feet time is crumbling away,
holding firmly by the Lord whom he has loved and
served all his days, and finding that the pillar of cloud,
which guided him while he lived, begins to glow in its
heart of fire as the shadows fall, and is a pillar of light to
guide him when he comes to die. Dear friends, whether
you be near the starting or near the prize of your Christian
course, '' cast not away your confidence, which hath great
recompense of reward." See to it that the "knowledge
of the Father," which is the '' little children's " possession,
passes through the " strength " of youth, and the " victory
over the world," into the calm knowledge of Him " that
is from the beginning," wherein the fathers find their
AN OLD DISCIPLE. 67
earliest convictions deepened and perfected. " Grow in
grace, and in the knowledge " of Him, whom to know ever
so imperfectly is eternal life ; whom to know a little better,
is the true progress for men ; whom to know more and
more fully is the growth, and gladness, and glory of the
heavens. Look at this shadowy figure that looks out on us
here, and listen to his far off voice, " exhorting us all that-
with purpose of heart we should cleave unto the Lord."
But there is another, and, as some might think, opposite
lesson, to be gathered from this outline sketch, namely,
The welcome which we should be ready to give to new
thoughts and ways. It is evidently meant that we should
note Mnason's position in the Church as significant in
regard to his hospitable reception of the Apostle. You
can fancy how the little knot of " original disciples "
v/ould be apt to value themselves on their position, espe-
cially as time went on, and their ranks were thinned.
They would be tempted to suppose that they must needs
understand the Master's meaning a great deal better than
those who had never known Christ after the flesh ; and
no doubt they would be inclined to share in the suspicion
with which the thorough-going Jewish party in the Church
regarded this Paul, who had never seen the Lord. It
would have been very natural for this good old man to
have said — " I do not Uke these new-fangled ways. There
was nothing of this sort in my younger days. Is it not
likely that we, who were at the beginning of the Gospel,
should understand the Gospel and the Church's work
without this new man coming to set us right ? I am too
old to go in with these changes." All the more honour-
able is it tnat he should have been ready with an open
house to shelter the great champion of the Gentile
Churches; and, as we may reasonably believe, with an open
68 AN OLD DISCIPLE.
heart to welcome his teaching. Depend on it, it was not
every old disciple that would have done as much.
Now, does not this flexibility of mind, and openness of
nature to welcome new ways of work, when united with
the persistent constancy in his old creed, make an ad-
mirable combination ? It is one rare enough at any age,
but especially in elderly men. We are always disposed to
rend apart what ought never to be separated, the inflexible
adherence to a fixed centre of belief, and the freest
ranging around the whole changing circumference. The
man of strong convictions is apt to grip every trifle of
practice and every unimportant bit of bis creed with the
same tenacity with which he holds its vital heart, and to
mistake obstinacy for firmness, and dogged self-will for
faithfulness to truth. The man who welcomes new light,
and reaches forward to greet new ways, is apt to delight
in having much fluid that ought to be fixed, and to value
himself on a "liberality" which simply means that he has
no central truth and no rooted convictions. And as
men get older they stiffen more and more, and have to
leave the new work for new hands, and the new thoughts
for new brains. That is all in the order of nature, but so
much the finer is it when we do see old Christian men
who join to their firm grip of the old Gospel the power
of welcoming, and at least bidding God speed, to new
thoughts and new workers, and new ways of work.
The union of these two characteristics should be con-
sciously aimed at by us all. Hold unchanging, with a
grasp that nothing can relax, by Christ, our life and our
all ; but with that tenacity of mind, try to cultivate
flexibility too. Love the old, but be ready to welcome
the new. Do not consecrate your own or other people's
habits of thought or forms of work with the same sanctity
AN OLD DISCIPLE. 69
which belongs to the central truths of our salvation ; do
not let the willingness to entertain new light lead you to
tolerate any changes there. It is hard to blend the two
virtues together, but they are meant to be complements,
not opposites, to each other. The fluttering leaves and
bending branches need a firm stem and deep roots. The
firm stem looks noblest in its unmoved strength when it
is contrasted with a cloud of light foliage dancing in the
wind. Try to imitate the persistency and the open mind
of that " old disciple " who was so ready to welcome and
entertain the Apostle, of the Gentile Churches.
But there is still another lesson which, I think, this
portrait may suggest, and that is, the /?eaiay that may
dwell in an obscure life. There is nothing to be said
about this old man but that he was a disciple. He had
(lone no great thing for his Lord. No teacher or preacher
VN-as he. No eloquence or genius was in him. No great
heroic deed, or piece of saintly endurance, is to be re-
corded of him, but only this, that he had loved and fol-
lowed Christ all his days. And is not that record enough ?
It is a blessed fate to live for ever in the world's memory,
with only that one word attached to his name — a disciple.
The world may remember very little about us a year
after we are gone. No thought, no deed may be con-
nected with our names beyond some narrow circle of
loving hearts. There may be no place for us in any
record wTitten with a man's pen. But what does that
matter if our names, dear friends, are \\Titten in the
Lamb's Book of Life, with this for sole epitaph, "a
disciple " ? That single phrase is the noblest summary of
a life. A thinker? a hero? a great man? a millionnaire?
no, " a disciple." That says all. May it be your epitaph
and mine !
70 AN OLD DISCIPLE.
What he could do he did. It was not his vocation to
go into the regions beyond, Hke Paul ; to guide the Church,
like James ; to put his remembrances of his Master in a
book, like Matthew ; to die for Jesus, like Stephen. But
he could open his house for Paul and his compan}^, and
so take his share in their work. " He that receiveth a
prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a prophet's
reward." He that with understanding and sympathy
welcomes and sustains the prophet, shows thereby that
he stands on the same spiritual level, and has the makmgs
of a prophet in him, though he want the intellectual force
and may never open his lips to speak the burden of the
Lord. Therefore, he shall be one in reward as he is in
spirit. . The old law in Israel is the law for the warfare
of Christ's soldiers. " As his part is that goeth down to
the battle, so shall his part be that abideth by the stuff:
they shall part alike." The men in the rear who guard
the camp, and keep the communications open, may de-
serve honours, and crosses, and prize-money as much as
their comrades who led the charge that cut through the
enemy's line and scattered their ranks. It does not
matter, so far as the real spiritual worth of the act is
concerned, what we do, but only why we do it. All
deeds are the same which are done from the same
motive and with the same devotion ; and He who judges
not by our outward actions, but by the springs from
which they come, will bracket together as equals at last
many who were widely separated here in the form of their
service, and the apparent magnitude of their work.
" She hath done what she could." Her power deter-
mined the measure and the manner of her work. One
precious thing she had, and only one, and she broke her
one rich possession that she might pour the fragrant oil
AN OLD DISCIPLE. 71
over His feet. Therefore, her useless deed of utter love
and uncalculating self-sacrifice is crowned by praise from
His lips, whose praise is our highest honour, and the
world is still "filled with the odour of that ointment."
So this old disciple's hospitality is strangely made im-
mortal, and the record of it reminds us that the smallest
service done for Jesus is remembered and treasured by
Him. Men have spent their lives to win a line in the
world's chronicles which are written on sand, and have
broken their hearts because they failed ; and this passing
act of one obscure Christian, in sheltering a little com-
pany of travel-stained wayfarers, has made his name a
possession for ever. " Seekest thou great things for thy-
self ? Seek them not;" — bu' let us fill our Httle corners,
doing our unnoticed work for the love of our Lord, care-
less about man's remembrance or praise, because sure of
Christ's, whose praise is the only fame, whose remem-
brance is the highest reward. " God is not unrighteous
to forget your work and labour of love."
IX.
" THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB."
Genesis xjix. 23, 24.
Tlie archers shot at him, but his bow abode in strength, and the arms
of his hands were made strong by the hands of the mighty God of
Jacob.
nPHESE picturesque words are part of what purports
to be one of the oldest pieces of poetry in the
gible — the dying Jacob's prophetic blessing on his sons.
Of these sons, there are two over whom his heart
seems especially to pour itself— Judah the ancestor of
the royal tribe, and Joseph. The future fortunes of their
descendants are painted in most glowing colours. And
of these two, the blessing on the " Son who was dead and
is alive again, who was lost and is found," is the fuller of
tender desire and glad prediction. The words of our text
are probably to be taken as prophecy, not as history — as
referring to the future conflicts and victories of the tribe,
not to the past trials and triumphs of its father. But be
that as it may, they contain, in most vivid metaphor, the
earHest utterance of a very familiar truth. They are the
first hint of that thought which is caught up and expanded
in many a later saying of psalmist, and prophet, and apostle.
We hear their echoes in tlie great song which David spake
"THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB." 73
" in the day that the Lord deHvered him from the hand
of all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul." " He
teacheth my hands to war, so that a bow of steel is broken
by mine arms;" and the idea receives its fullest carrying out
and noblest setting forth in the trumpet-call of the apostle,
who had seen more formidable weapons and a more terrible
military discipline in Rome's legions than Jacob knew, and
who pressed them into his stimulating call : " Be strong in
the Lord, and in the power of His might." " Put on the
whole armour of God." Strength for conflict by contact
with the strength of God is the common thought of all
these passages — a very common thought, which may per-
haps be freshened for us by the singular intensity with
which this metaphor of our text presents it. Look at the
picture. — Here stands the solitary man, ringed all round
by enemies full of bitter hate. Their arrows are on the
string, their bows drawn to the ear. The shafts fly thick,
and when they have whizzed past him, and he can be
seen again, he stands unharmed, grasping his unbroken
bow. The assault has shivered no weapon, has given no
wound. He has been able to stand in the evil day — and
look ! a pair of great gentle strong hands are laid upon
his hands and arms, and strength passes into his feeble-
ness from the touch of the hands of the mighty God of
Jacob. So the enemy have two, not one, to reckon with.
By the side of the hunted man stands a mighty figure, and
it is His strength, not the mortal's impotence, that has to
be overcome. Some dream of such Divine help in the
struggle of battle has floated through the minds and been
enshrined in the legends of many people, as when the
panoplied Athene has been descried leading the Grecian
armies, or, through the dust of conflict, the gleaming
armour and white horses of the Twin Brethren far in ad-
74 "THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB."
vance of the armies of Rome. But the dream Is for us a
reaUty. It is true that we go not to warfare at our own
charges, nor by our own strength. If we love Hmi and
try to make a brave stand against our own evil, and to
strike a manful blow for God in this world, we shall not
have to bear the brunt alone. Remember he who fights
for God never fights without God.
There is a strange story in a later book of Scripture,
which almost reads as if it had been modelled on some
reminiscence of these words of the dying Jacob — and is, at
any rate, a remarkable illustration of them. The kingdom
of Israel, of which the descendants of Joseph were the
most conspicuous part, was in the very crisis and agony of
one of its Syrian wars. Its principal human helper was
" fallen sick of the sickness whereof he died." And to
his death-bed came, in a passion of perplexity and de-
spair, the irresolute weakling who was then king, bewailing
the impending withdrawal of the nation's best defence.
The dying Elisha, with curt authority, pays no heed to the
tears of Joash, but bids him take bow and arrows. " And
he said to the king of Israel, Put thine hand upon the
bow," and he put his hand upon it ; and " Elisha put his
hands tipon the king's hands^ Then, when the thin, wasted,
transparent fingers of the old man were thus laid guiding
and infusing strength, by a strange paradox, into the brown,
muscular hands of the young king, he bids him open the
casement that looked eastward towards the lands of the
enemy, and, as the blinding sunshine and the warm air
streamed into the sick-chamber, he bade him draw the bow.
He was obeyed, and, as the arrow whizzed Jordanwards,
the dying prophet followed its flight with words brief and
rapid like it, " the arrow of the Lord's deliverance." Here
we have all the elements of our text singularly repeated, —
"THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB." 75
the dying seer, the king the representative of Joseph
in the royal dignity to which his descendants have come,
the arrows and the bow, the strength for conflict by the
touch of hands that had the strength of God in them. The
lesson of that paradox that the dying gave strength to the
living, the feeble to the strong, was the old one which is
ever new, that the mere human power is weakness when
it is strongest, and that power drawn from God is omnipo-
tent when it seems weakest. And the further lesson is
the lesson of our text, that our hands are then strengthened
when His hands are laid upon them, of whom it is written :
" Thou hast a mighty arm : strong is Thy hand, and high is
Thy right hand."
As a father in old days might have taken his little boy
out to the butts, and put a bow into his hand, and given
him his first lesson in archery, directing his unsteady aim
by his own firmer finger, and lending the strength of his
wrist to his child's feebler pall, so God does with us. The
sure strong hand is laid on ours, and is " profitable to
direct.'' A wisdom not our own is ever at our side, and
ready for our service. We but dimly perceive the con-
ditions of the conflict, and the mark at which we should
aim is ever apt to be obscured to our perceptions. But
in all cases where conscience is perplexed, or where the
judgment is at fault, we may, if we will, have Him for our
teacher. And when we know not where to strike the foes
that seem invulnerable, like the warrior who was dipped
in the magic stream, or clothed in mail impenetrable as
rhinoceros' hide. He will make us wise to know the one
spot where a wound is fatal. We shall not need to fight
as one that beats the air ; to strike at random ; or to draw
our bow at a venture, if we will let Him guide us.
Or if ever the work be seen clearly enough, but our
76 "THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB.'
poor hands cannot take aim for very trembling, or shoot
for fear of striking something very dear to us, He will
steady our nerves and make our aim sure and true. We
have often, in our fight with ourselves, and in our struggle
to get God's will done in the world, to face as cruel a
perplexity as the father who had to split the apple on his'
son's head. The evil against which we have to contend is
often so closely connected with things very precious to
us, that it is hard to smite the one when there is such
danger of grazing the other. Many a time our tastes, our
likings, our prejudices, our hopes, our loves, make our
sight dim, and our pulses too tumultuous to allow of a
good long steady gaze and a certain aim. It is hard to
keep the arrow point firm when the heart throbs and the
hand shakes. But in all such difficult times He is ready
to help us. " Behold, we know not what to do, but our
eyes are upon Thee," is a prayer never offered in vain.
The word that is here rendered " made strong," might
be translated " made pliable," or " flexible," conveying
the notion of deftness and dexterity rather than that
of simple strength. It is practised strength that He
will give, the educated hand and arm, master of all the
manipulation of the weapon. The stiffness and clumsi-
ness of our handling, the obstinate rigidity as well as the
throbbing feebleness of our arms, the dimness of our sight,
may all be overcome. At His touch the raw recruit is as
the disciplined veteran ; the prophet who cannot speak
because he is a child, gifted with a onouth and wisdom
which all the adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor
to resist. Do not be disheartened by your inexperience,
or by your ignorance ; but as the prophet said to the
young king, Take the bow and shoot. God's strong hand
will hold yours, and the arrow will fly true.
"THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB." 77
The strong hand is laid on ours, and lends its weight to
our feeble pull. The bow is often too heavy for us to
bend, but we do not need to strain our strength in the
vain attempt to do it alone. Tasks seem too much for
us. The pressure of our daily work overwhelms us. The
burden of our daily anxieties and sorrows is too much.
Some huge obstacle starts up in our path. Some great
sacrifice for truth, honour, duty, which we feel we cannot
make, is demanded of us. Some daring defiance of some
evil, which has caught us in its toils, or which it is un-
fashionable to fight against, seems laid upon us. We
cannot rise to the height of the occasion, or bring our-
selves to the wrench that is required. Or the wearing
recurrence of monotonous duties seems to take all fresh-
ness out of our lives, and all spring out of ourselves ; and
we are ready to give over struggling any more, and let our-
selves drift. Can we not feel that large hand laid on ours ;
and does not power, more and other than our own, creep
into our numb and relaxed fingers ? Yes, if we will let
Him. His strength is made perfect in our weakness;
and every man and woman who will make life a noble
struggle against evil, vanity, or sin, may be very sure that
God will direct and strengthen their hands to war, and
their fingers to fight.
But the remarkable metaphor of the text not only gives
the fact of Divine strength being bestowed, but also
the majiner of the gift. What a boldness of reverent
familiarity there is in that symbol of the hands of God
laid on the hands of the man ! How strongly it puts the
contact between us and Him as the condition of our
reception of power from Him ! A true touch, as of hand
to hand, conveys the grace. It is as when the prophet
laid himself down with his warm lip on the dead boy's
7S 'THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB."
cold mouth, and his heart beating against the still heart
of the corpse, till the life passed into the clay, and the
lad lived. So, if we may say it, our Quickener bends
Himself over all our deadness, and by His own warmth
re-animates us.
Perhaps this same thought is one of the lessons which
we are meant to learn from the frequency with which
our Lord wrought His miracles of healing by the touch
of His hand. " Come and lay Thy hand on him, and he
shall live." " And He put forth His hand and touched
him, and said, I will, be thou clean." " Many said, He
is dead ; but Jesus took him by the hand and lifted him
up, and he arose." The touch of His hand is healing
and life. The touch of our hands is faith. In the mystery
of His incarnation, in the flow of His sympathy, m the
forth-putting of His power, He lays hold not on angels,
but He lays hold on the seed of Abraham. By our lowly
trust, by the forth-putting of our desires, we stretch
" lame hands of faith," and, blessed be God ! we do not
"grope," but we grasp His strong hand and are held u}).
The contact of our spirits with His Spirit is a contact
far more real than the touch of earthly hands that grasp
each other closest. There is ever some film of atmo-
sphere between the palms. But " he that is joined to
the Lord is one spirit," and he that clasps Christ's out-
stretched hand of help with his outstretched hand of
weakness, holds Him with a closeness to which all unions
of earth are gaping gulfs of separation. You remember
how Mary cast herself at Christ's feet on the resurrection
morning, and would have flung her arms round them in
the passion of her joy. The calm word which checked
her has a wonderful promise in it. " Touch me not, for
I am not yet ascended to my Father ; " plainly leading
♦♦THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB." 79
to the inference, " When I am ascended, then you may
touch IMe." And that touch will be more reverent, more
close, more blessed, than any clasping of His feet, even
with such loving hands, and will be possible for us all for
evermore.
Nothing but such contact will give us strength for
conflict and for conquest. And the plain lesson therefore
is — see to it, that the contact is not broken by you. Put
away the metaphor, and the simple English of the advice
is just this :— First, live in the desire and the confidence
of His help in all our need, of His strength as all our
power. As a part of that confidence — its reverse and
under side, so to speak — cherish the profound sense of
your own weakness.
"In our own strength we nothing can ;
Full soon were we down -ridden " —
as Luther has taught us to sing. Let there be a constant
renewal, in the midst of our duties and trials, of that
conscious dependence and feeling of insufticiency.
Stretch out the empty hands to Him in that desire and
hope, which, spoken or silent, is prayer. Keep the com-
munications open, by which His strength flows into your
souls. Let them not be choked with self-confidence,
with vanities, with the rubbish of your own nature, or of
the world. Do not twitch away your hands from under
the strong hands that are laid so gently upon them. But
let Him cover, direct, cherish, and strengthen your poor
fingers till they are strong and nimble for all your work
and warfare. If you go into the fight trusting to your
own wit and wisdom, to the vigour of your own arm, or
the courage of your own heart, that very fool-hardy con-
fidence is itself defeat, for it is sin as well as folly, and
8o "THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY CxOD OF JACOB."
nothing can come of it but utter collapse and disaster.
But if you will only go to your daily fight with yourself
and the world, with your hand grasping God's hand,
you will be able to withstand in the evil day, and having
done all, to stand. The enemies may compass you
about like bees, but in the name of the Lord you can
destroy. Their arrows may fly thick enough to darken
the sun, but, as the proud old boast has it, " then we can
fight in the shade ; " and when their harmless points
have buried themselves in the ground, you will stanci
unhurt, your unshivered bow ready for the next assault,
and your hands made strong by the hands of the mighty
God of Jacob. "In all these things we are more tJian
conquerors, through Him that loved us."
X.
THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
Genesis xlix. 24.
, , . The Mighty God of Jacob. From thence is the Shepherd,
the stone of Israel.
A SLIGHT alteration in the rendering will probably
bring out the meaning of these words more cor-
rectly. The last two clauses should perhaps not be read
as a separate sentence. Striking out the supplement
" is," and letting the previous sentence run on to the end
of the verse, we get a series of names of God, in apposi-
tion with each other, as the sources of the strength pro-
mised to the arms of the hands of the warlike sons of
Joseph. From the hands of the mighty God of Jacob —
from thence, from the Shepherd, the stone of Israel — the
power will come for conflict and for conquest. This
exuberant heaping together of names of God is the mark
of the flash of rapturous confidence which lit up the
dying man's thoughts when they turned to God. When
he begins to think of Him he cannot stay his tongue.
So many aspects of His character, so many remembrances
of His deeds, come crowding into his mind ; so familiar
and so dear are they, that he must linger over the words,
and strive by this triple repetition to express the manifold
G
82 THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
preciousness of Him whom no name, nor crowd of names,
can rightly praise. So earthly love ever does with its
earthly objects, inventing and reiterating epithets which
are caresses. Such repetitions are not tautologies, for each
utters some new aspect of the one subject, and comes
from a new gush of heart's love towards it. And some-
thing of the same rapture and unwearied recurrence to
the Name that is above every name should mark the
communion of devout souls with their heavenly Love.
What a wonderful burst of such praise flowed out from
David's thankful heart, in his day of deliverance, like
some strong current, with its sevenfold wave, each crested
with the Name ! " The Lord is my rock, and my fortress,
and my deliverer : my God, my strength, in whom I will
trust ; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my
high tower."
These three names which we find here are striking and
beautiful in themselves ; in their juxtaposition ; in their
use on Jacob's lips. They seem to have been all coined
by him, for, if we accept this song as a true prophecy
uttered by him, we have here the earliest instance of their
occurrence. They have all a history, and appear again
expanded and deepened in the subsequent Revelation.
Let us look at them as they stand.
I. The Mighty God of Jacob. The meaning of such a
name is clear enough. It is He who has shown Himself
mighty and mine by His deeds for me all through my life.
The dying man's thoughts are busy with all that past
from the day when he went forth from the tent of Isaac,
and took of the stones of the field for his pillow when
the sun went down. A perplexed history it had been,
with many a bitter sorrow, and many a yet bitterer sin.
Passionate grief and despairing murmurs he had felt and
THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL. 83
flung out, while it slowly unfolded itself. When the
Pharaoh had asked, " how old art thou?" he had answered
in words which owe their sombreness partly to obsequious
assumption of insignificance in such a presence, but
have a strong tinge of genuine sadness in them too :
" Few and evil have the days of the years of my life been."
But lying dying there, with it all well behind him, he has
become wiser ; and now it all looks to him as one long
showing forth of the might of his God, who had been with
him all his life long, and had redeemed him from all evil.
He has got far enough away to see the lie of the land, as
he could not do while he was toiling along the road. The
barren rocks and white snow glow with purple as the
setting sun touches them. The struggles with Laban ; the
fear of Esau ; the weary work of toilsome years ; the sad
day when Rachel died, and left him the " son of her sor-
row ; " the heart sickness of the long years of Joseph's loss
— all have faded away, or been changed into thankful
wonder at God's guidance. The one thought which the
dying man carries out of life wath him is : God has shown
Himself mighty, and He has shown Himself mine.
For each of us, our own experience should be a revela-
tion of God. The things about Him which we read in the
Bible are never living and real to us till we have verified
them in the facts of our own history. Many a word lies
on the page, or in our memories, fully believed and
utterly shadowy, until in some soul's conflict we have had
to grasp it, and found it true. Only so much of our
creed as we have proved in life is really ours. If we will
only open our eyes and reflect upon our history as it
passes before us, we shall find every corner of it filled
with the manifestations to our hearts and to our minds of
a present God. But our folly, our stupidity, our im-
84 THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
patience, our absorption with the mere oiitsides of tilings,
our selfwill, blind us to the Angel with the drawn sword
who resists us, as well as to the Angel with the lily who
would lead us. So we waste our days ; are deaf to His
voice speaking through all the clatter of tongues, and
blind to His bright presence shining through all the dim-
ness of earth ; and, for far too many of us, we never can
see God in the present, but only discern Him when He
has passed by, like Moses from his cleft. Like this same
Jacob, we have to say : " Surely God was in this place,
and I knew it not." Hence we miss the educational
worth of our lives ; are tortured with needless cares ; are
beaten by the poorest adversaries; and grope amidst what
seems to us a chaos of pathless perplexities, when we
might be marching on assured and strong, with God for
our guide, and the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob for
our defence.
Notice, too, how distinctly the thought comes out in this
name, — that the very vital centre of a man's religion is his
conviction that God is his. He will not be content with
thinking of God as the God of his fathers ; he will not
even be content with associating himself with them in the
common possession ; but he must feel the full force of the
intensely personal bond that knits him to God, and God to
him. Of course such a feeling does not ignore the blessed
fellowship and family who also are held in this bond.
The God of Jacob is to the patriarch also the God of
Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob. But that comes
second, and this comes first. Each man for himself
must put forth the hand of his own faith, and grasp that
great hand for his own guide. " My Lord and my God "
is the true form of the confession. " He loved nie and
gave Himself for w^," is the shape in which the Gospel of
THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL. 85
Christ melts the soul. God is mine because His love indi-
vidualizes me, and I have a distinct place in His heart,
His purposes, and His deeds. God is mine, because by
my own individual act — the most personal which I can
perform — I cast myself on Him ; by my faith appropriate
the common salvation ; and open my being to the inflow
of His power. God is mine, and I am His, in that won-
derful mutual possession, with perpetual interchange of
giving and receiving not only gifts but selves, which
makes the very life of love, whether it be love on earth
or love in heaven.
Remember, too, the profound use which our Lord
made of this name wherein the man claims to possess
God. Because Moses at the bush called God, the God
of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, they cannot
have ceased to be. The personal relations which subsist
between God and the soul that clasps Him for its own
demand an immortal life for their adequate expression,
and make it impossible that death's skeleton fingers
should have power to untie such a bond. Anything is
conceivable, rather than that the soul which can say
" God is mine " should perish. And that continued
existence demands, too, a state of being which shall cor-
respond to itself, in which its powers shall all be exer-
cised, its desires fulfilled, its possibilities made facts.
Therefore there must be " the resurrection." " God is
not ashamed to be called their God, for He hath prepared
for them a city."
The dying patriarch left to his descendants the legacy
of this great name, and often, in later times, it was used
to quicken faith by the remembrance of the great deeds
of God in the past. One instance may serve as a sample
of the whole. " The Lord of Hosts is with us, the God
S6 THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
of Jacob is our refuge." The first of these two names
lays the foundation of our confidence in the thought of
the boundless power of Him whom all the forces of the
universe, personal and impersonal, angels and stars, ia
their marshalled order, obey and serve. The second bids
later generations claim as theirs all that the old history
reveals as having belonged to the "world's grey fathers."
They had no special prerogative of nearness or of pos-
session. The arm that guided them is unwearied, and all
the past is true still, and will for evermore be true for all
who love God. So the venerable name is full of promise
and of hope for us : " the God of Jacob is our refuge."
2. T/ie Shepherd. How that name sums up the lessons
that Jacob had learned from the work of himself and of
his sons ! " Thy servants are shepherds," they said to
Pharaoh; "both we, and also our sons." For fourteen
long weary years he had toiled at that task. " In the
day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night ;
and my sleep departed from mine eyes." And his own
sleepless vigilance and patient endurance seem to him to
be but shadows of the loving care, the watchful protection,
the strong defence, which " the God, who has been my
Shepherd all my life long," had extended to him and his.
Long before the shepherd king, who had been taken from
the sheepcotes to rule over Israel, sang his immortal
psalm, the same occupation had suggested the same
thought to the shepherd patriarch. Happy they whose
daily work may picture for them some aspect of God's
care — or rather, happy they whose eyes are open to see
the dim likeness of God's care which every man's earthly
relations, and some part of his work, most certainly
present.
There can be no need to draw out at length the
THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL. 87
thoughts which that sweet and famiUar emblem has
conveyed to so many generations. Loving care, wise
guidance, fitting food, are promised by it ; and docile
submission, close following at the Shepherd's heels,
patience, innocence, meekness, trust, are required. But
I may put emphasis for a moment on the connection
between the thought of ''the mighty God of Jacob " and
that of ''the Shepherd." The occupation, as we see it,
does not call for a strong arm, or much courage, except
now and then to wade through snovz-drifts, and dig out the
buried and half-dead creatures. But the shepherds whom
Jacob knew, had to be hardy, bold fighters. There were
marauders lurking ready to sweep away a weakly guarded
flock. There were wild beasts in the gorges of the hills.
There was danger in the sun by day on these burning
plains, and in the night the wolves prowled round the
flock. We remember how David's earliest exploits were
against the lion and the bear, and how he felt that even his
duel with the Philistine bully was not more formidable than
these had been. If we will read into our English notions
of a shepherd this element of danger and of daring, we
shall feel that these two clauses are not to be taken as
giving the contrasted ideas of strength and gentleness,
but the connected ones of strength, and therefore pro-
tection and security. We have the same connection in
later echoes of this name. " Behold, the Lord God shall
come with stroftg hand ; He shall feed His flock like a
shepherd." And our Lord's use of the figure brings into
all but exclusive prominence the good shepherd's con-
flict with the ravening wolves — a conflict in which he
must not hesitate even " to lay down his life for the
sheep." As long as the flock are here, amidst dangers,
and foeS; and wild weather, the arm that guides must be
88 THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
an arm that guards ; and none less mighty than the
Mighty One of Jacob can be the Shepherd of men. But
a higher fulfilment yet awaits this venerable emblem,
when in other pastures, where no lion nor any ravening
beast shall come, the " Lamb, which is in the midst of
the throne," and is Shepherd as well as Lamb, " shall
feed them, and lead them by living fountains of waters."
3. The Sto7ie of Israel. Here, again, we have a name,
that after-ages have caught up and cherished, used for
the first time. I suppose the Stone of Israel means much
the same thing as the Rock. If so, that symbol, too,
which is full of such large meanings, was coined by
Jacob. It is, perhaps, not fanciful to suppose that it
OY/es its origin to the scenery of Palestine. The wild
cliffs of the eastern region where Peniel lay, or the savage
fastnesses in the southern wilderness, a day's march from
Hebron, where he lived so long, came back to his
memory amid the flat, clay land of Egypt ; and their
towering height, their immovable firmness, their cool
shade, their safe shelter, spoke to him of the unalterable
might and impregnable defence which he had found in
God. So there is in this name the same devout, reflect-
ive laying-hold upon experience which we have observed
in the preceding.
There is also the same individualizing grasp of God as
his very own ; for " Israel " here is, of course, to be taken
not as the name of the nation but as his own name, and
the intention of the phrase is evidently to express what
God had been to him personally.
The general idea of this symbol is perhaps firmness,
solidity. And that general idea may be followed out in vari-
ous details. God is a rock for a foundation. Build your
lives, your thoughts, your efforts, your hopes there. The
THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL. 89
house founded on the rock will stand though wind and
rain from above smite it, and floods from beneath beat on
it like battering-rams. God is a rock for a fortress. Flee
to Him to hide, and your defence shall be the " muni-
tions of rocks," which shall laugh to scorn all assault, and
never be stormed by any foe. God is a rock for shade
and refreshment. Come close to Him from out of the
scorching heat, and you will find coolness and verdure
and moisture in the clefts, when all outside that grateful
shadow is parched and dry.
The word of the dying Jacob was caught up by the
great law-giver in his dying song. " Ascribe ye greatness
to our God. He is the Rock." It reappears in the last
words of the shepherd king, whose grand prophetic
picture of the true King is heralded by " The Rock of
Israel spake to me. It is heard once more from the lips
of the greatest of the prophets in his glowing prophecy of
the song of the final days : " Trust ye in the Lord for ever ;
for in the Lord Jehovah is the Rock of Ages," as well as
in his solemn prophecy of the Stone which God would lay
in Zion. We hear it again from the lips that cannot lie.
" Did ye never read in the Scriptures, The Stone which the
builders rejected, the same is become the head-stone of
the corner?" And for the last time the venerable meta-
phor which has cheered so many ages appears in the
words of that Apostle who was " surnamed Cephas, which
is by interpretation a stone." " To whom coming as unto
a living stone, ye also as living stones are built up." As
on some rocky site in Palestine, where a thousand genera-
tions in succession have made their fortresses, one may
see stones laid with the bevel that tells of early Jewish
masonry, and above them Roman work, and higher still
masonry of crusading times, and above it the building of
90 THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL.
to-day ; so we, each age in our turn, build on this great
rock foundation, dwell safe there for our little lives, and are
laid to peaceful rest in a sepulchre in the rock. On
Christ we may build. In Him we may dwell and rest
secure. We may die in Jesus, and be gathered to our
own people, who, having died, live in Him. And though
so many generations have reared their dwellings on that
great rock, there is ample room for us too to build. We
have not to content ourselves with an uncertain founda-
tion among the shifting rubbish of perished dwellings, but
can get down to the firm virgin rock for ourselves. None
that ever builded there have been confounded. We clasp
hands with all who have gone before us. At one end of
the long chain this dim figure of the dying Jacob, amid
the strange vanished life of Egypt, stretches out his
withered hands to God the stone of Israel ; at the otlier
end, we lift up ours to Jesus, and cry :
" Rock of Ages ! cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in Thee. "
The faith is one. One will be the answer and the reward.
May it be yours and mine !
XI.
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
John viii. 12.
I am the Light of the World. He that followeth Me shall not
walk in darkness, but shall have the Light of Life .
T ESUS CHRIST was His own great theme. Whatever
J be the explanation of the fact, there stands the fact,
that, if we know anything at all about his habitual tone
of teaching, we know that it was full of Himself We
know, too, that what He said about Himself was very un-
like the language becoming a wise and humble religiour
teacher. Both the prominence given to His own per-
sonality, and the tremendous claims He advances for
Himself, are hard to reconcile with any conception of
His nature and work except one, — that there we have God
manifest in the flesh. Are such words as these fit to be
spoken by any man conscious of his own limitations and
imperfections of life and knowledge ? Would they not be
fatal to anybody's pretensions to be a teacher of religion
or morality? They assert that the speaker is the source
of illumination for the whole world ; the only source ; the
source for all. They assert that " following " Him, whether
in belief or in deed, is the sure deliverance from all
darkness, either of error or of sin ; and implants in every
92 THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
follower a light which is life ! And the world, instead of
turning away, from such monstrous assumptions, and
drowning them in scornful laughter, or rebelling against
them, has Hstened, and largely believed, and has not felt
them to mar the beauty of meekness, v/hich, by a strange
anomaly, this Man says he has.
Words parallel to these are frequent on our Lord's lips.
In each instance they have some special appropriateness of
application, as is probably the case here. The suggestion
has been reasonably made, that there is an allusion in
them to part of the ceremonial connected with the Feast
of Tabernacles, at which we find our Lord present in the
previous chapter. Commentators tell us that on the first
evening of the feast, two huge golden lamps, which stood
one on each side of the altar of burnt offering in the
temple court, were lighted as the night began to fall, and
poured out a brilliant flood over temple, and city, and
deep gorge ; while far into the midnight, troops of
rejoicing worshippers clustered about them with dance
and song. The possibility of this reference is strength-
ened by the note of place which our Evangelist gives.
" These things spake Jesus in the treasury, as He taught
in the temple," for the " treasury " stood in the same
court, and doubtless the golden lamps were full in sight
of the listening groups. It is also strengthened by the
unmistakeable allusion in the previous chapter to another
portion of the ceremonial of the feast, where our Lord puts
forth another of His great self-revelations and demands, in
singular parallelism with that of our text, in the words :
" If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink."
That refers to the custom during the feast of drawing
w^ater from the fountain of Siloam, which was poured out
on the altar, while the gathered multitude chanted the
THE LIGHT OF THE \YORLD. 93
old Strain of Isaiah's prophecy : "With joy shall ye draw
water out of the wells of salvation." It is to be remem-
bered, too, in estimating the probability of our text belong-
ing to these temple-sayings at the feast, that the section
which separates it from them, and contains the story
about the woman taken in adultery, is judged by the be*st
critics to be out of place here, and is not found in the
most valuable manuscripts. If, then, we suppose this
allusion to be fairly probable, I think it gives a special
direction and meaning to these grand words, which it may
be worth while to think of briefly.
The first thing to notice is — the intention of the
ceremonial which our Lord here points to as a symbol
of Himself. What was the meaning of these great lights
that went flashing through the warm autumn nights of
the festival? All the parts of that feast were intended
to recall some feature of the forty years' wanderings in
the wilderness ; the lights by the altar were memorials
of the pillar of cloud by day and of fire by night.
When, then, Jesus says, " I am the Light of the world,"
He would declare Himself as being in reality, and to
every soul of man to the end of time, what that cloud
with its heart of fire was in outward seeming to one
generation of desert wanderers.
Now, the main thing which // was to these, was the
visible vehicle of the Divine presence. " The Lord went
before them in a pillar of a cloud." " The Lord looked
through the pillar." " The Lord came down in the cloud
and spake with him." The " cloud covered the taber-
nacle, and the glory of the Lord appeared." Such is the
way in which it is ever spoken of, as being the manifest-
ation to Israel in sensible form of the presence among
them of God their King. " The glory of the Lord " has
94 THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
a very specific meaning in the Old Testament. It usually
signifies that brightness, the flaming heart of the cloudy
pillar, which for the most part, as it would appear, veiled
by the cloud, gathered radiance as the world grew
darker at set of sun; and sometimes, at great crises in
the history, as at the Red Sea, or on Sinai, or in loving
communion with the law-giver, or in swift judgment
against the rebels, rent the veil and flamed on men's
eyes. I need not remind you how this same pillar of
cloud and fire, which at once manifested and hid God,
was thereby no unworthy symbol of Him who remains,
after all revelation, unrevealed. Whatsoever sets forth,
must also shroud the infinite glory. Concerning all by
which He makes Himself known to eye, or mind, or
heart, it must be said : " And there was the hiding of
His power." The fire is ever folded in the cloud.
Nay, at bottom, the light which is full of glory is
therefore inaccessible. And the thick darkness in which
He dwells is but the " glorious privacy " of perfect
light.
That guiding pillar, which moved before the moving
people — a cloud to shelter from the scorching heat, a fire
to cheer in the blackness of night — spread itself above
the sanctuary of the wilderness ; and " the glory of the
Lord filled the tabernacle." When the moving taber-
nacle gave place to the fixed temple, again " the cloud
filled the house of the Lord;" and there, — dwelling between
the cherubim, the types of the whole order of creatural life ;
and above the mercy-seat, that spoke of pardon ; and the
ark that held the law ; and behind the veil, in the thick
darkness of the holy of holies, where no feet trod, save
once a year one white-robed priest, in the garb of a peni-
tent, and bearing the blood that made atonement, — shone
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD. 95
the light of the glory of God, the visible majesty of the
present Deity.
But long centuries had passed since that light had
departed. " The glory " had ceased from the house that
now stood on Zion, and the light from bet\Yeen the
cherubim. Shall we not, then, see a deep meaning and
reference to that awful blank, when Jesus standing there
in the courts of that temple, whose inmost shrine was, in
a most sad sense, empty, pointed to the quenched lamps
that commemorated a departed Shechinah, and said, " I
am the Light of the world."
He is the Light of the world, because in Him is the
glory of God. His words are madness, and something
very like blasphemy, unless they are vindicated by the
visible indwelling in Him of the present God. The cloud
of the humanity, " the veil, that is to say, His flesh,"
enfolds and tempers ; and through its transparent folds
reveals, even while it swathes, the Godhead. Like some
fleecy vapour flitting across the sun, and irradiated by its
light, it enables our weak eyes to see light, and not dark-
ness, in the else intolerable blaze. Yes ! Thou art the
Light of the world, because in Thee dwelleth the fulness
of the Godhead bodily. Thy servant hath taught us the
meani-ng of Thy words, when he said : " The Word was
made flesh, and dwelt among us ; and we beheld His
glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full
of grace and truth."
Then, subordinate to this principal thought, is the
other on which I may touch for a moment — that Christ,
like that pillar of cloud and fire, guides us in our pilgrim-
age. You may remember how emphatically the Book of
Numbers (chap, ix.) dwells upon the absolute control of
all the marches and halts by the movements of the cloud.
96 THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
When it was taken up, they journeyed ; when it settled
down, they encamped. As long as it lay spread above
the tabernacle, there they stayed. Impatient eyes might
look, and impatient spirits chafe — no matter. The camp
might be pitched in a desolate place, away from wells
and palm-trees, away from shade, among fiery serpents,
and open to fierce foes — no matter. As long as it was
motionless no man stirred. Weary slow days might pass
in this compulsory inactivity ; but " whether it were two
days, or a month, or a year, that the cloud tarried upon
the tabernacle, the children of Israel journeyed not."
And whenever it lifted itself up, — no matter how short had
been the halt, how weary and footsore the people, how plea-
sant the resting-place, — up with the tent-pegs immediately,
and away. If the signal were given at midnight, when all
but the watchers slept, or at mid-day, it was all the same.
There was the true Commander of their march. It was
not Moses, nor Jethro, with his quick Arab eye and
knowledge of the ground, that guided them ; but that
stately, solemn pillar, that floated before them. How
they must have watched for the gathering up of its folds
as they lay softly stretched along the tabernacle roof!
and for its sinking down, and spreading itself out, like a
misty hand of blessing, as it sailed in tJie van.
" I am the Light of the world." We have in Him a
better guide through worse perplexities than theirs. By
His Spirit within us ; by that all-sufficient and perfect
example of His life ; by the word of His Gospel ; and Ly
the manifold indications of His providence ; Jesus Christ
is our Guide. If ever we go astray, it is not His fault,
but ours. How gentle and loving that guidance is none
who have not yielded to it can tell ! How wise and sure,
none but those who have followed it know ! He does not
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD. 97
say " Go," but '' Come." When He puts forth His sheep,
He goes before them. In all rough places His quick
hand is put out to save us. In danger He lashes us to
Himself, as Alpine guides do when there is perilous ice
to get over. As one of the psalms puts it, with wonderful
beauty: "I will guide thee with Mine eye" — a glance,
not a blow — a look of directing love, that at once heartens
to duty and tells duty. We must be very near Him to
catch that look, and very much in sympathy with Him to
understand it ; and when we do, we must be swift to obev.
Our eyes must be ever toward the Lord, or we shall often
be marching on, unwitting that the pillar has spread
itself for rest, or idly dawdling in our tents long after th.e
cloud has gathered itself up for the march. Do not let
impatience lead you to hasty interpretation of His pla'r.s
before they are fairly evolved. Many men by self-will,
by rashness, by precipitate hurry in drawing conclusions
about what they ought to do, have ruined their lives.
Take care, in the old-fashioned phrase, "of running
before you are sent." There should always be a good
clear space between the guiding ark and you, "about
two thousand cubits by measure," that there may be no
mistakes about the road. It is neither reverent nor wise
to be treading on the heels of our Guide in our eager
confidence that we know where He wants us to go.
Do not let the warmth by the camp-fire, or the pleasant-
ness of the shady place where your tent is pitched, keep
you there when the cloud lifts. Be ready for change, be
ready for continuance, because you are in fellowship with
your Leader and Commander; and let Him say, Go,
and you go ; Do this, and you gladly do it, until the hour
when He will whisper. Come ; and, as you come, the
river will part, and the journey will be over. And *'• the
98 THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
fiery, cloudy pillar," that "guided you all your journey
through," will spread itself out an abiding glory, in that
higher home where " the Lamb is the light thereof."
All true following of Christ begins with faith, or we might
almost say that faith is following, for we find our Lord
substituting the former expression for the latter in
another passage of this Gospel parallel with the present.
" I am come a light into the world, that whosoever
believeth on Me should not walk in darkness." The two
ideas are not equivalent, but faith is the condition of
following ; and following is the outcome and test, because
it is the operation of faith. None but they who trust
Him will follow Him. He who does not follow, does
not trust. To follow Christ, means to long and strive
after His companionship, as the Psalmist says, " My soul
fulloweth hard after Thee." It means the submission of
the will, the effort of the whole nature, the daily conflict
to reproduce His example, the resolute adoption of His
command as my law, His providence as my will, His
fellowship as my joy. And the root and beginning of all
such following is in coming to Him, conscious of mine
own darkness, and trustful in His great light. We must
rely on a Guide before we accept His directions ; and it
is absurd to pretend that we trust Him, if we do not go
as He bids us. So " follow thou Me " is, in a very real
sense, the sum of all Christian duty.
That thought opens out very wide fields, into which
we must not even glance now ; but I cannot help pausing
here to repeat the remark already made, as to the gigantic
and incomprehensible self-confidence that speaks here :
" Folio weth Afe." Then Jesus Christ calmly proposes
Himself as the aim and goal for every soul of man , sets
up His own doings as an all-sufficient rule for us all, with
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD. 99
all our varieties of temper, character, culture, and work,
and quietly assumes to have a right of precedence before,
and of absolute command over, the whole world. They
are all to keep behind Him, He thinks, be they saints or
sages, kings or beggars; and -the liker they are to Him-
self, He thinks, the nearer they will be to perfectness and
life. He puts Himself at the head of the mystic march
of the generations, and, like the mysterious angel that
Joshua saw in the plain by Jericho, makes the lofty
claim : " Nay, but as Captain of the Lord's host am I
come up." Do we admit His claim because we know
His name ? do we yield Him full trust because we have
learned that He is the Light of men, because He is the
Word of God ? Do we follow Him with loyal obedience,
longing love, and lowly imitation, because He has been
and is to us the Saviour of our souls ?
In the measure in which we do, the great promises of
this wonderful saying will be verified and understood
by us — " He that foUoweth Me shall not walk in dark-
ness." That saying has, as one may say, a lower and a
higher fulfilment. In the lower, it refers to practical Hfe
and its perplexities. Nobody who has not tried it would
believe how many difficulties are cleared out of a man's
road by the simple act of trying to follow Christ. No
doubt there will still remain obscurities enough as to
what we ought to do, to call for the best exercise of
patient wisdom ; but an enormous proportion of them
vanish like mist when the sun looks through, when once
we honestly set ourselves to find out where the pillared
Light is guiding. It is a reluctant will, and intrusive
likings and dislikings, that obscure the way for us, much
oftener than real obscurity in the way itself It is seldom
impossible to discern the Divine will, when we only wish
loo THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
to know it that we may do it. And if ever it is impossible
for us, surely that impossibility is like the cloud resting
on the tabernacle — a sign that for the present His will is
that we should be still, and wait, and watch.
But there is a higher meaning in the words than even
this promise of practical direction. In the profound
symbolism of Scripture, especially of this Gospel, " dark-
ness" is the name for the whole condition of the soul
averted from God. So our Lord here is declaring that to
follow Him is the true deliverance from that midnight of
the soul. There is a darkness of ignorance, a darkness
of impurity, a darkness of sorrow, — and in that threefold
gloom, thickening to a darkness of death, are they en-
wrapt who follow not the Light. That is the grim tragical
side of this saying, too sad, too awful for our lips to speak
much of, and best left in the solemn impressiveness of that
one word. But the hopeful, blessed side of it is, that
the feeblest beginnings of trust in Jesus Christ, and the
first tottering steps that try to tread in His, bring us into
the light. It does not need that we have reached our
goal, it is enough that our faces are turned to it, and our
hearts desire to attain it, then we may be sure that the
dominion of the darkness over us is broken. To follow,
though it be afar off, and with unequal steps, fills our path
with increasing brightness, and even though evil and
ignorance and sorrow may thrust their blackness in upon
our day, they are melting in the growing glory, and
already we may give thanks " unto the Father who hath
made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the
saints in light, who hath delivered us from the power of
darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of His
dear Son."
But we have not merely the promise that we shall be
THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD. loi
led by the light and brought into the light. A yet deeper
and grander gift is offered here : " He shall have the light
of life," I suppose that means not, as it is often care-
lessly taken to mean, a light which illuminates the life,
but, Uke the similar phrases of this Gospel, " bread of life,"
''water of life," — light which is life. ''In Him was life,
and the life was the light of men." These two are one in
their source, which is Jesus, the Word of God. Of Him
we have to say, "With Thee is the fountain of life, in
Thy light shall we see light." They are one in their
deepest nature, the Hfe is the light, and the light the life.
And this one gift is bestowed upon every soul that follows i/
Christ. Not only will our outward lives be illumined or }
guided from without, but our inward being will be filled |
with the brightness. " Ye were sometimes darkness, now f
are ye light in the Lord."
That pillar of fire remained apart and 'without. But
this true and better guide of our souls enters in and '\
dwells in us, in all the fulness of His triple gift of life, ''
and light, and love. Within us He will chiefly prove
Himself the guide of our spirits, and will not merely cast
His beams on the path of our feet, but will fill and flood
us with His own brightness. All light of knowledge, of
goodness, of gladness will be ours, if Christ be ours : and
ours He surely will be if we follow Him. Let us take
heed, lest turning away from Him we follow the will-o'-
the-wisps of our own fancies, or the dancing lights, born
of putrescence, that flicker above the swamps, for they will
lead us into doleful lands where evil things haunt, and
into outer darkness. Let us take heed how we use that
light of God ; for Christ, like His symbol of old, has a
double aspect according to the eye which looks. "It
came between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp
I02 THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD.
of Israel, and it was a cloud and darkness to them, but it
gave light by night to these." He is either a stone of
stumbling or a sure foundation, a savour of life or of
death, and which He is depends on ourselves. Trusted,
loved, followed. He is light. Neglected, turned from,
He is darkness. Though He be the light of the world,
it is only the man who follows Him to whom He can give
the light of life. Therefore, man's awful prerogative of
perverting the best into the worst forced Him, who
came to be the light of men, to that sad and solemn
utterance : " For judgment I am come into this world,
that they which see not might see, and that they which
see might be made blind."
XII.
FEAR AND FAITH.
Psalm Ivi. 3, 4.
*' What time I am afraid, I will trust in Thee. ... In God I
have put my trust ; I will not fear."
IT is not given to many men to add new words to the
vocabulary of religious emotion. But so far as an
examination of the Old Testament avails, I find that
David was the' first that ever employed the word that is
here translated, / will trust, with a religious meaning.
It is found occasionally in earlier books of the Bible in
different connections, never in regard to man's relations
to God, until the Poet-Psalmist laid his hand upon it,
and consecrated it for all generations to express one of
the deepest relations of man to his Father in heaven.
And it is a favourite word of his. I find it occurs con-
stantly in his psalms ; twice as often, or nearly so, in the
psalms attributed to David as in all the rest of the
Psalter put together; and, as I shall have occasion to
show you in a moment, it is in itself a most significant
and poetic word.
But, first of all, I ask you to notice how beautifully
there comes out here the occasion of trust. " Vv'hat time
I am afraid, I will put my trust in Thee."
104 FEAR AND FAITH.
This psalm is one of those belonging to the Saullne
l^ersecution. If we adopt the allocation in the superscrip-
tion, it was written at one of the very lowest points of his
fortunes. And there seem to be one or two of its phrases
which acquire new force, if we regard the psalm as drawn
forth by the perils of his wandering, hunted life. For
instance — " Thou tellest my wanderings," is no mere ex-
])ression of the feelings with which he regarded the
changes of this earthly pilgrimage, but is the confidence
of the fugitive that in the doublings and windings of his
flight God's eye marked him. " Put thou my tears into
Thy i?oU/e " — one of the few indispensable articles which
he had to carry with him, the water-skin which hung
beside him, perhaps, as he meditated. So read in the light
of his probable circumstances, how pathetic and eloquent
does that saying become — " What time I am afraid, I
will trust in Thee." That goes deep down into the reali-
ties of life. It is when we are " afraid " that we trust in
God; not in easy times, when things are going smoothly
with us. Not when the sun shines, but when the tempest
blows and the wind howls about his ears, a man gathers
his cloak round him, and cleaves fast to his supporter.
The midnight sea lies all black ; but when it is cut into
by the oar, or divided and churned by the paddle, it
flashes up into phosphorescence. And so it is from the
tumults and agitation of man's spirit that there is struck
out the light of man's faith. There is the bit of flint and
the steel that comes hammering against it; and it is the
contact of these two that brings out the spark. The man
never knew confidence who does not know how the occa-
sion that evoked and preceded was terror and need.
" What time I am a/ra/d, I will trust." That is no trust
wnich is only fair weather trust. This principle — first fear,
FEAR AND FAITPI. 105
and only then, faith— applies all round the circle of oar
necessities, weaknesses, sorrows, and sins.
There must, first of all, be the deep sense of need, of
exposedness to danger, of weakness, of sorrow, and only
then will there come the calmness of confidence. A
victorious faith will
" rise large and slow
From out the fluctuations of our souls,
As from the dim and tumbling sea
Starts the completed moon."
And then, if so, notice how there is involved in that the
other consideration, that a man's confidence is not the
product of outward circumstances, but of his own fixed
resolves. " I will put my trust in Thee."
Nature snys. Be afraid, and the recoil from that natural
fear, which comes from a discernment of threatening evil,
is only possible by a strong effort of the will. Foolish
confidence opposes to natural fear a groundless resolve
not to be afraid, as if heedlessness were security, or facts
could be altered by resolving not to think about them.
True faith, by a mighty effort of the will, fixes its gaze on
our Divine helper, and there finds it possible and wise to
lose its fears. It is madness to say, I will not be afraid ;
it is wisdom and peace to say, I will trust, and not be
afraid. But it is no easy matter to fix the eye on God when
threatening enemies within arm's length compel our gaze ;
and there must be a fixed resolve, not indeed to coerce
our emotions or to ignore our perils, but to set the Lord
before us, that we may not be moved. When war deso-
lates a land, the peasants fly from their undefended huts
to the shelter of the castle on the hill-top, but they can-
not reach the safety of the strong walls without climbing
the steep road. So when calamity darkens round us, or
\
lo6 FEAR AND FAITH.
our sense of sin and sorrow shakes our hearts, we need
effort to resolve and to carry into practice the resolution,
" I flee unto Thee to hide me." Fear, then, is the occasion
of faith, and faith is fear transformed by the act of our
own will, calling to mind the strength of God, and be-
taking ourselves thereto. Therefore, do not wonder if the
two things lie in your hearts together, and do not say, " I
have no faith because I have some fear," but rather feel
that if there be the least spark of the former it will turn all
the rest into its own bright substance. Here is the stifling
smoke, coming up from some newly-lighted fire of green
wood, black and choking, and solid in its coils ; but as the
fire burns up, all the smoke-wreaths will be turned into
one flaming spire, full of light and warmth. Do you turn
your smoke into fire, your fear into faith. Do not be
down-hearted if it takes a while to convert the whole of
the lower and baser into the nobler and higher. Faith
and fear do blend, thank God. They are as oil and water
in a man's soul, and the oil will float above, and quiet the
waves. " What time I am afraid " — there speaks nature
and the heart. " I will trust in Thee " — there speaks the
better man within, Hfting himself above nature and cir-
cumstances, and casting himself into the extended arms of
God, who catches him and keeps him safe.
Then, still further, these words, or rather one portion of
them, give us a bright light and a beautiful thought as to the
essence and inmost centre of this faith or trust. Scholars
tell us that the word here translated " trust " has a graphic,
pictorial meaning for its root idea. It signifies literally to
cling to or hold fast anything, expressing thus both the
notion of a good tight grip and of intimate union. Now,
is not that metaphor vivid and full of teaching as well as
of impulse ? ''I will trust in Thee." " And he exhorted
FEAR AND FAITH. 107
them all, that with purpose of heart they should cleave
unto the Lord." We may follow out the metaphor of the
word in many illustrations. For instance, here is a strong
prop, and here is the trailing, lithe feebleness of the vine.
Gather up the leaves that are creeping all along the
ground, and coil them around that support, and up they go
straight towards the heavens. Here is a limpet m some
pond or other, left by the tide, and it has relaxed its
grasp a little. Touch it with your finger and it grips fast
to the rock, and you will want a hammer before you can
dislodge it. There is a traveller groping along some nar-
row broken path, where the chamois would tread cau-
tiously, his guide in front of him. His head reels, and his
limbs tremble, and he is all but over, but he grasps the
strong hand of the man in front of him, or lashes himself
to him by the rope, and he can walk steadily. Or, take
that story in the Acts of the Apostles, about the lame man
healed by Peter and John. All his life long he had been
lame, and when at last healing comes, one can fancy with
what a tight grasp "the lame man held Peter and John."
The timidity and helplessness of a Hfe-time made him
hold fast, even while, walking and leaping, he tried how
the unaccustomed "feet and ankle bones " could do their
work. How he would clutch the arms of his two sup-
porters, and feel himself firm and safe only as long as he
grasped them ! That is faith, cleaving to Christ, twining
round Him with all the tendrils of our heart, as the vine
does round its pole ; holding to Him by His hand, as a
tottering man does by the strong hand that upholds.
And there is one more application of the metaphor,
which perhaps may be best brought out by referring to a
passage of Scripture. We find this same expression used
in that wonderfully dramatic scene in the Book of Kings,
loS FEAR AND FAITH.
where the supercilious messengers from the king of
Assyria came up and taunted the king and his people on
the wall. ''What confidence is this wherein thou trustest ?
Now, on whom dost thou trust, that thou rebellest against
me? Now, behold, thou trustest upon the staff of this
bruised reed, even upon Egypt, on which, if a man lean,
it will go into his hand and pierce it : so is Pharaoh,
king of Egypt, unto all that trust on him."
The word of our text is employed there, and, as the
phrase shows, with a distinct trace of its primary sense
You are trusting or leaning upon this poor paper reed on
the Nile banks, that has got no substance, or strength, oi
pith in it. A man leans upon it, and it runs into the
palm of his hand, and makes an ugly festering wound
Such rotten stays are all our earthly confidences. The
act of trust, and the miserable issues of placing it on man,
are excellently described there. The act is the same when
directed to God, but how different the issues. Lean all
your weight on God as on some strong staff, and depend
upon it that support will never yield nor crack ; there
will no splinters run into your palms from it.
If I am to cling with my hand I must first empty my hand.
Fancy a man saying, I cannot stand unless you hold me up ;
but I have to hold my Bank Book, and this thing, and that
thing, and the other thing ; I cannot put them down, so
I have not a hand free to lay hold with, you must do
the holding. That is what some of us are saying in
effect. Now the prayer, " Hold Thou me up, and I
shall be safe," is a right one ; but not from a man who
will not put his possessions out of his hands, that he may
lay hold of the God who lays hold of him.
" Nothing in my hands I bring."
Then of course, and only then, when we are empry-
FEAR AND FAITH. 109
handed, shall we be free to grip and lay hold ; and only
then shall we be able to go on with the grand words —
" Simply to Thy cross I cling,"
as some half-drowned, shipwrecked sailor, flung up on the
beach, clasps a point of rock, and is safe from the power
of the waves that beat around him.
And then one word more. These two clauses that I
have put together give us not only the occasion of faith
in fear, and the essence of faith in this clinging, but
they also give us very beautifully the victory of faith.
You see with what poetic art — if we may use such words
about the breathings of such a soul — he repeats the two
main words of the former verse in the latter, only in in-
verted order — " What time I am afraid, I will trust in
Thee." He is possessed by the lower emotion, and
resolves to escape from its sway into the light and liberty
of faith. And then the next words still keep up the con-
trast of faith and fear, only that now he is possessed by
the more blessed mood, and determines that he will not
fall back into the bondage and darkness of the baser.
"In God I have put my trust; I will not fear." He
has confidence, and in the strength of that he resolves
that he will not yield to fear. If we put that thought into
a more abstract form it comes to this : that the one trn^
antagonist and triumphant rival of all fear is faith, and
faith alone. There is no reason why any man should be
emancipated from his fears either about this world or
about the next, except in proportion as he has faith. Nay,
rather it is far away more rational to be afraid than not to
be afraid, unless I have this faith in Christ. There are
plenty of reasons for dread in the dark possibilities and
not less dark certainties of life. Disasters, losses, part-
no FEAR AND FAT'IH.
ings, disappointments, sicknesses, death, may any of them
come at any moment, and some of them will certainly
come sooner or later. Temptations lurk around us like
serpents in the grass, they beset us in open ferocity like
lions in our path. Is it not wise to fear unless our faith
has hold of that great promise, " Thou shalt tread upon
the lion and adder ; there shall no evil befall thee"? But
if we have a firm hold of God, then it is wise not to be
afraid, and terror is folly and sin. For trust brings not
only tranquillity, but security, and so takes away fear by
taking away danger.
That double operation of faith in quieting and in
defendmg is very strikingly .set forth by an Old Testa-
ment word, formed from the verb here employed, which
means properly confidence^ and then in one form comes
to signify both in security and /;/ safety, secure as be-
ing free from anxiety, safe as being sheltered from peril.
So, for instance, the people of that secluded little town
of Laish, whose peaceful existence amidst warlike neigh-
bours is described with such singular beauty in the
Book of Judges, are said to 'Mwell careless, quiet, and
secured The former phrase is literally " in trust," and the
latter is " trusting." The idea sought to be conveyed by
both seems to be that double one of quiet freedom from
fear and from danger. So, again, in Moses' blessing,
"The beloved of the Lord shall dwell /;/ safety by
Him," we have the same phrase to express the same
twofold benediction of shelter, by dwelling in God, from
all alarm and from all attack :
*' As far from danger as from fear,
While love, almighty love, is near."
This thought of the victory of faith over feax is very
forcibly set forth in a verse from the Book of Proverbs,
which in our version runs " The righteous is bold as a
FEAR AND FAITH. in
lion." The word rendered " is bold" is that of our text,
and would literally be " trusts," but obviously the meta-
phor requires such a translation as that of the English
Bible. The word that properly describes the act of faith
has come to mean the courage which is the consequence
of the act, just as our own word cotifidejice properly signi-
fies trust, but has come to mean the boldness which is
born of trust. So, then, the true way to become brave is
to lean on God. That, and that alone, delivers from other-
wise reasonable fear, and Faith bears in her one hand the
gift of outward safety, and in her other that of inward peace.
Peter is sinking in the water; the tempest runs high. He
looks upon the waves, and is ready to fancy that he is
going to be swallowed up immediately. His fear is
reasonable if he has only the tempest and himself to
draw his conclusions from. His helplessness and the
scowling storm together strike out a little spark of faith,
which the wind cannot blow out, nor the floods quench.
Like our Psalmist here, when Peter is afraid, he trusts.
" Save, Lord, or I perish." Immediately the outstretched
hand of his Lord grasps his, and brings him safety,
while the gentle rebuke, " O thou of little faith, wherefore
didst thou doubt ? " infuses courage into his beating heart.
The storm runs as high as ever, and the waves beat about
his limbs, and the spray blinds his eyes. If he leaves his
hold for one moment down he will go. But, as long as he
clasps Christ's hand, he is as safe on that heaving floor as
if his feet were on a rock ; and as long as he looks in
Christ's face and leans upon His upholding arm, he does
not " see the waves boisterous," nor tremble at all as they
break around him. His fear and his danger are both
gone, because he holds Christ and is upheld by Him. In
this sense, too, as in many others," this is the victory that
overcometh the world, even our faith."
Xlll.
WAITING AND SINGING.
Psalm lix. 9, 17.
Because ^his strength will I wait upon Thee ; for God is my defence.
. . . Unto Thee, O my strength, will I sing; for God is my
defence, and the God of my mercy.
'T^HERE is an obvious correspondence between these
•^ two verses, even as they stand in our translation, and
still more obviously in the Hebrew. You observe that
in the former verse the words "because of " are a sup-
plement inserted by our translators, because they did not
exactly know what to make of the bare words as they
stood. " His strength, I will wait upon thee," is, of
course, nonsense ; but a very slight alteration of a single
letter, which has the sanction of several good authorities,
both among manuscripts and translations, gives an appro-
priate and beautiful meaning, and brings the two verses'
into complete verbal correspondence. Suppose we read,
" My strength," instead of " His strength." The change
is only making the limb of one letter a little shorter, and,
as you will perceive, we thereby get the same expressions
in both verses. We may then read our two texts thus :
''Upon Thee, O my Strength, I will wait . . . Unto
Thee, O my Strength, I will sing."
WAITING AND SINGING. 113
They are, word for word, parallel, with the signifi-
cant difference that the waiting in the one passes into
song, in the other the silent expectation breaks into
music of praise. And these two words — wait and sing —
are in the Hebrew the same in every letter but one, thus
strengthening the impression of likeness as well as em-
phasizing, with poetic art, that of difference. The parallel,
too, obviously extends to the second half of each verse,
where the reason for both the waiting and the praise is
the same — " For God is my defence " — with the further
eloquent variation that the song is built not only on the
thought that " God is my defence," but also on this, that
He is " the God of my mercy."
These two parallel verses, then, are a kind of refrain,
coming in at the close of each division of the psalm; and if
you examine its structure and general course of thought, you
will see that the first stands at the end of a picture of the
Psalmist's trouble and danger, and makes the transition to
the second part, which is mainly a prayer for deliverance,
and finishes with the refrain altered and enlarged, as I
have pointed out.
The heading of the psalm tells us that its date is the
very beginning of Saul's persecution, when " they watched
the house to kill him," and he fled by night from the
city. There is a certain correspondence between the
circumstances and some part of the picture of his foes
here which makes the date probable. If so, this is one
of David's oldest psalms, and is interesting as show-
ing his faith and courage, even in the first burst of danger.
But whether that be so or not, we have here, at any rate,
the voice of a devout soul in sore sorrow, and may well
learn the lesson of its twofold utterance.
The man, overwhelmed by calamity, betakes himself
114 WAITING AND SINGING.
to God. " Upon Thee, O my strength, will I wait, for
God is my defence." Then, by dint oi waiting, although
the outward circumstances keep just the same, his temper
and feelings change. He began with, " Deliver me from
my enemies, O Lord, for they lie in wait for my soul."
He passes through " My strength, I will wait upon Thee,"
and so ends with " My strength, I will sing unto
Thee." We may then throw our remarks into two
groups, and deal for a few minutes with these two points
— the Waiting on God, and the change of Waiting into
Praise.
Now, with regard to the first of these — the Waiting on
God — I must notice that the expression here, " I will
wait,'' is a somewhat remarkable one. It means, accurately,
'' I will watch Thee," and it is the word that is generally
employed, not about our looking up to Hmi, but about
His looking down to us. It would describe the action of a
shepherd guarding his flock ; of a sentry keeping a city ;
of the watchers that watch for the morning, and the like.
By using it, the Psalmist seems as if he would say — There
are two kinds of watching. There is God's watching over
me, and there is my watching for God. I look up to
Him that He may bless ; He looks down upon me that
He may take care of me. As He guards me, so I stand
expectant before Him, as one in a besieged town, upon
the ramparts there, looks eagerly out across the plain
to see the coming of the long-expected succours. God
" waits to be gracious " — wonderful w^ords, painting for
us His watchfulness of fitting times and ways to bless us,
and His patient attendance on our unwilling, careless
spirits. We may well take a lesson from His attitude in
bestowing, and, on our parts, wait on Him to be helped.
For these two things — vigilance and patience — are the
WAITING AND SINGING. 115
main elements in the Scriptural idea of waiting on God.
Let me enforce each of them in a word or two.
There is no waiting on God for help, and there is no
help from God, without watchful expectation on our parts.
If ever we fail to receive strength and defence from Him,
it is because we are not on the outlook for it. Many a
proffered succour from heaven goes past us, because we
are not standing on our watch-tower to catch the far-off
indications of its approach, and to fling open the gates of
our heart for its entrance. He who expects no help will
get none ; he whose expectation does not lead him to be
on the alert for its coming will get but little. How the
beleaguered garrison, that knows a relieving force is on
the march, strain their eyes to catch the first glint of the
sunshine on their spears as they top the pass ! But how
unlike such tension of watchfulness is the languid anticipa-
tion and fitful look, with more of distrust than hope in it,
which we turn to heaven in our need. No wonder we
have so little living experience that God is our '' strength "
and our " defence," when we so partially believe that He is,
and so little expect that He will be either. The homely old
proverb says, " They that watch for Providences will never
want a providence to watch for," and you may turn it the
other way and say, " They that do 7iot watch for Providence
will never have a providence to watch for." Unless you put
out your water-jars when it rains you will catch no water ;
if you do not watch for God coming to help you, God's
watching to be gracious will be of no good at all to you.
His waiting is not a substitute for ours, but because He
watches therefore we should watch. We say, we expect
Him to comfort and help us — well, are we standing, as it
were, on tiptoe, with empty hands upraised to bring them
a little nearer the gifts we look for ? Are our " eyes ever
Ii6 WAITING AND SINGING.
towards the Lord ? " Do we pore over His gifts, scruti-
nizing them as eagerly as a gold-seeker does the quartz in
his pan, to detect every shining speck of the precious
metal ? Do we go to our work and our daily battle with
the confident expectation that He will surely come when
our need is the sorest and scatter our enemies ? Is there
any clear outlook kept by us for the help which we know
must come, lest it should pass us unobserved, and, like
the dove from the ark, finding no footing in our hearts
drowned in a flood of troubles, be fain to return to the
calm refuge from which it came on its vain errand ? Alas,
how many gentle messengers of God flutter homeless
about our hearts, unrecognized and unwelcomed, because
we have not been watching for them ! Of what avail is it
that a strong hand from the cliff should fling the safety-
line with true aim to the wreck, if no eye on the deck is
watching for it ? It hangs there, useless and unseen, and
then it drops into the sea, and every soul on board is
drowned. It is our own fault — and very largely the fault
of our want of watchfulness for the coming of God's help —
if we are ever overwhelmed by the tasks, or difficulties,
or sorrows of life. We wonder that we are left to fight out
the battle ourselves. But are we ? Is it not rather, that
while God's succours are hastening to our side we will not
open our eyes to see, nor our hearts to receive them ? If
we go through the world with our hands hanging listlessly
down instead of lifted to heaven, or full of the trifles and
toys of this present, as so many of us do, what wonder is
it if heavenly gifts of strength do not come into our grasp?
That attitude of watchful expectation is wonderfully de-
scribed for us in the graphic words of another psalm,
" My soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch
for the morning : I say, more than they that watch for the
WAITING AND SINGING. 117
morning." What a picture that is ! Think of the wakeful,
sick man, tossing restless all the night on his tumbled
bed, wracked with pain made harder to bear by the
darkness. How often his heavy eye is lifted to the win-
dow-pane, to see if the dawn has not yet begun to tint it
with a gray glimmer ! How he groans, " Would God it
were morning ! " Or, think of some unarmed and solitary
man, benighted in the forest, and hearing the wild beasts
growl, and scream, and bark all round, while his fire dies
down, and he knows that his life depends on the morning
breaking soon. With yet more eager expectation are we
to look for God, whose coming is a better morning for our
sick and defenceless spirits. If we are not so looking for
His help, we need never be surprised that we do not get
it. There is no promise and no probability that it will
come to men in their sleep, who neither desire it nor wait
for it. And such vigilant expectation will be accom-
panied with patience. There is no impatience in it, but
the very opposite. '' If we hope for that we see not, then
do we with patience wait for it." If we know that He
will surely come, then if He tarry we can wait for Him.
The measure of our confidence is ever the measure of our
patience. Being sure that He is always "in the midst
of" Zion, we may be sure that at the right time He will
flame out into delivering might, '' helping her, and that
right early." So Waiting means Watchfulness and Pa-
tience, both of which have their roots in Trust.
Further, we have here set forth not only the nature,
but also the object of this waiting, " Upon Thee, O 7/iy
strength, will I wait, for God is 7}iy defence."
The object to which it is directed, and the ground on
which it is based, are both set forth in these two names
here applied to God. The name of the Lord is strength,
ii8 WAITING AND SINGING.
therefore I wait on Him in the confident expectation of
receiving of His power. The Lord is " my defence,"
therefore I wait on Him in the confident expectation of
safety. The one name has respect to our condition of
feebleness and inadequacy for our tasks, and points to
God as infusing strength into us. The other points to
our exposedness to danger and to enemies, and points
to God as casting His shelter around us. The word
translated defence is literally '^ a high fortress," and is the
same as closes the rapturous accumulation of the names
of his delivering God, which the Psalmist gives us when
he vows to love Jehovah, who has been his Rock, and
Fortress, and Deliverer ; his God in whom he will trust,
his Buckler, and the Horn of his salvation, and his H/gA
Tower. The first name speaks of God dwelling in us, and
His strength made perfect in our weakness ; the second
speaks of our dweUing in God, and our defencelessness
sheltered in Him. " The name of the Lord is a strong
tower ; the righteous runneth into it, and is safe." As
some outnumbered army, unable to make head against its
enemies in the open, flees to the shelter of some hill
fortress, perched upon a crag, and, taking up the draw-
bridge, cannot be reached by anything that has not
wings ; so this man, hard pressed by his foes, flees into
God to hide him, and feels secure behind these strong walls.
That is the God on whom we wait. The recognition
of His character as thus mighty and ready to help is the
only thing that will evoke our expectant confidence, and
His character thus discerned is the only object that our
confidence can grasp aright. Trust Him as what He is,
and trust Him because of what He is, and see to it that
your faith lays hold on the living God Himself, and on
nothing beside.
WATTING AND SINGING. 119
But waiting on God is not only the recognition of
liis character as revealed, but it involves, too, the act
of laying hold on all the power and blessing of that
character for myself. "Jlfy strength, my defence," sa}'s
the Psalmist. So think of what He is, and believe that
He is that for you, else there is no true waiting on
Him. Make God thy very own by claiming thine own
portion in His might, by betaking thyself to that strong
habitation. We cannot wait on God in crowds, but, one
by one, must say, " J/y strength and my defence."
And now turn to the second verse of our two texts :
'' Unto thee, O my strength, will I sing, for God is my
defence and the God of my mercy."
Here we catch, as it were, waiting expectation and
watchfulness in the very act of passing over into possession
and praise. For remember the aspect of things has not
changed a bit between the first verse of our text and the
last. The enemies are all round about David just as
they were, " making a noise like a dog," as he says, and
"going round about the city." The evil that w^as
threatening him and making him sad remains entirely
unlightened. What has altered ? He has altered. And
how has he altered ? Because his waiting on God has
begun to work an inward change, and he has climbed up,
as it were, out of the depths of his sorrow up into the
sunlight. And so it ever is, my friends ! There is de-
liverance in spirit before there is deliverance in outward
fact. If our patient waiting bring, as it certainly will
bring, at the right time, an answer in the removal of
danger, and the lightening of sorrow, it will bring first the
better answer : " The peace of God, which passeth all
understanding," to keep your hearts and minds. That is
the highest blessing we have to seek for in our waiting on
I20 WAITING AND SINGING.
God, and that is the blessing we get as soon as we wait
on Him. The outward deliverance may tarry, but ever
there come before it, as a herald of its approach, the
sense of a lightened burden and the calmness of a
strengthened heart. It may be long before the morning
breaks, but even while the darkness lasts a faint air
begins to stir among the sleeping leaves, the promise of
the dawn, and the first notes of half-awakened birds pre-
lude the full chorus that will hail the sunrise.
It is beautiful, I think, to see, how in the compass of
this one litde psalm the singer has, as it were, wrought
himself clear, and sung himself out of his fears. The
stream of his thought, like some mountain torrent, tur-
bid at first, has run itself bright and sparkling. How all
the tremor and agitation has gone away, just because
he has kept his mind for a few minutes in the presence of
the calm thought of God and His love. The first courses
of his psalm, like those of some great building, are laid
deep down in the darkness, but the shining summit is
away up there in the sunlight, and God's glittering glory
is sparklingly reflected from the highest point. Whoever
begins with, " Deliver me — I will wait upon thee," will
pass very quickly, even before the outward deliverance
comes, into — " O my strength, unto Thee will I sing ! "
Every song of true trust, though it may begin with a
minor, will end in a burst of jubilant gladness. No
prayer ought ever to deal with complaints, we know,
without starting with thanksgiving, and, blessed be God,
no prayer need to deal with complaints without ending
with thanksgiving. So, all our cries of sorrow, and all
our acknowledgments of weakness and need, and all our
plaintive beseechings, should be inlaid, as it were, between
two layers of brighter and gladder thought, like dull rock
WAITING AND SINGING. 121
between two veins of gold. The prayer that begins with
thankfulness, and passes on into waiting, even while in
sorrow and sore need, will always end in thankfulness,
and triumph, and praise.
If we regard this second verse of our text as the ex-
pression of the psalmist's emotion at the moment of its
utterance, then we see in it a beautiful illustration of the
effect of faithful waiting to turn complaining into praise.
If we regard it rather as an expression of his confidence,
that " I shall yet praise Him for the help of His counte-
nance," we see in it an illustration of the power of patient
waiting to brighten the sure hope of deliverance, and to
bring summer into the heart of winter. As resolve, or as
prophecy, it is equally a witness of the large reward
of quiet waiting for the salvation of the Lord.
In either application of the words their almost precise
correspondence with those of the previous verse is far
more than a mere poetic ornament, or part of the artistic
form of the psalm. It teaches us this happy lesson — that
the song of accompUshed deliverance, whether on earth, or
in the final joy of heaven, will be but a sweeter, fuller
repetition of the cry that went up in trouble from our
waiting hearts. The object to which we shall turn with
our thankfulness is He to whom we betook ourselves
with our prayers. There will be the same turning of the
soul to Him ; only instead of wistful waiting in the longing
look, joy will light her lamps in our eyes, and thankiul-
ness beam in our faces as we turn to His light. We shall
look to Him as of old, and name Him what we used to
name Him when we were in weakness and warfare, — our
** strength" and "our defence." But how different the
feelings with which the delivered soul calls Him so, from
those with which the sorrowful heart tried to grasp the
122 WAITING AND SINGING.
comfort of the names. Then their reaUty was a matter of
faith, often hard to hold fast. Now it is a matter of
memory and experience. " I called Thee my strength
when I was full of weakness ; I tried to believe Thou wast
my defence when I was full of fear ; I thought of Thee
as my fortress when I was ringed about with foes ; I
know Thee now for that which I then trusted that Thou
wast. As I waited upon Thee that Thou mightest be
gracious, I praise Thee now that Thou hast been more
gracious than my hopes." Blessed are they whose
loftiest expectations were less than their grateful memories
and their rich experience, and who can take up in their
song of praise the names by which they called on God,
and feel that they knew not half their depth, their sweet-
ness, or their power.
But the praise is not merely the waiting transformed.
Experience has not only deepened the conception of the
meaning of God's name ; it has added a new name. The
cry 01 the suppliant was to God, his strength and de-
fence ; the song of the saved is to the God who is also
the God of his mercy. The experiences of life have
brought out more fully the love and tender pity of God.
While the troubles lasted it was hard to believe that
God was strong enough to brace us against them, and to
keep us safe in them ; it was harder still to think of them
as coming from Him at all ; it was hardest to feel that
they came from His love. But when they are past, and
their meaning is plainer, and we possess their results in
the weight of glory which they have wrought out for us,
we shall be able to look back on them all as the mercies
of the God of our mercy, even as when a man looks down
from the mountain-top upon the m.ists and the clouds
through which he passed, and sees them all smitten by
WAITING AND SINGING. 123
the sunshine that gleams upon thern from above. Thnt
which was thick and damp as he was struggUng through
it, is irradiated into rosy beauty ; the retrospective and
downward glance confirms and surpasses all that faith
dimly discerned, and found it hard to believe. Whilst we
are fighting here, brethren, let us say, '' I will wait for
Thee," and then yonder we shall, with deeper knowledge
of the love that was in all our sorrows, sing unto Him
who was our strength in earth's weakness, our defence in
earth's dangers, and is for evermore the " God of our
niercy," amidst the large and undeserved favours of
heaven.
XIV.
QUARTUS A BROTHER.
Romans xvi. 23.
And Quartus a brother.
T AM afraid very few of us read often, or with much interest,
■^ those long Hsts of names at the end of Paul's letters.
And yet there are plenty of lessons in them, if anybody
will look at them lovingly and carefully. There does not
seem much in these three words ; but I am very much
mistaken if they will not prove to be full of beauty and
pathos, and to open out into a wonderful revelation of
what Christianity is and does, as soon as we try to freshen
them up into some kind of human interest.
It is easy for us to make a Httle picture of this brother
Quartus. He is evidently an entire stranger to the
Church in Rome. They had never heard his name
before : none of them knew anything about him. Further,
he is evidently a man of no especial reputation or position
in the Church at Corinth, from which Paul writes. He
contrasts strikingly with the others who send saluta-
tions to Rome. " Timotheus, my work-fellow " — the
companion and helper of the Apostle, whose name was
known everywhere among the Churches, heads the list.
Then come other prominent men of his more immediate
circle. Then follows a loving greeting from Paul's amanu-
QU.\RTUS A BROTHER. 125
ensis, who, naturally, as the pen is in his own hand, says :
"/ Tertius, who \vrote this Epistle, salute you in the
Lord." Then Paul begins again to dictate, and the list
runs on. Next comes a message from " Gaius mine host,
and of the whole Church " — an influential man in the
community, apparently rich, and willing, as well as able,
to extend to them large and loving hospitality. Erastus,
the chamberlain or treasurer of the city, follows ; a man
of consequence in Corinth. And then, among all these
people of mark, comes the modest, quiet Quartus. He
has no wealth like Gaius, nor civil position like Erastus,
nor wide reputation like Timothy. He is only a good,
simple, unknown Christian, He feels a spring of love
open in his heart to these brethren far across the sea,
whom he never met. He would like them to know that
he thought lovingly of them, and to be lovingly thought
of by them. So he begs a little corner in Paul's letter,
and gets it ; and there, in his little niche, like some statue
of a forgotten saint, scarce seen amidst the glories of a
great cathedral, " Quartus a brother " stands to all time.
The first thing that strikes me in connection with these
words is, how deep and real they show that new bond of
'Christian love to have been.
A Httle incident of this sort is more impressive than
any amount of mere talk about the uniting influence of
the Gospel. Here we get a gUmpse of the power in
actual operation in a man's heart, and if we think of all
that this simple greeting pre-supposes and implies, and
of all that had to be overcome before it could have been
sent, we may well see in it the sign of the greatest revo-
lution that was ever wrought in men's relations to one
another. Quartus was an inhabitant of Corinth, from
which city this letter was written. His Roman name
126 QUARTUS A BROTHER.
may indicate Poman descent, but of that we cannot be
sure. Just as probably he may have been a Greek by
birth, and so have had to stretch his hand across a deep
crevasse of national antipathy, in order to clasp the hands
of his brethren in the great city. There was little love
lost between Rome, the rough imperious conqueror, and
Corinth, prostrate and yet restive under her bonds, and
nourishing remembrances of a freedom which Rome had
crushed, and of a culture that Rome haltingly followed.
And how many other deep gulfs of separation had to
be bridged before that Christian sense of oneness could be
felt ! It is impossible for us to throw ourselves completely
back to the condition of things which the Gospel found.
The world then was like some great field of cooled lava
on the slopes of a volcano, all broken up by a labyrinth
of clefts and cracks, at the bottom of which one can see
the flicker of sulphurous flames. Great gulfs of national
hatred, of fierce enmities of race, language, and religion ;
wide separations of social condition, far profounder than
anything of the sort which we know, split mankind into
fragments. On the one side was the freeman, on the
other, the slave ; on the one side, the Gentile, on the
other, the Jew ; on the one side, the insolence and hard-
handedness of Roman rule, on the other, the impotent,
and, therefore, envenomed hatred of conquered peoples.
And all this fabric, full of active repulsions and disin-
tegrating forces, was bound together into an artificial and
unreal unity by the iron clamp of Rome's power, holding
up the bulging walls that were ready to fall — the unity of
the slave-gang manacled together for easier driving. Into
this hideous condition of things the Gospel comes, and
silently flings its clasping tendrils over the wide gaps,
and binds the crumbling structure of human society with
QUARTUS A BROTHER. 127
a new bond, real and living. We know well enough that
that was so, but we are helped to apprehend by seeing,
as it were, the very process going on before our eyes, in
this message from " Quartus a brother."
It reminds us that the very notion of humanity, and
of the brotherhood of man, is purely Christian. A world-
embracing society, held together by love, was not dreamt
of before the Gospel came ; and since the Gospel came
it is more than a dream. If you wrench away the idea
from its foundation, as people do who talk about fra-
ternity, and seek to bring it to pass without Christ, it is a
mere piece of Utopian sentiment — a fine dream. But in
Christianity it worked. It works imperfectly enough,
God knows. Still there is some reaUty in it, and some
power. The Gospel first of all produced the thing and
the practice, and then the theory came afterwards. The
Church did not talk much about the brotherhood of man,
or the unity of the race ; but simply ignored all dis-
tinctions, and gathered into the fold the slave and his
master, the Roman and his subject, fair-haired Goths and
swarthy Arabians, the worshippers of Odin and of Zeus,
the Jew and the Gentile. That actual unity, utterly irre-
spective of all distinctions, which came naturally in the
train of the Gospel, was the first attempt to realize the
oneness of the race, and first taught the world that all
men were brethren.
And before this simple word of greeting could have
been sent, and the unknown man in Corinth felt love to
a company of unknown men in Rome, some profound
new impulse must have been given to the world ; some-
thing altogether unlike any of the forces hitherto in exist-
ence. What was that ? What should it be but the story
of One who gave Himself for the whole world, who binds
128 QUARTUS A BROTHER.
men into a unity because of His common relation to them
all, and through whom the great proclamation can be
made : " There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither
bond nor free, there is neither male nor female, for ye
are all one in Christ Jesus." Brother Quartus' message,
like some tiny flower above-ground which tells of a
spreading root beneath, is a modest witness to that mighty
revolution, and pre-supposes the preaching of a Saviour
in whom he and his unseen friends in Rome are one.
So let us learn not to confine our sympathy and the
play of our Christian affection within the limits of our
personal knowledge. We must go further a-field than
that. Like this man, let us sometimes send our thoughts
across mountains and sea. He knew nobody in the
Roman Church, and nobody knew him, but he wished to
stretch out his hand to them, and to feel, as it were, the
pressure of their fingers in his palm. That is a pattern
for us.
Let me suggest another thing. Quartus was a Corinth-
ian. The Corinthian Church was remarkable for its
quarrellings and dissensions. One " said, I am of Paul,
and another, I of Apollos, and I of Cephas, and I of
Christ." I wonder if our friend Quartus belonged to aiay
of these parties. There is nothing more likely than that
he had a much warmer glow of Christian love to the
brethren over there in Rome than to those who sat on
the same bench with him in the upper room at Corinth. .
For you know that sometimes it is true about people, as
well as about scenery, that " distance lends enchantment
to the view." A great many of us have much keener
sympathies with '' brethren " who are well out of our
reach, and whose peculiarities do not jar against ours,
than with those who are nearest. I do not say Quartus
QUARTUS A BROTHER. 129
was one of these, but he may very well have been one of
the wranglers in Corinth who found it much easier to
love his brother whom he had not seen than his brother
whom he had seen. So take the hint, if you need it.
Do not let your Christian love go wandering away abroad
only, but keep some for home consumption.
Again, how simply, and with what unconscious beauty,
the deep reason for our Christian unity is given in that
one word, a " Brother." As if he had said, Never mind
telling them anything about what I am, what place I
hold, or what I do. Tell them I am a brother, that will
be enough. It is the only name by which I care to be
kno\vn ; it is the name which explains my love to them.
We are brethren because we are sons of one Father.
So that favourite name, by which the early Christians
knew each other, rested upon and proclaimed the deep
truth that they knew themselves to be all partakers of a
common life derived from one Parent. When they said
they were brethren, they implied, " We have been born
again by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for
ever." The great Christian truth of regeneration, the
communication of a Divine life from God the Father,
through Christ the Son, by the Holy Spirit, is the found-
ation of Christian brotherhood. So the name is no mere
piece of effusive sentiment, but expresses a profound fact.
To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to
become '' the sons of God," and therein to become the
brethren of all His sons.
That is the true ground of our unity, and of our obli-
gation to love all who are begotten of Him. You cannot
safely put them on any other footing. All else — identity
of opinion, similarity of practice and ceremonial, local 01
national ties, and the like — all else is insufficient. It may
I30 QUARTUS A BROTHER.
be necessary for Christian communities to require in
addition a general identity of opinion, and even some
uniformity in government and form of worship ; but if
ever they come to fancy that such subordinate conditions
of visible oneness are the grounds of their spiritual unity,
and to enforce these as such, they are slipping off the
real foundation, and are perilling their character as
Churches of Christ. The true ground of the unity of all
Christians is here : " Have we not all one Father ? " We
possess a kindred life derived from Him. We are a
family of brethren because we are sons.
Another remark is, how strangely and unwittingly this
good man has got himself an immortality by that passing
thought of his. One loving message has won for him the
prize for which men have joyfully given life itself, — an
eternal place in history. Wheresoever the Gospel is
preached there also shall this be told as a memorial of
hrn. How much surprised he would have been if, as he
J/eaned forward to Tertius hurrying to end his task, and
said, " Send my love too," anybody had told him that
that one act of his would last as long as the world, and
his name be known for ever ! And how much ashamed
some of the other people in the New Testament would
have been if they had known that their passing faults — the
quarrel of Euodia and Syntyche for instance — were to be
gibbetted for ever in the same fashion ! How careful they
would have been, and we would be of our behaviour if
we knew that it was to be pounced down upon and made
immortal in that style ! Suppose you were to be told — Your
thoughts and acts to-morrow at twelve o'clock will be re-
corded for all the world to read — you would be pretty
careful how you behaved. When a speaker sees the re-
porters in front of him, he weighs his words.
QUARTUS A BROTHER. 131
Well, Quartus' little message is written down here, and
the world knows it. All our words and works are getting
put down too in another Book up there, and it is going to
be read out one day. It does seem wonderful that you and
I should live as we do, knowing all the while that God is
recording it all. If we are not ashamed to do things, and
let Him note them " on His tablets that they may be for
the time to come, for ever and ever," it is strange that we
should be more careful to attitudinize and pose ourselves
before one another than before Him. Let us then keep
ever in mind "those pure eyes and perfect witness of"
the " all-judging " God. The eternal record of this little
message is only a symbol of the eternal life and eternal
record of all our transient and trivial thoughts and
deeds before Him. Let us live so that each act if re-
corded would shine with some modest ray of true light
like brother Quartus' greeting. And let us seek that,
like him, — all else about us being forgotten, position,
talents, wealth, buried in the dust, — we may be remember-
ed, if we are remembered at all, by such a biography as
is condensed into these three words. Who would not wish
to have such an epitaph as this ? who would not wish to
be embalmed, so to speak, in such a record ? A sweet fate
to live for ever in the world's memory by three words
which tell his name, his Christianity, and his brotherly
love. So far as we are remembered at all, may the like
be our life's history and our epitaph!
XV.
SHOD FOR THE ROAD.
Deuteronomy xxxiii. 25.
Thy shoes shall be iron and brass ; and as thy days, so shall
thy strength be.
nPHERE is a general correspondence between those
-*- blessings wherewith Moses blessed the tribes of Israel
before his death, and the circumstances and territory of
each tribe in the promised land. The portion of Asher,
in whose blessing the words of our text occurs, was partly
the rocky northern coast and partly the fertile lands
stretching to the base of the Lebanon. In the inland
part of their land they cultivated large olive groves, the
produce of which was trodden out in great rock-hewn
cisterns. So the clause before my text is a benediction
upon that industry — " let him dip his foot in oil." And
then the metaphor naturally suggested by the mention of
the foot is carried on into the next words, " Thy shoes
shall be iron and brass," the tribe being located upon
rocky sea-coast, having rough roads to travel, and so
needing to be well shod. The substance, then, of that
promise seems to be — strength adequate to and unworn
by exercise ; while the second clause, though not alto-
gether plain, seems to put a somewhat similar idea in
SHOD FOR THE ROAD. 133
unmetaphorical shape. "As thy days, so shall thy
strength be/' probably means the promise of power that
grows with growing years.
So, then, we have first that thought that God gives as
an equipment of streftgth proportioned to our work, — shoes
fit for our road. God does not turn people out to
scramble over rough mountains with thin-soled boots on ;
that is the plain English of the words. When an Alpine
climber is preparing to go away into Switzerland for rock
work, the first thing he does is to get a pair of strong
shoes, with plenty of iron nails in the soles of them. So
Asher had to be shod for his rough roads, and so each of
us may be sure that if God sends us on stony paths He
will provide us with strong shoes, and will not send us
out on any journey for which He does not equip us well.
There are no difficulties to be found in any path of
duty for which he that is called to tread it is not pre-
pared by Him that sent him. Whatsoever may be the
road, our equipment is calculated for it, and is given to
us from Him that has appointed it.
Is not there a suggestion here, too, as to the sort of
travelling we may expect to find ? An old saying tells us
that we do not go to heaven in silver slippers, and the
reason is because the road is rough. The "primrose
way " leads somewhere else, and it may be walked on
" delicately." But if we need shoes of iron and brass, we
may pretty well guess the kind of road we have before us.
If a man is equipped with such things on his feet, depend
upon it that there will be use for them before he gets to
the end of his day's journey. The thickest sole will make
the easiest travelling over rocky roads. So be quite sure
of this, that if God gives to us certain endowments and
equipments which are only calculated for very toilsome
134 SHOD FOR THE ROAD.
paths, the rough work will not be very far behind the
stout shoes.
And see what He does give. See the provision which
is made for patience and strength, for endurance and
courage, in all the messages of His mercy, in all the words
of His love, in all the powers of His Gospel, and then
say whether that looks like an easy life of it on our way
to the end. Those two ships that went away a while ago
upon the brave, and, as some people thought, desperate
task of finding the North Pole — any one that looked
upon them as they lay in Portsmouth Roads, might know
that it was no holiday cruise they were meant for. The
thickness of the sides, the strength of the cordage, the
massiveness of the equipment, did not look like pleasure-
sailing.
And so, dear brethren, if we think of all that is given
to us in God's Gospel in the way of stimulus and en-
couragement, and exhortation, and actual communication
of powers, we may calculate from the abundance of the
resources how great will be the strain upon us before
we come to the end, and our " feet stand within thy
gates, O Jerusalem." Go into some of the great fortresses
in continental countries, and you will find the store-rooms
full of ammunition and provisions ; bread enough and
biscuits enough, it would look, for half the country, laid
up there, and a deep well somewhere or other about the
courtyard. What does that mean? It means fighting,
that is what it means. So if we are brought into this
strong pavilion, so well provisioned, so well fortified and
defended, that means that we shall need all the strength
that is to be found in those thick walls, and all the suste-
nance that is to be found in those gorged magazines, and
all the refreshment that is to be drawn from that fair, and
SHOD FOR THE ROAD. 135
full, and inexhaustible fountain, before the battle is over
and the victory won. Depend upon it, the promise
" Thy shoes shall be iron and brass," means Thy road
shall be rocky and flinty ; and so it is.
And yet, thank God ! whilst it is true that it is very
hard and very difficult for many of us, and hard and diffi-
cult—even if without the "very" — for us all, it is also true
that we have the adequate provision sufficient for all our
necessities — and far more than sufficient ! Oh, it is a
poor compliment to the strength that He gives to us to
say that it is enough to carry us through ! God does not
deal out His gifts to people with such an economical
correspondence to necessities as that. There is always
a wide margin. More than we can ask, more than we
can think, more tlian we can need.
If He were to deal with us as men often deal with one
another — '' Well, how much do you want ? Cannot you
do with a little less ? There is the exact quantity that
you need for your support" — if you got the bread by
weight and the water by measure, it would be a very
poor affair. See how He does. He says, '' See, tnere
is Mine own strength for you ; " and we think that we
honour Him when we say, " God has given us enough
for our necessities." Rather the old word is always true :
" So they did eat, and were filled ; and they took up of
the fragments that remained seven baskets-full." And
after they were satisfied and replete with the provision,
there was more at the end than when they began.
That suggests another possible thought to be drawn
from this promise, namely, that it assures not only of
strength adequate to the difficulties and perils of the
journey, but also of a strength which is not worn out
by use.
136 SHOD FOR THE ROAD.
The portion of Asher was the rocky sea-coast. The
sharp, jagged rocks would cut anything of leather to
pieces long before the day's march was over ; but the
tribe has got its feet shod with metal, and the rocks which
they have to stumble over will only strike fire from their
shoes. They need not step timidly for fear of wearing
them out ; but wherever they have to march, may go with
full confidence that their shoeing will not fail them. A
wise general looks after that part of his soldiers' outfit
with special care, knowing that if it gives all the rest is of
no use. So our Captain provides us with an inexhaust-
ible strength, to which we may fully trust. We shall not
exhaust it by any demands that we can make upon it.
We shall only brighten it up, like the nails in a well-used
shoe, the heads of which are polished by stumbling and
scrambling over rocky roads.
So we may be bold in the march, and draw upon our
stock of strength to the utmost. There is no fear that it will
fail us. We may put all our force into our work, we shall
not weaken the power which " by reason of use is exer-
cised^' not exhausted. For the grace which Christ gives
us to serve Him, being Divine, is subject to no weariness,
and neither faints nor fails. The bush that burned un-
consumed is a type of that Infinite Being which works
unexhausted, and lives undying ; after all expenditure
is rich ; after all pouring forth is full. And of His
strength we partake.
Whensoever a man puts forth an effort of any kind
whatever — when I speak, when I lift my hand, when I
run, when I think — there is waste of muscular tissue.
Some of my strength goes in the act, and thus every
effort means expenditure and diminution of force. Hence
weariness that needs sleeD, waste that needs food, languor
SHOD FOR THE ROAD. 137
that needs rest. We belong to an order of things in
which work is death, in regard of the physical world ; but
our spirits may lay hold of God^ and enter into an order
of things in which work is not death, nor effort exhaustion,
nor any loss of power in the expenditure of power.
That sounds strange ! And yet it is not strange. Did
you ever see that electric light which is made by directing
a strong stream upon two small pieces of carbon ? As the
electricity strikes upon these and turns their blackness
into a fiery blaze, it eats away their substance as it
changes them into light. But there is an arrangement in
the lamp by which a fresh surface is continually being
brought into the path of the beam, and so the light con-
tinues without wavering and blazes on. The carbon is
our human nature, black and dull in itself; the electric
beam is the swift energy of God, which makes us light in
the Lord. For the one decay is the end of effort ; for
the other there is none. Though our outward man
perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day.
Though we belong to the perishing order of nature by
our bodily frame, we belong to the undecaying realm of
grace by the spirit that lays hold upon God. And if
our work weary us, as it must do so long as we continue
here, yet in the deepest sanctuary of our being oui
strength is quickened by exercise. " Thy shoes shall be
iron and brass." " Thy raiment waxed not old upon thee,
neither did thy foot swell, these forty years." " Stand,
therefore, having your feet shod with the preparedness of
the Gospel of peace."
But this is not all. There is an advance even upon
these great promises in the closing words. That second
clause of our text says more than the first one. " Thy
shoes shall be iron and brass." That promises us powers
138 SHOD FOR THE ROAD
and provision adapted to and unexhausted by the weary
pilgrimage and rough road of life. But " as thy days, so
shall thy strength be," says even more than that. The
meaning of the word rendered " strength " in our version
is very doubtful, and most modern translators are inclined
to render it " rest." But if we adhere to the translation
of our version, we get a forcible and relevant promise,
which fits on well to the previous clause, understood as it
has been in my previous remarks. The usual understand-
ing of the words is " strength proportioned to thy day,"
an idea which we have found already suggested by the
previous clause. But that explanation rests on, or at any
rate derives support from, the common misquotation of
the words. They are not, as we generally hear them
quoted, "As thy day, so shall thy strength be," — but
" day" is in the plural, and that makes a great difference.
" As thy days, so shall thy strength be." That is to say :
the two sums — of "thy days" and of "thy strength" —
keep growing side by side, the one as fast as the other
and no faster. The days increase. Well, what then?
The strength increases too. As I said, we are allied to
two worlds. According to the law of one of them, the
outer world of physical life, we soon reach the summit of
human strength. For a little while it is true, even in the
life of nature, that our power grows with our days. But
we soon reach the watershed, and then the opposite comes
to be true. Down, steadily down we go with diminishing
power, with diminishing vitality, with a dimmer eye, with
an obtuser ear, with a slower beating heart, with a feebler
frame, we march on and on to our grave ! "As thy days, so
shall thy weakness be," is the law for all of us mature men
and women in regard to our outward life.
But oh, dear brethren, we may be emancipated from
SHOD FOR THE ROAD.
139
that dreary law in regard to the true life of our spirits, and
instead of getting weaker as we get older, we may and we
should get stronger. We may be and we should be
moving on a course tliat has no limit to its advance. We
may be travelling on a shining path througli the heavens,
that has no noon-tide height from which it must slowly
and sadly decline, but tends steadily and for ever upwards,
nearer and nearer to the very fountain itself of heavenly
radiance. "The path of the just is as the shining light,
which shineth more and more till the noon-tide of the
day." But the reality surpasses even that grand thought,
for it points us to an endless approximation, to an infinite
beauty, and to ever-growing possession of never ex-
hausted fulness, as the law for the progress of all Christ's
servants. The life of each of us may and should be con
tinuai accession and increase of power through all the
days here, through all the ages beyond. Why ? Because
" the life which I live, I live by the faith of the Son of
God." Christ liveth in me. It is not my strength that
grows, so much as God's strength in me which is given
more abundantly as the days roll. It is so given on one
condition. If my faith has laid hold of the infinite, the
exhaustless, the immortal energy of God, unless there is
something fearfully wrong about me I shall be getting
purer, nobler, wiser ; more observant of His will ; gentler,
liker Christ; every way fitter for His service, and for larger
service, as the days increase.
Those of us who have reached middle life, or perhaps
got a little over the watershed, ought to have this experi-
ence as our own in a very distinct degree. The years
that are gone ought to have drawn us somewhat away
from our hot pursuing after earthly and perishable things.
They should have added something to the clearness and
140 SHOD FOR THE ROAD.
completeness of our perception of the deep simplicity of
God's gospel. They should have tightened our hold and
increased our possession of Christ, unfolding more and
more of His all-sufficiency. They should have enriched
us with memories of God's loving care, and lighted all the
sky behind with a glow which is reflected on the path
before us, and becomes calm confidence in His unfailing
goodness. They should have given us power and skill
for the conflicts that yet remain, as the Red Indians be-
lieve that the strength of every defeated and scalped
enemy passes into his conqueror's arm. They should
have given force to our better nature, and weakening,
progressive weakening, to our worse. They should have
rooted us more firmly and abidingly in Him from whom
all our power comes, and so have given us more and
fuller supplies of His exhaustless and ever-flowing might.
So it may be with us if we abide in Him, without whom
we are nothing, but partaking of whose strength *'the
weakest shall be as David, and David as an angel of God."
If for us, drawing nearer to the end is drawing nearer
to the light, our faces shall be brightened more and more
with that light which we approach, and our path shall be
" as the shining light which shines more and more unto
the noon-tide of the day," because we are closer to the
very fountain of heavenly radiance, and growingly bathed
and flooded with the outgoings of His glory. " As thy
days, so shall thy strength be."
The promise ought to be true for us all. It is true for
all who use the things that are freely given to them of
God. And whilst thus it is the law for the devout life
here, its most glorious fulfilment remains for the life be-
yond. There each new moment shall bring new strength,
and growing millenniums but add fresh vigour to our im-
SHOD FOR THE ROAD. 141
mortal life. Here the unresting beat of the waves of the
sea of time gnaws away the bank and shoal whereon we
stand, but there each roll of that great ocean of eternity
shall but spread new treasures at our feet and add new
acres to our immortal heritage. The oldest angels, says
Swedenborg, seem the youngest. When life is immor-
tal, the longer it lasts the stronger it becomes, and so the
spirits that have stood for countless days before His
throne, when they appear to human eyes appear as
''young men clothed in long white garments" — full of
unaging youth, and energy that cannot wane. So, whilst
in the flesh we must obey the law of decay, the spirit may
be subject to this better law of life, and "while the out-
ward man perisheth, the inward man be renewed day by
day." " Even the youths shall faint and be wesury, and the
young men shall utterly fall ; but they that wait on the
Lord shall renew their strength."
XVI.
TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD.
Psalm cxvi. 12, 13.
What shall 'I render unto the Lord for all His benefits towards
me ? I will take the cup of salvation and call upon the name of
the Lord.
'"INHERE may possibly be a reference here to a part of
the Passover ritual. It seems to have become the
custom in later times to lift high the wine-cup at that
feast and drink it with solemn invocation and glad thanks-
giving. So we find our Lord taking the cup — the " cup
of blessing " as Paul calls it — and giving thanks. But, as
there is no record of the introduction of that addition to
the original Paschal celebration, we do not know but that
it was later than the date of this psalm. Nor is there any
need to suppose such an allusion in order either to ex-
plain or to give picturesque force to the words. It is a
most natural thing, as all languages show, to talk of a
man's lot, either of sorrow or joy, as the cup which he has
to drink ; and there are plenty of instances of the meta-
phor in the Psalms, such as ''Thou art the portion of
mine inheritance and of my cup, Thou maintainest my
lot." " My cup runneth over." That familiar emblem is
all that is wanted here.
TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD. 143
Then, one other point in reference to the mere words
of the text may be noticed. "Salvation" can scarcely
be taken in its highest meaning here, both because the
whole tone of the psalm fixes its reference to lower bless-
ings, and because it is in the plural in the Hebrew.
" The cup of salvation " expresses, by that plural form,
the fulness and variety of the manifold and multiform de-
liverances which God had wrought and was working for
the Psalmist. His whole lot in life appears to him as a
cup-full of tender goodness, loving faithfulness, delivering
grace. It runs over with Divine acts of help and susten-
ance. As his grateful heart thinks of all God's benefits
to him, he feels at once the impulse to requite and the
impossibility of doing it. With a kind of glad despair
he asks the question that ever springs to thankful lips, and
having nothing to give, recognizes the only possible re-
turn to God to be the acceptance of the brimming
chalice which His goodness commends to his thirst.
The great thought, then, which lies here is that we
best requite God by thankfully taking what He gives.
Now, I note to begin with — how deep that thought goes
ifito the heart of God.
Why is it that we honour God most by taking, not
by giving? The first answer that occurs to you, no
doubt, is — because of His all-sufficiency and our empti-
ness. Man receives all. God needs nothing. We have
all to say, after all our service, "of Thine own have
we given Thee." No doubt that is quite true; and
rightly understood that is a strengthening and a glad
truth. But is that all which can be said in explanation of
this principle ? Surely not. " If I were hungry I would
not tell thee ; for the world is Mine and the fulness
thereof," is a grand word, but it does not give all the
144 TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD.
truth. When Paul stood on Mars Hill, and within sight
of the fair images of the Parthenon shattered the intel-
lectual basis of idolatry, by proclaiming a God " not wor-
shipped with men's hands as though He needed anything,
seeing He giveth to all men all things," that truth, mighty
as it is, is not all. We requite God by taking rather than
by giving, not merely because He needs nothing and we
have nothing which is not His. If that were all, it might
be as true of an almighty tyrant, and might be so used as
to forbid all worship before the gloomy presence, to give
reverence and love to whom were as impertinent as the
grossest offerings of savage idolaters. But the motive of
His giving to us is the deepest reason why our best
recompense to Him is our thankful reception of His
mercies. The principle of our text reposes at last on
" God is love and wishes our hearts," and not merely on
" God has all and does not need our gifts."
Take the illustration of our own love and gifts. Do we
not feel that all the beauty and bloom of a gift is gone if
the giver hoped to receive as much again ? Do we not
feel that it is all gone if the receiver thinks of repaying it
in any coin but that of the heart ? Love gives because it
delights in giving. It gives that it may express itself and
may bless the recipient. If there be any thought of
return it is only the return of love. And that is how God
gives. As James puts it. He is " the giving God, — who
gives," not as our version inadequately renders, "liberally,"
but " simply " — that is, I suppose, with a single eye^ with-
out any ulterior view to personal advantage, from the im-
pulse of love alone, and having no end but our good.
Therefore, it is — because of that pure, perfect love, that
He delights in no recompense, but only in the payment of
a heart won to His love and melted by His mercies.
TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD. 145
Therefore it is that His hand is outstretched, "hoping
for nothing again." His Ahiiighty all-sufficiency needs
nought from us, and to all heathen notions of worship
and tribute puts the question : " Do ye requite the Lord,
O foolish people and unwise ? " But His deep heart of
love desires and deHghts in the echo of its own tones that
is evoked among the rocky hardnesses of our hearts, and
is glad when we take the full cup of I^is blessings, and
as we raise it to our lips call on the name of the Lord.
Ls not that a great and a gracious thought, of our God and
of His great purpose in His mercies ?
But now let us look for a moment at the elements
7vhich 7nake up this requital of God in which He delights.
And first — I put a very simple and obvious one — let us
be sure that we recognize the real contents of our cup.
It is a cup of salvations, however hard it is sometimes to
believe it. How much blessing and happiness we all
rob ourselves of by our slowness to feel that ! Some of
us by reason of natural temperament ; some of us by
reason of the pressure of anxieties, and the aching of
sorrows, and the bleeding of wounds ; some of us by
reason of mere blindness to the true character of our
present, have little joyous sense of the real brightness of
our days. It seems as if joys must have passed, and be
seen in the transfiguring light of memory, before we can dis-
cern their fairness ; and then, when their place is empty,
we know that we were entertaining angels unawares.
Many a man and woman lives in the gloom of a life-long
regret for the loss of some gift, which, when they had it,
seemed nothing very extraordinary, and could not keep
them from annoyance with trifles. Common sense and
reasonable regard for our own happiness and religious
duty unite, as they always do, in bidding us take care
L
146 TAKING r-ROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD.
that we know our blessings. Do not let custom blind
you to them. Do not let tears so fill your eyes that you
cannot see the goodness of the Lord. Do not let thunder-
clouds, however heavy their lurid piles, shut out from
you the blue that is in your sky. Do not let the empty
cup be your first teacher of the blessings you had when
it was full. Do not let a hard place here and there in the
bed destroy your jest. Seek, as a plain duty, to cultivate
a buoyant, joyous sense of the crowded kindnesses of
God in your daily life. Take full account of all the
pains, all the bitter ingredients, remembering that for us
weak and sinful men the bitter is needful. If still the
cup seem charged with distasteful draught, remember
whose lip has touched its rim, leaving its sacred kiss
there, and whose hand holds it out to you. He says,
" Do this in remembrance of Me." The cup which my
Saviour giveth me, can it be anything but a cup of sal-
vations ?
Then, again, another of the elements of this Requital
of God is — be sure that you take what God gives.
There can be no greater slight and dishonour to a
giver than to have his gifts neglected. You give some-
thing that has, perhaps, cost you much, or which at any
rate has your heart in it, to your child, or other dear
one ; would it not wound you, if a day or two after you
found it tossing about among a heap of unregarded
trifles ? Suppose that some of those Rajahs that received
presents on the recent royal visit to India had gone out
from the durbar and flung them into the kennel, that
would have been insult and disaffection, would it not?
But these illustrations are trivial by the side of our
treatment of the " giving God." Surely of all the follies
and crimes of our foolish and criminal race, there are
TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD. 147
none to match tliis — that we will not take and make our
own the things that are freely given to us of God. This
is the height of all madness ; this is the lowest depth of
all sin. He spares not His own Son, the Son spares not
Himself The Father gives up His Son for us all because
He loves. The Son loves us, and gives Himself to us
and for us. And we stand with our hands folded on our
breasts, will not condescend so much as to stretch them
out, or hold our blessings with so slack a grasp that at any
time we may let them slip through our careless fingers.
He prays us wiili much entreaty to receive the gift, and
neglect and stolid indifference are His requital. Is there
anything worse than that ? Surely Scripture is right when
it makes the sin of sins that unbelief, which is at bottom
nothing else than a refusal to take the cup of salvation.
Surely no sharper grief can be inflicted on the Spirit of
God than when we leave His gifts neglected and un-
appropriated.
In the highest region of all, how many of these there
are which we treat so ! A Saviour and His pardoning
blood ; a Spirit and His quickening energies ; that eternal
life which might spring in our souls a fountain of living
waters — all these are ours. Are we as strong as we might
be if we used the strength which we have ? How comes
it that with the fulness of God at our sides we are
empty ; that with the word of God in our hands we know
so little ; that with the Spirit of God in our hearts we
are so fleshly ; that with the joy of our God for our
portion we are so troubled ; that with the heart of God
for our hiding-place we are so defenceless ? *' We have
all and abound," and yet we are poor and needy, like
some infatuated beggar in rags and wTetchedness, to
whom wealth had been given which he would not use.
hs taking from god the best giving to god.
Ill the lower region of daily life and common mercies
the same strange slowness to take what we have is found.
There are very few men who really make the best of their
circumstances. Most of us are far less happy than we
might be, if we had learned the Divine art of wringing the
last drop of good out of everything. After our rude
attempts at smelting there is a great deal of valuable
metal left in the dross, which a wiser system would ex-
tract. One wonders when one gets a glimpse of how
much of the raw material of happiness goes to waste in
the manufacture in all our lives. There is so little to
spare, and yet so much is flung away. It needs a great
deal of practical wisdom, and a great deal of strong, manly
Christian principle, to make the most of what God gives
us. Watchfulness, self-restraint, the power of suppressing
anxieties and taking no thought for the morrow, and most
of all, the habitual temper of fellowship with God, which
is the most potent agent in the chemistry that extracts its
healing virtue from everything — all these are wanted.
The lesson is worth learning, lest we should wound that
most tender Love, and lest we should impoverish and
hurt ourselves. Do not complain of your thirsty lips till
you are sure that you have emptied the cup of salvation
which God gives.
One more element of this Requital of God has still to
be named — the thankful recognition of Him in all our
feasting, — " call on the name of the Lord." Without this,
the preceding precept would be a piece of pure selfish
Epicureanism — and without this it would be impossible.
Only he who enjoys life in God enjoys it worthily. Only
he who enjoys life in God enjoys it at all. This is the true
infusion which gives sweetness to whatever of bitter, and
more of sweetness to whatever of sweet, the cup may con-
TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD. 149
tain, when the name of the Lord is pronounced above it.
The Jewish father at the Passover feast solemnly lifted
the wine-cup above his head, and drank with thanksgiving.
The meal became a sacrament. So here the word ren-
dered " take " might be translated " raise," and we may
be intended to have the picture as emblematical of our
consecration of all our blessings by a like offering of them
before God, and a like invoking of the Giver.
Christ has given us not only the ritual of an ordinance,
but the pattern for our lives, when He took the cup and
gave thanks. So common joys become sacraments, en-
joyment becomes worship, and the cup which holds the
bitter or the sweet skilfully mingled for our lives be-
comes the cup of blessing and salvation drank in remem-
brance of Him. If we carried that spirit with us into all
our small duties, sorrows, and gladnesses, how different
they would all seem ! We should then drink for strength,
not for drunkenness. We should not then find that God's
gifts hid Him from us. We should neither leave any
of them unused nor so greedily grasp them that we let His
hand go. Nothing would be too great for us to attempt,
nothing too small for us to put our strength into. There
would be no discord between earthly gladness and heavenly
desires, nor any repugnance at what He put to our lips.
We should drink of the cup of His benefits, and all would
be sweet — until we drew nearer and slaked our thirst at
the river of His pleasures and the Fountain-head itself.
One more word. There is an old legend of an en-
chanted cup filled with poison, and put treacherously into
a king's hand. He signed the sign of the cross and
named the name of God over it — and it shivered in his
grasp. Do you take this name of the Lord as a test.
Name Him over many a cup which you are eager to
ISO TAKING FROM GOD THE BEST GIVING TO GOD.
drink of, and the glittering fragments will lie at your feet,
and the poison be spilled on the ground. What you can*
not lift before His pure eyes and think of Him while you
enjoy, is not for you. Friendships, schemes, plans, am-
bitions, amusements, speculations, studies, loves, busi-
nesses— can you call on the name of the Lord while you
put these cups to your lips ? If not, fling them behind
you — for they are full of poison which, for Sll its sugared
sweetness, at the last will bite like a serpent and sting
like an adder.
XVII.
SILENCE TO GOD.
Psalm lxii. i, 5.
Truly my soul waiteth upon God. . . . My soul, wait thou only
upon God.
'\T /"Bhave here two corresponding clauses, each begin-
* * ning a section of the psahii. They resemble each
other even more closely than appears from the English
version, for the " truly " of the first, and the " only " of
the second clause, are the same word ; and in each case
it stands in the same place, namely, at the beginning.
So, word for word, the two answer to each other. The
difference is, that the one expresses the Psalmist's patient
stillness of submission, and the other is his self-encourage-
ment to that very attitude and disposition which he has
just professed to be his. In the one he speaks of, in the
other to, his soul. He stirs himself up to renew and
continue the faith and resignation which he has, and so
he sets before us both the temper which we should bear,
and the effort which we should make to prolong and
deepen it, if it be ours. Let us look at these two points
then — the expression of waiting, and the self-exhortation
to waiting.
" Truly my soul waiteth upon God." It is difficult to
152 SILENCE TO GOD.
say whether the opening word is better rendered " truly,"
as here, or " only," as in the other clause. Either mean-
ing is allowable and appropriate. If, with our version, we
adopt the former, we may compare with this text the
opening of another psalm (Ixxiii.), "Truly God is good to
Israel," and there, as here, we may see in that vehement
affirmation, a trace of the struggle through which it had
been won. The Psalmist bursts into song with a word,
which tells us plainly enough how much had to be quieted
in him before he came to that quiet waiting, just as in
the other psalm he pours out first the glad, firm certainty
which he had reached, and then recounts the weary seas
of doubt and bewilderment through which he had waded
to reach it. That one word is the record of conflict and
the trophy of victory, the sign of the blessed effect of
effort and struggle in a truth more firmly held, and in a
submission more perfectly practised. It is as if he had
said. Yes ! in spite of all its waywardness and fears, and
self-willed struggles, my soul waits upon God. I have
overcome these, and now there is peace within.
It is to be further observed that literally the words run,
" My soul is silence unto God." That forcible form of
expression describes the completeness of the Psalmist's
unmurmuring submission and quiet faith. His whole
being is one great stillness, broken by no clamorous
passions ; by no loud-voiced desires ; by no remonstrating
reluctance. There is a similar phrase in another psalm
(cix. 4), which may help to illustrate this : '' For my love
they are my adversaries, but I am prayer " — his soul is
all one supplication. The enemies' wrath awakens no
flush of passion on his cheek, or ripple of vengeance in
his heart. He meets it all with prayer. Wrapped in
devotion and heedless of their rage, he is like Stephen,
SILENXE TO GOD. 153
when he kneeled down among his yelHng murderers, and
cried with a loud voice, " Lord, lay not this sin to their
charge." So here we have the strongest expression of
the perfect consent of the whole inward nature in sub-
mission and quietness of confidence before God.
That silence is first a silence of the will. The plain
meaning of this phrase is, resignation ; and resignation is
just a silent will. Before the throne of the Great King,
His servants are to stand like those long rows of attend-
ants we see on the walls of eastern temples, silent with
folded arms, straining their ears to hear, and bracing
their muscles to execute his whispered commands, or
even his gesture and his glance. A man's will should be
an echo, not a voice ; the echo of God, not the voice of
self. It should be silent, as some sweet instrument is
silent till the owner's hand touches the keys. Like
the boy-prophet in the hush of the sanctuary, below the
quivering light of the dpng lamps, we should wait till the
awful voice calls, and then, " Speak, Lord, for Thy
servant heareth." Do not let the loud utterances of your
own wills anticipate, nor drown, the still, small voice in
which God speaks. Bridle impatience till He does. If
you cannot hear His whisper, wait till you do. Take
care of running before you are sent. Keep your wills in
equipoise, till God's hand gives the impulse and direction.
Such a silent will is a strong will. It is no feeble
passiveness, no dead indifference, no impossible abne-
gation that God requires, when He requires us to put our
wills in accord with His. They are not slain, but vivified
by such surrender ; and the true secret of strength lies in
submission. The secret of blessedness is there, too, for
our sorrow comes because there is discord between our
circumstances and our wills, and the measure in which
154 SILENCE TO GOD.
these are in harmony with God is the measure in which
we shall feel that all things are blessings to be received
with thanksgiving. But if we will take our own way, and
let our own wills speak before God speaks, or otherwise
than God speaks, nothing can come of that but what
always has come of it — blunders, sins, misery, and mani-
fold ruin.
We must keep our hearts silent too. The sweet voices
of pleading affections, the loud cry of desires and instincts
that roar for their food like beasts of prey, the querulous
complaints of disappointed hopes, the groans and sobs of
black-robed sorrows, the loud hubbub and Babel, like
the noise of a great city, that every man carries within,
must be stifled and coerced into silence. We have to
take the animal in us by the throat, and sternly say, Lie
down there and be quiet. We have to silence tastes and
inclinations. We have to stop our ears to the noises
around, however sweet the songs, and to close many an
avenue through which the world's music might steal in.
He cannot say, '' My soul is silent unto God," whose
whole being is buzzing with vanides and noisy with the
din of the market-place. Unless we have something, at
least, of that great stillness, our hearts will have no peace,
and our religion no reality.
There must be the silence of the mind, as well as of
the heart and will. We must not have our thoughts ever
occupied with other things, but must cultivate the habit
of detaching them from earth, and keeping our minds
still before God, that He may pour His light into them.
Surely if ever any generation needed the preaching — Be
still, and let God speak — we need it. Even religious
men are so busy with spreading or defending Christianity,
that they have litde time, and many of them less inclina-
SILENCE TO GOD. 155
tion for quiet meditation and still communion with God.
Newspapers, and books, and practical philanthropy, and
Christian effort, and business, and amusement, so crowd
into our lives now, that it needs some resolution and
some planning to get a clear space where we can be
quiet, and look at God.
But the old law for a noble and devout life is not
altered by reason of any new circumstances. It still re-
mains true that a mind silently waiting before God is the
condition without which such a life is impossible. As the
lowers follow the sun, and silently hold up their petals
to be tinted and enlarged by his shining, so must we, if
we would know the joy of God, hold our souls, wills,
hearts, and minds still before Him, whose voice com-
mands, whose love warms, whose truth makes fair our
whole being. God speaks for the most part in such silence
only. If the soul be full of tumult and jangling noises,
His voice is little likely to be heard. As in some kinds of
deafness, a perpetual noise in the head prevents liearing
any other sounds, the rush of our own fevered blood, and
the throbbing of our own nerves, hinder our catching His
tones. It is the calm lake which mirrors the sun, the
least catspaw wrinkling the surface wipes out all the re-
flected glories of the heavens. If we would mirror God
our souls must be calm. If we would hear God our souls
must be silence.
Alas ! how far from this is our daily life ! Who among
us dare to take these words as the expression of our own
experience ? Is not the troubl'ed sea which cannot rest,
whose waters cast up mire and dirt, a truer emblem of our
restless, labouring souls than the calm lake? Put your
own selves by the side of this Psalmist, and honestly
measure the contrast. It is like the difference between
156 SILENCE TO GOD.
some crowded market-place all full of noisy traffickers,
ringing with shouts, blazing in sunshine, and the interior
of the quiet cathedral that looks down on it all, where
are coolness and subdued light, and silence and solitude.
" Come, My people, enter thou into thy chambers, and
shut thy doors about thee." " Commune with your own
heart and be still." " In quietness and confidence shall
be your strength."
This man's profession of utter resignation is perhaps too
high for us ; but we can make his self-exhortation our
own. " My soul ! wait thou only upon God." Perfect as
he ventures to declare his silence towards God, he yet
feels that he has to stir himself up to the effort which is
needed to preserve it in its purity. Just because he can
say, " My soul waits," therefore he bids his soul wait.
I need not dwell upon that self-stimulating as involving
the great mystery of our personality, whereby a man ex-
alts himself above himself, and controls, and guides, and
speaks to his soul. But a few words may be given to
that thought illustrated here, of the necessity for conscious
effort and self-encouragement, in order to the preservation
of the highest religious emotion.
We are sometimes apt to forget that no holy thoughts
or feelings are in their own nature permanent, and the
illusion that they are, often tends to accelerate their fading.
It is no wonder if we in our selectest hours of '' high
communion with the living God " should feel as if that
lofty experience would last by virtue of its own sweetness,
and need no effort of ours to retain it. But it is not so.
All emotion tends to exhaustion, as surely as a pendulum
to rest, or as an Eastern torrent to dry up. All our flames
burn to their extinction. There is but one fire that blazes
and is not consumed. Action is the destruction of tissue.
STLENXE TO GOD. 157
Life reaches its term in death. Joy and sorrow, and hope
and fear, cannot be continuous. They must needs wear
tliemselves out and fade into a gray uniformity like moun-
tain summits when the sun has left them.
Our religious experience too will have its tides, and
even those high and pure emotions and dispositions that
bind us to God can only be preserved by continual effort.
Their existence is no guarantee of their permanence,
rather is it a guarantee of their transitoriness, unless we
earnestly stir up ourselves to their renewal. Like the emo-
tions kindled by lower objects, they perish while they
glow, and there must be a continual recurrence to the
one source of light and heat if the brilliancy is to be pre-
served.
Nor is it only from within that their continuance is
menaced. Outward forces are sure to tell upon them.
The constant wash of the sea of life undermines the cliffs
and wastes the coasts. The tear and wear of external
occupations is ever acting upon our religious life. Travel-
lers tell us that the constant rubbing of the sand on
Egyptian hieroglyphs removes every trace of colour, and
even effaces the deep-cut characters from basalt rocks.
So the unceasing attrition of multitudinous trifles will take
all the bloom off your religion, and efface the name of
the King cut on the tables of your hearts, if you do not
counteract them by constant, earnest effort. Our devo-
tion, our faith, our love is only preserved by being con-
stantly renewed.
That vigorous effort is expressed here by the very form
of the phrase. The same word which began the first
clause begins the second also. As in the former it re-
presented for us, with an emphatic " Truly," the struggle
through which tlie Psalmist had reached the height of his
158 SILENCE TO GOD
blessed experience, so here it represents in like manner
the earnestness of the self-exhortation which he addresses
to himself. He calls forth all his powers to the conflict,
which is needed even by the man who has attained to
that height of communion, if he would remain where he
has climbed. And for us, brethren, who shrink from
taking these former words upon our lips, how much
greater the need to use our most strenuous efforts to quiet
our souls. If the summit reached can only be held by
earnest endeavour, how much more is needed to struggle
up from the valleys below.
The silence of the soul before God is no mere passive-
ness. It requires the intensest energy of all our being to
keep all our being still and waiting upon Him. So pat
all your strength into the task, and be sure that your soul
is never so intensely alive as when in deepest abnegation
it waits hushed before God.
Trust no past emotions. Do not wonder if they should
fade even when they are brightest. Do not let their
evanescence tempt you to doubt their reality. But always
when our hearts are fullest of His love, and our spif!ts
stilled with the sweetest sense of His solemn presence,
stir yourselves up to keep firm hold of the else passing
gleam, and in your consciousness let these two words live
in perpetual alternation : " Truly my soul waiteth upon
God. My soul ! wait thou only upon God."
xvin.
THE VALLEY OF ACHOR.
HosEA ii. 15.
I will give her . , . the valley of Achor for a door of ho; e.
T^HE prophet Hosea is remarkable for the frequent use
■^ which he makes of events in the former history of his
people. Their past seems to him a mirror in which they
may read their future. He believes that " which is to be
hath already been," the great principles of the Divine
government living on through all the ages, and issuing in
similar acts when the circumstances are similar. So he
foretells that there will yet be once more a captivity and
a bondage, that the old story of the wilderness will be
repeated once more. In that wilderness God will speak
to the heart of Israel. Its barrenness shall be changed
into the fruitfulness of vineyards, where the purpling clus-
ters hang ripe for the thirsty travellers. And not only
will the sorrows that He sends thus become sources of
refreshment, but the gloomy gorge through which they
journey — the valley of Achor — will be a door of hope.
One word is enough to explain the allusion. You re-
member that after the capture of Jericho by Joshua, the
people were baffled in their first attempt to press through
the narrow defile that led from the plain of Jordan to the
i6o THE VALLEY OF ACHOR.
highlands of Canaan. Their defeat was caused by the covet-
ousness of Achan, who for the sake of some miserable
spoil which he found in a tent, broke God's laws, and
drew down shame on Israel's ranks. When the swift, ter-
rible punishment on him had purged the camp, victory
again followed their assault, and, Achan lying stiff and
stark below his cairn, they pressed on up the glen to their
task of conquest. The rugged valley, where that defeat
and that sharp act of justice took place, was named in
memory thereof, the valley of Achor^ that is, trouble; and
our prophet's promise is that as then, so for all future
ages, the complicity of God's people with an evil world
will work weakness and defeat, but that, if they will be
taught by their trouble and will purge themselves of the
accursed thing, then the disasters will make a way for hope
to come to them again. The figure which conveys this is
very expressive. The narrow gorge stretches before us,
with its dark overhanging cliffs that almost shut out the
sky ; the path is rough and set with sharp pebbles ; it is
narrow, winding, steep ; often it seems to be barred by
some huge rock that juts across it, and there is barely
room for the broken ledge yielding slippery footing be-
tween the beetling crag above and the steep slope be-
neath that dips so quickly to the black torrent below.
All is gloomy, damp, hard ; and if we look upwards the
glen becomes more savage as it rises, and armed foes
hold the very throat of the pass. But, however long,
however barren, however rugged, however black, how-
ever trackless, we may see if we will, a bright form de-
scending the rocky way with radiant eyes and calm lips,
God's messenger, Hope; — and the rough rocks are like the
doorway through which she comes near to us in our weary
struggle. For us all, dear friends, it is true. In all our
THE VALLEY OF ACHOR. i6i
difficulties and sorrows, be they great or small; in our
business perplexities ; in the losses that rob our homes of
their light ; in the petty annoyances that diffuse their irri-
tation through so much of our days, — it is within our
power to turn them all into occasions for a firmer grasp
of God, and so to make them openings by which a hap-
pier hope may flow into our souls.
But the promise, like all God's promises, has its well-
defined conditions. Achan has to be killed and put safe
out of the way first, or no shining Hope will stand out
against the black walls of the defile. The tastes which
knit us to the perishable world, the yearnings for Baby-
lonish garments and wedges of gold, must be coerced and
subdued. Swift, sharp, unrelenting justice must be done
on the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eye, and the
pride of life, if our trials are ever to become doors oj
hope. There is no natural tendency in the mere fact of
sorrow and pain to make God's love more discernible, or
to make our hope any firmer. All depends on how we
use the trial, or as I say — first stone Achan and then
hope !
So, the trouble ivhich detaches us from earth gives us new
hope. Sometimes the eflect of our sorrows, and annoy-
ances, and difficulties, is to rivet us more firmly to earth.
The eye has a curious power, which they call persistence
,of vision, of retaining the impression made upon it, and
therefore of seeming to see the object for a definite time
after it has really been withdrawn. If you whirl a bit of
blazing stick round, you will see a circle of fire though
there is only a point moving rapidly in the circle. The
eye has its memory like the soul. And the soul has
its power of persistence like the eye, and that power
is sometimes kindled into activity by the fact of loss-
M
i62 THK VALLEY OF ACHOR.
We often see our departed joys, and gaze upon them all
the more eagerly for their departure. The loss of dear
ones should stamp their image on our hearts, and set it as
in a golden glory. But it sometimes does more than that ;
it sometimes makes us put the present with its duties im-
l)atiently away from us. Vain regret, absorbed brooding
over what is gone, a sorrow kept gaping long after it
should have been healed, like a grave-mound off which
desperate love has pulled turf and flowers, in the vain at-
tempt to clasp the cold hand below — in a word, the trouble
that does not withdraw us from the present will never
be a door of Hope, but rather a grim gate for despair to
come in at.
The trouble which knits us to God gives us neiv hope.
That bright form which comes down the narrow valley is
His messenger and herald — sent before His face. All the
light of hope is the reflection on our hearts of the light of
God. Her silver beams, which shed quietness over the
darkness of earth, come only from that great Sun. If
our Hope is to grow out of our sorrow, it must be because
our sorrow drives us to God. It is only when we by faith
stand in His grace, and live in the conscious fellowship
of peace with Him, that we rejoice in hope. If we would
see Hope drawing near to us, we must fix our eyes not on
Jericho that lies behind among its palm-trees, though it
has memories of conquests, and attractions of fertility and
repose, nor on the corpse that lies below that pile of
stones, nor on the narrow way and the strong enemy in
front there ; but higher up, on the blue sky that spreads
peaceful above the highest summits of the pass, and from
the heaven we shall see the angel coming to us. Sorrow
forsakes its own nature, and leads in its own opposite,
when sorrow helps us to see God. It clears away the
THE VALLEY OF ACIIOR. 163
thick trees, and lets the sunhght into the forest shades,
and then in time corn will grow. Hope is but the
brightness that goes before God's face, and if Ave would
see it we must look at Him.
The trouble which we bear rightly with God's help,
gives new hope. If we have made our sorrow an occasion
for learning, by living experience, somewhat more of His
exquisitely varied and ever ready power to aid and bless,
then it will teach us firmer confidence in these inexhaust-
ible resources which we have thus once more proved.
" Tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience,
and experience hope." That is the order. You cannot
put patience and experience into a parenthesis, and
omitting them, bring hope out of tribulation. But if in
my sorrow I have been able to keep quiet because I have
had hold of God's hand, and if in that unstruggling sub-
mission I have found that from His hand I have been
upheld, and had strength above mine own infused into
me, then my memory will give the threads with which
Hope weaves her bright web. 1 build upon two things —
God's unchangeableness, and His help already received ;
and upon these strong foundations I may wisely and safely
rear a palace of Hope, which shall never prove a castle in
the air. The past, when it is God's past, is the surest
pledge for the future. Because He has been with us in
six troubles, therefore we may be sure that in seven He will
not forsake us. I said that the light of hope was the
brightness from the face of God. I may say again, that
the light of hope which fills our sky is like that which, on
happy summer nights, lives till morning in the calm west,
and with its colourless, tranquil beauty, tells of a yester-
day of unclouded splendour, and prophesies a to-morrow
yet more abundant. The glow from a sun that is set, the
i64 THE VALLEY OF ACHOR.
experience of past deliverances, is the truest light of hope
to light our way through the night of life.
One of the psalms gives us, in different form, a
metaphor and a promise substantially the same as that of
this text. " Blessed are the men who, passing through
the valley of weeping, make it a well." They gather their
tears, as it were, into the cisterns by the wayside, and
draw refreshment and strength from their very sorrows.
And then, when thus we in our wise husbandry have irri-
gated the soil with the gathered results of our sorrows,
the heavens bend over us, and weep their gracious tears,
and " the rain also covereth it with blessings." No
chastisement for the present seemeth to be joyous, but
grievous; nevertheless, afterward it yieldeth the peaceable
fruit of righteousness.
Then, dear friends, let us set ourselves with our loins
girt to the road. Never mind how hard it may be to
climb. The slope of the valley of trouble is ever upwards.
Never mind how dark the shadow of death which stretches
athwart it is. If there were no sun there would be no
shadow; presently the sun will be right overhead, and
there will be no shadow then. Never mind how black it
may look ahead, or how frowning the rocks. From
between their narrowest gorge you may see, if you Avill,
the guide whom God has sent you, and that Angel of Hope
will light up all the darkness, and will only fade away
when she is lost in the sevenfold brightness of that upper
land; whereof our "God Himself is Sun and Moon" — the
true Canaan, to whose everlasting mountains the steep
way of life has climbed at last through valleys of trouble,
and of weeping, and of the shadow of death.
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