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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I, by
-Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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-
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-Title: Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I
-
-Author: Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-Release Date: December 6, 2012 [EBook #41571]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES ON DEUTERONOMY, VOL 1 ***
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41571 ***
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End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy,
Volume I, by Charles Henry Mackintosh
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41571 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I, by
-Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I
-
-Author: Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-Release Date: December 6, 2012 [EBook #41571]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES ON DEUTERONOMY, VOL I ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Júlio Reis, Moisés S. Gomes, Julia Neufeld and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
- _on the book of_
-
- DEUTERONOMY
-
- _Volume I_
-
- C. H. MACKINTOSH
-
- "_Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is settled in heaven._"
-
- "_Thy Word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin
- against Thee._"
-
- LOIZEAUX BROTHERS
-
- _Neptune, New Jersey_
-
-
-
-
- FIRST EDITION 1880
- TWENTY-SEVENTH PRINTING 1965
-
- LOIZEAUX BROTHERS, INC., PUBLISHERS
-
- _A Nonprofit Organization, Devoted to the Lord's Work
- and to the Spread of His Truth_
-
- NEPTUNE, NEW JERSEY
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE
-
-TO THE AMERICAN EDITION
-
-
-As several persons in America have, without any authority whatever
-from me, undertaken to publish my four[1] volumes of "Notes," I deem
-it my duty to inform the reader that I have given full permission to
-Messrs. LOIZEAUX BROTHERS to publish an edition of those books in such
-form as they shall consider most suitable.
-
- C. H. MACKINTOSH.
-
- _6 West Park Terrace, Scarborough,
- May 1st, 1879._
-
- [1] Now six.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The value and importance of the Word of God cannot be over-estimated
-at the present moment. Its integrity and authority are being assailed
-from almost every quarter and in every form of attack. "If the
-foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?" (Ps. xi. 3.)
-
-Infidel thoughts and principles are not limited to a few literary and
-speculative minds, as they were fifty years ago, but are now asserted
-by many who ought to be the true guardians of Christianity and the
-defenders of the Bible as a revelation from God.
-
-In this way the multitude of the simple and unsuspecting are deceived.
-If the style of address be pleasing, few care to compare what they
-have been hearing with the holy Scriptures. The conscience not being
-aroused, they take no further trouble.
-
-But what of the state of immortal souls, under such a ministry, in
-view of eternity? On whom does the weight of responsibility rest?
-Fine-spun theories will never awaken a soul asleep in sin: the lost
-sinner must be brought face to face with the plain Word of God and the
-solemn realities of eternity. His voice must be heard. All is
-absolute, positive, and definite here, whatever infidelity may say.
-"The Word of the Lord endureth forever."
-
-The burden of the following pages, I am thankful to find, is well
-calculated to meet and counteract the looseness and indefiniteness of
-the prevailing teaching of the present day.
-
-And this, I may also say, is the burden of the book of Deuteronomy.
-The Jewish lawgiver presses with great earnestness the Word of Jehovah
-on the heart of Israel. It is not a book of ceremonials, but the
-reminding of the people of their obligation to keep the commandments,
-the statutes, and the judgments of the Lord.
-
-This is the first moral duty of man in every age--implicit obedience
-and submission to the revealed will of God. Moses speaks to the
-children of Israel as a father, and appeals to them in the most tender
-and loving way. "Hearken, O Israel," he says, "unto the statutes and
-unto the judgments which I teach you ... ye shall not add unto the
-word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish aught from it,
-that ye may keep the commandments of the Lord your God which I command
-you." And again, he says, "Thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine
-hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou
-shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates."
-
-The welfare of the people individually and nationally depended on
-their faithfully observing these oft-repeated laws. To neglect them
-was to bring upon themselves the displeasure and chastening of the God
-of Israel.
-
-But more need not be said here on these subjects. The reader will find
-in the following pages the most ample unfolding and practical
-application of these divine exhortations and warnings. But the writer
-has not confined himself to what Deuteronomy teaches, but has enlarged
-on what it suggests. In this way we have brought before us the grand
-cardinal truths of Christianity: a wide circle of truth is embraced,
-and much that applies to the individual Christian, the family, the
-household, and the Church of God will be found in the accompanying
-book.
-
-It now goes forth with the earnest desire that the Lord may be
-graciously pleased to use it for the glory of His own name, the help
-of His people, and the eternal blessing of many precious souls.
-
- _A. M._
-
- _London, November, 1880._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- _Page._
-
- INTRODUCTION, 1
-
- CHAPTER I, 22
-
- " II, 107
-
- " III, 132
-
- " IV, 162
-
- " V, 284
-
- " VI, 377
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-ON
-
-THE BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The character of the book on which we now enter is quite as distinct
-as that of any of the four preceding sections of the Pentateuch. Were
-we to judge from the title of the book, we might suppose that it is a
-mere repetition of what we find in previous books. This would be a
-very grave mistake. There is no such thing as mere repetition in the
-Word of God. Indeed, God never repeats Himself, either in His Word or
-in His works. Wherever we trace our God, whether on the page of holy
-Scripture or in the vast fields of creation, we see divine fullness,
-infinite variety, marked design; and just in proportion to our
-spirituality of mind will be our ability to discern and appreciate
-these things. Here, as in all beside, we need the eye anointed with
-heavenly eye-salve. What a poor idea must the man entertain of
-inspiration who could imagine for a moment that the fifth book of
-Moses is a barren repetition of what is to be found in Exodus,
-Leviticus, and Numbers! Why, even in human composition we should not
-expect to find such a flagrant imperfection, much less in the perfect
-revelation which God has so graciously given us in His holy Word. The
-fact is, there is not, from cover to cover of the inspired volume, a
-single superfluous sentence, not one redundant clause, not one
-statement without its own distinct meaning--its own direct
-application. If we do not see this, we have yet to learn the depth,
-force, and meaning of the words, "All scripture is given by
-inspiration of God."
-
-Precious words! Would they were more thoroughly understood in this our
-day! It is of the utmost possible importance that the Lord's people
-should be rooted, grounded, and settled in the grand truth of the
-plenary inspiration of holy Scripture. It is to be feared that laxity
-as to this most weighty subject is spreading in the professing church
-to an appalling extent. In many quarters it has become fashionable to
-pour contempt upon the idea of plenary inspiration. It is looked upon
-as the veriest childishness and ignorance. It is regarded by many as a
-great proof of profound scholarship, breadth of mind, and original
-thinking to be able, by free criticism, to find out flaws in the
-precious volume of God. Men presume to sit in judgment upon the Bible
-as though it were a mere human composition. They undertake to
-pronounce upon what is and what is not worthy of God. In fact, they do
-virtually sit in judgment upon God Himself. The present result is, as
-might be expected, utter darkness and confusion, both for those
-learned doctors themselves and for all who are so foolish as to listen
-to them. And as for the future, who can conceive the eternal destiny
-of all those who shall have to answer before the judgment-seat of
-Christ for the sin of blaspheming the Word of God, and leading
-hundreds astray by their infidel teaching?
-
-We shall not, however, occupy time in dwelling upon the sinful folly
-of infidels and skeptics (even though called Christians), or their
-puny efforts to cast dishonor upon that peerless volume which our
-gracious God has caused to be written for our learning. They will some
-day or other find out their fatal mistake. God grant it may not be too
-late! And as for us, let it be our deep joy and consolation to
-meditate upon the Word of God, that so we may ever be discovering some
-fresh treasure in that exhaustless mine--some new moral glories in
-that heavenly revelation!
-
-The book of Deuteronomy holds a very distinct place in the inspired
-canon. Its opening lines are sufficient to prove this.--"These be the
-words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Jordan in the
-wilderness, in the plain over against the Red Sea, between Paran, and
-Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab."
-
-Thus much as to the place in which the lawgiver delivered the contents
-of this marvelous book. The people had come up to the eastern bank of
-the Jordan, and were about to enter upon the land of promise. Their
-desert wanderings were nearly ended, as we learn from the third verse,
-in which the point of time is as distinctly marked as is the
-geographical position in verse 1.--"It came to pass in the fortieth
-year, in the eleventh month, on the first day of the month, that Moses
-spake unto the children of Israel, according unto all that the Lord
-had given him in commandment unto them."
-
-Thus, not only have we both time and place set forth with divine
-precision and minuteness, but we also learn, from the words just
-quoted, that the communications made to the people in the plains of
-Moab were very far indeed from being a repetition of what has come
-before us in our studies on the books of Exodus, Leviticus, and
-Numbers. Of this we have further and very distinct proof in a passage
-in chapter xxix. of the book on which we are now entering.--"These are
-the words of the covenant which the Lord commanded Moses to make with
-the children of Israel in the land of Moab, _beside the covenant which
-He made with them in Horeb_."
-
-Let the reader note particularly these words. They speak of two
-covenants--one at Horeb and one in Moab; and the latter, so far from
-being a mere repetition of the former, is as distinct from it as any
-two things can be. Of this we shall have the fullest and clearest
-evidence in our study of the profound book which now lies open before
-us.
-
-True, the Greek title of the book, signifying the law a second time,
-might seem to give rise to the idea of its being a mere recapitulation
-of what has gone before; but we may rest assured it is not so.
-Indeed, it would be a very grave error to think so. The book has its
-own specific place. Its scope and object are as distinct as possible.
-The grand lesson which it inculcates, from first to last, is
-_obedience_; and that, too, not in the mere letter, but in the spirit
-of love and fear--an obedience grounded upon a known and enjoyed
-relationship--an obedience quickened by the sense of moral obligations
-of the weightiest and most influential character.
-
-The aged lawgiver--the faithful, beloved, and honored servant of the
-Lord was about to take leave of the congregation. He was going to
-heaven and they were about to cross the Jordan, and hence his closing
-discourses are solemn and affecting in the very highest degree. He
-reviews the whole of their wilderness history, and that, too, in a
-manner most touching and impressive. He recounts the scenes and
-circumstances of their forty eventful years of desert life, in a style
-eminently calculated to touch the deepest moral springs of the heart.
-We hang over these most precious discourses with wonder and delight.
-They possess an incomparable charm, arising from the circumstances
-under which they were delivered, as well as from their own divinely
-powerful contents. They speak to us no less effectively than to those
-for whom they were specially intended. Many of the appeals and
-exhortations come home to us with a power of application as if they
-had been uttered but yesterday.
-
-And is it not thus with all Scripture? Are we not continually struck
-with its marvelous power of adaptation to our own very state, and to
-the day in which our lot is cast? It speaks to us with a point and
-freshness as if it were written expressly for us--written this very
-day. There is nothing like Scripture. Take any human writing of the
-same date as the book of Deuteronomy; if you could lay your hand on
-some volume written three thousand years ago, what would you find? A
-curious relic of antiquity--something to be placed in the British
-Museum, side by side with an Egyptian mummy, having no application
-whatever to us or to our time--a musty document--a piece of obsolete
-writing, practically useless to us, referring only to a state of
-society and to a condition of things long since passed away and buried
-in oblivion.
-
-The Bible, on the contrary, is the book for to-day. It is God's own
-book--His perfect revelation. It is His own very voice speaking to
-each one of us. It is a book for every age, for every clime, for every
-class, for every condition--high and low, rich and poor, learned and
-ignorant, old and young. It speaks in a language so simple that a
-child can understand it, and yet so profound that the most gigantic
-intellect cannot exhaust it. Moreover, it speaks right home to the
-heart; it touches the deepest springs of our moral being; it goes down
-to the hidden roots of thought and feeling in the soul; it judges us
-thoroughly. In a word, it is, as the inspired apostle tells us, "quick
-and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to
-the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow,
-and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." (Heb.
-iv. 12.)
-
-And then mark the marvelous comprehensiveness of its range. It deals
-as accurately and as forcibly with the habits and customs, the manners
-and maxims of the nineteenth century of the Christian era as with
-those of the very earliest ages of human existence. It displays a
-perfect acquaintance with man in every stage of his history. The
-London of to-day and the Tyre of three thousand years ago are
-mirrored, with like precision and faithfulness, on the sacred page.
-Human life, in every stage of its development, is portrayed by a
-master-hand in that wonderful volume which our God has graciously
-penned for our learning.
-
-What a privilege to possess such a book!--to have in our hands a
-divine revelation!--to have access to a book, every line of which is
-given by inspiration of God!--to have a divinely given history of the
-past, the present, and the future! Who can estimate aright such a
-privilege as this?
-
-But then, this book judges man--judges his ways--judges his heart. It
-tells him the truth about himself. Hence man does not like God's book.
-An unconverted man would vastly prefer a newspaper or a sensational
-novel to the Bible. He would rather read the report of a trial in one
-of our criminal courts than a chapter in the New Testament.
-
-Hence, too, the constant effort to pick holes in God's blessed book.
-Infidels in every age and of every class have labored hard to find
-out flaws and contradictions in holy Scripture. The determined enemies
-of the Word of God are to be found, not only in the ranks of the
-vulgar, the coarse, and the demoralized, but amongst the educated, the
-refined, and the cultivated. Just as it was in the days of the
-apostles, "certain lewd fellows of the baser sort," and "devout and
-honorable women"--two classes so far removed from each other socially
-and morally--found one point in which they could heartily agree,
-namely, the utter rejection of the Word of God and of those who
-faithfully preached it. (Comp. Acts xiii. 50 with xvii. 5.) So we ever
-find that men who differ in almost every thing else, agree in their
-determined opposition to the Bible. Other books are let alone. Men
-care not to point out defects in Virgil, in Horace, in Homer, or
-Herodotus; but the Bible they cannot endure, because it exposes them
-and tells them the truth about themselves and the world to which they
-belong.
-
-And was it not exactly the same with the living Word--the Son of
-God--the Lord Jesus Christ when He was here among men? Men hated Him
-because He told them the truth. His ministry, His words, His ways--His
-whole life was a standing testimony against the world; hence their
-bitter and persistent opposition. Other men were allowed to pass on,
-but He was watched and waylaid at every turn of His path. The great
-leaders and guides of the people "sought to entangle Him in His talk,"
-to find occasion against Him, in order that they might deliver Him to
-the power and authority of the governor. Thus it was during His
-marvelous life; and at the close, when the blessed One was nailed to
-the cross between two malefactors, these latter were let alone; there
-were no insults heaped upon them--the chief priests and elders did not
-wag their heads at them. No; all the insults, all the mockery, all the
-coarse and heartless vulgarity--all was heaped upon the divine
-Occupant of the centre cross.
-
-Now, it is well we should thoroughly understand the real source of all
-the opposition to the Word of God--whether it be the living Word or
-the written Word. It will enable us to estimate it at its real worth.
-The devil hates the Word of God--hates it with a perfect hatred; and
-hence he employs learned infidels to write books to prove that the
-Bible is not the Word of God, that it cannot be, inasmuch as there are
-mistakes and discrepancies in it; and not only so, but in the Old
-Testament we find laws and institutions, habits and practices,
-unworthy of a gracious and benevolent Being.
-
-To all this style of argument we have one brief and pointed reply. Of
-all these learned infidels we simply say, They know nothing whatever
-about the matter. They may be very learned, very clever, very deep and
-original thinkers, well made up in general literature, very competent
-to give an opinion on any subject within the domain of natural and
-moral philosophy, very able to discuss any scientific question;
-moreover, they may be very amiable in private life--truly estimable
-characters--kind, benevolent, philanthropic, beloved in private and
-respected in public,--all this they may be, but being unconverted, and
-not having the Spirit of God, they are wholly unfit to form, much less
-to give, a judgment on the subject of holy Scripture. If any one
-wholly ignorant of astronomy were to presume to sit in judgment on the
-principles of the Copernican system, these very men of whom we speak
-would at once pronounce him utterly incompetent to speak, and unworthy
-to be heard on such a subject. In short, no one has any right whatever
-to offer an opinion on a matter with which he is unacquainted. This is
-an admitted principle on all hands; and therefore its application in
-the case now before us cannot justly be called in question.
-
-Now, the inspired apostle tells us, in his first epistle to the
-Corinthians, that "the natural man receiveth not the things of the
-Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him; _neither can he know
-them_, because they are spiritually discerned." This is conclusive. He
-speaks of man in his natural state, be he ever so learned, ever so
-cultivated. He is not speaking of any special class of men, but simply
-of man in his unconverted state--man destitute of the Spirit of God.
-Some may imagine that the apostle refers to man in a state of
-barbarism, or savage ignorance. By no means; it is simply man in
-nature, be he a learned philosopher or an ignorant clown. "He cannot
-know the things of the Spirit of God." How, then, can he form or give
-a judgment as to the Word of God? How can he take it upon him to say
-what is or what is not worthy of God to write? And if he is audacious
-enough to do so (as, alas! he is), who will be foolish enough to
-listen to him? His arguments are baseless, his theories worthless, his
-books only fit for the wastepaper basket; and all this, be it
-observed, on the universally admitted principle above stated, that no
-one has any title to be heard on a subject of which he is wholly
-ignorant.
-
-In this way we dispose of the whole tribe of infidel writers. Who
-would think of listening to a blind man on the subject of light and
-shade? And yet such a man has much more claim to be heard than an
-unconverted man on the subject of inspiration. Human learning, however
-extensive and varied--human wisdom, however profound, cannot qualify a
-man to form a judgment upon the Word of God. No doubt a scholar may
-examine and collate MSS. simply as a matter of criticism; he may be
-able to form a judgment as to the question of authority for any
-particular reading of a passage; but this is a different matter
-altogether from an infidel writer undertaking to pronounce judgment
-upon the revelation which God has, in His infinite goodness, given to
-us. We maintain that no man can do this. It is only by the Spirit, who
-Himself inspired the holy Scriptures, that those Scriptures can be
-understood and appreciated. The Word of God must be received upon its
-own authority. If man can judge it or reason upon it, it is not the
-Word of God at all. Has God given us a revelation, or has He not? If
-He has, it must be absolutely perfect in every respect; and being
-such, it must be entirely beyond the range of human judgment. Man is
-no more competent to judge Scripture than he is to judge God. The
-Scriptures judge man; not man the Scriptures.
-
-This makes all the difference. Nothing can be more miserably
-contemptible than the books which infidels write against the Bible.
-Every page, every paragraph, every sentence, only goes to illustrate
-the truth of the apostle's statement, that "the natural man receiveth
-not the things of the Spirit of God; ... _neither can he know them_,
-because they are spiritually discerned." Their gross ignorance of the
-subject with which they undertake to deal is only equaled by their
-self-confidence. Of their irreverence we say nothing; for who would
-think of looking for reverence in the writings of infidels? We might
-perhaps look for a little modesty were it not that we are fully aware
-of the bitter _animus_ which lies at the root of all such writings,
-and renders them utterly unworthy of a moment's consideration. Other
-books may have a dispassionate examination; but the precious book of
-God is approached with the foregone conclusion that it is not a divine
-revelation, because, forsooth, infidels tell us that God could not
-give us a written revelation of His mind.
-
-How strange! Men can give us a revelation of their thoughts (and
-infidels have done so pretty plainly), but God cannot! What folly!
-What presumption! Why, we may lawfully inquire, could not God reveal
-His mind to His creatures? Why should it be thought a thing
-incredible? For no reason whatever, but because infidels would have it
-so. The wish is, in this case assuredly, father to the thought. The
-question raised by the old serpent in the garden of Eden nearly six
-thousand years ago, has been passed on from age to age by all sorts of
-skeptics, rationalists, and infidels, namely, "Hath God said?" We
-reply, with intense delight, Yes; blessed be His holy name, He has
-spoken--spoken to us. He has revealed His mind; He has given us the
-holy Scriptures. "_All scripture is given by inspiration of God_, and
-is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
-instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect
-[+artios+], thoroughly furnished unto all good works." And
-again, "Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our
-learning, that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might
-have hope." (2 Tim. iii. 16, 17; Rom. xv. 4.)
-
-The Lord be praised for such words! They assure us that all Scripture
-is given of God, and that all Scripture is given to us. Precious link
-between the soul and God! What tongue can tell the value of such a
-link? God has spoken--spoken to us. His Word is a rock against which
-all the waves of infidel thought dash themselves in contemptible
-impotency, leaving it in its own divine strength and eternal
-stability. Nothing can touch the Word of God. Not all the powers of
-earth and hell, men and devils combined can ever move the Word of
-God. There it stands, in its own moral glory, spite of all the
-assaults of the enemy, from age to age. "Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is
-settled in heaven." "Thou hast magnified Thy Word above all Thy name."
-What remains for us? Just this: "Thy Word have I hid in my heart, that
-I might not sin against Thee." Here lies the deep secret of peace. The
-heart is linked to the throne--yea, to the very heart of God by means
-of His most precious Word, and is thus put in possession of a peace
-which the world can neither give nor take away. What can all the
-theories, the reasonings, and the arguments of infidels effect? Just
-nothing. They are esteemed as the dust of the summer threshing-floor.
-To one who has really learnt, through grace, to confide in the Word of
-God--to rest on the authority of holy Scripture, all the infidel books
-that ever were written are utterly worthless, pointless, powerless;
-they display the ignorance and terrible presumption of the writers;
-but as to Scripture, they leave it just where it ever has been and
-ever will be--"settled in heaven," as immovable as the throne of
-God.[2] The assaults of infidels cannot touch the throne of God,
-neither can they touch His Word; and, blessed be His name, neither can
-they touch the peace that flows through the heart that rests on that
-imperishable foundation. "Great peace have they that love Thy law, and
-nothing shall offend them." "The Word of our God shall stand forever."
-"All flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of
-grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away; but
-the Word of the Lord endureth forever. And this is the Word which by
-the gospel is preached unto you." (1 Pet. i. 24, 25.)
-
- [2] In referring to infidel writers, we should bear in mind that by
- far the most dangerous of such are those calling themselves
- Christians. In our young days, whenever we heard the word "infidel,"
- we at once thought of a Tom Paine or a Voltaire; now, alas! we have to
- think of so-called bishops and doctors of the professing church.
- Tremendous fact!
-
-Here we have the same precious golden link again. The Word which has
-reached us in the form of glad tidings is the Word of the Lord which
-endureth forever; and hence our salvation and our peace are as stable
-as the Word on which they are founded. If _all_ flesh is as grass, and
-_all_ the glory of man as the flower of grass, then what are the
-arguments of infidels worth? They are as worthless as withered grass
-or a faded flower; and the men who put them forth and those who are
-moved by them will find them to be so, sooner or later. Oh, the sinful
-folly of arguing against the Word of God--arguing against the only
-thing in all this world that can give rest and consolation to the
-poor, weary human heart--arguing against that which brings the glad
-tidings of salvation to poor lost sinners--brings them fresh from the
-heart of God!
-
-But we may perhaps here be met by the question so often raised, and
-which has troubled many and led them to fly for refuge to what is
-called "the authority of the church." The question is this: "How are
-we to know that the book which we call the Bible is the Word of God?"
-Our answer to this question is a very simple one--it is this: The One
-who has graciously given us the blessed book can give us also the
-certainty that the book is from Him. The same Spirit who inspired the
-various writers of the holy Scriptures can make us know that those
-Scriptures are the very voice of God speaking to us. It is only by the
-Spirit that any one can discern this. As we have already seen, "the
-natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; ... neither
-can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." If the Holy
-Spirit does not make us know, and give us the certainty that the Bible
-is the Word of God, no man or body of men can possibly do it; and on
-the other hand, if He does give us the blessed certainty, we do not
-need the testimony of man.
-
-We freely admit that on this great question a shadow of uncertainty
-would be positive torture and misery; but who can give us certainty?
-God alone. If all the men upon earth were to agree in their testimony
-to the authority of holy Scripture--if all the councils that ever sat,
-all the doctors that ever taught, all the fathers that ever wrote,
-were in favor of the dogma of plenary inspiration--if the universal
-church, if every denomination in christendom were to assent to the
-truth that the Bible is, in very deed, the Word of God--in a word, if
-we had all the human authority that could possibly be had in reference
-to the integrity of the Word of God, it would be utterly insufficient
-as a ground of certainty; and if our faith were founded on that
-authority, it would be perfectly worthless. God alone can give us the
-certainty that He has spoken in His Word; and blessed be His name,
-when He gives it, all the arguments, all the cavilings, all the
-quibblings, all the questionings of infidels, ancient and modern, are
-as the foam on the water, the smoke from the chimney-top, or the dust
-on the floor. The true believer rejects them as so much worthless
-rubbish, and rests in holy tranquillity in that peerless revelation
-which our God has graciously given us.
-
-It is of the very last possible importance for the reader to be
-thoroughly clear and settled as to this grave question, if he would be
-raised above the influence of infidelity on the one hand and
-superstition on the other. Infidelity undertakes to tell us that God
-has not given us a book-revelation of His mind--could not give it:
-Superstition undertakes to tell us that even though God has given us a
-revelation, yet we cannot be assured of it without man's authority,
-nor understand it without man's interpretation. Now it is well to see
-that by both alike we are deprived of the precious boon of holy
-Scripture. And this is precisely what the devil aims at. He wants to
-rob us of the Word of God; and he can do this quite as effectually by
-the apparent self-distrust that humbly and reverently looks to wise
-and learned men for authority, as by an audacious infidelity that
-boldly rejects all authority, human or divine.
-
-Take a case. A father writes a letter to his son at Canton--a letter
-full of the affection and tenderness of a father's heart. He tells him
-of his plans and arrangements, tells him of every thing that he thinks
-would interest the heart of a son--every thing that the love of a
-father's heart could suggest. The son calls at the post-office in
-Canton to inquire if there is a letter from his father. He is told by
-one official that there is no letter, that his father has not written
-and could not write--could not communicate his mind by such a medium
-at all, that it is only folly to think of such a thing. Another
-official comes forward, and says, Yes; there is a letter here for you,
-but you cannot possibly understand it; it is quite useless to you,
-indeed it can only do you positive mischief inasmuch as you are quite
-unable to read it aright. You must leave the letter in our hands, and
-we will explain to you such portions of it as we consider suitable for
-you. The former of these two officials represents Infidelity; the
-latter, Superstition. By both alike would the son be deprived of the
-longed-for letter--the precious communication from his father's heart.
-But what, we may inquire, would be his answer to these unworthy
-officials? A very brief and pointed one we may rest assured. He would
-say to the first, I know my father can communicate his mind to me by
-letter, and that he has done so. He would say to the second, I know my
-father can make me understand his mind far better than you can. He
-would say to both, and that, too, with bold and firm decision. Give me
-up at once my father's letter; it is addressed to me, and no man has
-any right to withhold it from me.
-
-Thus, too, should the simple-hearted Christian meet the _insolence_ of
-Infidelity and the _ignorance_ of Superstition--the two special
-agencies of the devil, in this our day, in setting aside the precious
-Word of God. "My Father has communicated His mind, and He can make me
-understand the communication."--"All Scripture is given _by
-inspiration of God_;" and, "Whatsoever things were written aforetime
-were written _for our learning_." Magnificent answer to every enemy of
-God's precious and peerless revelation, be he rationalist or
-ritualist!
-
-We do not attempt to offer any apology to the reader for this
-lengthened introduction to the book of Deuteronomy. Indeed we are only
-too thankful for an opportunity of bearing our feeble testimony to the
-grand truth of the divine inspiration of the holy Scriptures. We feel
-it to be our sacred duty, as most surely it is our high privilege, to
-press upon all to whom we have access, the immense importance--yea,
-the absolute necessity of the most uncompromising decision on this
-point. We must faithfully maintain, at all cost, the divine authority,
-and therefore the absolute supremacy and all-sufficiency, of the Word
-of God at all times, in all places, for all purposes. We must hold to
-it that the Scriptures, having been given of God, are complete, in the
-very highest and fullest sense of the word; that they do not need any
-human authority to accredit them, or any human voice to make them
-available: they speak for themselves, and carry their own credentials
-with them. All we have to do is to believe and obey, not to reason or
-discuss. God has spoken it: it is ours to hearken, and yield an
-unreserved and reverent obedience.
-
-This is one grand leading point throughout the book of Deuteronomy, as
-we shall see in the progress of our meditations; and never was there a
-moment, in the history of the Church of God, in which it was more
-needful to urge home on the human conscience the necessity of implicit
-obedience to the Word of God. It is, alas! but little felt. Professing
-Christians, for the most part, seem to consider that they have a right
-to think for themselves--to follow their own reason, their own
-judgment, or their own conscience. They do not believe that the Bible
-is a divine and universal guide-book. They think there are very many
-things in which we are left to choose for ourselves; hence the almost
-numberless sects, parties, creeds, and schools of thought. If human
-opinion be allowed at all, then, as a matter of course, one man has as
-good a right to think as another; and thus it has come to pass that
-the professing church has become a proverb and a by-word for division.
-
-And what is the sovereign remedy for this widespread disease? Here it
-is: _Absolute and complete subjection to the authority of holy
-Scripture_. It is not men going to Scripture to get _their_ opinions
-and _their_ views confirmed; but going to Scripture to get the mind of
-God as to every thing, and bowing down their whole moral being to
-divine authority. This is the one pressing need of the day in which
-our lot is cast--reverent subjection, in all things, to the supreme
-authority of the Word of God. No doubt, there will be variety in our
-measure of intelligence, in our apprehension and appreciation of
-Scripture; but what we specially urge upon all Christians is that
-condition of soul, that attitude of heart expressed in those precious
-words of the psalmist, "Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I
-might not sin against Thee." This, we may rest assured, is grateful to
-the heart of God. "To this man will I look, even to him that is poor
-and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at My Word."
-
-Here lies the true secret of moral security. Our knowledge of
-Scripture may be very limited; but if our reverence for it be
-profound, we shall be preserved from a thousand errors--a thousand
-snares. And then there will be steady growth. We shall grow in the
-knowledge of God, of Christ, and of the written Word; we shall delight
-to draw from those living and exhaustless depths of holy Scripture,
-and to range through those green pastures which infinite grace has so
-freely thrown open to the flock of Christ. Thus shall the divine life
-be nourished and strengthened; the Word of God will become more and
-more precious to our souls, and we shall be lead, by the powerful
-ministry of the Holy Ghost, into the depth, fullness, majesty, and
-moral glory of holy Scripture. We shall be delivered completely from
-the withering influences of all mere systems of theology, high, low,
-or moderate--a most blessed deliverance! We shall be able to tell the
-advocates of all the schools of divinity under the sun that whatever
-elements of truth they may have in their systems we have in divine
-perfectness in the Word of God; not twisted and tortured to make them
-fit into a system, but in their right place in the wide circle of
-divine revelation which has its eternal centre in the blessed Person
-of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-"These be the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side
-Jordan in the wilderness, in the plain over against the Red Sea,
-between Paran, and Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab.
-(There are eleven days' journey from Horeb, by the way of Mount Seir,
-unto Kadesh-barnea.)"
-
-The inspired writer is careful to give us, in the most precise manner,
-all the bearings of the place in which the words of this book were
-spoken in the ears of the people. Israel had not yet crossed the
-Jordan; they were just beside it, and over against the Red Sea where
-the mighty power of God had been so gloriously displayed nearly forty
-years before. The whole position is described with a minuteness which
-shows how thoroughly God entered into every thing that concerned His
-people. He was interested in all their movements and in all their
-ways. He kept a faithful record of all their encampments. Their was
-not a single circumstance connected with them, however trifling,
-beneath His gracious notice. He attended to every thing. His eye
-rested continually on that assembly as a whole, and on each member in
-particular. By day and by night He watched over them. Every stage of
-their journey was under His immediate and most gracious
-superintendence. There was nothing, however small, beneath His notice;
-nothing, however great, beyond His power.
-
-Thus it was with Israel in the wilderness of old, and thus it is with
-the Church now--the Church as a whole, and each member in particular.
-A Father's eye rests upon us continually, His everlasting arms are
-around and underneath us day and night. "He withdraweth not His eyes
-from the righteous." He counts the hairs of our heads, and enters,
-with infinite goodness, into every thing that concerns us. He has
-charged Himself with all our wants and all our cares. He would have us
-to cast our every care on Him, in the sweet assurance that He careth
-for us. He most graciously invites us to roll our every burden over on
-Him, be it great or small.
-
-All this is truly wonderful. It is full of deepest consolation. It is
-eminently calculated to tranquilize the heart, come what may. The
-question is, Do we believe it? are our hearts governed by the faith of
-it? Do we really believe that the almighty Creator and Upholder of all
-things, who bears up the pillars of the universe, has graciously
-undertaken to do for us all the journey through? Do we thoroughly
-believe that "the Possessor of heaven and earth" is our Father? and
-that He has charged Himself with all our wants from first to last? Is
-our whole moral being under the commanding power of those words of the
-inspired apostle, "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him
-up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all
-things?" Alas! it is to be feared that we know but little of the power
-of these grand yet simple truths. We talk about them, we discuss them,
-we profess them, we give a nominal assent to them; but with all this,
-we prove, in our daily life--in the actual details of our personal
-history, how feebly we enter into them. If we truly believed that our
-God has charged Himself with all our necessities--if we were finding
-all our springs in Him--if He were a perfect covering for our eyes and
-a resting-place for our hearts, could we possibly be looking to poor
-creature-streams, which so speedily dry up and disappoint our hearts?
-We do not and cannot believe it. It is one thing to hold the theory of
-the life of faith, and another thing altogether to live that life. We
-constantly deceive ourselves with the notion that we are living by
-faith, when in reality we are leaning on some human prop, which sooner
-or later is sure to give way.
-
-Reader, is it not so? Are we not constantly prone to forsake the
-Fountain of living waters, and hew out for ourselves broken cisterns,
-which can hold no water? And yet we speak of living by faith! We
-profess to be looking only to the living God for the supply of our
-need, whatever that need may be, when, in point of fact, we are
-sitting beside some creature-stream and looking for something there.
-Need we wonder if we are disappointed? How could it possibly be
-otherwise? Our God will not have us dependent upon aught or any one
-but Himself. He has, in manifold places in His Word, given us His
-judgment as to the true character and sure result of all
-creature-confidence. Take the following most solemn passage from the
-prophet Jeremiah: "Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh
-flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. For he shall
-be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when good cometh;
-but shall inhabit the parched places in the wilderness, in a salt land
-and not inhabited." And then mark the contrast--"Blessed is the man
-that trusteth in the Lord, and whose hope the Lord is: for he shall be
-as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by
-the river, and shall not see when heat cometh, but her leaf shall be
-green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall
-cease from yielding fruit." (Jer. xvii. 5-8.)
-
-Here we have, in language divinely forcible, clear, and beautiful, both
-sides of this most weighty subject put before us. Creature-confidence
-brings a certain curse; it can only issue in barrenness and
-desolation. God, in very faithfulness, will cause every human stream
-to dry up--every human prop to give way, in order that we may learn
-the utter folly of turning away from Him. What figure could be more
-striking or impressive than those used in the above passage?--"A heath
-in the desert," "parched places in the wilderness," "a salt land not
-inhabited." Such are the figures used by the Holy Ghost to illustrate
-all mere human dependence--all confidence in man.
-
-But on the other hand, what can be more lovely or more refreshing than
-the figures used to set forth the deep blessedness of simple trust in
-the Lord?--"A tree planted by the waters," "spreading out her roots by
-the rivers," the leaf ever green, the fruit never ceasing. Perfectly
-beautiful! Thus it is with the man who trusteth in the Lord, and whose
-hope the Lord is. He is nourished by those eternal springs that flow
-from the heart of God. He drinks at the Fountain, life-giving and
-free. He finds all his resources in the living God. There may be
-"heat," but he does not see it; "the year of drought" may come, but he
-is not careful. Ten thousand creature-streams may dry up, but he does
-not perceive it, because he is not dependent upon them; he abides hard
-by the ever-gushing Fountain. He can never want any good thing. He
-lives by faith.
-
-And here, while speaking of the life of faith--that most blessed life,
-let us clearly understand what it is, and carefully see that we are
-living it. We sometimes hear this life spoken of in a way by no means
-intelligent. It is not unfrequently applied to the mere matter of
-trusting God for food and raiment. Certain persons who happen to have
-no visible source of temporal supplies--no settled income--no property
-of any kind, are singled out and spoken of as "living by faith," as if
-that marvelous and glorious life had no higher sphere or wider range
-than temporal things--the mere supply of our bodily wants.
-
-Now, we cannot too strongly protest against this most unworthy view of
-the life of faith. It limits its sphere and lowers its range in a
-manner perfectly intolerable to any one who understands aught of its
-most holy and precious mysteries. Can we for a moment admit that a
-Christian who happens to have a settled income of any kind is to be
-deprived of the privilege of living by faith? Or, further, can we
-permit that life to be limited and lowered to the mere matter of
-trusting God for the supply of our bodily wants? Does it soar no
-higher than food and raiment? Does it give no more elevated thought of
-God than that He will not let us starve or go naked?
-
-Far away, and away forever, be the unworthy thought! The life of faith
-must not be so treated. We cannot allow such a gross dishonor to be
-offered to it, or such a grievous wrong done to those who are called
-to live it. What, we would ask, is the meaning of those few but
-weighty words, "The just shall live by faith"? They occur, first of
-all, in Habakkuk ii. They are quoted by the apostle in Romans i, where
-he is, with a master-hand, laying the solid foundations of
-Christianity. He quotes them again in Galatians iii, where he is, with
-intense anxiety, recalling those bewitched assemblies to those solid
-foundations which they, in their folly, were abandoning. Finally, he
-quotes them again in chapter x. of his epistle to the Hebrews, where
-he is warning his brethren against the danger of casting away their
-confidence and giving up the race.
-
-From all this we may assuredly gather the immense importance and
-practical value of the brief but far-reaching sentence, "The just
-shall live by faith." But to whom does it apply? Is it only for a few
-of the Lord's servants, here and there, who happen to have no settled
-income? We utterly reject the thought. It applies to every one of the
-Lord's people. It is the high and happy privilege of all who come
-under the title--that blessed title, "The just." We consider it a very
-grave error to limit it in any way. The moral effect of such
-limitation is most injurious. It gives undue prominence to one
-department of the life of faith which, if any distinction be
-allowable, we should judge to be the very lowest. But in reality,
-there should be no distinction: the life of faith is one. Faith is the
-grand principle of the divine life from first to last. By faith we are
-justified, and by faith we live; by faith we stand, and by faith we
-walk. From the starting-post to the goal of the Christian course it is
-all by faith.
-
-Hence, therefore, it is a serious mistake to single out certain
-persons who trust the Lord for temporal supplies, and speak of them as
-living by faith, as if they alone did so. And not only so, but such
-persons are held up to the gaze of the Church of God as something
-wonderful; and the great mass of Christians are led to think that the
-privilege of living by faith lies entirely beyond their range. In
-short, they are led into a complete mistake as to the real character
-and sphere of the life of faith, and thus they suffer materially in
-the inner life.
-
-Let the Christian reader, then, distinctly understand that it is his
-happy privilege, whoever he be or whatever be his position, to live a
-life of faith, in all the depth and fullness of that word. He may,
-according to his measure, take up the language of the blessed apostle,
-and say, "The life that I live in the flesh, I live by the faith of
-the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me." Let nothing
-rob him of this high and holy privilege which belongs to every member
-of the household of faith. Alas! we fail. Our faith is weak, when it
-ought to be strong, bold, and vigorous. Our God delights in a bold
-faith. If we study the gospels, we shall see that nothing so refreshed
-and delighted the heart of Christ as a fine bold faith--a faith that
-understood Him and drew largely upon Him. Look, for example, at the
-Syrophenician in Mark vii, and the centurion in Luke vii.
-
-True, He could meet a weak faith--the very weakest. He could meet an
-"If Thou _wilt_" with a gracious "I will"--an "If Thou _canst_" with
-"If thou canst believe, all things are possible." The faintest look,
-the feeblest touch, was sure to meet with a gracious response; but the
-Saviour's heart was gratified and His spirit refreshed when He could
-say, "O woman, great is thy faith; be it unto thee even as thou wilt;"
-and again, "I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel."
-
-Let us remember this. We may rest assured it is the very same to-day
-as when our blessed Lord was here amongst men. He loves to be trusted,
-to be used, to be drawn upon. We can never go too far in counting on
-the love of His heart or the strength of His hand. There is nothing
-too small, nothing too great for Him; He has all power in heaven and
-on earth; He is head over all things to His Church; He holds the
-universe together; He upholds all things by the word of His power.
-Philosophers talk of the forces and laws of nature: the Christian
-thinks with delight of Christ, His hand, His Word, His mighty power.
-By Him all things were created, and by Him all things consist.
-
-And then His love! What rest, what comfort, what joy, to know and
-remember that the almighty Creator and Upholder of the universe is the
-everlasting Lover of our souls! that He loves us perfectly; that His
-eye is ever upon us, His heart ever toward us; that He has charged
-Himself with all our wants, whatever these wants may be--whether
-physical, mental, or spiritual! There is not a single thing within the
-entire range of our necessities that is not treasured up for us in
-Christ. He is Heaven's treasury--God's storehouse, and all this for
-us.
-
-Why, then, should we ever turn to another? Why should we ever,
-directly or indirectly, make known our wants to a poor fellow-mortal?
-Why not go straight to Jesus? Do we want sympathy? Who can sympathize
-with us like our most merciful High-Priest, who is touched with the
-feeling of our infirmities? Do we want help of any kind? Who can help
-us like our almighty Friend, the Possessor of unsearchable riches? Do
-we want counsel or guidance? Who can give it like the blessed One who
-is the very wisdom of God, and who is made of God unto us wisdom? Oh,
-let us not wound His loving heart, and dishonor His glorious name by
-turning away from Him. Let us jealously watch against the tendency so
-natural to us to cherish human hopes, creature-confidences, and
-earthly expectations. Let us abide hard by the Fountain, and we shall
-never have to complain of the streams. In a word, let us seek to live
-by faith, and thus glorify God in our day and generation.
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter; and in so doing, we would call
-the reader's attention to verse 2. It is certainly a very remarkable
-parenthesis. "(There are eleven days' journey from Horeb, by the way
-of Mount Seir, unto Kadesh-barnea.)" Eleven days! and yet it took them
-forty years! How was this? Alas! we need not travel far for the
-answer. It is only too like ourselves. How slowly we get over the
-ground! What windings and turnings! How often we have to go back and
-travel over the same ground again and again! We are slow travelers,
-because we are slow learners. It may be we feel disposed to marvel how
-Israel could have taken forty years to accomplish a journey of eleven
-days; but we may, with much greater reason, marvel at ourselves. We,
-like them, are kept back by our unbelief and slowness of heart; but
-there is far less excuse for us than for them, inasmuch as our
-privileges are so very much higher.
-
-Some of us have much reason to be ashamed of the time we spend over
-our lessons. The words of the blessed apostle do but too forcibly
-apply to us--"For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have
-need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the
-oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of
-strong meat." Our God is a faithful and wise as well as a gracious and
-patient Teacher. He will not permit us to pass cursorily over our
-lessons. Sometimes, perhaps, we think we have mastered a lesson, and
-we attempt to move on to another; but our wise Teacher knows better,
-and He sees the need of deeper ploughing. He will not have us mere
-theorists or smatterers: He will keep us, if need be, year after year
-at our scales until we learn to sing.
-
-Now, while it is very humbling to us to be so slow in learning, it is
-very gracious of Him to take such pains with us, in order to make us
-sure. We have to bless Him for His mode of teaching as for all
-beside--for the wonderful patience with which He sits down with us
-over the same lesson again and again, in order that we may learn it
-thoroughly.[3]
-
- [3] The journey of Israel from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea illustrates but
- too forcibly the history of many souls in the matter of finding peace.
- Many of the Lord's beloved people go on for years, doubting and
- fearing, never knowing the blessedness of the liberty wherewith Christ
- makes His people free. It is most distressing, to any one who really
- cares for souls, to see the sad condition in which some are kept all
- their days, through legality, bad teaching, false manuals of devotion,
- and such like. It is a rare thing now-a-days to find in christendom a
- soul fully established in the peace of the gospel. It is considered a
- good thing--a sign of humility--to be always doubting. Confidence is
- looked upon as presumption. In short, things are turned completely
- upside down. The gospel is not known: souls are under law instead of
- under grace,--they are kept at a distance instead of being taught to
- draw nigh. Much of the religion of the day is a deplorable mixture of
- Christ and self, law and grace, faith and works. Souls are kept in a
- perfect muddle all their days.
-
- Surely these things demand the grave consideration of all who occupy
- the responsible place of teachers and preachers in the professing
- church. There is a solemn day approaching, when all such will be
- called to render an account of their ministry.
-
-"And it came to pass in the fortieth year, in the eleventh month, on
-the first day of the month, that Moses spake unto the children of
-Israel, according unto all that the Lord had given him in commandment
-unto them." (Ver. 3.) These few words contain a volume of weighty
-instruction for every servant of God--for all who are called to
-minister in the Word and doctrine. Moses gave the people just what he
-himself had received from God--nothing more, nothing less. He brought
-them into direct contact with the living Word of Jehovah. This is the
-grand principle of ministry at all times. Nothing else is of any real
-value. The Word of God is the only thing that will stand. There is
-divine power and authority in it. All mere human teaching, however
-interesting--however attractive at the time, will pass away and leave
-the soul without any foundation to rest upon.
-
-Hence it should be the earnest, jealous care of all who minister in
-the assembly of God, to preach the Word in all its purity, in all its
-simplicity; to give it to the people as they get it from God; to bring
-them face to face with the veritable language of holy Scripture. Thus
-will their ministry tell, with living power, on the hearts and
-consciences of their hearers. It will link the soul with God Himself,
-by means of the Word, and impart a depth and solidity which no human
-teaching can ever produce.
-
-Look at the blessed apostle Paul. Hear him express himself on this
-weighty subject.--"And I, brethren, when I came to you, came not with
-excellency of speech or of wisdom, declaring unto you the testimony of
-God. For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus
-Christ, and Him crucified. And I was with you in weakness, and in
-fear, and in much trembling. And my speech and my preaching was not
-with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the
-Spirit and of power." What was the object of all this fear and
-trembling? "That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but
-in the power of God." (1 Cor. ii. 1-5.)
-
-This true-hearted faithful servant of Christ sought only to bring the
-souls of his hearers into direct personal contact with God Himself. He
-sought not to link them with Paul. "Who then is Paul, and who is
-Apollos, but ministers _by whom ye believed_?" All false ministry has
-for its object the attaching of souls to itself. Thus the minister is
-exalted, God is shut out, and the soul left without any divine
-foundation to rest upon. True ministry, on the contrary, as seen in
-Paul and Moses, has for its blessed object the attaching of the soul
-to God. Thus the minister gets his true place--simply an instrument,
-God is exalted, and the soul established on a sure foundation which
-can never be moved.
-
-But let us hear a little more from our apostle on this most weighty
-subject. "Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I
-preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand;
-by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto
-you, unless ye have believed in vain. _For I delivered unto you first
-of all that which I also received_"--nothing more, nothing less,
-nothing different--"how that Christ died for our sins _according to
-the Scriptures_; and that He was buried, and that He rose again the
-third day _according to the Scriptures_."
-
-This is uncommonly fine. It demands the serious consideration of all
-who would be true and effective ministers of Christ. The apostle was
-careful to allow the pure stream to flow down from its living
-source--the heart of God, into the souls of the Corinthians. He felt
-that nothing else was of any value. If he had sought to link them on
-to himself, he would have sadly dishonored his Master, done them a
-grievous wrong, and he himself would most assuredly suffer loss in the
-day of Christ.
-
-But no; Paul knew better. He would not, for worlds, lead any to build
-upon himself. Hear what he says to his much-loved Thessalonians.--"For
-this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when _ye
-received the Word of God_ which ye heard of us, ye received it _not as
-the word of men_, but _as it is in truth, the Word of God_, which
-effectually worketh also in you that believe." (1 Thess. ii. 13.)
-
-We feel solemnly responsible to commend this grave and important point
-to the serious consideration of the Church of God. If all the
-professed ministers of Christ were to follow the example of Moses and
-Paul, in reference to the matter now before us, we should witness a
-very different condition of things in the professing church. But the
-plain and serious fact is, that the Church of God, like Israel of old,
-has wholly departed from the authority of His Word. Go where you will,
-and you find things done and taught which have no foundation in
-Scripture. Things are not only tolerated but sanctioned and stoutly
-defended which are in direct opposition to the mind of Christ. If you
-ask for the divine authority for this, that, and the other institution
-or practice, you will be told that Christ has not given us directions
-as to matters of church government; that in all questions of
-ecclesiastical polity, clerical orders, and liturgical services, He
-has left us free to act according to our consciences, judgment, or
-religious feelings; that it is simply absurd to demand a "Thus saith
-the Lord" for all the details connected with our religious
-institutions: there is a broad margin left to be filled up according
-to our national customs and our peculiar habits of thought. It is
-considered that professing Christians are left perfectly free to form
-themselves into so-called churches, to choose their own form of
-government, to make their own arrangements, and to appoint their own
-office-bearers.
-
-Now the question which the Christian reader has to consider is, "Are
-these things so?" Can it be that our Lord Christ has left His Church
-without guidance as to matters so interesting and momentous? Can it be
-possible that the Church of God is worse off, in the matter of
-instruction and authority, than Israel? In our studies on the books of
-Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers, we have seen (for who could help
-seeing?) the marvelous pains which Jehovah took to instruct His people
-as to the most minute particulars connected with their public worship
-and private life. As to the tabernacle, the temple, the priesthood,
-the ritual, the various feasts and sacrifices, the periodical
-solemnities, the months, the days, the very hours, all was ordered and
-settled with divine precision. Nothing was left to mere human
-arrangement. Man's wisdom, his judgment, his reason, his conscience,
-had nothing whatever to do in the matter. Had it been left to man, how
-should we ever have had that admirable, profound, and far-reaching
-typical system which the inspired pen of Moses has set before us? If
-Israel had been allowed to do what (as some would fain persuade us)
-the Church is allowed, what confusion, what strife, what division,
-what endless sects and parties, would have been the inevitable result!
-
-But it was not so. The Word of God settled every thing. "As the Lord
-commanded Moses." This grand and influential sentence was appended to
-every thing that Israel had to do, and to every thing they were not to
-do. Their national institutions and their domestic habits--their
-public and their private life, all came under the commanding authority
-of "Thus saith the Lord." There was no occasion for any member of the
-congregation to say, I cannot see this, or, I cannot go with that, or,
-I cannot agree with the other. Such language could only be regarded as
-the fruit of self-will. He might just as well say, I cannot agree with
-Jehovah. And why? Simply because the Word of God had spoken as to
-every thing, and that, too, with a clearness and simplicity which left
-no room whatever for human discussion. Throughout the whole of the
-Mosaic economy there was not the breadth of a hair of margin left in
-which to insert the opinion or the judgment of man. It pertained not
-to man to add the weight of a feather to that vast system of types and
-shadows which had been planned by the divine mind, and set forth in
-language so plain and pointed, that all Israel had to do was to
-_obey_--not to argue, not to reason, not to discuss, but to obey.
-
-Alas! alas! they failed, as we know. They did their own will; they
-took their own way; they did "every man that which was right in his
-own eyes." They departed from the Word of God, and followed the
-imaginations and devices of their own evil heart, and brought upon
-themselves the wrath and indignation of offended Deity, under which
-they suffer till this day, and shall yet suffer unexampled
-tribulation.
-
-But all this leaves untouched the point on which we are just now
-dwelling. Israel had the oracles of God, and these oracles were
-divinely sufficient for their guidance in every thing. There was no
-room left for the commandments and doctrines of men. The Word of the
-Lord provided for every possible exigence, and that Word was so plain
-as to render human comment needless.
-
-Is the Church of God worse off, as regards guidance and authority,
-than Israel of old? Are Christians left to think and arrange for
-themselves in the worship and service of God? Are there any questions
-left open for human discussion? Is the Word of God sufficient, or is
-it not? Has it left any thing unprovided for? Let us hearken
-diligently to the following powerful testimony: "All Scripture is
-given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for
-reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness; that the
-man of God may be _perfect_ [+artios+] _throughly furnished
-unto all good works_." (2 Tim. iii.)
-
-This is perfectly conclusive. Holy Scripture contains all that the man
-of God can possibly require to make him perfect, to equip him
-thoroughly for every thing that can be called a "good work." And if
-this be true as to the man of God individually, it is equally true as
-to the Church of God collectively. Scripture is all-sufficient--for
-each, for all. Thank God that it is so! What a signal mercy to have a
-divine guide-book! Were it not so, what should we do? whither should
-we turn? what would become of us? If we were left to human tradition
-and human arrangement in the things of God, what hopeless confusion!
-what clashing of opinions! what conflicting judgments! And all this of
-necessity, inasmuch as one man would have quite as good a right as
-another to put forth his opinion and to suggest his plan.
-
-We shall perhaps be told that, notwithstanding our possession of the
-holy Scripture, we have, nevertheless, sects, parties, creeds, and
-schools of thought almost innumerable. But why is this? Simply because
-we refuse to submit our whole moral being to the authority of holy
-Scripture. This is the real secret of the matter--the true source of
-all those sects and parties which are the shame and sorrow of the
-Church of God.
-
-It is vain for men to tell us that these things are good in
-themselves--that they are the legitimate fruit of that free exercise
-of thought and private judgment which form the very boast and glory of
-Protestant Christianity. We do not and cannot believe for a moment
-that such a plea will stand before the judgment-seat of Christ. We
-believe, on the contrary, that this very boasted freedom of thought
-and independence of judgment are in direct opposition to that spirit
-of profound and reverent obedience which is due to our adorable Lord
-and Master. What right has a servant to exercise his private judgment
-in the face of his master's plainly expressed will? None whatever. The
-duty of a servant is simply to obey--not to reason or to question, but
-to do what he is told. He fails, as a servant, just in so far as he
-exercises his own private judgment. The most lovely moral trait in a
-servant's character is implicit, unquestioning, and unqualified
-obedience. The one grand business of a servant is to do his master's
-will.
-
-All this will be fully admitted in human affairs; but in the things of
-God, men think themselves entitled to exercise their private judgment.
-It is a fatal mistake. God has given us His Word; and that Word is so
-plain, that wayfaring men, though fools, need not err therein. Hence,
-therefore, if we were all guided by that Word,--if we were all to bow
-down in a spirit of unquestioning obedience to its divine authority,
-there could not be conflicting opinions and opposing sects. It is
-quite impossible that the voice of holy Scripture can teach opposing
-doctrines. It cannot possibly teach one man Episcopacy; another,
-Presbyterianism; and another, Independency. It cannot possibly furnish
-a foundation for opposing schools of thought. It would be a positive
-insult offered to the divine volume to attempt to attribute to it all
-the sad confusion of the professing church. Every pious mind must
-recoil, with just horror, from such an impious thought. Scripture
-cannot contradict itself; and therefore if two men or ten thousand men
-are exclusively taught by Scripture, they will think alike.
-
-Hear what the blessed apostle says to the church at Corinth--says to
-us, "Now I beseech you, brethren, _by the name of our Lord Jesus
-Christ_" (mark the mighty moral force of this appeal) "that ye all
-_speak the same thing_, and that there be no divisions among you; but
-that ye be perfectly joined together in _the same mind_, and in _the
-same judgment_."
-
-Now the question is, how was this most blessed result to be reached?
-Was it by each one exercising the right of private judgment? Alas! it
-was this very thing that gave birth to all the division and contention
-in the assembly at Corinth, and drew forth the sharp rebuke of the
-Holy Ghost. Those poor Corinthians thought they had a right to think
-and judge and choose for themselves, and what was the result? "It hath
-been declared unto me of you, my brethren, by them which are of the
-house of Chloe, that there are contentions among you. Now this I say,
-that _every one of you saith_, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I
-of Cephas; and I of Christ. Is Christ divided?"
-
-Here we have private judgment and its sad fruit--its necessary fruit.
-One man has quite as good a right to think for himself as another; and
-no man has any right whatsoever to force his opinion upon his fellow.
-Where, then, lies the remedy? In flinging to the winds our private
-judgments, and reverently submitting ourselves to the supreme and
-absolute authority of holy Scripture. If it be not thus, how could
-the apostle beseech the Corinthians to "speak the same thing, and to
-be perfectly joined together in the same mind, and in the same
-judgment"? Who was to prescribe the "thing" that all were to "speak"?
-In whose "mind" or whose "judgment" were all to be "perfectly joined
-together"? Had any one member of the assembly, however gifted or
-intelligent, the slightest shadow of a right to set forth what his
-brethren were to speak, to think, or to judge? Most certainly not.
-There was one absolute, because divine, authority to which all were
-bound, or rather privileged, to submit themselves. Human opinions,
-man's private judgment, his conscience, his reason--all these things
-must go for what they are worth; and most assuredly they are perfectly
-worthless as authority. The Word of God is the _only_ authority; and
-if we are all governed by that, we shall "all speak the same thing,"
-and "there will be no divisions among us;" but we shall "be perfectly
-joined together in the same mind, and in the same judgment."
-
-Lovely condition! But, alas! it is not the present condition of the
-Church of God; and therefore it is perfectly evident that we are not
-all governed by the one supreme, absolute, and all-sufficient
-authority--the voice of holy Scripture--that most blessed voice that
-can never utter one discordant note--a voice ever divinely harmonious
-to the circumcised ear.
-
-Here lies the root of the whole matter. The Church has departed from
-the authority of Christ, as set forth in His Word. Until this is
-seen, it is only lost time to discuss the claims of conflicting
-systems, ecclesiastical or theological. If a man does not see that it
-is his sacred duty to test every ecclesiastical system, every
-liturgical service, and every theological creed by the Word of God,
-discussion is perfectly useless. If it be allowable to settle things
-according to expediency--according to man's judgment, his conscience,
-or his reason, then verily we may as well at once give up the case as
-hopeless. If we have no divinely settled authority--no perfect
-standard--no infallible guide, we cannot see how it is possible for
-any one to possess the certainty that he is treading in the true path.
-If indeed it be true that we are left to choose for ourselves, amid
-the almost countless paths which lie around us, then farewell to all
-certainty--farewell to peace of mind and rest of heart--farewell to
-all holy stability of purpose and fixedness of aim. If we cannot say
-of the ground we occupy, of the path we pursue, and of the work in
-which we are engaged, "This is the thing which the Lord hath
-commanded," we may rest assured we are in a wrong position, and the
-sooner we abandon it the better.
-
-Thank God, there is no necessity whatever for His child or His servant
-to continue for one hour in connection with what is wrong. "Let every
-one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity." But how are
-we to know what is iniquity? By the Word of God. Whatever is contrary
-to Scripture, whether in morals or in doctrines, is iniquity, and I
-must depart from it, cost what it may. It is an individual
-matter.--"_Let every one._"--"_He_ that hath ears."--"_He_ that
-overcometh."--"If _any_ man hear My voice."
-
-Here is the point. Let us mark it well. It is _Christ's_ voice. It is
-not the voice of this good man or that good man; it is not the voice
-of the church, the voice of the fathers, the voice of general
-councils, but the voice of our own beloved Lord and Master. It is the
-individual conscience in direct, living contact with the voice of
-Christ--the living, eternal Word of God--the holy Scriptures. Were it
-merely a question of human conscience or judgment or authority, we are
-at once plunged in hopeless uncertainty, inasmuch as what one man
-might judge to be iniquity, another might consider to be perfectly
-right. There must be some fixed standard to go by--some supreme
-authority from which there can be no appeal; and, blessed be God,
-there is. God has spoken; He has given us His Word; and it is at once
-our bounden duty, our high privilege, our moral security, our true
-enjoyment, to obey that Word.
-
-Not man's interpretation of the Word, but the Word itself. This is
-all-important. We must have nothing--absolutely nothing between the
-human conscience and divine revelation. Men talk to us about the
-authority of the church. Where are we to find it? Suppose a really
-anxious, earnest, honest soul, longing to know the true way. He is
-told to listen to the voice of the church. He asks, Which church? Is
-it the Greek, Latin, Anglican, or Scotch church? Not two of them
-agree. Nay, more; there are conflicting parties, contending sects,
-opposing schools of thought, in one and the self-same body. Councils
-have differed, fathers have disagreed, popes have anathematized one
-another. In the Anglican Establishment, we have high-church,
-low-church, and broad-church, each differing from the rest. In the
-Scotch or Presbyterian church, we have the Established church, the
-United Presbyterian, and the Free church. And then if the anxious
-inquirer turns away in hopeless perplexity from those great bodies, in
-order to seek guidance amid the ranks of Protestant dissenters, is he
-likely to fare any better?
-
-Ah! reader, it is perfectly hopeless. The whole professing church has
-revolted from the authority of Christ, and cannot possibly be a guide
-or an authority for any one. In the second and third chapters of the
-book of Revelation, the church is seen under judgment, and the appeal,
-seven times repeated, is, "He that hath an ear, let him hear"--what?
-The voice of the church? Impossible! The Lord could never direct us to
-hear the voice of that which is itself under judgment. Hear what,
-then? "Let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches."
-
-And where is this voice to be heard? _Only_ in the holy Scriptures,
-given of God, in His infinite goodness, to guide our souls in the way
-of peace and truth, notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the church,
-and the thick darkness and wild confusion of baptized christendom. It
-lies not within the compass of human language to set forth the value
-and importance of having a divine and therefore an infallible and
-all-sufficient guide and authority for our individual path.
-
-But be it remembered, we are solemnly responsible to bow to that
-authority, and follow that guide. It is utterly vain, indeed morally
-dangerous, to profess to have a divine guide and authority unless we
-are thoroughly subject thereto. This it was that characterized the
-Jews in the days of our Lord. They had the Scriptures, but they did
-not obey them. And one of the saddest features in the present
-condition of christendom is its boasted possession of the Bible, while
-the authority of that Bible is boldly set aside.
-
-We deeply feel the solemnity of this, and would earnestly press it
-upon the conscience of the Christian reader. The Word of God is
-virtually ignored amongst us. Things are practiced and sanctioned, on
-all hands, which not only have no foundation in Scripture, but are
-diametrically opposed to it. We are not exclusively taught and
-absolutely governed by Scripture.
-
-All this is most serious, and demands the attention of all the Lord's
-people in every place. We feel compelled to raise a warning note in
-the ears of all Christians in reference to this most weighty subject.
-Indeed, it is the sense of its gravity and vast moral importance that
-has led us to enter upon the service of writing these "Notes on the
-book of Deuteronomy." It is our earnest prayer that the Holy Ghost
-may use these pages to recall the hearts of the Lord's dear people to
-their true and proper place--even the place of reverent allegiance to
-His blessed Word. We feel persuaded that what will characterize all
-those who will walk devotedly in the closing hours of the Church's
-earthly history will be profound reverence for the Word of God, and
-genuine attachment to the Person of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
-The two things are inseparably bound together by a sacred and
-imperishable link.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The Lord our God spake unto us in Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long
-enough in this mount: turn you, and take your journey, and go to the
-mount of the Amorites, and unto all the places nigh thereunto, in the
-plain, in the hills, and in the vale, and in the south, and by the
-sea-side, to the land of the Canaanites, and unto Lebanon, unto the
-great river, the river Euphrates.'" (Ver. 6, 7.)
-
-We shall find, throughout the whole of the book of Deuteronomy, the
-Lord dealing much more directly and simply with the people than in any
-of the three preceding books; so far is it from being true that
-Deuteronomy is a mere repetition of what has passed before us in
-previous sections. For instance, in the passage just quoted there is
-no mention of the movement of the cloud--no reference to the sound of
-the trumpet. "The Lord our God spake unto us." We know, from the book
-of Numbers, that the movements of the camp were governed by the
-movements of the cloud, as communicated by the sound of the trumpet.
-But neither the trumpet nor the cloud is alluded to in this book. It
-is much more simple and familiar. "The Lord our God spake unto us in
-Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long enough in this mount.'"
-
-This is very beautiful. It reminds us somewhat of the lovely
-simplicity of patriarchal times, when the Lord spake unto the fathers
-as a man speaketh to his friend. It was not by the sound of a trumpet,
-or by the movement of a cloud, that the Lord communicated His mind to
-Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He was so very near to them that there was
-no need, no room for an agency characterized by ceremony and distance.
-He visited them, sat with them, partook of their hospitality, in all
-the intimacy of personal friendship.
-
-Such is the lovely simplicity of the order of things in patriarchal
-times; and this it is which imparts a peculiar charm to the narratives
-of the book of Genesis.
-
-But in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers we have something quite
-different. There, we have set before us a vast system of types and
-shadows, rites, ordinances, and ceremonies, imposed on the people for
-the time being, the import of which is unfolded to us in the epistle
-to the Hebrews.--"The Holy Ghost this signifying, that the way into
-the holiest of all was not yet made manifest, while as the first
-tabernacle was yet standing; which was a figure for the time then
-present, in which were offered both gifts and sacrifices, that could
-not make him that did the service perfect, as pertaining to the
-conscience; which stood only in meats and drinks, and divers washings,
-and carnal ordinances, imposed on them until the time of reformation."
-(Heb. ix. 8-10.)
-
-Under this system, the people were at a distance from God. It was not
-with them as it had been with their fathers in the book of Genesis.
-God was shut in from them, and they were shut out from Him. The
-leading features of the Levitical ceremonial, so far as the people
-were concerned, were bondage, darkness, distance; but on the other
-hand, its types and shadows pointed forward to that one great
-Sacrifice which is the foundation of all God's marvelous counsels and
-purposes, and by which He can, in perfect righteousness, and according
-to all the love of His heart, have a people near unto Himself, to the
-praise of the glory of His grace, throughout the golden ages of
-eternity.
-
-Now, it has been already remarked, we shall find in Deuteronomy
-comparatively little of rites and ceremonies. The Lord is seen more in
-direct communication with the people; and even the priests, in their
-official capacity, come rarely before us; and if they are referred to,
-it is very much more in a moral than in a ceremonial way. Of this we
-shall have ample proof as we pass along; it is a marked feature of
-this beautiful book.
-
-"The Lord our God spake unto us in Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long
-enough in this mount: turn you, and take your journey, and go to the
-mount of the Amorites.'" What a rare privilege for any people to have
-the Lord so near to them, and so interested in all their movements and
-in all their concerns, great and small! He knew how long they ought to
-remain in any one place, and whither they should next bend their
-steps. They had no need to harass themselves about their journeyings,
-or about any thing else. They were under the eye and in the hands of
-One whose wisdom was unerring, whose power was omnipotent, whose
-resources were inexhaustible, whose love was infinite, who had charged
-Himself with the care of them, who knew all their need, and was
-prepared to meet it, according to all the love of His heart and the
-strength of His holy arm.
-
-What, then, we may ask, remained for them to do? What was their plain
-and simple duty? Just to obey. It was their high and holy privilege to
-rest in the love and obey the commandments of Jehovah, their covenant
-God. Here lay the blessed secret of their peace, their happiness, and
-their moral security. They had no need whatever to trouble themselves
-about their movements, no need of planning or arranging. Their
-journeyings were all ordered for them by One who knew every step of
-the way from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea, and they had just to live by the
-day, in happy dependence upon Him.
-
-Happy position! Privileged path! Blessed portion! But it demanded a
-broken will, an obedient mind, a subject heart. If when Jehovah had
-said, "Ye have compassed this mountain long enough," they, on the
-contrary, were to form the plan of compassing it a little longer, they
-would have had to compass it without Him. His companionship, His
-counsel, and His aid could only be counted upon in the path of
-obedience.
-
-Thus it was with Israel in their desert wanderings, and thus it is
-with us. It is our most precious privilege to leave all our matters in
-the hands, not merely of a covenant God, but of a loving Father. He
-arranges our movements for us; He fixes the bounds of our habitation;
-He tells us how long to stay in a place, and where to go next. He has
-charged Himself with all our concerns, all our movements, all our
-wants. His gracious word to us is, "Be careful for nothing; but in
-every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
-requests be made known unto God." And what then? "The peace of God,
-which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds
-through Christ Jesus."
-
-But it may be the reader feels disposed to ask, How does God guide His
-people now? We cannot expect to hear His voice telling us when to move
-or where to go. To this we reply, at once, It cannot surely be that
-the members of the Church of God--the body of Christ--are worse off in
-the matter of divine guidance than Israel in the wilderness. Cannot
-God guide His children--cannot Christ guide His servants--in all their
-movements and in all their service? Who would think, for a moment, of
-calling in question a truth so plain and so precious? True, we do not
-expect to hear a voice, or see the movement of a cloud; but we have
-what is very much better, very much higher, very much more intimate.
-We may rest assured our God has made ample provision for us in this,
-as in all beside, according to all the love of His heart.
-
-Now, there are three ways in which we are guided: we are guided by the
-Word, we are guided by the Holy Ghost, and we are guided by the
-instincts of the divine nature; and we have to bear in mind that the
-instincts of the divine nature, the leadings of the Holy Ghost, and
-the teaching of holy Scripture will always harmonize. This is of the
-utmost importance to keep before us. A person might fancy himself to
-be led by the instincts of the divine nature, or by the Holy Spirit,
-to pursue a certain line of action involving consequences at issue
-with the Word of God. Thus his mistake would be made apparent. It is a
-very serious thing for any one to act on mere impulse or impression.
-By so doing, he may fall into a snare of the devil, and do very
-serious damage to the cause of Christ. We must calmly weigh our
-impressions in the balances of the sanctuary, and faithfully test them
-by the standard of the divine Word. In this way we shall be preserved
-from error and delusion. It is a most dangerous thing to trust
-impressions or act on impulse. We have seen the most disastrous
-consequences produced by so doing. Facts _may be_ reliable. Divine
-authority is absolutely infallible. Our own impressions may prove as
-delusive as a will-o'-the-wisp, or a mirage of the desert: human
-feelings are most untrustworthy. We must ever submit them to the most
-severe scrutiny, lest they betray us into some fatally false line of
-action. We can trust Scripture without a shadow of misgiving; and we
-shall find, without exception, that the man who is led by the Holy
-Ghost, or guided by the instincts of the divine nature, will never act
-in opposition to the Word of God. This is what we may call an axiom in
-the divine life--an established rule in practical Christianity. Would
-that it had been more attended to in all ages of the Church's history!
-Would that it were more pondered in our own day!
-
-But there is another point in this question of divine guidance which
-demands our serious attention. We not unfrequently hear people speak
-of "the finger of divine Providence" as something to be relied upon
-for guidance. This may be only another mode of expressing the idea of
-being guided by circumstances, which, we do not hesitate to say, is
-very far indeed from being the proper kind of guidance for a
-Christian.
-
-No doubt, our Lord may and does, at times, intimate His mind and
-indicate our path by His providence; but we must be sufficiently near
-to Him to be able to interpret the providence aright, else we may find
-that what is called "an opening of Providence" may actually prove an
-opening by which we slip off the holy path of obedience. Surrounding
-circumstances, just like our inward impressions, must be weighed in
-the presence of God, and judged by the light of His Word, else they
-may lead us into the most terrible mistakes. Jonah might have
-considered it a remarkable providence to find a ship going to
-Tarshish; but had he been in communion with God, he would not have
-needed a ship. In short, the Word of God is the one grand test and
-perfect touchstone for every thing--for outward circumstances and
-inward impressions--for feelings, imaginations, and tendencies--all
-must be placed under the searching light of holy Scripture and there
-calmly and seriously judged. This is the true path of safety, peace,
-and blessedness for every child of God.
-
-It may, however, be said, in reply to all this, that we cannot expect
-to find a text of Scripture to guide us in the matter of our
-movements, or in the thousand little details of daily life. Perhaps
-not; but there are certain great principles laid down in Scripture,
-which, if properly applied, will afford divine guidance even where we
-might not be able to find a particular text. And not only so, but we
-have the fullest assurance that our God can and does guide His
-children in all things. "The steps of a good man are ordered of the
-Lord."--"The meek will He guide in judgment; and the meek will He
-teach His way."--"I will guide thee with Mine eye." He can signify His
-mind to us as to this or that particular act or movement. If not,
-where are we? How are we to get on? How are we to regulate our
-movements? Are we to be drifted hither and thither by the tide of
-circumstances? Are we left to blind chance, or to the mere impulse of
-our own will?
-
-Thank God, it is not so. He can, in His own perfect way, give us the
-certainty of His mind in any given case; and without that certainty we
-should never move. Our Lord Christ (all homage to His peerless name!)
-can intimate His mind to His servant as to where He would have him to
-go and what He would have him to do; and no true servant will ever
-think of moving or acting without such intimation. We should never act
-or move in uncertainty. If we are not sure, let us be quiet and wait.
-Very often it happens that we harass and fret ourselves about
-movements that God would not have us make at all. A person once said
-to a friend, "I am quite at a loss to know which way to turn." "Then,
-don't turn at all," was the friend's wise reply.
-
-But here an all-important moral point comes in, and that is, our whole
-condition of soul. This, we may rest assured, has very much to do with
-the matter of guidance. It is "the meek He will guide in judgment, and
-teach His way." We must never forget this. If only we are humble and
-self-distrusting--if we wait on our God, in simplicity of heart,
-uprightness of mind, and honesty of purpose, He will most assuredly
-guide us. But it will never do to go and ask counsel of God in a
-matter about which our mind is made up, or our will is at work.
-
-This is a fatal delusion. Look at the case of Jehoshaphat, in 1 Kings
-xxii.--"It came to pass in the third year, that Jehoshaphat the king
-of Judah came down to the king of Israel"--a sad mistake, to begin
-with.--"And the king of Israel said unto his servants, 'Know ye that
-Ramoth in Gilead is ours, and we be still, and take it not out of the
-hand of the king of Syria?' And he said unto Jehoshaphat, 'Wilt thou
-go with me to battle to Ramoth-gilead?' And Jehoshaphat said to the
-king of Israel, 'I am as thou art, my people as thy people, my horses
-as thy horses; and, (as we have it in 2 Chronicles xviii. 3,) we will
-be with thee in the war.'"
-
-Here we see that his mind was made up before ever he thought of asking
-counsel of God in the matter. He was in a false position and a wrong
-atmosphere altogether. He had fallen into the snare of the enemy,
-through lack of singleness of eye, and hence he was not in a fit state
-to receive or profit by divine guidance. He was bent on his own will,
-and the Lord left him to reap the fruits of it; and but for infinite
-and sovereign mercy, he would have fallen by the sword of the Syrians,
-and been borne a corpse from the battle-field.
-
-True, he did say to the king of Israel, "Inquire, I pray thee, at the
-word of the Lord to-day." But where was the use of this, when he had
-already pledged himself to a certain line of action? What folly for
-any one to make up his mind and then go and ask for counsel! Had he
-been in a right state of soul, he never would have sought counsel in
-such a case at all; but his state of soul was bad, his position false,
-and his purpose in direct opposition to the mind and will of God.
-Hence, although he heard, from the lips of Jehovah's messenger, His
-solemn judgment on the entire expedition, yet he took his own way, and
-well-nigh lost his life in consequence.
-
-We see the same thing in the forty-second chapter of Jeremiah. The
-people applied to the prophet to ask counsel as to their going down
-into Egypt; but they had already made up their minds as to their
-course--they were bent on their own will. Miserable condition! Had
-they been meek and humble, they would not have needed to ask counsel
-in the matter; but they said unto Jeremiah the prophet, "'Let, we
-beseech thee, our supplication be accepted before thee, and pray for
-us unto the Lord _thy_ God [Why not say, The Lord _our_ God?] even for
-all this remnant; (for we are left but a few of many, as thine eyes do
-behold us:) that the Lord _thy_ God may show us the way wherein we may
-walk, and the thing that we may do.' Then Jeremiah the prophet said
-unto them, 'I have heard you; behold, I will pray unto the Lord _your_
-God according to your words; and it shall come to pass, that
-whatsoever thing the Lord shall answer you, I will declare it unto
-you; I will keep nothing back from you.' Then they said to Jeremiah,
-'The Lord be a true and faithful witness between us, if we do not even
-according to all things for the which the Lord _thy_ God shall send
-thee to us. Whether it be good, or whether it be evil [How could the
-will of God be aught but good?], we will obey the voice of the Lord
-our God, to whom we send thee; that it may be well with us, when we
-obey the voice of the Lord our God.'"
-
-Now, all this seemed very pious and very promising; but mark the
-sequel. When they found that the judgment and counsel of God did not
-tally with their will, "then spake ... _all the proud men_, saving
-unto Jeremiah, 'Thou speakest falsely: the Lord our God hath not sent
-thee to say, Go not into Egypt to sojourn there.'"
-
-Here, the real state of the case comes clearly out. Pride and
-self-will were at work; their vows and promises were false. "Ye
-dissembled in your hearts," says Jeremiah, "when ye sent me unto the
-Lord your God, saying, 'Pray for us unto the Lord our God; and
-according unto all that the Lord our God shall say, so declare unto
-us, and we will do it.'" It would have been all very well had the
-divine response fallen in with their will in the matter; but inasmuch
-as it ran counter, they rejected it altogether.
-
-How often is this the case! The Word of God does not suit man's
-thoughts; it judges them, it stands in direct opposition to his will,
-it interferes with his plans, and hence he rejects it. The human will
-and human reason are ever in direct antagonism to the Word of God, and
-the Christian must refuse both the one and the other if he really
-desires to be divinely guided. An unbroken will and blind reason, if
-we listen to them, can only lead us into darkness, misery, and
-desolation. Jonah _would_ go to Tarshish, when he ought to have gone
-to Nineveh; and the consequence was that he found himself "in the
-belly of hell," with "the weeds wrapped about his head." Jehoshaphat
-_would_ go to Ramoth-gilead, when he ought to have been at Jerusalem;
-and the consequence was that he found himself surrounded by the swords
-of the Syrians. The remnant, in the days of Jeremiah, _would_ go into
-Egypt, when they ought to have remained at Jerusalem; and the
-consequence was that they died by the sword, by the famine, and by the
-pestilence in the land of Egypt, "whither they _desired_ to go and to
-sojourn."
-
-Thus it must ever be. The path of self-will is sure to be a path of
-darkness and misery; it cannot be otherwise: the path of obedience, on
-the contrary, is a path of peace, a path of light, a path of blessing,
-a path on which the beams of divine favor are ever poured in living
-lustre. It may, to the human eye, seem narrow, rough, and lonely; but
-the obedient soul finds it to be the path of life, peace, and moral
-security. "The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth
-more and more unto the perfect day." Blessed path! May the writer and
-the reader ever be found treading it, with a steady step and earnest
-purpose.
-
-Before turning from this great practical subject of divine guidance
-and human obedience, we must ask the reader to refer, for a few
-moments, to a very beautiful passage in the eleventh chapter of Luke.
-He will find it full of the most valuable instruction.
-
-"The light of the body is the eye: therefore when thine eye is
-single, thy whole body also is full of light; but when thine eye is
-evil, thy body also is full of darkness. Take heed, therefore, that
-the light which is in thee be not darkness. If thy whole body
-therefore be full of light, having no part dark, the whole shall be
-full of light, as when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee
-light." (Ver. 34-36.)
-
-Nothing can exceed the moral force and beauty of this passage. First
-of all, we have the "single eye." This is essential to the enjoyment
-of divine guidance. It indicates a broken will--a heart honestly fixed
-upon doing the will of God. There is no under-current, no mixed
-motive, no personal end in view. There is the one simple desire and
-earnest purpose to do the will of God, whatever that will may be.
-
-Now, when the soul is in this attitude, divine light comes streaming
-in and fills the whole body. Hence it follows that if the body is not
-full of light, the eye is not single; there is some mixed motive;
-self-will or self-interest is at work; we are not upright before God.
-In this case, any light which we profess to have is darkness; and
-there is no darkness so gross or so terrible as that judicial darkness
-which settles down upon the heart governed by self-will while
-professing to have light from God. This will be seen in all its
-horrors by and by in christendom, when "that Wicked shall be revealed,
-whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His mouth, and shall
-destroy with the brightness of His coming; even him, whose coming is
-after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders,
-and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish;
-because _they received not the love of the truth_, that they might be
-saved. And _for this cause_ God shall send them strong delusion, that
-they should believe a lie; that they all might be damned who believed
-not the truth, but _had pleasure in unrighteousness_." (2 Thess. ii.
-8-12.)
-
-How awful is this! How solemnly it speaks to the whole professing
-church! How solemnly it addresses the conscience of both the writer
-and the reader of these lines! Light not acted upon becomes
-darkness.--"If the light which is in thee be darkness, how great is
-that darkness!" But on the other hand, a little light honestly acted
-upon is sure to increase; for "to him that hath shall more be given,"
-and "the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more
-and more unto the perfect day."
-
-This moral progress is beautifully and forcibly set forth in Luke xi.
-36.--"If thy whole body therefore be full of light, having _no part
-dark_"--no chamber kept closed against the heavenly rays--no dishonest
-reserve--the whole moral being laid open, in genuine simplicity, to
-the action of divine light; then "the whole shall be full of light, as
-when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee light." In a word,
-the obedient soul has not only light for his own path, but the light
-shines out, so that others see it, like the bright shining of a
-candle. "Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your
-good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven."
-
-We have a very vivid contrast to all this in the thirteenth chapter of
-Jeremiah.--"Give glory to the Lord your God, _before He cause
-darkness_, and before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains, and
-while ye look for light, He turn it into the shadow of death, and make
-it gross darkness." The way to give glory to the Lord our God is to
-obey His Word. The path of duty is a bright and blessed path; and the
-one who, through grace, treads that path will never stumble on the
-dark mountains. The truly humble, the lowly, the self-distrusting,
-will keep far away from those dark mountains, and walk in that blessed
-path which is ever illuminated by the bright and cheering beams of
-God's approving countenance.
-
-This is the path of the just, the path of heavenly wisdom, the path of
-perfect peace. May we ever be found treading it, beloved reader; and
-let us never, for one moment, forget that it is our high privilege to
-be divinely guided in the most minute details of our daily life. Alas!
-for the one who is not so guided. He will have many a stumble, many a
-fall, many a sorrowful experience. If we are not guided by our
-Father's eye, we shall be like the horse or the mule, which have no
-understanding, whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle,--like
-the horse, impetuously rushing where he ought not, or the mule,
-obstinately refusing to go where he ought. How sad for a Christian to
-be like these! How blessed to move, from day to day, in the path
-marked out for us by our Father's eye!--a path which the vulture's eye
-hath not seen, or the lion's whelp trodden; the path of holy
-obedience; the path in which the meek and lowly will ever be found, to
-their deep joy, and the praise and glory of Him who has opened it for
-them and given them grace to tread it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the remainder of our chapter, Moses rehearses in the ears of the
-people, in language of touching simplicity, the facts connected with
-the appointment of the judges, and the mission of the spies. The
-appointment of the judges, Moses here attributes to his own
-suggestion: the mission of the spies was the suggestion of the people.
-That dear and most honored servant of God felt the burden of the
-congregation too heavy for him; and assuredly it was very heavy;
-though we know well that the grace of God was amply sufficient for the
-demand, and, moreover, that that grace could act as well by one man as
-by seventy.
-
-Still, we can well understand the difficulty felt by "the meekest man
-in all the earth" in reference to the responsibility of so grave and
-important a charge; and truly the language in which he states his
-difficulty is affecting in the highest degree. We feel as though we
-must quote it for the reader.
-
-"And I spake unto you at that time, saying, 'I am not able to bear you
-myself alone [Surely not; what mere mortal could? But God was there
-to be counted upon for exigence of every hour.]: the Lord your God
-hath multiplied you, and, behold, ye are this day as the stars of
-heaven for multitude.' (The Lord God of your fathers make you a
-thousand times so many more as ye are, and bless you, as He hath
-promised you.)" Lovely parenthesis! Exquisite breathing of a large and
-lowly heart! "How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance, and your
-burden, and _your strife_?"
-
-Alas! here lay the secret of much of the "cumbrance" and the "burden."
-They could not agree among themselves,--there were controversies,
-contentions, and questions; and who was sufficient for these things?
-what human shoulder could sustain such a burden? How different it
-might have been with them! Had they walked lovingly together, there
-would have been no cases to decide, and therefore no need of judges to
-decide them. If each member of the congregation had sought the
-prosperity, the interest, and the happiness of his brethren, there
-would have been no "strife," no "cumbrance," no "burden." If each had
-done all that in him lay to promote the common good, how lovely would
-have been the result!
-
-But, ah! it was not so with Israel in the desert; and, what is still
-more humbling, it is not so in the Church of God, although our
-privileges are so much higher. Hardly had the assembly been formed by
-the presence of the Holy Ghost ere the accents of murmuring and
-discontent were heard. And about what? About "neglect," whether
-fancied or real. Whatever way it was, _self_ was at work. If the
-neglect was merely imaginary, the Grecians were to blame; and if it
-was real, the Hebrews were to blame. It generally happens, in such
-cases, that there are faults on both sides; but the true way to avoid
-all strife, contention, and murmuring is to put self in the dust and
-earnestly seek the good of others. Had this excellent way been
-understood and adopted, from the outset, what a different task the
-ecclesiastical historian would have had to perform! But, alas! it has
-not been adopted; and hence the history of the professing church, from
-the very beginning, has been a deplorable and humiliating record of
-controversy, division, and strife. In the very presence of the Lord
-Himself, whose whole life was one of complete self-surrender, the
-apostles disputed about who should be greatest. Such a dispute could
-never have arisen had each known the exquisite secret of putting self
-in the dust and seeking the good of others. No one who knows aught of
-the true moral elevation of self-emptiness could possibly seek a good
-or a great place for himself. Nearness to Christ so satisfies the
-lowly heart, that honors, distinctions, and rewards are little
-accounted of; but where self is at work, there you will have envy and
-jealousy, strife and contention, confusion and every evil work.
-
-Witness the scene between the two sons of Zebedee and their ten
-brethren, in the tenth chapter of Mark. What was at the bottom of it?
-Self. The two were thinking of a good place for themselves in the
-kingdom, and the ten were angry with the two for thinking of any such
-thing. Had each set self aside, and sought the good of others, such a
-scene would never have been enacted,--the two would not have been
-thinking about themselves, and hence there would have been no ground
-for the "indignation" of the ten.
-
-But it is needless to multiply examples. Every age of the church's
-history illustrates and proves the truth of our statement that self
-and its odious workings are the producing cause of strife, contention,
-and division, always. Turn where you will--from the days of the
-apostles down to the days in which our lot is cast, and you will find
-unmortified self to be the fruitful source of strife and schism; and
-on the other hand, you will find that to sink self and its interests
-is the true secret of peace, harmony, and brotherly love. If only we
-learn to set self aside, and seek earnestly the glory of Christ and
-the prosperity of His beloved people, we shall not have many "cases"
-to settle.
-
-We must now return to our chapter.
-
-"How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance, and your burden, and your
-strife? Take you wise men, and understanding, and known among your
-tribes, and I will make them rulers over you. And ye answered me, and
-said, 'The thing which thou hast spoken is good for us to do.' So I
-took the chief of your tribes, _wise_ men, and _known_"--men fitted of
-God, and possessing, because entitled to, the confidence of the
-congregation--"and made them heads over you, captains over thousands,
-and captains over hundreds, and captains over fifties, and captains
-over tens, and officers among your tribes."
-
-Admirable arrangement! If indeed it had to be made, nothing could be
-better adapted to the maintenance of order than the graduated scale of
-authority, varying from the captain of ten to the captain of a
-thousand; the lawgiver himself at the head of all, and he in immediate
-communication with the Lord God of Israel.
-
-We have no allusion here to the fact recorded in Exodus xviii, namely,
-that the appointment of those rulers was at the suggestion of Jethro,
-Moses' father-in-law; neither have we any reference to the scene in
-Numbers xi. We call the reader's attention to this as one of the many
-proofs which lie scattered along the pages of Deuteronomy that it is
-very far indeed from being a mere repetition of the preceding sections
-of the Pentateuch. In short, this delightful book has a marked
-character of its own, and the mode in which facts are presented is in
-perfect keeping with that character. It is very evident that the
-object of the venerable lawgiver, or rather of the Holy Ghost in him,
-was to bring every thing to bear, in a moral way, upon the hearts of
-the people, in order to produce that one grand result which is the
-special object of the book from beginning to end, namely, a loving
-obedience to all the statutes and judgments of the Lord their God.
-
-We must bear this in mind if we would study aright the book which lies
-open before us. Infidels, skeptics, and rationalists may impiously
-suggest to us the thought of discrepancies in the various records
-given in the different books; but the pious reader will reject, with a
-holy indignation, every such suggestion, knowing that it emanates
-directly from the father of lies, the determined and persistent enemy
-of the precious revelation of God. This, we feel persuaded, is the
-true way in which to deal with all infidel assaults upon the Bible.
-Argument is useless, inasmuch as infidels are not in a position to
-understand or appreciate its force; they are profoundly ignorant of
-the matter. Nor is it merely a question of profound ignorance, but of
-determined hostility; so that, in every way, the judgment of all
-infidel writers on the subject of divine inspiration is utterly
-worthless and perfectly contemptible. We would pity and pray for the
-men, while we thoroughly despise and indignantly reject their
-opinions. The Word of God is entirely above and beyond them. It is as
-perfect as its Author, and as imperishable as His throne; but its
-moral glories, its living depths, and its infinite perfections are
-only unfolded to faith and need. "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of
-heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and
-prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes."
-
-If we are only content to be as simple as a babe, we shall enjoy the
-precious revelation of a Father's love, as given by His Spirit in the
-holy Scriptures; but on the other hand, those who fancy themselves
-wise and prudent--who build upon their learning, their philosophy, and
-their reason--who think themselves competent to sit in judgment on the
-Word of God, and hence on God Himself, are given over to judicial
-darkness, blindness, and hardness of heart. Thus it comes to pass that
-the most egregious folly and the most contemptible ignorance that man
-can display will be found in the pages of those learned writers who
-have dared to write against the Bible. "Where is the wise? where is
-the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God made
-foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of God
-the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of
-preaching to save them that believe." (1 Cor. i. 20, 21.)
-
-"If any man will be wise, let him become a fool." Here lies the grand
-moral secret of the matter. Man must get to the end of his own wisdom,
-as well as of his own righteousness. He must be brought to confess
-himself a fool ere he can taste the sweetness of divine wisdom. It is
-not within the range of the most gigantic human intellect, aided by
-all the appliances of human learning and philosophy, to grasp the very
-simplest elements of divine revelation; and therefore, when
-unconverted men, whatever may be the force of their genius or the
-extent of their learning, undertake to handle spiritual subjects, and
-more especially the subject of the divine inspiration of holy
-Scripture, they are sure to exhibit their profound ignorance, and
-utter incompetency to deal with the question before them. Indeed,
-whenever we look into an infidel book, we are struck with the
-feebleness of their most forcible arguments; and not only so, but in
-every instance in which they attempt to find a discrepancy in the
-Bible, we see only divine wisdom, beauty, and perfectness.
-
-We have been led into the foregoing line of thought in connection with
-the subject of the appointment of the elders, which is given to us in
-each book according to the wisdom of the Holy Ghost, and in perfect
-keeping with the scope and object of the book. We shall now proceed
-with our quotation.
-
-"And I charged your judges at that time, saying, 'Hear the causes
-between your brethren, and _judge righteously_ between every man and
-his brother, and _the stranger_ that is with him. _Ye shall not
-respect persons_ in judgment; but _ye shall hear the small as well as
-the great_; _ye shall not be afraid of the face of man_; for the
-judgment is God's; and the cause that is too hard for you, bring it
-unto me, and I will hear it.'"
-
-What heavenly wisdom is here! what even-handed justice! what holy
-impartiality! In every case of difference, all the facts on both sides
-were to be fully heard and patiently weighed. The mind was not to be
-warped by prejudice, predilection, or personal feeling of any kind.
-The judgment was to be formed, not by impressions, but by
-facts--clearly established, undeniable facts. Personal influence was
-to have no weight whatever. The position and circumstances of either
-party in the cause were not to be considered. The case must be
-decided entirely upon its own merits. "Ye shall hear the small as well
-as the great." The poor man was to have the same even-handed justice
-meted out to him as the rich; the stranger as one born in the land. No
-difference was to be allowed.
-
-How important is all this! how worthy of our attentive consideration!
-how full of deep and valuable instruction for us all! True, we are not
-all called to be judges or elders or leaders; but the great moral
-principles laid down in the above quotation are of the very utmost
-value to every one of us, inasmuch as cases are continually occurring
-which call for their direct application. Wherever our lot may be cast,
-whatever our line of life or sphere of action, we are liable, alas! to
-meet with cases of difficulty and misunderstanding between our
-brethren,--cases of wrong, whether real or imaginary; and hence it is
-most needful to be divinely instructed as to how we ought to carry
-ourselves in respect to such.
-
-Now, in all such cases, we cannot be too strongly impressed with the
-necessity of having our judgment based on facts--all the facts on both
-sides. We must not allow ourselves to be guided by our own
-impressions, for we all know that mere impressions are most
-untrustworthy. They may be correct, and they may be utterly false.
-Nothing is more easily received and conveyed than a false impression,
-and therefore any judgment based on mere impressions is worthless. We
-must have solid, clearly established facts--facts established by two
-or three witnesses, as Scripture so distinctly enforces. (Deut. xvii.
-6; Matt. xviii. 16; 2 Cor. xiii. 1; 1 Tim. v. 19.)
-
-But further, we must never be guided in judgment by an _ex parte_
-statement. Every one is liable, even with the best intentions, to give
-a color to his statement of a case. It is not that he would
-intentionally make a false statement, or tell a deliberate lie; but
-through inaccuracy of memory, or one cause or another, he may not
-present the case as it really is. Some fact may be omitted, and that
-one fact may so affect all the other facts as to alter their bearing
-completely. "_Audi alteram partem_" ("Hear the other side") is a
-wholesome motto. And not only hear the other side, but hear all the
-facts on both sides, and thus you will be able to form a sound and
-righteous judgment. We may set it down as a standing rule, that any
-judgment formed without an accurate knowledge of all the facts is
-perfectly worthless. "Hear the causes between your brethren, and judge
-righteously between every man and his brother, and the stranger that
-is with him." Seasonable, needed words, most surely, at all times, in
-all places, and under all circumstances. May we apply our hearts to
-them.
-
-And how important the admonition in verse 17! "Ye shall not respect
-persons in judgment; but ye shall hear the small as well as the great;
-ye shall not be afraid of the face of man." How these words discover
-the poor human heart! How prone we are to respect persons--to be
-swayed by personal influence--to attach importance to position and
-wealth--to be afraid of the face of man!
-
-What is the divine antidote against all these evils? Just this: the
-fear of God. If we set the Lord before us, at all times, it will
-effectually deliver us from the pernicious influence of partiality,
-prejudice, and the fear of men. It will lead us to wait humbly and
-patiently on the Lord for guidance and counsel in all that may come
-before us, and thus we shall be preserved from forming hasty and
-one-sided judgments of men and things--that fruitful source of
-mischief amongst the Lord's people in all ages.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now dwell for a few moments on the very affecting manner in
-which Moses brings before the congregation all the circumstances
-connected with the mission of the spies, which, like the appointment
-of the judges, is in perfect keeping with the scope and object of the
-book. This is only what we might expect. There is not, there could not
-be, a single sentence of useless repetition in the divine volume;
-still less could there be a single flaw, a single discrepancy, a
-single contradictory statement. The Word of God is absolutely
-perfect--perfect as a whole, perfect in all its parts. We must firmly
-hold and faithfully confess this in the face of this infidel age.
-
-We speak not of human translations of the Word of God, in which there
-must be more or less of imperfection; though even here, we cannot but
-be "filled with wonder, love, and praise" when we mark the way in
-which our God so manifestly presided over our excellent English
-translation, so that the poor man at the back of a mountain may be
-assured of possessing, in his common English Bible, the revelation of
-God to his soul. And most surely we are warranted in saying that this
-is just what we might look for at the hands of our God. It is but
-reasonable to infer that the One who inspired the writers of the Bible
-would also watch over the translation of it; for inasmuch as He gave
-it originally, in His grace, to those who could read Hebrew and Greek,
-so would He not, in the same grace, give it in every language under
-heaven? Blessed forever be His holy name, it is His gracious desire to
-speak to every man in the very tongue in which he was born,--to tell
-us the sweet tale of His grace--the glad tidings of salvation in the
-very accents in which our mothers whispered into our infant ears those
-words of love that went right home to our very hearts. (See Acts ii.
-5-8.)
-
-Oh that men were more impressed and affected with the truth and power
-of all this, and then we should not be troubled with so many foolish
-and unlearned questions about the Bible.
-
-Let us now hearken to the account given by Moses of the mission of the
-spies--its origin and its result. We shall find it full of most
-weighty instruction, if only the ear be open to hear and the heart
-duly prepared to ponder.
-
-"And I commanded you at that time all the things which ye should do."
-The path of simple obedience was plainly set before them. They had
-but to tread it with an obedient heart and firm step. They had not to
-reason about consequences, or weigh the results; all these they had
-just to leave in the hands of God, and move on with steady purpose in
-the blessed path of obedience.
-
-"And when we departed from Horeb, we went through all that _great and
-terrible wilderness_, which ye saw by the way of the mountain of the
-Amorites, as the Lord our God commanded us; and we came to
-Kadesh-barnea. And I said unto you, 'Ye are come unto the mountain of
-the Amorites, which the Lord our God doth give unto us. Behold, the
-Lord thy God hath set the land before thee: go up and possess it, as
-the Lord God of thy fathers hath said unto thee; fear not, neither be
-discouraged.'"
-
-Here was their warrant for entering upon immediate possession. The
-Lord their God had given them the land and set it before them. It was
-theirs by His free gift--the gift of His sovereign grace, in pursuance
-of the covenant made with their fathers. It was His eternal purpose to
-possess the land of Canaan through the seed of Abraham His friend.
-This ought to have been enough to set their hearts perfectly at rest,
-not only as to the character of the land, but also as to their
-entrance upon it. There was no need of spies. Faith never wants to spy
-what God has given. It argues that what He has given must be worth
-having, and that He is able to put us in full possession of all that
-His grace has bestowed. Israel might have concluded that the same
-hand that had conducted them "through all that great and terrible
-wilderness" could bring them in and plant them in their destined
-inheritance.
-
-So Faith would have reasoned; for it always reasons from God down to
-circumstances, never from circumstances up to God. "If God be for us,
-who can be against us?" This is Faith's argument, grand in its
-simplicity and simple in its moral grandeur. When God fills the whole
-range of the soul's vision, difficulties are little accounted of. They
-are either not seen, or, if seen, they are viewed as occasions for the
-display of divine power. Faith exults in seeing God triumphing over
-difficulties.
-
-But, alas! the people were not governed by faith on the occasion now
-before us, and therefore they had recourse to spies. Of this Moses
-reminds them, and that, too, in language at once most tender and
-faithful.--"And ye came near unto me, _every one of you_, and said,
-'We will send men before us, and they shall search us out the land,
-and bring us word again, by what way we must go up, and into what
-cities we shall come.'"
-
-Surely, they might well have trusted God for all this. The One who had
-brought them up out of Egypt, made a way for them through the sea,
-guided them through the trackless desert, was fully able to bring them
-into the land. But no; they would send spies, simply because their
-hearts had not simple confidence in the true, the living, the almighty
-God.
-
-Here lay the moral root of the matter; and it is well that the reader
-should thoroughly seize this point. True it is that, in the history
-given in Numbers, the Lord told Moses to send the spies; but why?
-Because of the moral condition of the people. And here we see the
-characteristic difference and yet the lovely harmony of the two books.
-Numbers gives us the public history, Deuteronomy the secret source of
-the mission of the spies; and as it is in perfect keeping with Numbers
-to give us the former, so it is in perfect keeping with Deuteronomy to
-give us the latter. The one is the complement of the other. We could
-not fully understand the subject had we only the history given in
-Numbers. It is the touching commentary given in Deuteronomy which
-completes the picture. How perfect is Scripture! All we need is the
-eye anointed to see and the heart prepared to appreciate its moral
-glories.
-
-It may be, however, that the reader still feels some difficulty in
-reference to the question of the spies. He may feel disposed to ask
-how it could be wrong to send them when the Lord told them to do so.
-The answer is, The wrong was not in the act of sending them when they
-were told, but in the wish to send them at all. The wish was the fruit
-of unbelief, and the command to send them was because of that
-unbelief.
-
-We may see something of the same in the matter of divorce in Matthew
-xix.--"The Pharisees also came unto Him, tempting Him, and saying unto
-Him, 'Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?'
-And He answered and said unto them, 'Have ye not read, that He which
-made them at the beginning made them male and female, and said, For
-this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to
-his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they are no
-more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together,
-let not man put asunder.' They say unto Him, 'Why did Moses, then,
-command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away? He
-saith unto them, 'Moses _because of the hardness of your hearts_
-suffered you to put away your wives; but from the beginning it was not
-so.'"
-
-It was not in keeping with God's original institution, or according to
-His heart, that a man should put away his wife; but, in consequence of
-the hardness of the human heart, divorce was permitted by the
-lawgiver. Is there any difficulty in this? Surely not; unless the
-heart is bent on making one. Neither is there any difficulty in the
-matter of the spies. Israel ought not to have needed them: simple
-faith would never have thought of them. But the Lord saw the real
-condition of things and issued a command accordingly; just as, in
-after ages, He saw the heart of the people bent on having a king, and
-He commanded Samuel to give them one.--"And the Lord said unto Samuel,
-'Hearken unto the voice of the people in all that they say unto thee;
-for they have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me, that I
-should not reign over them. According to all the works which they have
-done since the day that I brought them up out of Egypt even unto this
-day, wherewith they have forsaken Me, and served other gods, so do
-they also unto thee. Now therefore hearken unto their voice: _howbeit
-yet protest solemnly_ unto them, and shew them the manner of the king
-that shall reign over them.'" (1 Sam. viii. 7-9.)
-
-Thus we see that the mere granting of a desire is no proof whatever
-that such desire is according to the mind of God. Israel ought not to
-have asked for a king. Was not Jehovah sufficient? was not He their
-King? could not He, as He had ever done, lead them forth to battle and
-fight for them? Why seek an arm of flesh? why turn away from the
-living, the true, the almighty God to lean on a poor fellow-worm? What
-power was there in a king but that which God might see fit to bestow
-upon him? None whatever. All the power, all the wisdom, all real good,
-was in the Lord their God; and it was there for them--there at all
-times, to meet their every need. They had but to lean upon His
-almighty arm--to draw upon His exhaustless resources, to find all
-their springs in Him.
-
-When they did get a king, according to their hearts' desire, what did
-he do for them? "All the people followed him trembling." The more
-closely we study the melancholy history of Saul's reign, the more we
-see that he was, almost from the very outset, a positive hindrance
-rather than a help. We have but to read his history, from first to
-last, in order to see the truth of this. His whole reign was a
-lamentable failure, aptly and forcibly set forth in two glowing
-sentences of the prophet Hosea,--"I gave thee a king in Mine anger,
-and took him away in My wrath." In a word, he was the answer to the
-unbelief and self-will of the people, and therefore all their
-brilliant hopes and expectations respecting him were most lamentably
-disappointed. He failed to answer the mind of God, and, as a necessary
-consequence, he failed to meet the people's need. He proved himself
-wholly unworthy of the crown and sceptre, and his ignominious fall on
-Mount Gilboa was in melancholy keeping with his whole career.
-
-Now, when we come to consider the mission of the spies, we find it
-too, like the appointment of a king, ending in complete failure and
-disappointment. It could not be otherwise, inasmuch as it was the
-fruit of unbelief. True, God gave them spies, and Moses, with touching
-grace, says, "The saying pleased me well; and I took twelve men of
-you, one of a tribe,"--it was Grace coming down to the condition of
-the people and consenting to a plan which was suited to that
-condition; but this by no means proves that either the plan or the
-condition was according to the mind of God. Blessed be His name, He
-can meet us in our unbelief though He is grieved and dishonored by it.
-He delights in a bold, artless faith; it is the only thing in all this
-world that gives Him His proper place. Hence, when Moses said to the
-people, "Behold, the Lord thy God hath set the land before thee: go up
-and possess it, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath said unto thee;
-fear not, neither be discouraged," what would have been the proper
-response from them? Here we are: lead on, almighty Lord--lead on to
-victory. Thou art enough. With Thee as our leader, we move on with
-joyful confidence. Difficulties are nothing to Thee, and therefore
-they are nothing to us. Thy word and Thy presence are all we want. In
-these we find at once our authority and power. It matters not in the
-least to us who or what may be before us: mighty giants, towering
-walls, frowning bulwarks--what are they all in the presence of the
-Lord God of Israel, but as withered leaves before the whirlwind? Lead
-on, O Lord.
-
-This would have been the language of Faith; but, alas! it was not the
-language of Israel on the occasion before us. God was not sufficient
-for them. They were not prepared to go up, leaning on His arm alone:
-they were not satisfied with His report of the land; they would send
-spies. Any thing for the poor human heart but simple dependence upon
-the one living and true God. The natural man cannot trust God, simply
-because he does not know Him. "They that know Thy name will put their
-trust in Thee."
-
-God must be known, in order to be trusted; and the more fully He is
-trusted, the better He becomes known. There is nothing in all this
-world so truly blessed as a life of simple faith; but it must be a
-reality and not a mere profession. It is utterly vain to talk of
-living by faith, while the heart is secretly resting on some
-creature-prop. The true believer has to do exclusively with God. He
-finds in Him all his resources. It is not that he undervalues the
-instruments or the channels which God is pleased to use; quite the
-reverse. He values them exceedingly; and cannot but value them, as the
-means which God uses for his help and blessing; but he does not allow
-them to displace God. The language of his heart is, "My soul, wait
-thou only upon God; for my expectation is from Him. He _only_ is my
-rock."
-
-There is peculiar force in the word "only." It searches the heart
-thoroughly. To look to the creature, directly or indirectly, for the
-supply of any need, is, in principle, to depart from the life of
-faith; and, oh! it is miserable work, this looking, in any way, to
-creature-streams. It is just as morally degrading as the life of faith
-is morally elevating. And not only is it degrading, but disappointing.
-Creature-props give way, and creature-streams run dry; but they that
-trust in the Lord shall never be confounded, and never want any good
-thing. Had Israel trusted the Lord instead of sending spies, they
-would have had a very different tale to tell; but spies they would
-send, and the whole affair proved a most humiliating failure.
-
-"And they turned, and went up into the mountain, and came unto the
-valley of Eschol, and searched it out. And they took of the fruit of
-the land in their hands, and brought it down unto us, and brought us
-word again, and said, 'It is a good land which the Lord our God doth
-give us.'" How could it possibly be otherwise when God was giving it?
-Did they want spies to tell them that the gift of God was good?
-Assuredly, they ought not. An artless faith would have argued thus:
-Whatever God gives must be worthy of Himself; we want no spies to
-assure us of this. But, ah! this artless faith is an uncommonly rare
-gem in this world; and even those who possess it know but little of
-its value or how to use it. It is one thing to talk of the life of
-faith, and another thing altogether to live it,--the theory is one
-thing, the living reality quite another. But let us never forget that
-it is the privilege of every child of God to live by faith, and,
-further, that the life of faith takes in every thing that the believer
-can possibly need, from the starting-post to the goal of his earthly
-career. We have already touched upon this important point; it cannot
-be too earnestly or constantly insisted upon.
-
-With regard to the mission of the spies, the reader will note with
-interest the way in which Moses refers to it. He confines himself to
-that portion of their testimony which was according to truth; he says
-nothing about the ten infidel spies. This is in perfect keeping with
-the scope and object of the book. Every thing is brought to bear, in a
-moral way, on the conscience of the congregation. He reminds them that
-they themselves had proposed to send the spies; and yet, although the
-spies had placed before them the fruit of the land, and borne
-testimony to its goodness, they would not go up.--"Notwithstanding ye
-would not go up, but rebelled against the commandment of the Lord your
-God." There was no excuse whatever. It was evident that their hearts
-were in a state of positive unbelief and rebellion, and the mission of
-the spies, from first to last, only made this fully manifest.
-
-"And ye murmured in your tents, and said, 'Because the Lord hated
-us'--a terrible lie on the very face of it!--'He hath brought us forth
-out of the land of Egypt, to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites,
-to destroy us.'" What a strange proof of hatred! How utterly absurd
-are the arguments of unbelief! Surely, had He hated them, nothing was
-easier than to leave them to die amid the brick-kilns of Egypt,
-beneath the cruel lash of Pharaoh's taskmasters. Why take so much
-trouble about them? Why those ten plagues sent upon the land of their
-oppressors? Why, if He hated them, did He not allow the waters of the
-Red Sea to overwhelm them as they had overwhelmed their enemies? Why
-had He delivered them from the sword of Amalek? In a word, why all
-these marvelous triumphs of grace on their behalf if He hated them?
-Ah! if they had not been governed by a spirit of dark and senseless
-unbelief, such a brilliant array of evidence would have led them to a
-conclusion the direct opposite of that to which they gave utterance.
-There is nothing beneath the canopy of heaven so stupidly irrational
-as unbelief; and, on the other hand, there is nothing so sound, clear,
-and logical as the simple argument of a childlike faith. May the
-reader ever be enabled to prove the truth of this.
-
-"And ye murmured in your tents." Unbelief is not only a blind and
-senseless reasoner, but a dark and gloomy murmurer. It neither gets
-to the right side of things nor the bright side of things. It is
-always in the dark--always in the wrong, simply because it shuts out
-God, and looks only at circumstances. They said, "Whither shall we go
-up? our brethren have discouraged our hearts, saying, 'The people is
-greater and taller than we'--but they were not greater than
-Jehovah--'and the cities are great and _walled up to heaven_'--the
-gross exaggeration of unbelief--'and moreover we have seen the sons of
-the Anakims there.'"
-
-Now, Faith would say, Well, what though the cities be walled up to
-heaven, our God is above them, for He is _in_ heaven. What are great
-cities or lofty walls to Him who formed the universe, and sustains it
-by the Word of His power? What are Anakims in the presence of the
-almighty God? If the land were covered with walled cities from Dan to
-Beersheba, and if the giants were as numerous as the leaves of the
-forest, they would be as the chaff of the threshing-floor before the
-One who has promised to give the land of Canaan to the seed of
-Abraham, His friend, for an everlasting possession.
-
-But Israel had not faith, as the inspired apostle tells us in the
-third chapter of Hebrews, "They could not enter in because of
-unbelief." Here lay the great difficulty. The walled cities and the
-terrible Anakims would soon have been disposed of had Israel only
-trusted God. He would have made very short work of all these; but, ah!
-that deplorable unbelief! it ever stands in the way of our blessing.
-It hinders the outshining of the glory of God; it casts a dark shadow
-over our souls, and robs us of the privilege of proving the
-all-sufficiency of our God to meet our every need and remove our every
-difficulty.
-
-Blessed be His name, He never fails a trusting heart. It is His
-delight to honor the very largest drafts that Faith hands in at His
-exhaustless treasury. His assuring word to us ever is, "Be not afraid;
-only believe." And again, "According to your faith be it unto you."
-Precious soul-stirring words! may we all realize more fully their
-living power and sweetness. We may rest assured of this, we can never
-go too far in counting on God; it would be a simple impossibility. Our
-grand mistake is that we do not draw more largely upon His infinite
-resources. "Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou
-shouldest see the glory of God?"
-
-Thus we can see why it was that Israel failed to see the glory of God
-on the occasion before us,--they did not believe. The mission of the
-spies proved a complete failure. As it began, so it ended--in the most
-deplorable unbelief. God was shut out: difficulties filled their
-vision.
-
-"They could not enter in." They could not see the glory of God.
-Hearken to the deeply affecting words of Moses. It does the heart good
-to read them. They touch the very deepest springs of our renewed
-being.--"Then I said unto you, 'Dread not, neither be afraid of them.
-The Lord your God which goeth before you, He shall fight for
-you'--only think of God fighting for people! think of Jehovah as a Man
-of war!--'He shall fight for you, according to all that He did for you
-in Egypt before your eyes; and in the wilderness, where thou hast seen
-how that _the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son_, in
-all the way that ye went, until ye came into this place.' Yet in this
-thing _ye did not believe the Lord your God_, who went in the way
-before you, to search you out a place to pitch your tents in, in fire
-by night, to show you by what way ye should go, and in a cloud by
-day."
-
-What moral force, what touching sweetness in this appeal! How clearly
-we can see here, as indeed on every page of the book, that Deuteronomy
-is not a barren repetition of facts, but a most powerful commentary on
-those facts. It is well that the reader should be thoroughly clear as
-to this. If in the book of Exodus or Numbers the inspired lawgiver
-records the actual facts of Israel's wilderness-life, in the book of
-Deuteronomy he comments on those facts with a pathos that quite melts
-the heart. And here it is that the exquisite style of Jehovah's acts
-is pointed out and dwelt upon with such inimitable skill and delicacy.
-Who could consent to give up the lovely figure set forth in the words,
-"As a man doth bear his son"? Here we have the style of the action.
-Could we do without this? Assuredly not. It is the style of an action
-that touches the heart, because it is the style that so peculiarly
-expresses the heart. If the power of the _hand_ or the wisdom of the
-_mind_ is seen in the _substance_ of an action, the love of the
-_heart_ comes out in the _style_. Even a little child can understand
-this, though he might not be able to explain it.
-
-But, alas! Israel could not trust God to bring them into the land.
-Notwithstanding the marvelous display of His power, His faithfulness,
-His goodness, and loving-kindness, from the brick-kilns of Egypt to
-the very borders of the land of Canaan, yet they did not believe. With
-an array of evidence which ought to have satisfied any heart, they
-still doubted. "And the Lord heard the voice of your words, and was
-wroth, and sware, saying, 'Surely there shall not one of these men of
-this evil generation see that good land, which I sware to give unto
-your fathers, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh; he shall see it; and to
-him will I give the land that he hath trodden upon, and to his
-children, because he hath wholly followed the Lord.'"
-
-"Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest
-see the glory of God?" Such is the divine order. Men will tell you
-that seeing is believing, but in the kingdom of God, believing is
-seeing. Why was it that not a man of that evil generation was allowed
-to see the good land? Simply because they did not believe in the Lord
-their God. On the other hand, why was Caleb allowed to see and take
-possession? Simply because he believed. Unbelief is ever the great
-hindrance in the way of our seeing the glory of God.--"He did not many
-mighty works there because of their unbelief." If Israel had only
-believed, only trusted the Lord their God, only confided in the love
-of His heart and in the power of His arm, He would have brought them
-in and planted them in the mountain of His inheritance.
-
-And just so is it with the Lord's people now. There is no limit to the
-blessings which we might enjoy, could we only count more fully upon
-God. "All things are possible to him that believeth." Our God will
-never say, You have drawn too largely; you expect too much.
-Impossible. It is the joy of His loving heart to answer the very
-largest expectations of Faith.
-
-Let us, then, draw largely. "Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it."
-The exhaustless treasury of heaven is thrown open to Faith. "_All
-things_ whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall
-receive." "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth
-to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.
-But let him ask in faith, _nothing wavering_." Faith is the divine
-secret of the whole matter--the main-spring of Christian life from
-first to last. Faith wavers not, staggers not: Unbelief is ever a
-waverer and a staggerer, and hence it never sees the glory of God,
-never sees His power. It is deaf to His voice and blind to His
-actings; it depresses the heart and weakens the hands; it darkens the
-path and hinders all progress. It kept Israel out of the land of
-Canaan for forty years; and we have no conception of the amount of
-blessing, privilege, power and usefulness which we are constantly
-missing through its terrible influence. If faith were in more lively
-exercise in our hearts, what a different condition of things we should
-witness in our midst. What is the secret of the deplorable deadness
-and barrenness throughout the wide field of Christian profession? How
-are we to account for our impoverished condition, our low tone, our
-stunted growth? Why is it that we see such poor results in every
-department of Christian work? Why are there so few genuine
-conversions? Why are our evangelists so frequently cast down by reason
-of the paucity of their sheaves? How are we to answer all these
-questions? what is the cause? Will any one attempt to say it is not
-our unbelief?
-
-No doubt, our divisions have much to do with it; our worldliness, our
-carnality, our self-indulgence, our love of ease. But what is the
-remedy for all these evils? How are our hearts to be drawn out in
-genuine love to all our brethren? By faith, that precious principle
-"that worketh by love." Thus the blessed apostle says to the dear
-young converts at Thessalonica, "Your faith groweth exceedingly." And
-what then? "The love of every one of you all toward each other
-aboundeth." Thus it must ever be. Faith puts us into direct contact
-with the eternal spring of love in God Himself, and the necessary
-consequence is that our hearts are drawn out in love to all who belong
-to Him--all in whom we can, in the very feeblest way, trace His
-blessed image. We cannot possibly be near the Lord and not love all
-who in every place call upon His name out of a pure heart. The nearer
-we are to Christ, the more intensely we must be knit, in true
-brotherly love, to every member of His body.
-
-Then as to worldliness, in all its varied forms, how is it to be
-overcome? Hear the reply of another inspired apostle.--"For whatsoever
-is born of God overcometh the world; and this is the victory that
-overcometh the world, even our faith. Who is he that overcometh the
-world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?" The new
-man, walking in the power of faith, lives above the world, above its
-motives, above its objects, its principles, its habits, its fashions;
-he has nothing in common with it. Though in it, he is not of it; he
-moves right athwart its current; he draws all his springs from heaven;
-his life, his hope, his all is there, and he ardently longs to be
-there himself when his work on earth is done.
-
-Thus we see what a mighty principle faith is. It purifies the heart,
-it works by love, and it overcomes the world. In short, it links the
-heart in living power with God Himself, and this is the secret of true
-elevation, holy benevolence, and divine purity. No marvel, therefore,
-that Peter calls it "precious faith," for truly it is precious beyond
-all human thought.
-
-See how this mighty principle acted in Caleb, and the blessed fruit it
-produced. He was permitted to realize the truth of those words,
-uttered hundreds of years afterwards, "According to your faith be it
-unto you." He believed that God was able to bring them into the land,
-and that all the difficulties and hindrances were simply bread for
-faith. And God, as He ever does, answered his faith. "Then the
-children of Judah came unto Joshua in Gilgal; and Caleb the son of
-Jephunneh the Kenezite said unto him, 'Thou knowest the thing that the
-Lord said unto Moses the man of God concerning me and thee in
-Kadesh-barnea. Forty years old was I when Moses the servant of the
-Lord sent me from Kadesh-barnea to espy out the land; and I brought
-him word again as it was in my heart'--the simple testimony of a
-bright and lovely faith.--'Nevertheless my brethren that went up with
-me made the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed the Lord
-my God. And Moses sware on that day, saying, Surely the land whereon
-thy feet have trodden shall be thine inheritance, and thy children's
-forever, because thou hast wholly followed the Lord my God. And now,
-behold, the Lord hath kept me alive, _as He said_, these forty and
-five years, ever since the Lord spake this word unto Moses, while the
-children of Israel wandered in the wilderness; and now, lo, I am this
-day fourscore and five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as I
-was in the day that Moses sent me; as my strength was then, even so is
-my strength now, for war, both to go out, and to come in. Now
-therefore give me this mountain, whereof the Lord spake in that day;
-for thou heardest in that day how the Anakims were there, and that the
-cities were great and fenced: if so be the Lord will be with me, then
-I shall be able to drive them out, as the Lord said.'"
-
-How refreshing are the utterances of an artless faith! How edifying!
-how truly encouraging! How vividly they contrast with the gloomy,
-depressing, withering accents of dark, God-dishonoring unbelief! "And
-Joshua blessed him, and gave unto Caleb the son of Jephunneh Hebron
-for an inheritance. Hebron therefore became the inheritance of Caleb
-the son of Jephunneh the Kenezite unto this day, because that he
-wholly followed the Lord God of Israel." (Joshua xiv.) Caleb, like his
-father Abraham, was strong in faith, giving glory to God; and we may
-say, with all possible confidence, that inasmuch as faith ever honors
-God, He ever delights to honor faith; and we feel persuaded that if
-only the Lord's people could more fully confide in God, if they would
-but draw more largely upon His infinite resources, we should witness a
-totally different condition of things from what we see around us.
-"Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest
-see the glory of God?" Oh for a more lively faith in God--a bolder
-grasp of His faithfulness, His goodness, and His power! Then we might
-look for more glorious results in the gospel-field; more zeal, more
-energy, more intense devotedness in the Church of God; and more of the
-fragrant fruits of righteousness in the life of believers
-individually.
-
-We shall now, for a moment, look at the closing verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find some very weighty instruction. And,
-first of all, we see the actings of divine government displayed in a
-most solemn and impressive manner. Moses refers, in a very touching
-way, to the fact of his exclusion from the promised land.--"Also the
-Lord was angry with me _for your sakes_, saying, 'Thou also shalt not
-go in thither.'"
-
-Mark the words, "for your sakes." It was very needful to remind the
-congregation that it was on their account that Moses, that beloved and
-honored servant of the Lord, was prevented from crossing the Jordan,
-and setting his foot upon the land of Canaan. True, "he spake
-unadvisedly with his lips," but "they provoked his spirit" to do so.
-This ought to have touched them to the quick. They not only failed,
-through unbelief, to enter in themselves, but they were the cause of
-his exclusion, much as he longed to see "that goodly mountain and
-Lebanon." (See Ps. cvi. 32.)
-
-But the government of God is a grand and awful reality. Let us never
-for one moment forget this. The human mind may marvel why a few
-ill-advised words, a few hasty sentences, should be the cause of
-keeping such a beloved and honored servant of God from that which he
-so ardently desired; but it is our place to bow the head in humble
-adoration and holy reverence, not to reason or judge. "Shall not the
-Judge of all the earth do right?" Most surely. He can make no mistake.
-"Great and marvelous are Thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true
-are Thy ways, Thou King of nations." "God is greatly to be feared in
-the assembly of the saints; and to be had in reverence of all them
-that are about Him." "Our God is a consuming fire;" and "it is a
-fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God."
-
-Does it in any wise interfere with the action and range of the divine
-government that we, as Christians, are under the reign of grace? By no
-means. It is as true to-day as ever it was that "whatsoever _a man_
-soweth, that shall he also reap." Hence, therefore, it would be a
-serious mistake for any one to draw a plea from the freedom of divine
-grace to trifle with the enactments of divine government. The two
-things are perfectly distinct, and should never be confounded. Grace
-can pardon--freely, fully, eternally; but the wheels of Jehovah's
-governmental chariot roll on, in crushing power and appalling
-solemnity. Grace pardoned Adam's sin; but Government drove him out of
-Eden, to earn a living by the sweat of his brow, amid the thorns and
-thistles of a cursed earth: Grace pardoned David's sin, but the sword
-of Government hung over his house to the end,--Bathsheba was the
-mother of Solomon, but Absalom rose in rebellion.
-
-So with Moses; Grace brought him to the top of Pisgah and showed him
-the land, but Government sternly and absolutely forbad his entrance
-thither. Nor does it in the least touch this weighty principle to be
-told that Moses, in his official capacity as the representative of the
-legal system, could not bring the people into the land. This is quite
-true; but it leaves wholly untouched the solemn truth now before us.
-Neither in the twentieth chapter of Numbers nor in the first chapter
-of Deuteronomy have we any thing about Moses in his official capacity.
-It is himself personally we have before us, and he is forbidden to
-enter the land because of having spoken unadvisedly with his lips.
-
-It will be well for us all to ponder deeply, as in the immediate
-presence of God, this great practical truth. We may rest assured that
-the more truly we enter into the knowledge of grace, the more we shall
-feel the solemnity of government, and entirely justify its enactments.
-Of this we are most fully persuaded. But there is imminent danger of
-taking up, in a light and careless manner, the doctrines of grace
-while the heart and the life are not brought under the sanctifying
-influence of those doctrines. This has to be watched against with holy
-jealousy. There is nothing in all this world more awful than mere
-fleshly familiarity with the theory of salvation by grace. It opens
-the door for every form of licentiousness. Hence it is that we feel
-the necessity of pressing upon the conscience of the reader the
-practical truth of the government of God. It is most salutary at all
-times, but particularly so in this our day, when there is such a
-fearful tendency to turn the grace of our God into lasciviousness. We
-shall invariably find that those who most fully enter into the deep
-blessedness of being under the reign of grace, do also most
-thoroughly justify the actings of divine government.
-
-But we learn, from the closing lines of our chapter, that the people
-were by no means prepared to submit themselves under the governmental
-hand of God; in short, they would neither have grace nor government.
-When invited to go up at once and take possession of the land, with
-the fullest assurances of the divine presence and power with them,
-they hesitated and refused to go. They gave themselves up completely
-to a spirit of dark unbelief. In vain did Joshua and Caleb sound in
-their ears the most encouraging words, in vain did they set before
-their eyes the rich fruit of the goodly land, in vain did Moses seek
-to move them by the most soul-stirring words; they would not go up
-when they were told to go. And what then? They were taken at their
-word. According to their unbelief, so was it unto them. "Moreover,
-your little ones, which ye said should be a prey, and your children,
-which in that day had no knowledge between good and evil, they shall
-go in thither, and unto them will I give it, and they shall possess
-it. But as for you, turn you, and take your journey into the
-wilderness, by the way of the Red Sea."
-
-How sad! and yet how else could it be? If they would not, in simple
-faith, go up into the land, there remained nothing for them but
-turning back into the wilderness. But to this they would not submit.
-They would neither avail themselves of the provisions of grace nor bow
-to the sentence of judgment.--"Then ye answered and said unto me, 'We
-have sinned against the Lord; we will go up and fight, according to
-all that the Lord our God commanded us.' And when ye had girded on
-every man his weapon of war, ye were ready to go up into the hill."
-
-This looked like contrition and self-judgment; but it was hollow and
-false. It is a very easy thing to _say_, "We have sinned." Saul said
-it in his day; but he said it without heart, without any genuine sense
-of what he was saying. We may easily gather the force and value of the
-words "I have sinned" from the fact that they were immediately
-followed by "_Honor me_ now, I pray thee, before the elders of my
-people." What a strange contradiction!--"I have sinned," yet "Honor
-me." If he had really felt his sin, how different his language would
-have been! how different his spirit, style, and deportment! but it was
-all a solemn mockery. Only conceive a man full of himself, making use
-of a form of words, without one atom of true heart-feeling; and then,
-in order to get honor for himself, going through the empty formality
-of worshiping God. What a picture! Can any thing be more sorrowful?
-How terribly offensive to Him who desires truth in the inward parts,
-and who seeks those to worship Him who worship Him in spirit and in
-truth! The feeblest breathings of a broken and contrite heart are
-precious to God; but, oh, how offensive to Him are the hollow
-formalities of a mere religiousness, the object of which is to exalt
-man in his own eyes and in the eyes of his fellows! How perfectly
-worthless is the mere lip-confession of sin where the heart does not
-feel it! As a recent writer has well remarked, "it is an easy thing to
-say, 'We have sinned,' but how often we have to learn that it is not
-the quick, abrupt confession of sin which affords evidence that sin is
-felt! It is rather a proof of hardness of heart. The conscience feels
-that a certain act of confessing the sin is necessary, but perhaps
-there is hardly any thing which more hardens the heart than the habit
-of confessing sin without feeling it. This, I believe, is one of the
-great snares of christendom from of old and now, that is, the
-stereotyped acknowledgment of sin--the mere habit of hurrying through
-a formula of confession to God. I dare say we have almost all done so,
-without referring to any particular mode; for, alas! there is
-formality enough; and without having written forms, the heart may
-frame forms of its own, as we may have observed, if not known it, in
-our own experience, without finding fault with other people."[4]
-
- [4] "Lectures Introductory to the Pentateuch," by W. Kelly.
-
-Thus it was with Israel at Kadesh. Their confession of sin was utterly
-worthless; there was no truth in it. Had they felt what they were
-saying, they would have bowed to the judgment of God, and meekly
-accepted the consequence of their sin. There is no finer proof of true
-contrition than quiet submission to the governmental dealings of God.
-Look at the case of Moses. See how he bowed his head to the divine
-discipline. "The Lord," he says, "was angry with me for your sakes,
-saying, 'Thou also shalt not go in thither. But Joshua the son of Nun,
-which standeth before thee, he shall go in thither: encourage him; for
-he shall cause Israel to inherit it.'"
-
-Here, Moses shows them that they were the cause of his exclusion from
-the land; and yet he utters not a single murmuring word, but meekly
-bows to the divine judgment, not only content to be superseded by
-another, but ready to appoint and encourage his successor. There is no
-trace of jealousy or envy here. It was enough for that beloved and
-honored servant if God was glorified and the need of the congregation
-met. He was not occupied with himself or his own interests, but with
-the glory of God and the blessing of His people.
-
-But the people manifested a very different spirit. "We will go up and
-fight." How vain! How foolish! When commanded by God and encouraged by
-His true-hearted servants to go up and possess the land, they replied,
-"Whither shall we go up?" and when commanded to turn back into the
-wilderness, they replied, "We will go up and fight."
-
-"And the Lord said unto me, 'Say unto them, Go not up, neither fight;
-for I am not among you; lest ye be smitten before your enemies.' So I
-spake unto you; and ye would not hear, but rebelled against the
-commandment of the Lord, and went presumptuously up into the hill. And
-the Amorites, which dwelt in that mountain, came out against you, and
-chased you, as bees do, and destroyed you in Seir, even unto Hormah."
-
-It was quite impossible for Jehovah to accompany them along the path
-of self-will and rebellion; and, most assuredly, Israel, without the
-divine presence, could be no match for the Amorites. If God be for us
-and with us, all must be victory; but we cannot count on God if we are
-not treading the path of obedience. It is simply the height of folly
-to imagine that we can have God with us if our ways are not right.
-"The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous runneth into it
-and is safe." But if we are not walking in practical righteousness, it
-is wicked presumption to talk of having the Lord as our strong tower.
-
-Blessed be His name, He can meet us in the very depths of our weakness
-and failure, provided there be the genuine and hearty confession of
-our true condition; but to assume that we have the Lord with us while
-we are doing our own will and walking in palpable unrighteousness, is
-nothing but wickedness and hardness of heart. "Trust in the Lord, and
-do good"--this is the divine order; but to talk of trusting in the
-Lord while doing evil, is to turn the grace of our God into
-lasciviousness, and place ourselves completely in the hands of the
-devil, who only seeks our moral ruin. "The eyes of the Lord run to and
-fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong in the behalf
-of them whose heart is perfect toward Him." When we have a good
-conscience, we can lift up the head and move on through all sorts of
-difficulties; but to attempt to tread the path of faith with a bad
-conscience, is the most dangerous thing in this world. We can only
-hold up the shield of faith when our loins are girt with truth, and
-the breast covered with the breastplate of righteousness.
-
-It is of the utmost importance that Christians should seek to maintain
-practical righteousness, in all its branches. There is immense moral
-weight and value in these words of the blessed apostle Paul, "Herein
-do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offense
-toward God and men." He ever sought to wear the breastplate, and to be
-clothed in that white linen which is the righteousness of saints. And
-so should we. It is our holy privilege to tread, day by day, with firm
-step, the path of duty, the path of obedience, the path on which the
-light of God's approving countenance ever shines; then, assuredly, we
-can count on God, lean upon Him, draw from Him, find all our springs
-in Him, wrap ourselves up in His faithfulness, and thus move on, in
-peaceful communion and holy worship, toward our heavenly home.
-
-It is not, we repeat, that we cannot look to God in our weakness, our
-failure, and even when we have erred and sinned. Blessed be His name,
-we can; and His ear is ever open to our cry. "If we confess our sins,
-He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from
-all unrighteousness." (1 John i.) "Out of the depths have I cried unto
-thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice: let Thine ears be attentive to the
-voice of my supplications. If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O
-Lord, who shall stand? But there is forgiveness with Thee, that Thou
-mayest be feared." (Ps. cxxx.) There is absolutely no limit to divine
-forgiveness, inasmuch as there is no limit to the extent of the
-atonement, no limit to the virtue and efficacy of the blood of Jesus
-Christ, God's Son, which cleanseth from all sin; no limit to the
-prevalency of the intercession of our adorable Advocate, our great
-High-Priest, who is able to save to the uttermost--right through and
-through to the end--them that come unto God by Him.
-
-All this is most blessedly true; it is largely taught and variously
-illustrated throughout the volume of inspiration; but the confession
-of sin, and the pardon thereof, must not be confounded with practical
-righteousness. There are two distinct conditions in which we may call
-upon God: we may call upon Him in deep contrition and be heard, or we
-may call upon Him with a good conscience and an uncondemning heart and
-be heard. But the two things are very distinct; and not only are they
-distinct in themselves, but they both stand in marked contrast with
-that indifference and hardness of heart which would presume to count
-on God in the face of positive disobedience and practical
-unrighteousness. It is this which is so dreadful in the sight of the
-Lord, and which must bring down His heavy judgment. Practical
-righteousness He owns and approves; confessed sin He can freely and
-fully pardon; but to imagine that we can put our trust in God while
-our feet are treading the path of iniquity, is nothing short of the
-most shocking impiety. "Trust ye not in lying words, saying, The
-temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord,
-are these. For if ye throughly amend your ways and your doings; if ye
-throughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor; if ye
-oppress not the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, and shed not
-innocent blood in this place, neither walk after other gods to your
-hurt: then will I cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I
-gave to your fathers, forever and ever. Behold, ye trust in lying
-words, that cannot profit. Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery,
-and swear falsely, and burn incense unto Baal, and walk after other
-gods whom ye know not; and come and stand before Me in this house,
-which is called by My name, and say, 'We are delivered to do all these
-abominations?'" (Jeremiah vii.)
-
-God deals in moral realities. He desires truth in the inward parts;
-and if men will presume to hold the truth in unrighteousness, they
-must look out for His righteous judgment. It is the thought of all
-this that makes us feel the awful condition of the professing church.
-The solemn passage which we have just culled from the prophet
-Jeremiah, though bearing primarily upon the men of Judah and the
-inhabitants of Jerusalem, has a very pointed application to
-christendom. We find, in the third chapter of 2 Timothy, that all the
-abominations of heathenism, as detailed in the close of Romans i, are
-reproduced in the last days under the garb of the Christian
-profession, and in immediate connection with "a form of godliness."
-What must be the end of such a condition of things? Unmitigated wrath.
-The very heaviest judgments of God are reserved for that vast mass of
-baptized profession which we call christendom. The moment is rapidly
-approaching when all the beloved and blood-bought people of God shall
-be called away out of this dark and sinful, though so-called
-"Christian world," to be forever with the Lord, in that sweet home of
-love prepared in the Father's house. Then the "strong delusion" shall
-be sent upon christendom--upon those very countries where the light of
-a full-orbed Christianity has shone, where a full and free gospel has
-been preached, where the Bible has been circulated by millions, and
-where all, in some way or another, profess the name of Christ and call
-themselves Christians.
-
-And what then?--what is to follow this "strong delusion"? Any fresh
-testimony? any further overtures of mercy? any further effort of
-long-suffering grace? Not for christendom! not for the rejecters of
-the gospel of God! not for Christless, Godless professors of the
-hollow and worthless forms of Christianity! The heathen shall hear
-"the everlasting gospel"--"the gospel of the kingdom;" but as for that
-terrible thing, that most frightful anomaly called christendom--"the
-vine of the earth," nothing remains but the wine-press of the wrath
-of Almighty God, the blackness and darkness forever, the lake that
-burneth with fire and brimstone.
-
-Reader, these are the true sayings of God. Nothing would be easier
-than to place before your eyes an array of Scripture proof perfectly
-unanswerable: this would be foreign to our present object. The New
-Testament, from cover to cover, sets forth the solemn truth above
-enunciated; and every system of theology under the sun that teaches
-differently will be found, on this point at least, to be totally
-false.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-The closing lines of chapter i. show us the people weeping before the
-Lord.--"And ye returned and wept before the Lord; but the Lord would
-not hearken to your voice, nor give ear unto you. So ye abode in
-Kadesh many days, according unto the days that ye abode there."
-
-There was no more reality in their tears than in their words,--their
-weeping was no more to be trusted than their confession. It is
-possible for people to confess and shed tears without any true sense
-of sin in the presence of God. This is very solemn. It is really
-mocking God. We know, blessed forever be His name, that a truly
-contrite heart is His delight. He makes His abode with such. "The
-sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart,
-O God, Thou wilt not despise." The tears that flow from a penitent
-heart are more precious, by far, to God than the cattle upon a
-thousand hills, because they prove that there is room in that heart
-for Him; and this is what He seeks, in His infinite grace. He wants to
-dwell in our hearts, and fill us with the deep, unspeakable joy of His
-own most blessed presence.
-
-But Israel's confession and tears at Kadesh were not real, and hence
-the Lord could not accept them. The feeblest cry of a broken heart
-ascends directly to the throne of God, and is immediately answered by
-the soothing, healing balm of His pardoning love; but when tears and
-confession stand connected with self-will and rebellion, they are not
-only utterly worthless, but a positive insult to the divine Majesty.
-
-Thus, then, the people had to turn back into the wilderness, and
-wander there for forty years. There was nothing else for it. They
-would not go up into the land, in simple faith, with God, and He would
-not go up with them in their self-will and self-confidence; they had,
-therefore, simply to accept the consequence of their disobedience. If
-they would not enter the land, they must fall in the wilderness.
-
-How solemn is all this! and how solemn is the Spirit's commentary upon
-it in the third chapter of Hebrews! and how pointed and forcible the
-application to us! We must quote the passage for the benefit of the
-reader.--"Wherefore, as the Holy Ghost saith, 'To-day if ye will hear
-His voice, harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in the day
-of temptation in the wilderness; when your fathers tempted Me, proved
-Me, and saw My works forty years. Wherefore I was grieved with that
-generation, and said, They do alway err _in heart_; and they have not
-known My ways. So I sware in My wrath, They shall not enter into My
-rest.' Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart
-of unbelief, in departing from the living God. But exhort one another
-daily, while it is called 'To-day;' lest any of you be hardened
-through the deceitfulness of sin. For we are made partakers of Christ,
-if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end;
-while it is said, 'To-day if ye will hear His voice, harden not your
-hearts, as in the provocation. For some, when they had heard, did
-provoke; howbeit not all that came out of Egypt by Moses. But with
-whom was He grieved forty years? was it not with them that had sinned,
-whose carcases fell in the wilderness? And to whom sware He that they
-should not enter into His rest, but to them that believed not? So we
-see that they could not enter in because of unbelief. Let us therefore
-fear, lest, a promise being left us of entering into His rest, any of
-you should seem to come short of it. For unto us was the gospel
-preached, as well as unto them; but the word preached did not profit
-them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard."
-
-Here, as in every page of the inspired volume, we learn that unbelief
-is _the_ thing that grieves the heart and dishonors the name of God;
-and not only so, but it robs us of the blessings, the dignities, and
-the privileges which infinite grace bestows. We have very little idea
-of how much we lose, in every way, through the unbelief of our hearts.
-Just as in Israel's case the land was before them, in all its
-fruitfulness and beauty, and they were commanded to go and take
-possession, but "they could not enter in because of unbelief;" so with
-us--we fail to possess ourselves of the fullness of blessing which
-sovereign grace has put within our reach. The very treasury of heaven
-is thrown open to us, but we fail to appropriate. We are poor, feeble,
-empty, and barren when we might be rich, vigorous, full, and fruitful.
-We are blessed with all spiritual blessings in the heavenlies in
-Christ, but how shallow is our apprehension! how feeble our grasp! how
-poor our thoughts!
-
-Then, again, who can calculate how much we lose, through our unbelief,
-in the matter of the Lord's work in our midst? We read in the gospel
-of a certain place in which our blessed Lord could not do many mighty
-works, because of their unbelief. Has this no voice for us? Do we too
-hinder Him by unbelief? We shall perhaps be told by some that the Lord
-will carry on His work irrespective of us or our faith; He will gather
-out His own and accomplish the number of His elect spite of our
-unbelief. Not all the power of earth and hell--men and devils combined
-can hinder the carrying out of His counsels and purposes; and as to
-His work, It is not by might nor by power, but by His Spirit. Human
-efforts are in vain; and the Lord's cause can never be furthered by
-Nature's excitement.
-
-Now, all this is perfectly true; but it leaves wholly untouched the
-inspired statement quoted above. "He could there do not many mighty
-works, because of their unbelief." Did not those people lose blessing
-through their unbelief? did they not hinder much good being done? We
-must beware how we surrender our minds to the withering influence of a
-pernicious fatalism, which, with a certain semblance of truth, is
-utterly false, inasmuch as it denies all human responsibility and
-paralizes all godly energy in the cause of Christ. We have to bear in
-mind that the same One who, in His eternal counsels, has decreed the
-end, has also designed the means; and if we, in the sinful unbelief of
-our hearts and under the influence of one-sided truth, fold our arms
-and neglect the means, He will set us aside and carry on His work by
-other hands. He will work, blessed be His holy name, but we shall lose
-the dignity, the privilege, and the blessing of being His instruments.
-
-Look at that striking scene in the second of Mark. It most forcibly
-illustrates the great principle which we desire to press upon all who
-may read these lines. It proves the power of faith, in connection with
-the carrying on of the Lord's work. If the four men whose conduct is
-here set forth had suffered themselves to be influenced by a
-mischievous fatalism, they would have argued that it was no use doing
-any thing--if the palsied man was to be cured he would be cured,
-without human effort. Why should they busy themselves in climbing up
-on the house, uncovering the roof, and letting down the sick man into
-the midst before Jesus? Ah, it was well for the palsied man and well
-for themselves that they did not act on such miserable reasoning as
-this. See how their lovely faith wrought. It refreshed the heart of
-the Lord Jesus; it brought the sick man into the place of healing,
-pardon, and blessing; and it gave occasion for the display of divine
-power, which arrested the attention of all present and gave testimony
-to the great truth that God was on earth, in the Person of Jesus of
-Nazareth, healing diseases and forgiving sins.
-
-Many other examples might be adduced, but there in no need. All
-Scripture establishes the fact that unbelief hinders our blessing,
-hinders our usefulness, robs us of the rare privilege of being God's
-honored instruments in the carrying on of His glorious work, and of
-seeing the operations of His hand and His Spirit in our midst; and, on
-the other hand, that faith draws down power and blessing, not only for
-ourselves, but for others,--that it both glorifies and gratifies God,
-by clearing the platform of the creature and making room for the
-display of divine power. In short, there is no limit to the blessing
-which we might enjoy at the hand of our God if our hearts were more
-governed by that simple faith which ever counts on Him, and which He
-ever delights to honor. "According to your faith, be it unto you."
-Precious soul-stirring words! May they encourage us to draw more
-largely upon those exhaustless resources which we have in God. He
-delights to be used, blessed forever be His holy name. His word to us
-is, "Open thy mouth _wide_, and I will fill it." We can never expect
-too much from the God of all grace, who has given us His only begotten
-Son, and will with Him freely give us all things.
-
-But Israel could not trust God to bring them into the land; they
-presumed to go in their own strength, and, as a consequence, were put
-to flight before their enemies. Thus it must ever be. Presumption and
-faith are two totally different things: the former can only issue in
-defeat and disaster; the latter, in sure and certain victory.
-
-"Then we turned and took our journey into the wilderness, by the way
-of the Red Sea, as the Lord spake unto me; and we compassed Mount Seir
-many days." There is great moral beauty in the little word "_we_."
-Moses links himself thoroughly with the people. He and Joshua and
-Caleb had all to turn back into the wilderness, in company with the
-unbelieving congregation. This might, in the judgment of nature, seem
-hard; but we may rest assured it was good and profitable. There is
-always deep blessing in bowing to the will of God, even though we may
-not always be able to see the why and the wherefore of things. We do
-not read of a single murmuring word from these honored servants of God
-at having to turn back into the wilderness for forty years, although
-they were quite ready to go up into the land. No; they simply turned
-back. And well they might, when Jehovah turned back also. How could
-they think of complaining, when they beheld the traveling-chariot of
-the God of Israel facing round to the wilderness? Surely the patient
-grace and long-suffering mercy of God might well teach them to accept,
-with a willing mind, a protracted sojourn in the wilderness, and to
-wait for the blessed moment of entrance upon the promised land.
-
-It is a great thing always to submit ourselves meekly under the hand
-of God. We are sure to reap a rich harvest of blessing from the
-exercise. It is really taking the yoke of Christ upon us, which, as He
-Himself assures us, is the true secret of rest. "Come unto Me, all ye
-that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke
-upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye
-shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My burden is
-light."
-
-What was this yoke? It was absolute and complete subjection to the
-Father's will. This we see in perfection in our adorable Lord and
-Saviour Jesus Christ. He could say, "Even so, Father; for so it seemed
-good in Thy sight." Here was the point with Him--"good in Thy sight."
-This settled every thing. Was His testimony rejected? did He seem to
-labor in vain, and spend His strength for naught and in vain? What
-then? "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth." It was all
-right. Whatever pleased the Father, pleased Him. He never had a
-thought or wish that was not in perfect consonance with the will of
-God. Hence He, as a man, ever enjoyed perfect rest. He rested in the
-divine counsels and purposes. The current of His peace was unruffled,
-from first to last.
-
-This was the yoke of Christ; and this is what He, in His infinite
-grace, invites us to take upon us, in order that we too may find rest
-unto our souls. Let us mark and seek to understand the words, "ye
-shall _find_ rest." We must not confound the "rest" which _He gives_
-with the "rest" which we find. When the weary, burdened, heavy-laden
-soul comes to Jesus in simple faith, He gives rest--settled rest--the
-rest which flows from the full assurance that all is done,--sins
-forever put away; perfect righteousness accomplished, revealed, and
-possessed; every question divinely and eternally settled; God
-glorified; Satan silenced; conscience tranquillized.
-
-Such is the rest which Jesus gives when we come to Him. But then we
-have to move through the scenes and circumstances of our daily life.
-There are trials, difficulties, exercises, buffetings, disappointments,
-and reverses of all sorts. None of these can, in the smallest degree,
-touch the rest which Jesus gives; but they may very seriously
-interfere with the rest which we are to find. They do not trouble the
-conscience, but they may greatly trouble the heart; they may make us
-very restless, very fretful, very impatient. For instance, I want to
-preach at Glasgow; I am announced to do so; but lo! I am shut up in a
-sick-room in London. This does not trouble my conscience, but it may
-greatly trouble my heart; I may be in a perfect fever of restlessness,
-ready to exclaim, How tiresome! How terribly disappointing! Whatever
-am I to do? It is most untoward!
-
-And how is this state of things to be met? How is the troubled heart
-to be tranquillized, and the restless mind to be calmed down? What do
-I want? I want to find rest; how am I to find it? By stooping down and
-taking Christ's precious yoke upon me--the very yoke which He Himself
-ever wore, in the days of His flesh--the yoke of complete subjection
-to the will of God. I want to be able to say, without one atom of
-reserve--to say from the very depths of my heart, "Thy will, O Lord,
-be done." I want such a profound sense of His perfect love to me, and
-of His infinite wisdom in all His dealings with me, that I would not
-have it otherwise if I could--yea, that I would not move a finger to
-alter my position or circumstances, feeling assured that it is very
-much better for me to be suffering on a sick-bed in London than
-speaking on a platform in Glasgow.
-
-Here lies the deep and precious secret of rest of heart, as opposed to
-restlessness. It is the simple ability to thank God for every thing,
-be it ever so contrary to our own will and utterly subversive of our
-own plans. It is not a mere assent to the truth that "all things work
-together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called
-according to His purpose;" it is the positive sense--the actual
-realization of the divine fact that the thing which God appoints is
-the very best thing for us; it is perfect repose in the love, wisdom,
-power, and faithfulness of the One who has graciously undertaken for
-us in every thing, and charged Himself with all that concerns us for
-time and eternity. We know that love will always do its very best for
-its object. What must it be to have God doing His very best for us?
-Where is the heart that would not be satisfied with God's best if only
-it knows aught of Him?
-
-But He must be known ere the heart can be satisfied with His will.
-Eve, in the garden of Eden, beguiled by the serpent, became
-dissatisfied with the will of God. She _wished_ for something which He
-had forbidden, and this something the devil undertook to supply. She
-thought the devil could do better for her than God. She thought to
-better her circumstances by taking herself out of the hands of God and
-placing herself in the hands of Satan. Hence it is that no unrenewed
-heart can ever, by any possibility, rest in the will of God. If we
-search the human heart to the bottom, if we submit it to a faithful
-analysis, we shall not find so much as a single thought in unison with
-the will of God--no, not one. And even in the case of the true
-Christian--the child of God, it is only as he is enabled, by the grace
-of God, to mortify his own will, to reckon himself dead, and to walk
-in the Spirit, that he can delight in the will of God, and give thanks
-in every thing. It is one of the very finest evidences of the new
-birth to be able, without a single shade of reserve, to say, in
-respect to every dealing of the hand of God, "Thy will be done." "Even
-so, Father; for so it seemed good in Thy sight." When the heart is in
-this attitude, Satan can make nothing of it. It is a grand point to be
-able to tell the devil and to tell the world--tell them, not in word
-and in tongue, but in deed and in truth; not merely with the lips, but
-in the heart and the life--_I am perfectly satisfied with the will of
-God_.
-
-This is the way to find rest. Let us see that we understand it. It is
-the divine remedy for that unrest, that spirit of discontent, that
-dissatisfaction with our appointed lot and sphere, so sadly prevalent
-on all hands. It is a perfect cure for that restless ambition so
-utterly opposed to the mind and spirit of Christ, but so entirely
-characteristic of the men of this world.
-
-May we, beloved reader, cultivate, with holy diligence, that meek and
-lowly spirit which is, in the sight of God, of great price, which bows
-to His blessed will in all things, and vindicates His dealings, come
-what may. Thus shall our peace flow as a river, and the name of our
-Lord Jesus Christ shall be magnified in our course, character, and
-conduct.
-
-Ere turning from the deeply interesting and practical subject which
-has been engaging our attention, we would observe that there are three
-distinct attitudes in which the soul may be found in reference to the
-dealings of God, namely, subjection, acquiescence, and rejoicing. When
-the will is broken, there is subjection; when the understanding is
-enlightened as to the divine object, there is acquiescence; and when
-the affections are engaged with God Himself, there is positive
-rejoicing. Hence we read, in the tenth chapter of Luke, "In that hour
-Jesus _rejoiced_ in spirit, and said, '_I thank Thee_, O Father, Lord
-of heaven and earth, that Thou hast hid these things from the wise and
-prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes: even so, Father; for so it
-seemed good in Thy sight.'" That blessed One found His perfect delight
-in all the will of God. It was His meat and drink to carry out that
-will, at all cost. In service or in suffering, in life or in death, He
-never had any motive but the Father's will. He could say, "I do always
-the things that please Him." Eternal and universal homage to His
-peerless name!
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-"And the Lord spake unto me, saying, 'Ye have compassed this mountain
-long enough; turn you northward.'"
-
-The word of the Lord determined every thing. It fixed how long the
-people were to remain in any given place, and it indicated with equal
-distinctness whither they were next to bend their steps. There was no
-need whatever for them to plan or arrange their movements: it was the
-province and prerogative of Jehovah to settle all for them; it was
-theirs to obey. There is no mention here of the cloud and the
-trumpet; it is simply God's word and Israel's obedience.
-
-Nothing can be more precious to a child of God, if only the heart be
-in a right condition, than to be guided, in all his movements, by the
-divine command. It saves a world of anxiety and perplexity. In
-Israel's case, called as they were to journey through a great and
-terrible wilderness, where there was no way, it was an unspeakable
-mercy to have their every movement, their every step, their every
-halting-place, ordered by on infallible Guide. There was no need
-whatever for them to trouble themselves about their movements, no need
-to inquire how long they were to stay in any given place, or where
-they were to go next; Jehovah settled all for them. It was for them
-simply to wait on Him for guidance, and to do what they were told.
-
-Yes, reader, here was the grand point--a waiting and an obedient
-spirit. If this were lacking, they were liable to all sorts of
-questionings, reasonings, and rebellious activities. When God said,
-"Ye have compassed this mountain long enough," had Israel replied, No;
-we want to compass it a little longer: we are very comfortable here,
-and we do not wish to make any change; or, again, if when God said,
-"Turn you northward" they had replied, No; we vastly prefer going
-eastward; what would have been the result? Why, they would have
-forfeited the divine presence with them, and who could guide or help
-or feed them then? They could only count on the divine presence with
-them while they trod the path indicated by the divine command. If
-they chose to take their own way, there was nothing for them but
-famine, desolation, and darkness. The stream from the smitten rock,
-and the heavenly manna, were only to be found in the path of
-obedience.
-
-Now, we Christians have to learn our lesson in all this--a wholesome,
-needed, valuable lesson. It is our sweet privilege to have our path
-marked out for us, day by day, by divine authority. Of this we are to
-be most deeply and thoroughly persuaded. We are not to allow ourselves
-to be robbed of this rich blessing by the plausible reasonings of
-unbelief. God has promised to guide us, and His promise is yea and
-Amen. It is for us to make our own the promise, in the artless
-simplicity of faith. It is as solid and as real and as true as God can
-make it. We cannot admit for a moment that Israel in the desert were
-better off in the matter of guidance than God's heavenly people in
-their passage through this world. How did Israel know the length of
-the haltings or the line of their march? By the word of God. Are we
-worse off? Far be the thought. Yea, we are better off by far than
-they. We have the Word and Spirit of God to guide us. To us pertains
-the high and holy privilege of walking in the footsteps of the Son of
-God.
-
-Is not this perfect guidance? Yes, thank God, it is. Hear what our
-adorable Lord Jesus Christ saith to us,--"I am the light of the world;
-he that followeth Me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the
-light of life." Let us mark these words, "he that _followeth Me_." He
-has left us "an example, that we should follow His steps." This is
-living guidance. How did Jesus walk? Always and only by the
-commandment of His Father. By that He acted; by that He moved; without
-it He never acted, moved, or spoke.
-
-Now, we are called to follow Him; and in so doing, we have the
-assurance of His own word that we shall not walk in darkness, but
-shall have the light of life. Precious words!--"_the light of life_."
-Who can sound their living depths? who can duly estimate their worth?
-"The darkness is past, and the true light now shineth," and it is for
-us to walk in the full blaze of the light that shines along the
-pathway of the Son of God. Is there any uncertainty, any perplexity,
-any ground for hesitation here? Clearly not. How could there be if we
-are following Him? It is utterly impossible to combine the two ideas.
-
-And be it remarked here that it is not by any means a question of
-having a literal text of Scripture for every movement or every act.
-For example, I cannot expect to get a text of Scripture, or a voice
-from heaven, to tell me to go to London or to Edinburgh; or how long I
-am to stay when I go. How, then, it may be asked, am I to know where I
-ought to go, or how long I am to stay? The answer is, Wait on God, in
-singleness of eye and sincerity of heart, and He will make your path
-as plain as a sunbeam. This was what Jesus did; and if we follow Him,
-we shall not walk in darkness. "I will guide thee with Mine eye" is a
-most precious promise; but in order to profit by it, we must be near
-enough to Him to catch the movement of His eye, and intimate enough
-with Him to understand its meaning.
-
-Thus it is, in all the details of our daily life. It would answer a
-thousand questions, and solve a thousand difficulties, if we did but
-wait for divine guidance, and never attempt to move without it. If I
-have not gotten light to move, it is my plain duty to be still. We
-should never move in uncertainty. It often happens that we harass
-ourselves about moving or acting, when God would have us to be still
-and do nothing. We go and ask God about it, but get no answer; we
-betake ourselves to friends for advice and counsel, but they cannot
-help us, for it is entirely a question between our own souls and the
-Lord. Thus we are plunged in doubt and anxiety. And why? Simply
-because the eye is not single; we are not following Jesus, "the light
-of the world." We may set it down as a fixed principle, a precious
-axiom in the divine life, that if we are following Jesus, we shall
-have the light of life. He has said it, and that is enough for faith.
-
-Hence, then, we deem ourselves perfectly warranted in concluding that
-the One who guided His earthly people in all their desert wanderings,
-can and will guide His heavenly people now in all their movements and
-in all their ways. But, on the other hand, let us see to it that we
-are not bent on doing our own will, having our own way, and carrying
-out our own plans. "Be ye not as the horse or as the mule, which have
-no understanding, whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle,
-lest they come near unto thee." Be it our one grand aim to walk in the
-footsteps of that blessed One who pleased not Himself, but ever moved
-in the current of the divine will, never acted without divine
-authority; who, though Himself God over all, blessed forever, yet,
-having taken His place as a man, on the earth, surrendered completely
-His own will, and found His meat and His drink in doing the will of
-His Father. Thus shall our hearts and minds be kept in perfect peace;
-and we shall be enabled to move on, from day to day, with firm and
-decided step, along the path indicated for us by our divine and
-ever-present Guide, who not only knows, as God, every step of the way,
-but who, as man, has trodden it before us, and left us an example that
-we should follow His steps. May we follow Him more faithfully in all
-things, through the gracious ministry of the Holy Ghost, who dwelleth
-in us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now to invite the reader's attention to a subject of very deep
-interest, and one which occupies a large place in Old-Testament
-scripture, and is forcibly illustrated in the chapter which lies open
-before us, namely, God's government of the world, and His wonderful
-ordering of the nations of the earth. It is a grand and all-important
-fact to keep ever before the mind that the One whom we know as "the
-God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ," and our God and Father,
-takes a real, lively, personal interest in the affairs of
-nations--that He takes cognizance of their movements and of their
-dealings one with another.
-
-True, all this is in immediate connection with Israel and the land of
-Palestine, as we read in the thirty-second chapter of our book, and
-eighth verse--a passage of singular interest and of great suggestive
-power.--"When the Most High divided to the nations their inheritance,
-when He separated the sons of Adam, He set the bounds of the people
-according to the number of the children of Israel." Israel was and
-shall yet be God's earthly centre; and it is a fact of the deepest
-interest that, from the very outset, as we see in Genesis x, the
-Creator and Governor of the world formed the nations and fixed their
-bounds according to His own sovereign will, and with direct reference
-to the seed of Abraham, and that narrow strip of land which they are
-to possess, in virtue of the everlasting covenant made with their
-fathers.
-
-But in the second chapter of Deuteronomy, we find Jehovah, in His
-faithfulness and righteousness, interfering to protect three distinct
-nations in the enjoyment of their national rights, and that, too,
-against the encroachments of His own chosen people. He says to Moses,
-"Command thou the people, saying, 'Ye are to pass through the coast of
-your brethren the children of Esau, which dwell in Seir; and they
-shall be afraid of you: take ye good heed unto yourselves therefore:
-meddle not with them; for I will not give you of their land, no, not
-so much as a foot-breadth, because I have given Mount Seir unto Esau
-for a possession. Ye shall buy meat of them for money, that ye may
-eat; and ye shall also buy water of them for money, that ye may
-drink.'"
-
-Israel might imagine that they had nothing to do but seize upon the
-lands of the Edomite; but they had to learn something very
-different,--they had to be taught that the Most High is the Governor
-amongst the nations--that the whole earth belongs to Him, and He
-portions it out to one or another according to His good pleasure.
-
-This is a very magnificent fact to keep before the mind. The great
-majority of men think but little of it. Emperors, kings, princes,
-governors, statesmen, take little account of it. They forget that God
-interests Himself in the affairs of nations--that He bestows kingdoms,
-provinces, and lands as He sees fit. They act, at times, as if it were
-only a question of military conquest, and as if God had nothing to do
-with the question of national boundaries and territorial possessions.
-This is their great mistake. They do not understand the meaning and
-force of this simple sentence, "_I have given_ Mount Seir unto Esau
-for a possession." God will never surrender His rights in this
-respect. He would not allow Israel to touch a single atom of Esau's
-property. They were, to use a modern phrase, to pay ready cash for
-whatever they needed, and go quietly on their way. Indiscriminate
-slaughter and plunder were not to be thought of by the people of God.
-
-And mark the lovely reason for all this. "For the Lord thy God hath
-blessed thee in all the works of thy hand; He knoweth thy walking
-through this great wilderness; these forty years the Lord thy God hath
-been with thee, thou hast lacked nothing." They could well afford,
-therefore, to let Esau alone, and leave his possessions untouched.
-They were the favored objects of Jehovah's tender care. He took
-knowledge of every step of their weary journey through the desert. He
-had, in His infinite goodness, charged Himself with all their
-necessities. He was going to give them the land of Canaan, according
-to His promise to Abraham; but the self-same hand which was giving
-them Canaan had given Mount Seir to Esau.
-
-We see the same thing exactly in reference to Moab and Ammon.--"The
-Lord said unto me, 'Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with
-them in battle; for I will not give thee of their land for a
-possession, because I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a
-possession.'" And again, "And when thou comest nigh over against the
-children of Ammon, distress them not, nor meddle with them; for I will
-not give thee of the land of the children of Ammon any possession,
-because I have given it onto the children of Lot for a possession."
-
-The possessions here alluded to had been, of old time, in the hands of
-giants; but it was God's purpose to give up their territories to the
-children of Esau and Lot, and therefore He destroyed these giants;
-for who or what can stand in the way of the divine counsels? "That
-also was accounted a land of giants: giants dwelt therein in old time;
-... a people great, and many, and tall, as the Anakims; but the Lord
-destroyed them before them; and they succeeded them, and dwelt in
-their stead: as He did to the children of Esau which dwelt in Seir,
-when He destroyed the Horims from before them; and they succeeded
-them, and dwelt in their stead even unto this day." (Ver. 20-23.)
-
-Hence, then, Israel were not permitted to meddle with the possessions
-of any of these three nations--the Edomites, Ammonites, and Moabites;
-but in the very next sentence, we see another thing altogether in the
-case of the Amorites.--"Rise ye up, take your journey, and pass over
-the river Arnon: behold, I have given into thine hand Sihon the
-Amorite, king of Heshbon, and his land: begin to possess it, and
-contend with him in battle."
-
-The great principle, in all these varied instructions to Israel, is
-that God's word must settle every thing for His people. It was not for
-Israel to inquire why they were to leave the possessions of Esau and
-Lot untouched, and to seize upon those of Sihon. They were simply to
-do what they were told. God can do as He pleases. He has His eye upon
-the whole scene: He scans it all. Men may think He has forsaken the
-earth, but He has not, blessed be His name. He is, as the apostle
-tells us in his discourse at Athens, "Lord of heaven and earth;" and
-"He hath made of one blood all nations of men, for to dwell on all
-the face of the earth; and hath determined the times before appointed,
-and the bounds of their habitations." And, further, "He hath appointed
-a day, in the which He will judge the habitable earth [+oikoumenên+] in
-righteousness, by that Man whom He hath ordained; whereof He hath
-given assurance [given proof] unto all, in that He hath raised Him
-from the dead."
-
-Here we have a most solemn and weighty truth, to which men of all
-ranks and conditions would do well to take heed. God is the Sovereign
-Ruler of the world. He giveth no account of any of His matters. He
-puts down one and sets up another. Kingdoms, thrones, governments, are
-all at His disposal. He acts according to His own will in the ordering
-and arrangement of human affairs. But, at the same time, He holds men
-responsible for their actings in the various positions in which His
-providence has placed them. The ruler and the ruled, the king, the
-governor, the magistrate, the judge--all classes and grades of men
-will have, sooner or later, to give account to God. Each one, as if he
-were the only one, will have to stand before the judgment-seat of
-Christ, and there review his whole course, from first to last. Every
-act, every word, every secret thought, will there come out with awful
-distinctness. There will be no escaping in a crowd. The Word declares
-that they shall be judged "_every man_ according to his works." It
-will be intensely individual, and unmistakably discriminating. In a
-word, it will be a divine judgment, and therefore absolutely perfect.
-Nothing will be passed over. "Every idle word that men shall speak,
-they shall give account thereof at the day of judgment." Kings,
-governors, and magistrates will have to account for the way in which
-they have used the power with which they were intrusted, and the
-wealth which passed through their hands. The noble and the wealthy who
-have spent their fortune and their time in folly, vanity, luxury, and
-self-indulgence will have to answer for it all before the throne of
-the Son of Man, whose eyes are as a flame of fire, to read men through
-and through; and His feet as fine brass, to crush, in unsparing
-judgment, all that is contrary to God.
-
-Infidelity may sneeringly inquire, _How_ can these things be? _How_
-could the untold millions of the human race find room before the
-judgment-seat of Christ? and _how_ could there be time to enter so
-minutely into the details of each personal history? Faith replies, God
-says it shall be so, and this is conclusive; and as to the "How?" the
-answer is, God! Infinity! Eternity! Bring God in, and all questions
-are hushed and all difficulties disposed of in a moment. In fact, the
-one grand, triumphant answer to all the objections of the infidel, the
-skeptic, the rationalist, and the materialist, is just that one
-majestic word, "GOD!"
-
-We press this upon the reader; not, indeed, to enable him to reply to
-infidels, but for the rest and comfort of his own heart. As to
-infidels, we are increasingly persuaded that our highest wisdom is to
-act on our Lord's words in Matthew xv.--"Let them alone." It is
-perfectly useless to argue with men who despise the Word of God, and
-have no other foundation to build upon than their own carnal
-reasonings. But, on the other hand, we deem it to be of the very last
-possible importance that the heart should ever repose, in all the
-artless simplicity of a child, in the truth of God's Word. "Hath He
-said, and shall He not do it? or hath He spoken, and shall He not make
-it good?"
-
-Here is the sweet and hallowed resting-place of faith, the calm haven
-where the soul can find refuge from all the conflicting currents of
-human thought and feeling. "The Word of the Lord endureth forever; and
-this is the Word which by the gospel is preached unto you." Nothing
-can touch the Word of our God. It is settled forever in heaven; and
-all we want is to have it hidden in our hearts, as our own very
-possession--the treasure which we have received from God--the living
-fountain where we may ever drink for the refreshment and comfort of
-our souls. Then shall our peace flow as a river, and our path shall be
-as the shining light, which shineth more and more unto the perfect
-day.
-
-Thus may it be, O Lord, with all Thy beloved people, in these days of
-growing infidelity. May Thy holy Word be increasingly precious to our
-hearts. May our consciences feel its power. May its heavenly doctrines
-form our character and govern our conduct in all the relationships of
-life, that Thy name may be glorified in all things.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-"Then we turned, and went up the way to Bashan; and Og the king of
-Bashan came out against us, he and all his people, to battle at Edrei.
-And the Lord said unto me, 'Fear him not: for I will deliver him, and
-all his people, and his land, into thy hand; and thou shalt do unto
-him as thou didst unto Sihon king of the Amorites, which dwelt at
-Heshbon.' So the Lord our God delivered into our hands Og also, the
-king of Bashan, and all his people; and we smote him until none was
-left to him remaining. And we took all his cities at that time, there
-was not a city which we took not from them, threescore cities, all the
-region of Argob, the kingdom of Og in Bashan. All these cities were
-fenced with high walls, gates, and bars; beside unwalled towns a great
-many. And we utterly destroyed them, as we did unto Sihon king of
-Heshbon, utterly destroying the men, women, and children of every
-city. But all the cattle, and the spoil of the cities, we took for a
-prey to ourselves." (Ver. 1-7.)
-
-The divine instructions as to Og, king of Bashan, were precisely
-similar to those given, in the preceding chapter, with respect to
-Sihon the Amorite; and in order to understand both, we must look at
-them purely in the light of the government of God--a subject but
-little understood, though one of very deep interest and practical
-importance. We must accurately distinguish between grace and
-government. When we contemplate God in government, we see Him
-displaying His power in the way of righteousness--punishing
-evil-doers, pouring out vengeance upon His enemies, overthrowing
-empires, upturning thrones, destroying cities, sweeping away nations,
-tribes, and peoples. We find Him commanding His people to slay men,
-women, and little children with the edge of the sword; to set fire to
-their houses, and turn their cities into desolate heaps.
-
-Again, we hear Him addressing the prophet Ezekiel in the following
-remarkable words: "Son of man, Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon caused
-his army to serve a great service against Tyrus: every head was made
-bald, and every shoulder was peeled; yet had he no wages, nor his
-army, for Tyrus, for the service that he had served against it.
-Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will give the land of
-Egypt unto Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon; and he shall take her
-multitude, and take her spoil, and take her prey; and it shall be the
-wages for his army. I have given him the land of Egypt for his labor
-wherewith he served against it, because they wrought for Me, saith the
-Lord God." (Ezek. xxix. 18-20.)
-
-This is a very wonderful passage of Scripture; setting before us a
-subject which runs through the entire volume of Old-Testament
-scripture--a subject demanding our profound and reverent attention.
-Whether we turn to the five books of Moses, to the historical books,
-to the Psalms, or to the prophets, we find the inspiring Spirit giving
-us the most minute details of God's actings in government. We have the
-deluge in the days of Noah, when the whole earth, with all its
-inhabitants, with the exception of eight persons, was destroyed by an
-act of divine government. Men, women, children, cattle, fowl, and
-creeping things were all swept away and buried beneath the billows and
-waves of God's righteous judgment.
-
-Then we have, in the days of Lot, the cities of the plain, with all
-their inhabitants--men, women, and children--in a few short hours,
-consigned to utter destruction, overthrown by the hand of Almighty
-God, and buried beneath the deep, dark waters of the Dead Sea. Those
-guilty cities, "Sodom and Gomorrha, and the cities about them in like
-manner, giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange
-flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of
-eternal fire."
-
-Then, again, as we pass down along the page of inspired history, we
-see the seven nations of Canaan--men, women, and children--given over
-into the hands of Israel for unsparing judgment; nothing that breathed
-was to be left alive.
-
-But, we may truly say, time would fail us even to refer to all the
-passages of holy Scripture which set before our eyes the solemn
-actings of the divine government. Suffice it to say that the line of
-evidence runs from Genesis to Revelation--beginning with the deluge
-and ending with the burning up of the present system of things.
-
-Now, the question is, Are we competent to understand these ways of God
-in government? Is it any part of our business to sit in judgment upon
-them? Are we capable of unraveling the profound and awful mysteries of
-divine providence? Can we--are we called upon to--account for the
-tremendous fact of helpless babes involved in the judgment of their
-guilty parents? Impious infidelity may sneer at these things; morbid
-sentimentality may stumble over them; but the true believer, the pious
-Christian, the reverent student of holy Scripture, will meet them all
-with this one simple but safe and solid question, "Shall not the Judge
-of all the earth do right?"
-
-This, we may rest assured, reader, is the only true way in which to
-meet such questions. If man is to sit in judgment upon the actings of
-God in government--if he can take upon himself to decide as to what is
-and what is not worthy of God to do, then, verily, we have lost the
-true sense of God altogether. And this is just what the devil is
-aiming at. He wants to lead the heart away from God; and to this end,
-he leads men to reason and question and speculate in a region which
-lies as far beyond their ken as heaven is above the earth. Can we
-comprehend God? If we could, we should ourselves be God.
-
- "We comprehend Him not,
- Yet earth and heaven tell,
- God sits as Sovereign on the throne,
- And ruleth all things well."
-
-It is at once absurd and impious, in the very highest degree, for puny
-mortals to dare to question the counsels, enactments, and ways of the
-almighty Creator and all-wise Governor of the universe. Assuredly, all
-who do so must sooner or later find out their terrible mistake. Well
-would it be for all questioners and cavilers to give heed to the
-pungent question of the inspired apostle in Romans ix.--"Nay but, O
-man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed
-say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? Hath not the
-potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto
-honor, and another unto dishonor?"
-
-How simple! How forcible! How unanswerable! This is the divine method
-of meeting all the hows and whys of infidel reason. If the potter has
-power over the lump of clay which he holds in his hand--a fact which
-none would think of disputing--how much more has the Creator of all
-things power over the creatures which His hand has formed! Men may
-reason and argue interminably as to why God permitted sin to enter;
-why He did not at once annihilate Satan and his angels; why He allowed
-the serpent to tempt Eve; why He did not keep her back from eating the
-forbidden fruit. In short, the hows and whys are endless; but the
-answer is one--"Who art thou, O man, that repliest against God?" How
-monstrous for a poor worm of the earth to attempt to sit in judgment
-upon the unsearchable judgments and ways of the Eternal God! What
-blind and presumptuous folly for a creature, whose understanding is
-darkened by sin, and who is thus wholly incapable of forming a right
-judgment about any thing divine, heavenly, or eternal, to attempt to
-decide how God should act in any given case! Alas! alas! it is to be
-feared that thousands who now argue with great apparent cleverness
-against the truth of God, will find out their fatal mistake when it
-will be too late to correct it.
-
-And as to all those who, though very far from taking common ground
-with the infidel, are nevertheless troubled with doubts and misgivings
-as to some of God's ways in government, and as to the awful question
-of eternal punishment,[5] we would earnestly recommend them to study
-and drink in the spirit of that lovely little psalm, cxxxi.--"Lord, my
-heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty: neither do I exercise
-myself in great matters, or in things too high for me. Surely I have
-behaved and quieted myself as a child that is weaned of his mother: my
-soul is even as a weaned child."
-
- [5] With regard to the solemn subject of eternal punishment, we here
- offer a few remarks, seeing that so very many, both in England and
- America, are troubled with difficulties respecting it.
-
- There are three considerations, which, if duly weighed, will, we
- think, settle every Christian on the doctrine.
-
- I. The first is this: There are seventy passages in the New Testament
- where the word "everlasting," or "eternal," (+aiônios+) occurs.
- It is applied to the "life" which believers possess, to the "mansions"
- into which they are to be received, to the "glory" which they are to
- enjoy; it is applied to God (Rom. xvi. 26.), to the "salvation" of
- which our Lord Jesus Christ is the Author, to the "redemption" which
- He has obtained for us, and to the "Spirit."
-
- Then, out of the seventy passages referred to above, which the reader
- can verify in a few moments by a glance at a Greek Concordance, there
- are seven in which the self-same word is applied to the "punishment"
- of the wicked, to the "judgment" which is to overtake them, to the
- "fire" which is to consume them.
-
- Now, the question is, Upon what principle, or by what authority, can
- any one mark off these seven passages and say that in them the word
- +aiônios+ does not mean "everlasting," while in the other
- sixty-three it does? We consider the statement utterly baseless, and
- unworthy the attention of any sober mind. We fully admit that, had the
- Holy Spirit thought proper, when speaking of the judgment of the
- wicked, to make use of a different word from that used in the other
- passages, reason would that we should weigh the fact. But no; He uses
- the same word invariably, so that if we deny eternal punishment, we
- must deny eternal life, eternal glory, an eternal Spirit, an eternal
- God, an eternal any thing. In short, if punishment be not eternal,
- nothing is eternal, so far as this argument is concerned. To meddle
- with this stone in the archway of divine revelation, is to reduce the
- whole to a mass of ruin around us. And this is just what the devil is
- aiming at. We are fully persuaded that to deny the truth of eternal
- punishment is to take the first step on that inclined plane which
- leads down to the dark abyss of universal skepticism.
-
- II. Our second consideration is drawn from the great truth of the
- immortality of the soul. We read in the second chapter of Genesis that
- "the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
- his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul." Upon
- this one passage, as upon an immovable rock, even if we had not
- another, we build the great truth of the immortality of the human
- soul. The fall of man made no difference as to this. Fallen or
- unfallen, innocent or guilty, converted or unconverted, the soul must
- live forever.
-
- The tremendous question is, Where is it to live? God cannot allow sin
- into His presence. "He is of purer eyes than to behold evil, and
- cannot look upon iniquity." Hence, if a man dies in his sins--dies
- unrepentant, unwashed, unpardoned, then, most assuredly, where God is
- he never can come; indeed, it is the very last place to which he would
- like to come. There is nothing for him but an endless eternity in the
- lake that burneth with fire and brimstone.
-
- III. And lastly, we believe that the truth of eternal punishment
- stands intimately connected with the infinite nature of the atonement
- of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. If nothing short of an infinite
- sacrifice could deliver us from the consequences of sin, those
- consequences must be eternal. This consideration may not, perhaps, in
- the judgment of some, carry much weight with it; but to us its force
- is absolutely irresistible. We must measure sin and its consequences
- as we measure divine love and its results--not by the standard of
- human sentiment or reason, but only by the standard of the cross of
- Christ.
-
-Then, when the heart has in some measure taken in this exquisite
-breathing, it may turn with real profit to the words of the inspired
-apostle (2 Cor. x.)--"For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal,
-but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds; casting
-down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against
-the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the
-obedience of Christ."
-
-Doubtless, the philosopher, the scholar, the profound thinker, would
-smile contemptuously at such a childish mode of dealing with such
-great questions; but this is a very small matter in the judgment of
-the devout disciple of Christ. The same inspired apostle makes very
-short work of all this world's wisdom and learning. He says, "Let no
-man deceive himself. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this
-world, let him become a fool, that he may be wise. For the wisdom of
-this world is foolishness with God. For it is written, 'He taketh the
-wise in their own craftiness.' And again, 'The Lord knoweth the
-thoughts of the wise, that they are vain.'" (1 Cor. iii.) And again,
-"It is written, 'I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring
-to nothing the understanding of the prudent.' Where is the wise?
-where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God
-made foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of
-God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the
-foolishness of the preaching _to save them that believe_." (1 Cor. i.
-19-21.)
-
-Here lies the grand moral secret of the whole matter. Man has to find
-out that he is simply a fool, and that all the wisdom of the world is
-foolishness. Humbling but wholesome truth! Humbling, because it puts
-man in his right place; wholesome, yea, most precious, because it
-brings in the wisdom of God. We hear a great deal nowadays about
-science, philosophy, and learning. "Hath not God made foolish the
-wisdom of this world?"
-
-Do we fully take in the meaning of these words? Alas! it is to be
-feared they are but little understood. There are not wanting men who
-would fain persuade us that science has gone far beyond the Bible.[6]
-Alas! for the science, and for all those who give heed to it. If it
-has gone beyond the Bible, whither has it gone? In the direction of
-God, of Christ, of heaven, of holiness, of peace? Nay; but quite in
-the opposite direction. And where must it all end? We tremble to
-think, and feel reluctant to pen the reply. Still, we must be
-faithful, and declare solemnly that the sure and certain end of that
-path along which human science is conducting its votaries is the
-blackness of darkness forever.
-
- [6] We must distinguish between all true science and "science falsely
- so called." And further, we must distinguish between the _facts_ of
- science, and the _conclusions_ of scientific men. The facts are what
- God has done and is doing; but when men set about drawing their
- conclusions from these facts, they make the most serious mistakes.
-
- However, it is a real relief to the heart to think that there are many
- philosophers and men of science who give God His right place, and who
- love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity.
-
-"The world by wisdom knew not God." What did the philosophy of Greece
-do for its disciples? It made them the ignorant worshipers of "AN
-UNKNOWN GOD." The very inscription on their altar published to the
-universe their ignorance and their shame.
-
-And may we not lawfully inquire if philosophy has done better for
-christendom than it did for Greece? Has it communicated the knowledge
-of the true God? Who could dare to say, Yes? There are millions of
-baptized professors throughout the length and breadth of christendom
-who know no more of the true God than those philosophers who
-encountered Paul in the city of Athens.
-
-The fact is this: every one who really knows God, is the privileged
-possessor of eternal life. So our Lord Jesus Christ declares, in the
-most distinct manner, in the seventeenth chapter of John.--"This is
-life eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus
-Christ, whom Thou hast sent." This is most precious to every soul
-that, through grace, has gotten this knowledge. To know God, is to
-have life--life eternal.
-
-But how can I know God? where can I find Him? Can science and
-philosophy tell me? Have they ever told any one? have they ever
-guided any poor wanderer into this way of life and peace? No; never.
-"The world by wisdom knew not God." The conflicting schools of ancient
-philosophy could only plunge the human mind into profound darkness and
-hopeless bewilderment; and the conflicting schools of modern
-philosophy are not a whit better. They can give no certainty, no safe
-anchorage, no solid ground of confidence, to the poor benighted soul.
-Barren speculation, torturing doubt, wild and baseless theory, is all
-that human philosophy, in any age or of any nation, has to offer to
-the earnest inquirer after truth.
-
-How, then, are we to know God? If such a stupendous result hangs on
-this knowledge, if to know God is life eternal--and Jesus says it
-is--then how is He to be known? "No man hath seen God at any time; the
-only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath
-declared Him." (John i. 18.)
-
-Here we have an answer divinely simple, divinely sure. Jesus reveals
-God to the soul--reveals the Father to the heart. Precious fact! We
-are not sent to creation to learn who God is, though we see His power,
-wisdom, and goodness there; we are not sent to the law, though we see
-His justice there; we are not sent to providence, though we see the
-profound mysteries of His government there. No; if we want to know who
-and what God is, we are to look in the face of Jesus Christ, the only
-begotten Son of God, who dwelt in His bosom before all worlds, who
-was His eternal delight, the object of His affections, the centre of
-His counsels. He it is who reveals God to the soul. We cannot have the
-slightest idea of what God is apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. "In
-Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead [+theotês+] bodily." "God
-who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
-hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God, in
-the face of Jesus Christ."
-
-Nothing can exceed the power and blessedness of all this. There is no
-darkness here, no uncertainty. "The darkness is past and the true
-light now shineth." Yes; it shineth in the face of Jesus Christ. We
-can gaze, by faith, on that blessed One; we can trace His marvelous
-path on the earth; see Him going about doing good, and healing all
-that were oppressed of the devil; mark His very looks, His words, His
-works, His ways; see Him healing the sick, cleansing the leper,
-opening the eyes of the blind, unstopping the ears of the deaf,
-causing the lame to walk, the maimed to be whole, raising the dead,
-drying the widow's tears, feeding the hungry, binding up broken
-hearts, meeting every form of human need, soothing human sorrow,
-hushing human fears; and doing all these things in such a style, with
-such touching grace and sweetness, as to make each one feel, in his
-very inmost soul, that it was the deep delight of that loving heart
-thus to minister to his need.
-
-Now, in all this He was revealing God to man; so that if we want to
-know what God is, we have simply to look at Jesus. When Philip said,
-"Lord, shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us," the prompt reply was,
-"Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me,
-Philip? he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou
-then, 'Shew us the Father?' Believest thou not that I am in the
-Father, and the Father in Me? the words that I speak unto you I speak
-not of Myself; but the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works.
-Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or else
-believe Me for the very works' sake."
-
-Here is true rest for the heart. We know the true God, and Jesus
-Christ, whom He hath sent; and this is life eternal. We know Him as
-our own very God and Father, and Christ as our own personal, loving
-Lord and Saviour; we can delight in Him, walk with Him, lean on Him,
-trust in Him, cling to Him, draw from Him, find all our living springs
-in Him, rejoice in Him all the day long, find our meat and our drink
-in doing His blessed will, furthering His cause, and promoting His
-glory.
-
-Reader, do you know all this for yourself? Say, is it a living,
-divinely real thing in your own soul this moment? This is true
-Christianity, and you should not be satisfied with any thing less. You
-will perhaps tell us we have wandered far from the third chapter of
-Deuteronomy. But whither have we wandered? To the Son of God and to
-the soul of the reader. If this be wandering, be it so; it most
-assuredly is not wandering from the object for which we are penning
-these "Notes," which is, to bring Christ and the soul together, or to
-bind them together, as the case may be. We would never, for one
-moment, lose sight of the fact that, both in writing and speaking, we
-have not merely to expound Scripture, but to seek the salvation and
-blessing of souls. Hence it is that we feel constrained, from time to
-time, to appeal to the heart and conscience of the reader, as to his
-practical state, and as to how far he has made his very own of these
-imperishable realities which pass in review before us. And we
-earnestly beseech the reader, whoever he may be, to seek a deeper
-acquaintance with God in Christ; and, as a sure consequence of this, a
-closer walk with Him and more thorough consecration of heart to Him.
-
-This, we are thoroughly persuaded, is what is needed in this day of
-unrest and unreality in the world, and of lukewarmness and
-indifference in the professing church. We want a very much higher
-standard of personal devotedness, more real purpose of heart to cleave
-to the Lord and follow Him. There is much--very much to discourage and
-hinder in the condition of things around us. The language of the men
-of Judah in the days of Nehemiah may, with some measure of
-appropriateness and force, be applied to our times,--"The strength of
-the bearers of burdens is decayed, and there is much rubbish." But,
-thank God, the remedy now, as then, is to be found in this
-soul-stirring sentence, "Remember the Lord."
-
- * * * * *
-
-We now return to our chapter, in the remainder of which the lawgiver
-rehearses in the ears of the congregation the story of their dealings
-with the two kings of the Amorites, together with the facts connected
-with the inheritance of the two tribes and a half on the wilderness
-side of Jordan. And with regard to the latter subject, it is
-interesting to notice that he raises no question as to the right or
-the wrong of their choosing their possession short of the land of
-promise. Indeed, from the narrative given here, it could not be known
-that the two tribes and a half had expressed any wish in the matter.
-So far is our book from being a mere repetition of its predecessors.
-
-Here are the words: "And this land, which we possessed at that time,
-from Aroer, which is by the river Arnon, and half Mount Gilead, and
-the cities thereof, _gave I unto the Reubenites and to the Gadites_.
-And the rest of Gilead, and all Bashan, being the kingdom of Og, _gave
-I unto the half tribe of Manasseh_; all the region of Argob, with all
-Bashan, which was called the land of giants.... And _I gave_ Gilead
-unto Machir. And unto the Reubenites and unto the Gadites _I gave_
-from Gilead even unto the river Arnon half the valley, and the border
-even unto the river Jabbok, which is the border of the children of
-Ammon.... And I commanded you at that time, saying, _The Lord your God
-hath given you this land to possess it_:"--not a word about their
-having asked it--"ye shall pass over armed before your brethren the
-children of Israel, all that are meet for the war. But your wives, and
-your little ones, and your cattle (for I know that ye have much
-cattle), shall abide in your cities _which I have given you_; until
-the Lord have given rest unto your brethren, as well as unto you, and
-until they also possess the land which the Lord your God hath given
-them beyond Jordan; and then shall ye return every man unto his
-possession, which I have given you."
-
-In our studies on the book of Numbers, we have dwelt upon certain
-facts connected with the settlement of the two tribes and a half,
-proving that they were below the mark of the Israel of God in choosing
-their inheritance any where short of the other side of Jordan; but in
-the passage we have just quoted, there is no allusion at all to this
-side of the question, because the object of Moses is to set before the
-whole congregation the exceeding goodness, loving-kindness, and
-faithfulness of God, not only in bringing them through all the
-difficulties and dangers of the wilderness, but also in giving them,
-even already, such signal victories over the Amorites, and putting
-them in possession of regions so attractive and so suited to them. In
-all this, he is laying down the solid basis of Jehovah's claim upon
-their hearty obedience to His commandments; and we can at once see and
-appreciate the moral beauty of overlooking entirely, in such a
-rehearsal, the question as to whether Reuben, Gad, and the half tribe
-of Manasseh were wrong in stopping short of the land of promise. It
-is, to every devout Christian, a striking proof, not only of the
-touching and exquisite grace of God, but also of the divine
-perfectness of Scripture.
-
-No doubt, every true believer enters upon the study of Scripture with
-the full and deeply wrought conviction of its absolute perfectness in
-every part. He reverently believes that there is not, from the opening
-of Genesis to the close of Revelation, a single flaw, a single hitch,
-a single discrepancy--not one; all is as perfect as its divine Author.
-
-But then the cordial belief of the divine perfectness of Scripture as
-a whole can never lessen our appreciation of the evidences which come
-out in detail; nay, it enhances it exceedingly. Thus, for example, in
-the passage now before us, is it not perfectly beautiful to mark the
-absence of all reference to the failure of the two tribes and a half
-in the matter of choosing their inheritance, seeing that any such
-reference would be entirely foreign to the object of the lawgiver and
-to the scope of the book? Is it not the joy of our hearts to trace
-such infinite perfections, such exquisite and inimitable touches?
-Assuredly it is; and not only so, but we are persuaded that the more
-the moral glories of the volume dawn upon our souls, and its living
-and exhaustless depths are unfolded to our hearts, the more we shall
-be convinced of the utter folly of infidel assaults upon it, and of
-the feebleness and gratuitousness of many well-meant efforts to prove
-that it does not contradict itself. Thank God, His Word stands in no
-need of human apologists. It speaks for itself, and carries with it
-its own powerful evidences; so that we can say of it what the apostle
-says of his gospel, that "if it be hid, it is hid to them that are
-lost; in whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them
-which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ,
-who is the image of God, should shine unto them." We are more and more
-convinced each day, that the most effective method of answering all
-infidel attacks upon the Bible is, to cherish a more profound faith in
-its divine power and authority, and to use it as those who are most
-thoroughly persuaded of its truth and preciousness. The Spirit of God
-alone can enable any one to believe in the plenary inspiration of the
-holy Scriptures. Human arguments may go for what they are worth; they
-may doubtless silence gainsayers, but they cannot reach the
-heart--they cannot bring the genial rays of divine revelation to bear
-down in living, saving power upon the soul. This is a work divine; and
-until it is done, all the evidences and arguments in the world must
-leave the soul in the moral darkness of unbelief; but when it is done,
-there is no need of human testimony in defense of the Bible. External
-evidences, however interesting and valuable (and they are both),
-cannot add a single jot or tittle to the glory of that peerless
-revelation, which bears on every page, every paragraph, every
-sentence, the clear impress of its divine Author. As with the sun in
-the heavens, its every ray tells of the Hand that made it, so of the
-Bible, its every sentence tells of the Heart that inspired it. But
-inasmuch as a blind man cannot see the sunlight, so neither can the
-unconverted soul see the force and beauty of holy Scripture. The eye
-must be anointed with heavenly eye-salve ere the infinite perfections
-of the divine volume can be discerned or appreciated.
-
-Now, we must own to the reader that it is the deep and ever-deepening
-sense of all this that has led us to the determination not to occupy
-his time or our own by reference to the attacks which have been made
-by rationalistic writers on that portion of the Word of God with which
-we are now engaged. We leave this to other and abler hands. What we
-desire for ourselves and our readers is, that we may feed in peace
-upon the green pastures which the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls has
-graciously thrown open to us; that we may help each other, as we pass
-along, to see more and more of the moral glory of that which lies
-before us, and thus to build each other up on our most holy faith.
-This will be far more grateful work to us, and we trust also to our
-readers, than replying to men who, in all their puny efforts to find
-out flaws in the holy volume, only prove, to those capable of judging,
-that they understand neither what they say nor whereof they affirm. If
-men _will_ abide in the dark vaults and tunnels of a dreary
-infidelity, and there find fault with the sun, or deny that it shines
-at all, let it be ours to bask in the light, and help others to do the
-same.
-
-We shall now dwell for a little on the remaining verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find much to interest, instruct, and profit
-us.
-
-And first, Moses rehearses in the ears of the people his charge to
-Joshua.--"And I commanded Joshua at that time, saying, 'Thine eyes
-have seen all that the Lord our God hath done unto these two kings; so
-shall the Lord do unto all the kingdoms whither thou passest. Ye shall
-not fear them; for the Lord your God He shall fight for you.'" (Ver.
-21, 22.)
-
-The remembrance of the Lord's dealings with us in the past should
-strengthen our confidence in going on. The One who had given His
-people such a victory over the Amorites, who had destroyed such a
-formidable foe as Og, king of Bashan, and given into their hands all
-the land of the giants, what could He not do for them? They could
-hardly expect to encounter in all the land of Canaan any enemy more
-powerful than Og, whose bedstead was of such enormous dimensions as to
-call for the special notice of Moses; but what was he in the presence
-of his almighty Creator? Dwarfs and giants are all alike to Him. The
-grand point is to keep God Himself ever before our eyes; then
-difficulties vanish. If He covers the eyes, we can see nothing else;
-and this is the true secret of peace, and the real power of progress.
-"Thine eyes have seen all that the Lord your God hath done." And as He
-has done, _so_ He will do. He _hath_ delivered, and He _doth_ deliver,
-and He _will_ deliver. Past, present, and future are all marked by
-divine deliverance.
-
-Reader, art thou in any difficulty? Is there any pressure upon thee?
-Art thou anticipating, with nervous apprehension, some formidable
-evil? Is thine heart trembling at the very thought of it? It may be
-thou art like one who has come to the far end, like the apostle Paul
-in Asia--"Pressed out of measure, above strength, insomuch that we
-despaired even of life." If so, beloved friend, accept a word of
-encouragement. It is our deep and earnest desire to strengthen your
-hands in God, and to encourage your heart to trust Him for all that is
-before you. "Fear not:" only believe. He never fails a trusting
-heart--no, never. Make use of the resources which are treasured up for
-you in Him. Just put yourself, your surroundings, your fears, your
-anxieties, all into His hands, _and leave them there_.
-
-Yes, leave them there. It is of little use your putting your
-difficulties, your necessities, into His hands and then, almost
-immediately, taking them into your own. We often do this. When in
-pressure, in need, in deep trial of some kind or other, we go to God
-in prayer, we cast our burden upon Him and seem to get relief; but,
-alas! no sooner have we risen from our knees than we begin again to
-look at the difficulty, ponder the trial, dwell upon all the sorrowful
-circumstances, until we are again at our very wits' end.
-
-Now, this will never do. It sadly dishonors God, and, of course,
-leaves us unrelieved and unhappy. He would have our minds as free from
-care as the conscience is free from guilt. His word to us is, "Be
-careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication
-with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God." And what
-then? "The peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep
-[or garrison--+phrourêsei+] your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."
-
-Thus it was that Moses, that beloved man of God and honored servant of
-Christ, sought to encourage his fellow-laborer and successor, Joshua,
-in reference to all that was before him.--"Ye shall not fear them; for
-the Lord your God He shall fight for you." Thus, too, did the blessed
-apostle Paul encourage his beloved son and fellow-servant Timothy to
-trust in the living God; to be strong in the grace which is in Christ
-Jesus; to lean, with unshaken confidence, on God's sure foundation; to
-commit himself, with unquestioning assurance, to the authority,
-teaching, and guidance of the holy Scriptures; and thus armed and
-furnished, to give himself, with holy diligence and true spiritual
-courage, to that work to which he was called. And thus, too, the
-writer and the reader can encourage one another, in these days of
-increasing difficulty, to cling, in simple faith, to that Word which
-is settled forever in heaven; to have it hidden in the heart as a
-living power and authority in the soul--something that will sustain
-us, though heart and flesh should fail, and though we had not the
-countenance or support of a human being. "All flesh is as grass, and
-all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, and
-the flower thereof falleth away; but the Word of the Lord endureth
-forever. And this is the Word which by the gospel is preached unto
-you." (1 Pet. i. 24, 25.)
-
-How precious is this! What comfort and consolation! What stability and
-rest! What real strength, victory, and moral elevation! It is not
-within the compass of human language to set forth the preciousness of
-the Word of God, or to define, in adequate terms, the comfort of
-knowing that the self-same Word which is settled forever in heaven,
-and which shall endure throughout the countless ages of eternity, is
-that which has reached our hearts in the glad tidings of the gospel,
-imparting to us eternal life, and giving us peace and rest in the
-finished work of Christ, and a perfectly satisfying object in His
-adorable Person. Truly, as we think of all this, we cannot but own
-that every breath should be a halleluiah. Thus it shall be by and by,
-and that forever, all homage to His peerless name!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The closing verses of our chapter present a peculiarly touching
-passage between Moses and his Lord, the record of which, as given
-here, is in lovely keeping, as we might expect, with the character of
-the entire book of Deuteronomy.--"And I besought the Lord at that
-time, saying, 'O Lord God, Thou hast begun to show Thy servant Thy
-greatness, and Thy mighty hand; for what god is there in heaven or in
-earth that can do according to Thy works and according to Thy might? I
-pray Thee, let me go over, and see the good land that is beyond
-Jordan, that goodly mountain, and Lebanon.' But the Lord was wroth
-with me for your sakes, and would not hear me: and the Lord said unto
-me, 'Let it suffice thee; speak no more unto Me of this matter. Get
-thee up into the top of Pisgah, and lift up thine eyes westward, and
-northward, and southward, and eastward, and behold it with thine eyes:
-for thou shalt not go over this Jordan. But charge Joshua, and
-encourage him, and strengthen him; for he shall go over before this
-people, and he shall cause them to inherit the land which thou shalt
-see.'" (Ver. 23-28.)
-
-It is very affecting to find this eminent servant of God urging a
-request which could not be granted. He longed to see that good land
-beyond Jordan. The portion chosen by the two tribes and a half could
-not satisfy his heart; he desired to plant his foot upon the proper
-inheritance of the Israel of God. But it was not to be. He had spoken
-unadvisedly with his lips at the waters of Meribah; and, by the solemn
-and irreversible enactment of the divine government, he was prohibited
-from crossing the Jordan.
-
-All this, the beloved servant of Christ most meekly rehearses in the
-ears of the people. He does not hide from them the fact that the Lord
-had refused to grant his request. True, he had to remind them that it
-was on their account--that was morally needful for them to hear; still
-he tells them, in the most unreserved manner, that Jehovah was wroth
-with him, and that He refused to hear him--refused to allow him to
-cross the Jordan, and called upon him to resign his office and appoint
-his successor.
-
-Now, it is most edifying to hear all this from the lips of Moses
-himself. It teaches us a fine lesson, if only we are willing to learn
-it. Some of us find it very hard indeed to confess that we have done
-or said any thing wrong--very hard to own before our brethren that we
-have entirely missed the Lord's mind in any particular case. We are
-careful of our reputation; we are touchy and tenacious. And yet, with
-strange inconsistency, we admit, or seem to admit, in general terms,
-that we are poor, feeble, erring creatures; and that, if left to
-ourselves, there is nothing too bad for us to say or to do. But it is
-one thing to make a most humiliating general confession, and another
-thing altogether to own that, in some given case, we have made a gross
-mistake. This latter is a confession which very few have grace to
-make. Some can hardly ever admit that they have done wrong.
-
-Not so that honored servant whose words we have just quoted. He,
-notwithstanding his elevated position as the called, trusted, and
-beloved servant of Jehovah--the leader of the congregation, whose rod
-had made the land of Egypt to tremble, was not ashamed to stand before
-the whole assembly of his brethren and confess his mistake--own that
-he had said what he ought not, and that he had earnestly urged a
-request which Jehovah could not grant.
-
-Does this lower Moses in our estimation? The very reverse: it raises
-him immensely. It is morally lovely to hear his confession, to see how
-meekly he bows his head to the governmental dealings of God, to mark
-the unselfishness of his acting toward the man who was to succeed him
-in his high office. There was not a trace of jealousy or envy; no
-exhibition of mortified pride. With beautiful self-emptiness he steps
-down from his elevated position, throws his mantle over the shoulders
-of his successor, and encourages him to discharge, with holy fidelity,
-the duties of that high office which he himself had to resign.
-
-"He that humbleth himself shall be exalted." How true was this in
-Moses' case! He humbled himself under the mighty hand of God. He
-accepted the holy discipline imposed upon him by the divine
-government. He uttered not a murmuring word at the refusal of his
-request; he bows to it all, and hence he was exalted in due time. If
-government kept him out of Canaan, grace conducted him to Pisgah's
-top, from whence, in company with his Lord, he was permitted to see
-that good land, in all its fair proportions--see it, not as inherited
-by Israel, but as given of God.
-
-The reader will do well to ponder deeply the subject of grace and
-government. It is indeed a very weighty and practical theme, and one
-largely illustrated in Scripture, though but little understood
-amongst us. It may seem wonderful to us, hard to be understood, that
-one so beloved as Moses should be refused an entrance into the
-promised land; but in this we see the solemn action of the divine
-government, and we have to bow our heads and worship. It was not
-merely that Moses, in his official capacity, or as representing the
-legal system, could not bring Israel into the land. This is true; but
-it is not all. Moses spake unadvisedly with his lips. He and Aaron his
-brother failed to glorify God, in the presence of the congregation,
-and for this cause "the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron, 'Because ye
-believed Me not, to sanctify Me in the eyes of the children of Israel,
-therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which I
-have given them.'" And again, we read, "The Lord spake unto Moses and
-Aaron in Mount Hor, by the coast of the land of Edom, saying, 'Aaron
-shall be gathered unto his people; for he shall not enter into the
-land which I have given unto the children of Israel, because ye
-rebelled against My word at the water of Meribah. Take Aaron and
-Eleazar his son, and bring them up unto Mount Hor; and strip Aaron of
-his garments, and put them upon Eleazar his son; and Aaron shall be
-gathered unto his people, and shall die there.'"
-
-All this is most solemn. Here we have the two leading men in the
-congregation, the very men whom God had used to bring His people out
-of the land of Egypt, with mighty signs and wonders--"that Moses and
-Aaron"--men highly honored of God, and yet refused entrance into
-Canaan. And for what? Let us mark the reason.--"_Because ye rebelled
-against My word._"
-
-Let these words sink down into our hearts. It is a terrible thing to
-rebel against the Word of God; and the more elevated the position of
-those who so rebel, the more serious it is in every way, and the more
-solemn and speedy must be the divine judgment. "For rebellion is as
-the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry."
-
-These are weighty words, and we ought to ponder them deeply. They were
-uttered in the ears of Saul, when he had failed to obey the word of
-the Lord; and thus we have before us examples of a prophet, a priest,
-and a king, all judged, under the government of God, for an act of
-disobedience. The prophet and the priest were refused entrance into
-the land of Canaan, and the king was deprived of his throne, simply
-because they disobeyed the word of the Lord.
-
-Let us remember this. We, in our fancied wisdom, might deem all this
-very severe. Are we competent judges? This is a grand question in all
-such matters. Let us beware how we presume to sit in judgment on the
-enactments of divine government. Adam was driven out of paradise,
-Aaron was stripped of his priestly robes, Moses was sternly refused
-entrance into Canaan, and Saul was deprived of his kingdom--and for
-what? Was it for what men would call a grave moral offense--some
-scandalous sin. No; it was, in each case, for neglecting the word of
-the Lord. This is the serious thing for us to keep before us, in this
-day of human willfulness, in which men undertake to set up their own
-opinions, to think for themselves, and judge for themselves, and act
-for themselves. Men proudly put the question, "Has not every man a
-right to think for himself?" We reply, Most certainly not. We have a
-right to obey. To obey what? Not the commandments of men, not the
-authority of the so-called church, not the decrees of general
-councils--in a word, not any merely human authority, call it what you
-please, but simply the Word of the living God--the testimony of the
-Holy Ghost--the voice of holy Scripture. This it is that justly claims
-our implicit, unhesitating, unquestioning obedience. To this we are to
-bow down our whole moral being. We are not to reason, we are not to
-speculate, we are not to weigh consequences, we have nothing to do
-with results, we are not to say "Why?" or "Wherefore?" It is ours to
-obey, and leave all the rest in the hands of our Master. What has a
-servant to do with consequences? what business has he to reason as to
-results? It is of the very essence of a servant to do what he is told,
-regardless of all other considerations. Had Adam remembered this, he
-would not have been turned out of Eden; had Moses and Aaron remembered
-it, they might have crossed the Jordan; had Saul remembered it, he
-would not have been deprived of his throne. And so, as we pass down
-along the stream of human history, we see this weighty principle
-illustrated over and over again; and we may rest assured, it is a
-principle of abiding and universal importance.
-
-And be it remembered, we are not to attempt to weaken this great
-principle by any reasonings grounded upon God's foreknowledge of all
-that was to happen, and all that man would do, in the course of time.
-Men do reason in this way, but it is a fatal mistake. What has God's
-foreknowledge to do with man's responsibility? Is man responsible, or
-not? This is the question. If, as we most surely believe, he is, then
-nothing must be allowed to interfere with this responsibility. Man is
-called to obey the plain word of God; he is in no wise responsible to
-know aught about God's secret purposes and counsels. Man's
-responsibility rests upon what is revealed, not upon what is secret.
-What, for example, did Adam know about God's eternal plans and
-purposes when he was set in the garden of Eden and forbidden to eat of
-the tree of the knowledge of good and evil? Was his transgression in
-any wise modified by the stupendous fact that God took occasion from
-that very transgression to display, in the view of all created
-intelligences, His glorious scheme of redemption through the blood of
-the Lamb? Clearly not. He received a plain commandment, and by that
-commandment his conduct should have been absolutely governed. He
-disobeyed, and was driven out of paradise into a world which has, for
-well-nigh six thousand years, exhibited the terrible consequences of
-one single act of disobedience--the act of taking the forbidden
-fruit.
-
-True it is, blessed be God, that grace has come into this poor
-sin-stricken world and there reaped a harvest which could never have
-been reaped in the fields of an unfallen creation. But man was judged
-for his transgression; he was driven out by the hand of God in
-government, and by an enactment of that government, he has been
-compelled to eat bread in the sweat of his brow. "Whatsoever _a man_
-[no matter who] soweth, that shall he also reap."
-
-Here we have the condensed statement of the principle which runs all
-through the Word, and is illustrated on every page of the history of
-God's government. It demands our very gravest consideration. It is,
-alas! but little understood. We allow our minds to get under the
-influence of one-sided and therefore false ideas of grace, the effect
-of which is most pernicious. Grace is one thing, and government is
-another: they must never be confounded. We would earnestly impress
-upon the heart of the reader the weighty fact that the most
-magnificent display of God's sovereign grace can never interfere with
-the solemn enactments of His government.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-"Now therefore _hearken_, O Israel, unto the statutes and unto the
-judgments which I teach you, for to _do_ them, that ye may _live_, and
-go in and _possess_ the land which the Lord God of your fathers giveth
-you."
-
-Here we have very prominently before us the special characteristic of
-the entire book of Deuteronomy.--"Hearken" and "do," that ye may
-"live" and "possess." This is a universal and abiding principle. It
-was true for Israel, and it is true for us. The pathway of life and
-the true secret of possession is simple obedience to the holy
-commandments of God. We see this all through the inspired volume, from
-cover to cover. God has given us His Word, not to speculate upon it or
-discuss it, but, that we may obey it. And it is as we, through grace,
-yield a hearty and happy obedience to our Father's statutes and
-judgments, that we tread the bright pathway of life, and enter into
-the reality of all that God has treasured up for us in Christ. "He
-that hath My commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me;
-and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I will love
-him, and will manifest Myself to him."
-
-How precious is this! Indeed, it is unspeakable. It is something quite
-peculiar. It would be a very serious mistake to suppose that the
-privilege here spoken of is enjoyed by all believers. It is not. It is
-only enjoyed by such as yield a loving obedience to the commandments
-of our Lord Jesus Christ. It lies within the reach of all, but all do
-not enjoy it, because all are not obedient. It is one thing to be a
-child, and quite another to be an obedient child; it is one thing to
-be saved, and quite another thing to love the Saviour, and delight in
-all His most precious precepts.
-
-We may see this continually illustrated in our family circles. There,
-for example, are two sons, and one of them only thinks of pleasing
-himself, doing his will, gratifying his own desires. He takes no
-pleasure in his father's society, does not take any pains to carry out
-his father's wishes, knows hardly any thing of his mind, and what he
-does know he utterly neglects or despises. He is ready enough to avail
-himself of all the benefits which accrue to him from the relationship
-in which he stands to his father--ready enough to accept clothes,
-books, money--all, in short, that the father gives; but he never seeks
-to gratify the father's heart by a loving attention to his will, even
-in the smallest matters. The other son is the direct opposite to all
-this. He delights in being with his father; he loves his society,
-loves his ways, loves his words; he is constantly taking occasion to
-carry out his father's wishes, to get him something that he knows will
-be agreeable to him. He loves his father, not for his gifts, but for
-himself; and he finds his richest enjoyment in being in his father's
-company and in doing his will.
-
-Now, can we have any difficulty in seeing how very differently the
-father will feel towards those two sons? True, they are both his sons,
-and he loves them both, with a love grounded upon the relationship in
-which they stand to him; but beside the love of relationship common to
-both, there is the love of complacency peculiar to the obedient child.
-It is impossible that a father can find pleasure in the society of a
-willful, self-indulgent, careless son. Such a son may occupy much of
-his thoughts, he may spend many a sleepless night thinking about him
-and praying for him, he would gladly spend and be spent for him; but
-he is not agreeable to him, does not possess his confidence, cannot be
-the depositary of his thoughts.
-
-All this demands the serious consideration of those who really desire
-to be acceptable or agreeable to the heart of our heavenly Father and
-our Lord Jesus Christ. We may rest assured of this, that obedience is
-grateful to God; and "His commandments are not grievous"--nay, they
-are the sweet and precious expression of His love, and the fruit and
-evidence of the relationship in which He stands to us. And not only
-so, but He graciously rewards our obedience by a fuller manifestation
-of Himself to our souls, and His dwelling with us. This comes out in
-great fullness and beauty in our Lord's reply to Judas, not Iscariot,
-for whose question we may be thankful--"'Lord, how is it that Thou
-wilt manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto the world?' Jesus answered
-and said unto him, 'If a man love Me, he will keep My words; and My
-Father will love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our abode
-with him.'" (John xiv.)
-
-Here we are taught that it is not a question of the difference between
-"the world" and "us," inasmuch as the world knows nothing either of
-relationship or obedience, and is therefore in no wise contemplated in
-our Lord's words. The world hates Christ, because it does not know
-Him. Its language is, "Depart from us; for we desire not the
-knowledge of Thy ways." "We will not have this Man to reign over us."
-
-Such is the world, even when polished by civilization, and gilded with
-the profession of Christianity. There is, underneath all the gilding,
-all the polish, a deep-seated hatred of the Person and authority of
-Christ. His sacred, peerless name is tacked on to the world's
-religion, at least throughout baptized christendom; but behind the
-drapery of religious profession, there lurks a heart at enmity with
-God and His Christ.
-
-But our Lord is not speaking of the world in John xiv. He is shut in
-with "His own," and it is of them He is speaking. Were He to manifest
-Himself to the world, it could only be for judgment and eternal
-destruction. But, blessed be His name, He does manifest Himself to His
-own obedient children, to those who have His commandments and keep
-them, to those who love Him and keep His words.
-
-And, let the reader thoroughly understand that when our Lord speaks of
-His commandments, His words, and His sayings, He does not mean the ten
-commandments, or law of Moses. No doubt, those ten commandments form a
-part of the whole canon of Scripture--the inspired Word of God; but to
-confound the law of Moses with the commandments of Christ would be
-simply turning things upside down, it would be to confound Judaism
-with Christianity--law and grace. The two things are as distinct as
-any two things can be, and must be so maintained by all who would be
-found in the current of the mind of God.
-
-We are sometimes led astray by the mere sound of words; and hence,
-when we meet with the word "commandments," we instantly conclude that
-it must needs refer to the law of Moses. But this is a very great and
-mischievous mistake. If the reader is not clear and established as to
-this, let him close this volume and turn to the first eight chapters
-of the epistle to the Romans, and the whole of the epistle to the
-Galatians, and read them calmly and prayerfully, as in the very
-presence of God, with a mind freed from all theological bias and the
-influence of all previous religious training. There he will learn, in
-the fullest and clearest manner, that the Christian is not under law
-in any way, or for any object whatsoever, either for life, for
-righteousness, for holiness, for walk, or for any thing else. In
-short, the teaching of the entire New Testament goes to establish,
-beyond all question, that the Christian is not under law, not of the
-world, not in the flesh, not in his sins. The solid ground of all this
-is the accomplished redemption which we have in Christ Jesus, in
-virtue of which we are sealed by the Holy Ghost, and thus indissolubly
-united to, and inseparably identified with a risen and glorified
-Christ; so that the apostle John can say of all believers, all God's
-dear children, "_As_ He [Christ] _is, so are we_ in this world." This
-settles the whole question, for all who are content to be governed by
-holy Scripture. And as to all beside, discussion is worse than
-useless.
-
-We have digressed from our immediate subject, in order to meet any
-difficulty arising from a misunderstanding of the word "commandments."
-The reader cannot too carefully guard against the tendency to confound
-the commandments spoken of in John xiv. with the commandments of
-Moses, given in Exodus xx. And yet we reverently believe that Exodus
-xx. is as truly inspired as John xiv.
-
-And now, ere we finally turn from the subject which has been engaging
-us, we would ask the reader to refer, for a few moments, to a piece of
-inspired history which illustrates, in a very striking way, the
-difference between an obedient and disobedient child of God. He will
-find it in Genesis xviii, xix. It is a profoundly interesting study,
-presenting a contrast instructive, suggestive, and practical beyond
-expression. We are not going to dwell upon it, having in some measure
-done so in our "Notes on the Book of Genesis;" but we would merely
-remind the reader that he has before him, in these two chapters, the
-history of two saints of God. Lot was just as much a child of God as
-Abraham. We have no more doubt that Lot is amongst "the spirits of
-just men made perfect" than that Abraham is there. This, we think,
-cannot be called in question, inasmuch as the inspired apostle Peter
-tells us that Lot's "righteous soul was vexed with the filthy
-conversation of the wicked."
-
-But mark the grave difference between the two men. The Lord Himself
-visited Abraham, sat with him, and partook readily of his hospitality.
-This was a high honor indeed, a rare privilege--a privilege which Lot
-never knew, an honor to which he never attained. The Lord never
-visited him in Sodom; He merely sent His angels, His ministers of
-power, the agents of His government. And even they, at first, sternly
-refused to enter Lot's house or to partake of his proffered
-hospitality. Their withering reply was, "Nay, but we will abide in the
-street all night." And when they did enter his house, it was only to
-protect him from the lawless violence with which he was surrounded,
-and to drag him out of the wretched circumstances into which, for
-worldly gain and position, he had plunged himself. Could contrast be
-more vivid?
-
-But further, the Lord delighted in Abraham, manifested Himself to him,
-opened His mind to him, told him of His plans and purposes--what He
-was about to do with Sodom. "Shall I," said He, "hide from Abraham
-that thing which I do; seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great
-and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth shall be blessed
-in him? For _I know him, that he will command his children and his
-household after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do
-justice and judgment_, that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which
-he hath spoken of him."
-
-We could hardly have a more telling illustration of John xiv. 21, 23,
-although the scene occurred two thousand years before the words were
-uttered. Have we aught like this in the history of Lot? Alas! no. It
-could not be. He had no nearness to God, no knowledge of His mind, no
-insight into His plans and purposes. How could he? Sunk, as he was, in
-the low moral depths of Sodom, how could he know the mind of God?
-Blinded by the murky atmosphere which inwrapped the guilty cities of
-the plain, how could he see into the future? Utterly impossible. If a
-man is mixed up with the world, he can only see things from the
-world's stand-point; he can only measure things by the world's
-standard, and think of them with the world's thoughts. Hence it is
-that the Church, in its Sardis condition, is _threatened_ with the
-coming of the Lord as a thief, instead of being _cheered_ with the
-hope of His coming as the bright and morning star. If the professing
-church has sunk to the world's level--as, alas! she has--she can only
-contemplate the future from the world's point of view. This accounts
-for the feeling of dread with which the great majority of professing
-Christians look at the subject of the Lord's coming. They are looking
-for Him as a thief, instead of the blessed Bridegroom of their hearts.
-How few there are, comparatively, who _love His appearing_! The great
-majority of professors (we grieve to have to pen the words) find their
-type in Lot rather than in Abraham. The Church has departed from her
-proper ground; she has gone down from her true moral elevation, and
-mingled herself with that world which hates and despises her absent
-Lord.
-
-Still, thank God, there are "a few names, even in Sardis, which have
-not defiled their garments"--a few living stones, amid the smouldering
-ashes of lifeless profession--a few lights twinkling amid the moral
-gloom of cold, nominal, heartless, worldly Christianity. And not only
-so, but in the Laodicean phase of the Church's history, which presents
-a still lower and more hopeless condition of things, when the whole
-professing body is about to be spued out of the mouth of "the faithful
-and true witness"--even at this advanced stage of failure and
-departure, those gracious words fall, with soul-stirring power, on the
-attentive ear, "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if _any man_
-hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in _to him_, and will
-sup with him, and he with Me."[7]
-
- [7] To apply the solemn address of Christ to the church of Laodicea,
- as we sometimes find it done in modern evangelical preaching, to the
- case of the sinner, is a great mistake. No doubt, what the preacher
- means is right enough, but it is not presented here. It is not Christ
- knocking at the door of a sinner's heart, but knocking at the door of
- the professing church. What a fact is this! How full of deep and awful
- solemnity as regards the church! What an end to come to!--Christ
- outside! But what grace, as regards Christ, for He is knocking! He
- wants to come in; He is still lingering, in patient grace and
- changeless love, ready to come in to any faithful individual heart
- that will only open to Him. "If any man"--even one! In Sardis, He
- could speak _positively_ of "_a few_;" in Laodicea, He can only speak
- _doubtfully_ as to finding _one_. But should there be even one, He
- will come in to him, and sup with him. Precious Saviour! Faithful
- Lover of our souls! "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, to-day, and
- forever."
-
- Reader, need we wonder that the enemy should seek to mutilate and
- misapply the solemn and searching address to the church of
- Laodicea--the professing body in the last dreary stage of its history?
- We have no hesitation in saying that to apply it _merely_ to the case
- of an unconverted soul is to deprive the professing church of one of
- the most pertinent, pungent, and powerful appeals within the covers of
- the New Testament.
-
-Thus, in the days of professing Christianity, as in the days of the
-patriarchs--in the times of the New Testament, as in those of the Old,
-we see the same value and importance attached to a hearing ear and an
-obedient heart. Abraham, in the plains of Mamre, the pilgrim and the
-stranger, the faithful and obedient child of God, tasted the rare
-privilege of entertaining the Lord of glory--a privilege which could
-not be known by one who had chosen his place and his portion in a
-sphere doomed to destruction. So, also, in the days of Laodicean
-indifference and boastful pretension, the truly obedient heart is
-cheered with the sweet promise of sitting down to sup with Him who is
-"the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the
-creation of God." In a word, let the condition of things be what it
-may, there is no limit to the blessing of the individual soul who will
-only hearken to the voice of Christ, and keep His commandments.
-
-Let us remember this. Let it sink down into the very deepest depths of
-our moral being. Nothing can rob us of the blessings and privileges
-flowing from obedience. The truth of this shines out before our eyes
-in every section and on every page of the volume of God. At all times,
-in all places, and under all circumstances, the obedient soul was
-happy in God, and God was happy in him. It always holds good, whatever
-be the character of the dispensation, that, "To this man will I look,
-even to him who is of a contrite spirit, and trembles at My word."
-Nothing can ever alter or touch this. It meets us in the fourth
-chapter of our blessed book of Deuteronomy, in the words with which
-this section opens--"Now therefore _hearken_, O Israel, unto _the
-statutes_ and unto _the judgments which I teach you_, for _to do_,
-that ye may live, and go in and possess the land which the Lord God of
-your fathers giveth you." It meets us in those precious words of our
-Lord, in John xiv, on which we have been dwelling--"He that hath _My
-commandments_ and keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me," etc. And
-again, "If a man love Me, _he will keep My sayings_."[8] It shines
-with peculiar brightness in the words of the inspired apostle
-John--"Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence
-toward God. And whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, _because we keep
-His commandments_, and _do those things that are pleasing in His
-sight_. And this is His commandment, that we should believe on the
-name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us
-commandment. And he that keepeth His commandments dwelleth in Him, and
-He in him." (1 John iii. 21-24.)
-
- [8] There is an interesting difference between the Lord's
- "commandments" and "sayings." The former set forth, distinctly and
- definitely, what we ought to do; the latter are the expression of His
- mind. If I give my child a command, it is the statement of his duty;
- and if he loves me, he will delight to do it. But if he has heard me
- _say_ I like to see such a thing done, although I have not actually
- told him to do it, it will touch my heart much more deeply to see him
- go and do that thing in order to gratify me, than if I had given him a
- positive command. Now, ought we not to try and please the heart of
- Christ? Should we not "labor to be agreeable to Him"? He has made us
- accepted; surely we ought to seek, in every possible way, to be
- acceptable to Him. He delights in a loving obedience; it was what He
- Himself rendered to the Father.--"I delight to do Thy will; yea, _Thy
- law_ is within _My heart_." "If ye keep My commandments, ye shall
- abide in My love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments, and
- abide in His love." Oh, that we may drink more deeply into the spirit
- of Jesus, walk in His blessed footsteps, and render Him a more loving,
- devoted, and whole-hearted obedience in all things! Let us earnestly
- seek after these things, beloved Christian reader, that His heart may
- be gratified, and His name glorified in us, and in our entire
- practical career from day to day.
-
-Passages might easily be multiplied, but there is no need. Those which
-we have quoted set before us, in the clearest and fullest way
-possible, the very highest motive for obedience, namely, its being
-agreeable to the heart of our Lord Jesus Christ--well-pleasing to God.
-True, we owe a hearty obedience on every ground. "We are not our own;
-we are bought with a price." We owe our life, our peace, our
-righteousness, our salvation, our everlasting felicity and glory, all
-to Him; so that nothing can exceed the moral weight of His claims upon
-us for a life of whole-hearted obedience. But above and beyond His
-moral claims stands the marvelous fact that His heart is gratified,
-His spirit refreshed, by our keeping His commandments and doing those
-things that are pleasing in His sight.
-
-Beloved Christian reader, can any thing exceed the moral power of such
-a motive as this? Only think of our being privileged to give pleasure
-to the heart of our beloved Lord! What sweetness, what interest, what
-preciousness, what holy dignity, it imparts to every little act of
-obedience to know that it is grateful to the heart of our Father! How
-far beyond the legal system is this! It is a most perfect contrast, in
-its every phase and every feature. The difference between the legal
-system and Christianity is the difference between death and life,
-bondage and liberty, condemnation and righteousness, distance and
-nearness, doubt and certainty. How monstrous the attempt to amalgamate
-these two things--to work them up into one system, as though they were
-but two branches from the one stem! What hopeless confusion must be
-the result of any such effort! How terrible the effect of seeking to
-place souls under the influence of the two things! As well might we
-attempt to combine the sun's meridian beams with the profound darkness
-of midnight. Looked at from a divine and heavenly stand-point, judged
-in the light of the New Testament, measured by the standard of the
-heart of God, the mind of Christ, there could not be a more hideous
-anomaly than that which presents itself to our view in christendom's
-effort to combine law and grace. And as to the dishonor done to God,
-the wound inflicted on the heart of Christ, the grief and despite
-offered to the Holy Ghost, the damage done to the truth of God, the
-grievous wrong perpetrated upon the beloved lambs and sheep of the
-flock of Christ, the terrible stumbling-block thrown in the way of
-both Jew and Gentile, and, in short, the serious injury done to the
-entire testimony of God during the last eighteen centuries, the
-judgment-seat of Christ can alone declare it; and oh, what an awful
-declaration that will be! It is too tremendous to contemplate.
-
-But there are many pious souls throughout the length and breath of the
-professing church who conscientiously believe that the only possible
-way to produce obedience, to attain to practical holiness, to secure a
-godly walk, to keep our evil nature in order, is to put people under
-the law. They seem to fear that if souls are taken from under the
-school-master, with his rod and rudiments, there is an end to all
-moral order. In the absence of the authority of law, they look for
-nothing but hopeless confusion. To take away the ten commandments as a
-rule of life, is, in their judgment, to remove those grand moral
-embankments which the hand of God has erected to stem the tide of
-human lawlessness.
-
-We can fully understand their difficulty. Most of us have had to
-encounter it, in one shape or another. But we must seek to meet it in
-God's way. It is of no possible use to cling, with fond tenacity, to
-our own notions, in the face of the plainest and most direct teaching
-of holy Scripture. We must, sooner or later, give up all such notions.
-Nothing will, nothing can, stand but the Word of our God--the voice of
-the Holy Ghost--the authority of Scripture--the imperishable teachings
-of that peerless revelation which our Father has, in His infinite
-grace, put into our hands. To that we must listen, with profound and
-reverent attention; to it we must bow down, with unquestioning and
-unqualified obedience. We must not presume to hold a single opinion
-of our own: God's opinion must be ours. We must clear out all the
-rubbish, which, by the influence of mere human teaching, has
-accumulated in our minds, and have every chamber thoroughly cleansed
-by the action of the Word and Spirit of God, and thoroughly ventilated
-by the pure and bracing air of the new creation.
-
-Furthermore, we must learn to confide implicitly in every word that
-proceedeth out of the mouth of God. We must not reason, we must not
-judge, we must not discuss: we must simply believe. If man speaks, if
-it be a mere question of human authority, then indeed we must judge,
-because man has no right to command. We must judge what he says, not
-by our own opinions, or by any human standard, creed, or confession of
-faith, but by the Word of God. But when Scripture speaks, all
-discussion is closed.
-
-This is an unspeakable consolation. It is not within the compass of
-human language to set forth adequately the value or the moral
-importance of this great fact. It delivers the soul completely from
-the blinding power of self-will on the one hand, and of mere
-subjection to human authority on the other. It brings us into direct,
-personal, living contact with the authority of God; and this is life,
-peace, liberty, moral power, true elevation, divine certainty, and
-holy stability. It puts an end to doubts and fears, to all the
-fluctuations of mere human opinion, so perplexing to the mind, so
-torturing to the heart. We are no longer tossed about with every wind
-of doctrine, every wave of human thought. _God has spoken._ This is
-quite enough. Here the heart finds its deep and settled repose. It has
-made its escape from the stormy ocean of theological controversy, and
-cast anchor in the blessed haven of divine revelation.
-
-Hence, therefore, we would say to the pious reader of these lines, if
-you would know the mind of God on the subject before us--if you would
-know the ground, character, and object of Christian obedience, you
-must simply listen to the voice of holy Scripture. And what does it
-say? Does it send us back to Moses, to teach us how to live? Does it
-send us back "to the palpable mount," in order to secure holy living?
-Does it put us under the law, to keep the flesh in order? Hear what it
-says. Yes; hearken and ponder. Take the following words from Romans
-vi.--words of emancipating, holy power: "For sin shall not have
-dominion over you; for _ye are not under law_, but under grace."
-
-Now, we most earnestly entreat the reader to let these words enter
-into the very depths of his soul. The Holy Ghost declares, in the
-simplest and most emphatic manner, that Christians are not under law.
-If we were under law, sin would have dominion over us. Indeed, we
-invariably find, in Scripture, that "sin," "law," and "flesh" are
-linked together. A soul under law cannot possibly enjoy full
-deliverance from the dominion of sin; and in this we can see at a
-glance the fallacy of the whole legal system, and the utter delusion
-of seeking to produce holy living by putting souls under the law. It
-is simply putting them into the very place where sin can lord it over
-them, and rule them with absolute sway. How is it possible, then, to
-produce holiness by law? It is absolutely hopeless.
-
-But let us turn, for a moment, to Romans vii. "Wherefore, my brethren,
-ye also"--and all true believers, all God's people--"are become _dead
-to the law_ by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to
-another, even to Him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring
-forth fruit unto God." Now, it is perfectly plain that we cannot be
-"dead to the law" and "under the law" at the same time. It may perhaps
-be argued that the expression, "dead to the law" is merely a figure.
-Well, supposing it be so, we ask, A figure of what? Surely it cannot
-be a figure of persons under law. Nay, it is a figure of the very
-opposite.
-
-And let us mark particularly, the apostle does not say the law is
-dead. Nothing of the kind. The law is not dead, but we are dead to it.
-We have passed, by the death of Christ, out of the sphere to which the
-law belongs. Christ took our place; He was made under the law; and, on
-the cross, He was made sin for us. But He died for us, and we died in
-Him; and He has thus taken us clean out of the position in which we
-were under the dominion of sin, and under law, and introduced us into
-an entirely new position, in living association and union with
-Himself, so that it can be said. "As He is, so are we in this world."
-Is He under law? Assuredly not. Well, neither are we. Has sin any
-claim upon Him? None whatever. Neither has it any upon us. We are, as
-to our standing, as He is in the presence of God; and therefore to put
-us back under law would be a complete overturning of the entire
-Christian position, and a most positive and flagrant contradiction of
-the very plainest statements of holy Scripture.
-
-Now, we would, in all simplicity and godly sincerity, ask, How could
-holy living be promoted by removing the very foundation of
-Christianity? How could indwelling sin be subdued by putting us under
-the very system that gave sin power over us? How could true Christian
-obedience ever be produced by flying in the face of holy Scripture? We
-confess we cannot conceive any thing more thoroughly preposterous.
-Surely a divine end can only be gained by pursuing a divine way. Now,
-God's way of giving us deliverance from the dominion of sin is by
-delivering us from under law; and hence all those who teach that
-Christians are under law are plainly at issue with God. Tremendous
-consideration for all who desire to be teachers of the law!
-
-But let us hear further words from the seventh chapter of Romans. The
-apostle goes on to say, "For _when we were in the flesh_, the motions
-of sins, which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth
-fruit unto _death_. But now _we are delivered from the law_, being
-dead [or, having died] to that wherein we were held: _that we should
-serve_ in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the
-letter."[9]
-
- [9] The rendering of Romans vii. 6 in our authorized version is
- manifestly erroneous, inasmuch as it teaches that the law is dead,
- which is not true. "The law is good, if a man use it lawfully." (1
- Tim. i.) And again, "The law is holy." (Rom. vii.) Scripture never
- teaches that the law is dead, but it teaches that the believer is dead
- to the law--a totally different thing.
-
- But further, +apothanontes+ cannot possibly apply to the law,
- as any well-taught school-boy can see at a glance; it applies to
- us--believers. Were it the law, the word would be +apothanontos+.
-
-Here, again, all is as clear as a sunbeam. What means the expression,
-"When we _were_ in the flesh"? Does it--can it mean that we _are_
-still in that condition? Clearly not. If I were to say, When I _was_
-in London, would any one understand that I am in London still? The
-thought is absurd.
-
-But what does the apostle mean by the expression, "When we were in the
-flesh"? He simply refers to a thing of the past--to a condition that
-no longer obtains. Are believers, then, not in the flesh? So Scripture
-emphatically declares. But does this mean that they are not in the
-body? Assuredly not. They are in the body as to the fact of their
-existence, but not in the flesh as to the ground of their standing
-before God.
-
-In chapter viii. we have the most distinct statement of this
-point.--"So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God. _But ye
-are not in the flesh_, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of
-God dwell in you." Here we have the statement of a most solemn fact,
-and the setting forth of a most precious, glorious privilege. "They
-that are in the flesh _cannot please God_." They may be very moral,
-very amiable, very religious, very benevolent; but they cannot please
-God. Their entire position is false. The source whence all the streams
-flow is corrupt; the root and stem whence all the branches emanate are
-rotten--hopelessly bad. They cannot produce a single atom of good
-fruit--fruit that God can accept. "They cannot please God." They must
-get into an entirely new position; they must have a new life, new
-motives, new objects--in a word, they must be a new creation. How
-solemn is all this! Let us weigh it thoroughly, and see if we
-understand the apostle's words.
-
-But on the other hand, mark the glorious privilege of all true
-believers. "_Ye are not in the flesh._" Believers are no longer in a
-position in which they cannot please God. They have a new nature--a
-new life, every movement, every outflow, of which is agreeable to God.
-The very feeblest breathing of the divine life is precious to God. Of
-this life, the Holy Ghost is the power, Christ the object, glory the
-goal, heaven the home. All is divine, and therefore perfect. True, the
-believer is liable to err, prone in himself to wander, capable of
-sinning. In him (that is, in his flesh,) dwelleth no good thing. But
-his _standing_ is based on the eternal stability of the grace of God,
-and his _state_ is met by the divine provision which that grace has
-made for him in the precious atonement and all-prevailing advocacy of
-our Lord Jesus Christ. Thus he is forever delivered from that terrible
-system in which the prominent figures are, "Flesh," "Law," "Sin,"
-"Death"--melancholy group, most surely!--and he is brought into that
-glorious scene in which the prominent figures are, "Life," "Liberty,"
-"Grace," "Peace," "Righteousness," "Holiness," "Glory," "Christ." "For
-_ye are not come_ to the mount that might be touched"--that is, the
-palpable mount--"and that burned with fire, nor unto blackness, and
-darkness, and tempest, and the sound of a trumpet, and the voice of
-words; which voice they that heard, entreated that the word should not
-be spoken to them any more: (For they could not endure that which was
-commanded, 'And if so much as a beast touch the mountain, it shall be
-stoned, or thrust through with a dart:' and so terrible was the sight,
-that Moses said, 'I exceedingly fear and quake:') but _ye are come_
-unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly
-Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, the general
-assembly, the church of the first-born [ones] which are written in
-heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men
-made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to
-the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than Abel." (Heb.
-xii.)
-
-Thus we have endeavored to meet the difficulty of any conscientious
-reader who up to the moment in which he opened this volume had
-cherished the conviction that it is only by putting believers under
-the law that practical holiness and true obedience can be attained. We
-trust he has followed us through the line of Scripture evidence which
-we have laid before him. If so, he will see that to place believers in
-such a position is to do away with the very foundations of
-Christianity--to abandon grace--to give up Christ--to go back to the
-flesh, in which we cannot please God, and to place ourselves under the
-curse. In short, the legal system of men is diametrically opposed to
-the teaching of the entire New Testament. It was against this system
-and its upholders that the blessed apostle Paul, during his whole
-life, ever testified. He absolutely abhorred it, and continually
-denounced it. The law-teachers were ever seeking to sap and undermine
-his blessed labors, and subvert the souls of his beloved children in
-the faith. It is impossible to read his burning sentences in the
-epistle to the Galatians, his withering references in his epistle to
-the Philippians, or his solemn warnings in the epistle to the Hebrews,
-and not see how intense was his abhorrence of the whole legal system
-of the law-teachers, and how bitterly he wept over the ruins of the
-testimony so dear to his large, loving, devoted heart.
-
-But it is possible that after all we have written, and notwithstanding
-the full tide of Scripture evidence to which we have called the
-reader's attention, he may still feel disposed to ask, Is there not a
-danger of unholy laxity and levity if the restraining power of the law
-be removed? To this we reply, God is wiser than we are. He knows best
-how to cure laxity and levity, and how to produce the right sort of
-obedience. He tried the law, and what did it do? It worked wrath; it
-caused the offense to abound; it developed "the motions of sins;" it
-brought in death; it was the strength of sin; it deprived the sinner
-of all power; it slew him; it was condemnation; it cursed all who had
-to do with it--"As many as are of the works of the law are under the
-curse;" and all this, not because of any defect in the law, but
-because of man's total inability to keep it.
-
-Is it not plain to the reader that neither life nor righteousness nor
-holiness nor true Christian obedience could ever be attained under
-law? Is it possible, after all that has passed in review before us,
-that he can have a single question, a single doubt, a single
-difficulty? We trust not. No one who is willing to bow down to the
-teaching and authority of the New Testament can adhere to the legal
-system for one hour.
-
-However, ere we turn from this weighty and all-important subject, we
-shall place before the reader a passage or two of Scripture in which
-the moral glories of Christianity shine forth with peculiar lustre, in
-vivid contrast to the entire Mosaic economy.
-
-First of all, let us take that familiar passage at the opening of the
-eighth of Romans, "There is therefore now _no condemnation_ to them
-which are _in Christ Jesus_. For the law of the spirit of life in
-Christ Jesus _hath made me free_ from the law of sin and death. For
-what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God
-sending His own Son _in the likeness_ of sinful flesh, and for sin,
-condemned sin in the flesh; that the righteousness [+dikaiôma+]
-of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but
-after the Spirit." (Ver. 1-4.)
-
-Now, we must bear in mind that verse 1 sets forth the _standing_ of
-every Christian--his _position_ before God. He is "in Christ Jesus."
-This settles every thing. He is not in the flesh; he is not under law;
-he is absolutely and eternally "in Christ Jesus." Hence there is,
-there can be, no condemnation. The apostle is not speaking of or
-referring to our _walk_ or our _state_. If he were, he could not
-possibly speak of "no condemnation." The most perfect Christian walk
-that ever was exhibited, the most perfect Christian state that ever
-was attained, would afford some ground for judgment and condemnation.
-There is not a Christian on the face of the earth who has not daily to
-judge his state and his walk--his moral condition and his practical
-ways. How, then, could "no condemnation" ever stand connected with, or
-be based upon, Christian walk? Utterly impossible. In order to be free
-from all condemnation, we must have what is divinely perfect, and no
-Christian walk is or ever was that. Even a Paul had to withdraw his
-words (Acts xxiii. 5.). He repented of having written a letter (2 Cor.
-vii. 8.). A perfect walk and a perfect state were only found in One.
-In all beside--even the holiest and best, failure is found.
-
-Hence, therefore, the second clause of Romans viii. 1 must be
-rejected: it is not Scripture. This, we think, would be seen by any
-one really taught of God, apart from all question of mere criticism.
-Any spiritual mind would detect the incongruity between the words "no
-condemnation" and "walk." The two things cannot be made to harmonize.
-And here, we doubt not, is just where thousands of pious souls have
-been plunged into difficulty as to this really magnificent and
-emancipating passage. The joyful sound, "No condemnation," has been
-robbed of its deep, full, and blessed significance by a clause
-introduced by some scribe or copyist whose feeble vision was doubtless
-dazzled by the brightness of that free, absolute, sovereign grace
-which shines in the opening statement of the chapter. How often have
-we heard such words as these!--"Oh, yes; I know there is no
-condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus; but that is if they
-walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. Now, I cannot say that
-I walk thus. I long to do so, and I mourn over my failure. I would
-give worlds to be able to walk more perfectly; but, alas! alas! I have
-to judge myself--my state, my walk, my ways--each day, each hour. This
-being so, I dare not apply to myself the precious words, 'no
-condemnation.' I hope to be able to do so some day, when I have made
-more progress in personal holiness; but in my present state, I should
-deem it the very height of presumption to appropriate to myself the
-precious truth contained in the first clause of Romans viii."
-
-Such thoughts as these have passed through the minds of most of us, if
-they have not been clothed in words. But the simple and conclusive
-answer to all such legal reasonings is found in the fact that the
-second clause of Romans viii. 1 is not Scripture at all, but a very
-misleading interpolation, foreign to the spirit and genius of
-Christianity, opposed to the whole line of argument in the context
-where it occurs, and utterly subversive of the solid peace of the
-Christian. It is a fact well known to all who are conversant with
-biblical criticism, that all the leading authorities are agreed in
-rejecting the second clause of Romans viii. 1.[10] And in this, it is
-simply a matter of criticism confirming, as all sound criticism must
-do, the conclusion at which a really spiritual mind would arrive
-without any knowledge of criticism at all.
-
- [10] It may be that the reader feels a little jealous of any
- interference with our excellent English Bible. He may, like many
- others, feel disposed to say, "How is an uneducated man to know what
- is Scripture and what is not? Must he depend upon scholars and critics
- to give him certainty on so grave and important a question? If so, is
- it not the same old story of looking to human authority to confirm the
- Word of God?" By no means. It is a totally different thing. We all
- know that all copies and translations must be, in some points,
- imperfect, as being human; but we believe that the same grace which
- gave the Word in the original Hebrew and Greek languages, has most
- marvelously watched over our English translation, so that a poor man,
- at the back of a mountain, may rest assured that he possesses in his
- common English Bible the revelation of the mind of God. It is
- wonderful, after all the labors of scholars and critics, how few
- passages, comparatively, have had to be touched; and not one affecting
- any foundation-doctrine of Christianity. God, who graciously gave us
- the holy Scriptures at the first, has watched over them and preserved
- them to His Church in a most wonderful manner. Moreover, He has seen
- fit to make use of the labors of scholars and critics, from age to
- age, to clear the sacred text of errors which, through the infirmity
- attaching to all human agency, had crept into it. Should these
- corrections shake our confidence in the integrity of Scripture as a
- whole? or lead us to doubt that we possess, in very deed, the Word of
- God? Nay, rather should they lead us to bless God for His goodness in
- watching over His Word in order to preserve it in its integrity for
- His Church.
-
-But in addition to all that has been advanced in reference to this
-question, we cannot but think that the occurrence of the clause, "who
-walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit," in verse 4, affords
-abundant evidence of its misplacement in verse 1. We cannot, for a
-moment, admit the thought of redundancy in holy Scripture. Now, in
-verse 4 it _is_ a question of walk--a question of our fulfilling "the
-righteousness [mark the word--+dikaiôma+] of the law," and
-hence the clause is in its right, because divinely fitted, place. A
-person who walks in the Spirit--as every Christian ought--fulfills the
-righteousness of the law. Love is the fulfilling of the law; and love
-will lead us to do what the ten commandments could never effect,
-namely, to love our enemies. No lover of holiness, no advocate of
-practical righteousness, need ever be the least afraid of losing aught
-by abandoning the legal ground, and taking his place on the elevated
-platform of true Christianity--by turning from Mount Sinai to Mount
-Zion--by passing from Moses to Christ. No; he only reaches a higher
-source, a deeper spring, a wider sphere of holiness, righteousness,
-and practical obedience.
-
-And then, if any one should feel disposed to ask, Does not the line of
-argument which we have been pursuing tend to rob the law of its
-characteristic glory? We reply, Most assuredly not. So far from this,
-the law was never so magnified, never so vindicated, never so
-established, never so glorified, as by that precious work which forms
-the imperishable foundation of all the privileges, the blessings, the
-dignities, and the glories of Christianity. The blessed apostle
-anticipates and answers this very question in the earlier part of his
-epistle to the Romans. "Do we then," he says, "make void the law
-through faith? Far be the thought; yea, we establish the law." How
-could the law be more gloriously vindicated, honored, and magnified
-than in the life and death of the Lord Jesus Christ? Will any one
-seek, for a moment, to maintain the extravagant notion that it is
-magnifying the law to put Christians under it? We fondly trust the
-reader will not. Ah! no; all this line of things must be completely
-abandoned by those whose privilege it is to walk in the light of the
-new creation; who know Christ as their life and Christ as their
-righteousness, Christ their sanctification, Christ their great
-exemplar, Christ their model, Christ their all and in all; who find
-their motive for obedience, not in the fear of the curses of a broken
-law, but in the love of Christ, according to those exquisitely beautiful
-words, "The love of Christ"--not the law of Moses--"constraineth
-us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all
-dead. And He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth
-live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them and rose
-again." (2 Cor. v.)
-
-Could the law ever produce aught like this? Impossible. But, blessed
-forever be the God of all grace, "what the law could not do," not
-because it was not holy, just, and good, but "in that it was weak
-through the flesh"--the workman was all right, but the material was
-rotten, and nothing could be made of it; but "God sending His own Son
-in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the
-flesh, that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us,
-who," as risen with Christ, linked with Him by the Holy Ghost, in the
-power of a new and everlasting life, "walk not after the flesh, but
-after the Spirit."
-
-This, and only this, is true, practical Christianity; and if the
-reader will turn to the second of Galatians, he will find another of
-those fine, glowing utterances of the blessed apostle, setting forth,
-with divine force and fullness, the special glory of Christian life
-and walk. It is in connection with his faithful rebuke of the apostle
-Peter at Antioch, when that beloved and honored servant of Christ,
-through his characteristic weakness, had been led to step down, for a
-moment, from the elevated moral ground on which the gospel of the
-grace of God places the soul. We cannot do better than quote the
-entire paragraph for the reader: every sentence of it is pregnant with
-spiritual power.
-
-"But when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him _to the face_."
-He did not go behind his back, to disparage and depreciate him in the
-view of others, even though "he was to be blamed. For before that
-certain came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles; but when they
-were come, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing them which were
-of the circumcision. And the other Jews dissembled likewise with him,
-insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation.
-But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth
-of the gospel, I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a
-Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why
-compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews? We who are Jews
-by nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles, knowing that a man is not
-justified by works of law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we
-have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith
-of Christ, and not by works of law; for by works of law shall no flesh
-be justified. But if, while we seek to be justified by Christ, we
-ourselves also are found sinners, is therefore Christ the minister of
-sin? God forbid [or, Far be the thought--+mê genoito+.]. For if
-I build again the things which I destroyed, I make myself a
-transgressor." For if the things were right, why destroy them? and if
-they were wrong, why build them again? "For I, through law, am _dead
-to law_, that I might live unto God. I am crucified with Christ:
-nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life
-which I now live in the flesh, I live [not by the law, as a rule of
-life, but] by the faith of the Son of God, _who loved me_, and gave
-_Himself for me_. I do not frustrate the grace of God; for if
-righteousness come by law, then Christ is dead in vain [or, has died
-for nothing--+dôrean+.]." (Gal. ii. 11-21.)
-
-Here, then, we have one of the very finest statements of the truth as
-to practical Christianity any where to be found. But what specially
-claims our attention just now is, the very marked and beautiful way in
-which the gospel of God opens up the path of the true believer between
-the two fatal errors of legality on the one side and carnal laxity on
-the other. Verse 19, in the passage just quoted, contains the divine
-remedy for both these deadly evils. To all--whoever or wherever they
-are--who would seek to put the Christian under the law, in any shape
-or for any object whatsoever, our apostle exclaims, in the ears of
-dissembling Jews, with Peter at their head, and as an answer to all
-the law-teachers of every age, "_I am dead to law_."
-
-What can the law have to say to a dead man? Nothing. The law applies
-to a living man, to curse him and kill him because he has not kept it.
-It is a very grave mistake indeed to teach that the law is dead or
-abolished. It is nothing of the sort. It is alive in all its force, in
-all its stringency, in all its majesty, in all its unbending dignity.
-It would be a very serious mistake to say that the law of England
-against murder is dead; but if a man is dead, the law no longer
-applies to him, inasmuch as he has passed entirely out of its range.
-
-But how is the believer dead to law? The apostle replies, "I through
-law am dead to law." The law had brought the sentence of death into
-his conscience, as we read in Romans vii, "I was alive without the
-law once; but when the commandment came, sin revived and I died. And
-the commandment, which was ordained to life, I found to be into death.
-For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it
-slew me."
-
-But there is more than this. The apostle goes on to say, "I am
-crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ
-liveth in me." And here is the triumphant answer of the Christian to
-those who say that inasmuch as the Mosaic law is abrogated, there is
-no longer any demand for the legal restraint under which the Jews were
-called to live. To all who would seek liberty for self-indulgence, the
-answer is, "I am dead to law, [not that I might give a loose rein to
-the flesh, but] that I might live unto God."
-
-Thus nothing can be more complete, nothing more morally beautiful,
-than the answer of true Christianity to legality on the one hand and
-licentiousness on the other. Self crucified; sin condemned; new life
-in Christ; a life to be lived to God; a life of faith in the Son of
-God; the motive-spring of that life, the constraining love of
-Christ--what can exceed this? Will any one, in view of the moral
-glories of Christianity, contend for putting believers under the law,
-putting them back into the flesh--back into the old creation--back to
-the sentence of death in the conscience--back to bondage, darkness,
-distance, fear of death, condemnation?
-
-Is it possible that any one who has ever tasted, even in the very
-feeblest measure, the heavenly sweetness of God's most blessed gospel,
-can accept the wretched mongrel system, composed of half law and half
-grace, which christendom offers to the soul? How terrible to find the
-children of God--members of the body of Christ--temples of the Holy
-Ghost--robbed of their glorious privileges, and burdened with a heavy
-yoke, which, as Peter says, "neither our fathers nor we were able to
-bear." We earnestly entreat the Christian reader to consider what has
-been placed before him. Search the Scriptures; and if you find these
-things to be so, then fling aside forever the grave-clothes in which
-christendom inwraps its deluded votaries, and walk in the liberty
-wherewith Christ makes His people free; tear off the bandage with
-which it covers the eyes of men, and gaze on the moral glories which
-shine with such heavenly brilliancy in the gospel of the grace of God.
-
-And then let us prove, by a holy, happy, gracious walk and
-conversation, that grace can do what law never could. Let our
-practical ways from day to day, in the midst of the scenes,
-circumstances, relationships, and associations in which we are called
-to live, be the most convincing reply to all who contend for the law
-as a rule of life.
-
-Finally, let it be our earnest, loving desire and aim to seek, in so
-far as in us lies, to lead all the dear children of God into a clearer
-knowledge of their standing and privileges in a risen and glorified
-Christ. May the Lord send out His light and His truth, in the power
-of the Holy Ghost, and gather His beloved people around Himself, to
-walk in the joy of His salvation, in the purity and light of His
-presence, and to wait for His coming.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We do not attempt to offer any apology for what may perhaps appear to
-some of our readers to be a very lengthened digression from the fourth
-chapter of Deuteronomy. The fact is, we have been led into what we
-judge to be a very needed line of practical truth by the very first
-verse of the chapter, as quoted at the opening of this section. We
-felt it absolutely necessary, in speaking of the weighty question of
-obedience, to seek to place it on its true basis. If Israel was called
-to "hearken and do," how much more are we, who are so richly
-blessed--yea, "blessed with _all_ spiritual blessings in the
-heavenlies in Christ Jesus." We are called to obedience, even to the
-obedience of Jesus Christ, as we have it in 1 Peter i, "Elect
-according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through
-sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the
-blood of Jesus Christ." We are called to the very same character of
-obedience as that which marked the life of our blessed Lord Jesus
-Christ Himself. Of course, in Him there was no hindering influence as,
-alas! there is in us; but as to the character of the obedience, it is
-the same.
-
-This is an immense privilege. We are called to walk in the footsteps
-of Jesus. "He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so to
-walk even as He walked." Now, in pondering the path of our Lord, in
-considering His marvelous life, there is one point which demands our
-profound and reverent attention--a point which connects itself, in a
-very special manner, with the book of Deuteronomy--and that is, the
-way in which He ever used the Word of God--the place which He ever
-gave to the holy Scriptures. This we consider to be a subject of the
-last possible importance at the present moment. It holds a prominent
-place throughout the lovely book with which we are at present engaged.
-Indeed, as we have already remarked, it characterizes the book, and
-marks it off from the three books which precede it in the divine
-canon. We shall find proofs and illustrations of this in abundance as
-we pass along. Every where, the Word of God gets its own paramount
-place, as the only rule, the only standard, the only authority, for
-man. It meets him in every position, in every relationship, in every
-sphere of action, and in every stage of his moral and spiritual
-history. It tells him what he ought to do, and what he ought not. It
-furnishes him with ample guidance in every difficulty. It descends, as
-we shall see, to the most minute details--such details, indeed, as
-fill us with amazement to think that the High and Mighty One that
-inhabiteth eternity could occupy Himself with them--to think that the
-Omnipotent Creator and Sustainer of the vast universe could stoop to
-legislate about a bird's nest. (Chap. xxii. 6.)
-
-Such is the Word of God--that peerless revelation--that perfect and
-inimitable volume which stands alone in the history of literature. And
-we may say that one special charm of the book of Deuteronomy--one
-peculiar feature of interest is, the way in which it exalts the Word
-of God, and enforces upon us the holy and happy duty of unqualified
-and unhesitating obedience.
-
-Yes; we repeat and would fervently emphasize the words--unqualified
-and unhesitating obedience. We would have these wholesome words
-sounded in the ears of Christian professors throughout the length and
-breadth of the earth. We live in a day specially marked by the setting
-up of man's reason, man's judgment, man's will; in short, we live in
-what the inspired apostle calls "man's day." On all hands we are
-encountered by lofty and boastful words about human reason, and the
-right of every man to judge and reason and think for himself. The
-thought of being absolutely and completely governed by the authority
-of holy Scripture is treated with sovereign contempt by thousands of
-men who are the religious guides and teachers of the professing
-church. For any one to assert his reverent belief in the plenary
-inspiration, the all-sufficiency, and the absolute authority of
-Scripture, is quite sufficient to stamp him as an ignorant,
-narrow-minded man, if not a semi-lunatic, in the judgment of some who
-occupy the very highest position in the professing church. In our
-universities, our colleges, and our schools, the moral glory of the
-Divine Volume is fast fading away, and instead thereof our young
-people are led and taught to walk in the light of science--the light
-of human reason. The Word of God itself is impiously placed at the bar
-of man's judgment, and reduced to the level of the human
-understanding. Every thing is rejected which soars beyond man's feeble
-vision.
-
-Thus the Word of God is virtually set aside. For, clearly, if
-Scripture is to be submitted to human judgment, it ceases to be the
-Word of God. It is the very height of folly to think of submitting a
-divine and therefore perfect revelation to any tribunal whatsoever.
-Either God has given us a revelation or He has not. If He has, that
-revelation must be paramount, supreme, above and beyond all question,
-absolutely unquestionable, unerring, divine. To its authority all must
-bow down, without a single question. To suppose for a moment that man
-is competent to judge the Word of God, able to pronounce upon what is
-or what is not worthy of God to say or to write, is simply to put man
-in God's place. And this is precisely what the devil is aiming at,
-although many of his instruments are not aware that they are helping
-on his designs.
-
-But the question is continually cropping up before us, "How can we be
-sure that we have, in our English Bible, the _bona-fide_ revelation of
-God?" We reply, God can make us sure of it. If He does not, no one
-can: if He does, no one need. This is our ground, and we deem it
-unassailable. We should like to ask all those who start this infidel
-question (for such we must honestly call it), Supposing that God
-cannot give us the absolute certainty that, in our common English
-Bible, we do actually possess His own most precious, priceless
-revelation, then whither are we to turn? Of course, in such a weighty
-matter, on which momentous and eternal consequences hang, a single
-doubt is torture and misery. If I am not sure of possessing a
-revelation from God, I am left without a single ray of light for my
-path; I am plunged in darkness, gloom, and mental misery. What am I to
-do? Can man help me by his learning, his wisdom, or his reason? Can he
-satisfy my soul by his decision? Can he solve my difficulty, answer my
-question, remove my doubt, dissipate my fear? Is man better able than
-God to give me the assurance that God has spoken?
-
-The idea is absolutely monstrous--monstrous in the very highest
-degree. The plain fact is this, reader: If God cannot give us the
-certainty that He has spoken, we are left without His word altogether.
-If we must turn to human authority, call it what you please, in order
-to guarantee the Word of God to our souls, then that authority is
-higher and greater, safer and more trustworthy, than the Word which it
-guarantees. Blessed be God, it is not so. He has spoken to our hearts.
-He has given us His Word, and that Word carries its own credentials
-with it. It stands in no need of letters of commendation from a human
-hand. What! turn to man to accredit the Word of the living
-God!--apply to a worm to give us the assurance that our God has spoken
-to us in His Word! Away forever with the blasphemous notion, and let
-our whole moral being--all our ransomed powers adore the matchless
-grace, the sovereign mercy, that has not left us to grope in the
-darkness of our own minds, or to be bewildered by the conflicting
-opinions of men; but has given us His own perfect and most precious
-revelation, the divine light of His Word, to guide our feet into the
-path of certainty and peace, to enlighten our understandings and
-comfort our hearts, to preserve us from every form of doctrinal error
-and moral pravity, and finally, to conduct us into the rest,
-blessedness, and glory of His own heavenly kingdom. All praise to His
-name throughout the everlasting ages!
-
-But we must bear in mind that the marvelous privilege of which we have
-spoken--and truly it is most marvelous--is the basis of a most solemn
-responsibility. If it be true that God has, in His infinite goodness,
-given us a perfect revelation of His mind, then what should be our
-attitude in reference to it? Are we to sit in judgment upon it? Are we
-to discuss, argue, or reason? Alas! for all who do so. They will find
-themselves on terribly dangerous ground. The only true, the only
-proper, the only safe attitude for man in the presence of God's
-revelation is, obedience--simple, unqualified, hearty obedience. This
-is the only right thing for us, and this is the thing which is
-pleasing to God. The path of obedience is the path of sweetest
-privilege, rest, and blessing. This path can be trodden by the merest
-babe in Christ, as well as by the "young men" and the "fathers." There
-is the one straight and blessed path for all. Narrow it is, no doubt;
-but, oh! it is safe, bright, and elevated. The light of our Father's
-approving countenance ever shines upon it; and in this blessed light
-the obedient soul finds the most triumphant answer to all the
-reproaches of those who talk, in high-sounding words, about breadth of
-mind, liberality of thought, freedom of opinion, progress,
-development, and such like. The obedient child of God can afford to
-put up with all this, because he feels and knows, he believes and is
-sure, that he is treading a path indicated for him by the precious
-Word of God. He is not careful to explain or apologize, feeling
-assured that those who object, oppose, and reproach are utterly
-incapable of understanding or appreciating his explanation. And,
-moreover, he feels that it is no part of his duty to explain or
-defend. He has but to obey; and as for objectors and opposers, he has
-but to refer them to his Master.
-
-This makes it all so simple, so plain, so certain. It delivers the
-heart from a thousand difficulties and perplexities. If we were to set
-about replying to all who undertake to raise questions or start
-difficulties, our whole life would be spent in the profitless task. We
-may rest assured the best possible answer to all infidel objectors is,
-the steady, earnest, onward path of unqualified obedience. Let us
-leave infidels, skeptics, and rationalists to their own worthless
-theories, while we, with unswerving purpose and firm step, pursue that
-blessed path of childlike obedience which, like the shining light,
-shineth more and more unto the perfect day. Thus shall our minds be
-kept tranquil, for the peace of God, which passeth all understanding,
-shall garrison our hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. When the
-Word of God, which is settled forever in heaven, is hidden deep down
-in our hearts, there will be a calm certainty, a holy stability, and a
-marked progress in our Christian career, which will afford the best
-possible answer to the gainsayer, the most effectual testimony to the
-truth of God, and the most convincing evidence and solid confirmation
-to every wavering heart.
-
-The chapter before us abounds in the most solemn exhortation to
-Israel, grounded upon the fact of their having heard the word of God.
-Thus in the second verse we have a sentence or two which should be
-deeply engraved on the tablets of every Christian's heart.--"Ye shall
-not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish
-aught from it."
-
-These words involve two grand facts with regard to the Word of God. It
-is not to be added to, for the simplest of all reasons, because there
-is nothing lacking; it is not to be diminished, because there is
-nothing superfluous. Every thing we want is there, and nothing that is
-there can be done without. "Add thou not unto His words, lest He
-reprove thee, and thou be found a liar." To suppose that aught can be
-added to God's Word is, upon the very face of it, to deny that it is
-God's Word; and, on the other hand, if we admit that it is the Word of
-God, then it follows of necessity (blessed necessity!) that we could
-not afford to do without a single sentence of it. There would be a
-blank in the volume which no human hand could fill up, if a single
-clause were dropped from its place in the canon. We have all we want,
-and hence we must not add: we want it all, and hence we must not
-diminish.
-
-How deeply important is all this, in this day of human tampering with
-the Word of God! How blessed to know that we have in our possession a
-book so divinely perfect that not a sentence, not a clause, not a
-word, can be added to it. We speak not, of course, of translations or
-versions, but of the Scriptures as originally given of God--His own
-perfect revelation. To this, not a touch can be given. As well might a
-human finger have dared to touch the creation of God, on the morning
-when all the sons of God sang together, as to add a jot or a tittle to
-the inspired Word of God. And on the other hand, to take away a jot or
-a tittle from it, is to say that the Holy Ghost has penned what was
-unnecessary. Thus the holy volume is divinely guarded at both ends. It
-is securely fenced round about, so that no rude hand should touch its
-sacred contents.
-
-What! it may be said in reply, do you mean to say that every sentence,
-from the opening lines of Genesis to the close of Revelation, is
-divinely inspired? Yes; that is precisely the ground we take. We
-claim for every line between the covers of the volume a divine origin.
-To question this is to attack the very pillars of the Christian faith.
-A single flaw in the canon would be sufficient to prove it not of God.
-To touch a single stone in the arch is to bring down the whole fabric
-in ruins around us. "All Scripture is divinely inspired, and" being
-so, must be "profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
-instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect
-[+artios+], throughly furnished unto all good works." (2 Tim.
-iii.)
-
-This stronghold must on no account be surrendered; nay, it must be
-tenaciously held, in the face of every infidel assault. If it be given
-up, all is hopelessly lost--we have nothing to lean upon. Either the
-Word of God is perfect, or we are left without any divine foundation
-for our faith. If there be a word too much or a word too little in the
-revelation which God has given us, then verily we are left, like a
-ship without compass, rudder, or chart, to be drifted about on the
-wild, tumultuous ocean of infidel thought; in short, if we have not an
-absolutely perfect revelation, we are of all men most miserable.
-
-But we may still be challenged with such a question as this: Do you
-believe that the long string of names in the opening chapters of 1
-Chronicles--those genealogical tables are divinely inspired? were they
-written for our learning? and if so, what are we to learn from them?
-We unhesitatingly declare our reverent belief in the divine
-inspiration of all these; and we have no doubt whatever but that
-their value, interest, and importance will be fully proved by and by
-in the history of that people to whom they specially apply.
-
-And then, as to what we are to learn from those genealogical records,
-we believe they teach us a most precious lesson as to Jehovah's
-faithful care of His people Israel, and His loving interest in them
-and in all that concerns them. He watches over them from generation to
-generation, even though they are scattered and lost to human view. He
-knows all about "the twelve tribes," and He will manifest them in due
-time, and plant them in their destined inheritance, in the land of
-Canaan, according to His promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
-
-Now, is not all this full of blessed instruction for us? Is it not
-full of comfort for our souls? Is it not most confirmatory of our
-faith to mark the gracious pains-taking of our God, His minute care
-and vigilance in reference to His earthly people? Most assuredly it
-is. And ought not our hearts to be interested in all that interests
-the heart of our Father? Are we not to take an interest in any thing
-save what directly concerns ourselves? Where is there a loving child
-who would not take an interest in all his father's concerns, and
-delight to read every line that drops from his father's pen?
-
-Let us not be misunderstood. We do not, by any means, attempt to imply
-that all portions of the Word of God are of like interest and
-importance to us. We do not presume to assert that we are to hang
-with equal interest over the first chapter of 1 Chronicles and the
-seventeenth chapter of John or the eighth chapter of Romans. It seems
-hardly necessary to make such a statement, inasmuch as no such
-question is raised. But what we assert is that each of the above
-scriptures is divinely inspired, one just as much as another; and not
-only so, but we further assert that 1 Chronicles i. and such like
-passages fill a niche which John xvii. cannot fill, and do a work
-which Romans viii. cannot do.
-
-And finally, above and beyond all, we must remember that we are not
-competent to judge what is and what is not worthy of a place in the
-inspired canon. We are ignorant and short-sighted; and the very
-portion which we might deem beneath the dignity of inspiration may
-have some very important bearing upon the history of God's ways with
-the world at large or with His people in particular.
-
-In short, it simply resolves itself into this with every truly pious
-soul--every really spiritual mind: We reverently believe in the divine
-inspiration of every line of our precious Bible, from beginning to
-end; and we believe this not on the ground of any human authority
-whatsoever. To believe in holy Scripture because it comes to us
-accredited by any authority upon earth, would be to set that authority
-above holy Scripture, inasmuch as that which guarantees has more
-weight--more value than the thing guaranteed. Hence, we should no more
-think of looking to human authority to confirm the Word of God than
-we should of bringing out a rush-light to prove that the sun was
-shining.
-
-No, reader; we must be clear and decided as to this. It must be, in
-the judgment of our souls, a great cardinal truth which we hold dearer
-than life itself--the plenary inspiration of holy Scripture. Thus
-shall we have wherewithal to answer the cool audacity of modern
-skepticism, rationalism, and infidelity. We do not mean to say that we
-shall be able to convince infidels. God will deal with them in His own
-way, and convince them with His own unanswerable arguments in His own
-time. It is labor and time lost to argue with such men. But we feel
-persuaded that the most dignified and effective answer to infidelity,
-in its every phase, will be found in the calm repose of the heart that
-rests in the blessed assurance that "all Scripture is given by
-inspiration of God;" and again, "Whatsoever things were written
-aforetime were written for our learning; that we through patience and
-comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." The former of these
-precious quotations proves that Scripture has come from God; the
-latter, that it has come to us. Both together go to prove that we must
-neither add to nor take from the Word of God. There is nothing
-lacking, and nothing superfluous. The Lord be praised for this solid
-foundation-truth, and for all the comfort and consolation that flows
-from it to every true believer!
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now proceed to quote for the reader a few of the passages in
-this fourth chapter of Deuteronomy which so emphatically set forth the
-value, importance, and authority of the Word of God. In them, as in
-the whole of this book, we shall see that it is not so much a question
-of any particular ordinance, rite, or ceremony, but of the weight,
-solemnity, and dignity of the Word of God itself, whatever that Word
-may set before us.
-
-"Behold, I have taught you statutes and judgments, even as the Lord my
-God commanded me, that ye should do so in the land whither ye go to
-possess it." Their conduct was to be ruled and formed, in all things,
-by the divine commandments. Immense principle for them, for us, for
-all! "Keep, therefore, and do them; for _this is your wisdom_ and
-_your understanding_ in the sight of the nations, which shall hear all
-these statutes, and say, Surely this great nation is a wise and
-understanding people."
-
-Let us specially weigh these words. Their wisdom and their
-understanding were to consist in their simply keeping and doing the
-divine statutes and judgments. It was not by learned discussion or
-arguments that their wisdom was to be displayed, but by childlike,
-unquestioning obedience. All the wisdom was in the statutes and
-judgments, not in their thoughts and reasonings respecting them. The
-profound and marvelous wisdom of God was seen in His Word, and this
-was what the nations were to see and admire. The light of the divine
-judgments shining in the conduct and character of the people of God
-was to draw forth the admiring testimony of the nations around.
-
-Alas! alas! how differently it turned out! How little did the nations
-of the earth learn, from the actings of Israel, about God and His
-Word! Yea, His name was blasphemed continually through their ways.
-Instead of occupying the high and holy and happy ground of loving
-obedience to the divine commandments, they descended to the level of
-the nations around them--adopted their habits, worshiped their gods,
-and walked in their ways; so that those nations, instead of seeing the
-lofty wisdom, purity, and moral glory of the divine statutes, saw only
-the weakness, folly, and moral degradation of a people who made their
-boast in being the depositary of those oracles which condemned
-themselves. (Rom. ii, iii.)
-
-Still, blessed be God, His Word must stand forever, however His people
-may fail to carry it out. His standard is perfect, and therefore must
-never be lowered; and if the power of His Word be not seen in the ways
-of His people, it will shine in the condemnation of those ways, and
-ever abide for the guidance, comfort, strength, and blessing of any
-who desire, however feebly or falteringly, to tread the path of
-obedience.
-
-However, in the chapter with which we are at present occupied, the
-lawgiver seeks to set the divine standard faithfully before the
-people, in all its dignity and moral glory. He fails not to unfold to
-them the true effect of obedience, while he solemnly warns them
-against the danger of turning away from the holy commandments of God.
-Hear his powerful pleadings with their hearts. "What nation is there
-so great," he says, "who hath God so nigh unto them, as the Lord our
-God is in all things that we call upon Him for? And what nation is
-there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous as all
-this law, which I set before you this day?"
-
-Here is true moral greatness, at all times and in all places, for a
-nation, for a people, for a household, or for an individual. To have
-the living God nigh unto us; to have the sweet privilege of calling
-upon Him, in all things; to have His power and His mercy ever
-exercised toward us; to have the light of His blessed countenance
-shining approvingly upon us, in all our ways; to have the moral effect
-of His righteous statutes and holy commandments seen in our practical
-career, from day to day; to have Him manifesting Himself to us, and
-making His abode with us.
-
-What human language can adequately set forth the deep blessedness of
-such privileges as these? and yet they are placed, by infinite grace,
-within the reach of every child of God on the face of the earth. We do
-not mean to assert that every child of God enjoys them. Far from it.
-They are reserved, as we have already seen, for those who, through
-grace, are enabled to render a loving, hearty, reverent obedience to
-the divine word. Here lies the precious secret of the whole matter. It
-was true for Israel of old, and it is true for the Church now--it was
-true for the individual soul then, and it is true for the individual
-soul now, that divine complacency is the priceless reward of human
-obedience. And we may further add that obedience is the bounden duty
-and high privilege of all God's people, and of each in particular.
-Come what may, implicit obedience is our privilege and our duty,
-divine complacency our present sweet reward.
-
-But the poor human heart is prone to wander, and manifold influences
-are at work around us to draw us off from the narrow path of
-obedience. We need not marvel, therefore, at the solemn and
-oft-repeated admonitions addressed by Moses to the hearts and
-consciences of his hearers. He pours his large, loving heart out to
-the congregation so dear to him, in glowing, earnest, soul-stirring
-accents. "Only take heed to thyself," he says, "and keep thy soul
-diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen,
-and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life; but
-teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons."
-
-These are weighty words for all of us. They set before us two things
-of unspeakable importance, namely, individual and domestic
-responsibility--personal and household testimony. God's people of old
-were responsible to keep the heart with all diligence, lest it should
-let slip the precious Word of God. And not only so, but they were
-solemnly responsible to instruct their children and their
-grandchildren in the same. Are we, with all our light and privilege,
-less responsible than Israel of old? Surely not. We are imperatively
-called upon to give ourselves to the careful study of the Word of
-God--to apply our hearts to it. It is not enough that we hurry over a
-few verses or a chapter, as a piece of daily religious routine. This
-will not meet the case at all. We want to make the Bible our supreme
-and absorbing study,--that in which we delight--in which we find our
-refreshment and recreation.
-
-It is to be feared that some of us read the Bible as a matter of duty,
-while we find our delight and refreshment in the newspaper and light
-literature. Need we wonder at our shallow knowledge of Scripture? How
-could we know aught of the living depths or the moral glories of a
-volume which we merely take up as a cold matter of duty, and read a
-few verses with a yawning indifference, while, at the same time, the
-newspaper or the sensational novel is literally devoured?
-
-It will perhaps be said, in reply, We cannot be always reading the
-Bible. Would those who thus speak say, We cannot be always reading the
-newspaper or the novel? And, we would further inquire, what must be
-the actual state of a person who can say, "We cannot be always reading
-the Bible"? Can he be in a healthy condition of soul? Can he really
-love the Word of God? Can he have any just sense of its preciousness,
-its excellence, its moral glories? Impossible.
-
-What mean the following words to Israel: "Therefore shall ye lay up
-these My words _in your heart_, and _in your soul_, and bind them for
-a sign upon _your hand_, that they may be as frontlets between _your
-eyes_"? The "heart," the "soul," the "hand" the "eyes"--all engaged
-about the precious Word of God. This was real work. It was to be no
-empty formality, no barren routine. The whole man was to be given up,
-in holy devotion, to the statutes and judgments of God.
-
-"And ye shall teach them your children, speaking of them when thou
-sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, when thou
-liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt write them upon
-the door-posts of thine house, and upon thy gates." Do we, Christians,
-enter into such words as these? Has the Word of God such a place in
-our hearts, in our homes, and in our habits? Do those who enter our
-houses, or come in contact with us in daily life, see that the Word of
-God is paramount with us? Do those with whom we do business see that
-we are governed by the precepts of holy Scripture? Do our servants and
-our children see that we live in the very atmosphere of Scripture, and
-that our whole character is formed and our conduct governed by it?
-
-These are searching questions for our hearts, beloved Christian
-reader. Let us not put them away from us. We may rest assured there is
-no more correct indicator of our moral and spiritual condition than
-that afforded by our treatment of the Word of God. If we do not love
-it--love to study it--thirst after it--delight in it--long for the
-quiet hour in the which we can hang over its sacred page and drink in
-its most precious teaching--meditate upon it, in the closet, in the
-family, in the street; in short, if we do not breathe its holy
-atmosphere--if we could ever give utterance to such a sentiment as
-that given above, that "we cannot be always reading the Bible," then,
-verily, we have urgent need to look well to our spiritual state, for
-we are sadly out of health. The new nature loves the Word of
-God--earnestly desires it, as we read in 1 Peter ii.--"As new-born
-babes, desire the sincere milk of the Word, that ye may grow thereby."
-
-This is the true idea. If the sincere milk of the Word be not sought
-after, diligently used and eagerly fed upon, we must be in a low,
-unhealthy, dangerous condition of soul. There may not be any thing
-outwardly wrong in our conduct, we may not be publicly dishonoring the
-Lord in our ways, but we are grieving His loving heart by our gross
-neglect of His Word, which is but another term for the neglect of
-Himself. It is the very height of folly to talk of loving Christ if we
-do not love and live upon His Word. It is a delusion to imagine that
-the new life can be in a healthy, prosperous condition where the Word
-of God is habitually neglected in the closet and the family.
-
-We do not, of course, mean that no other book but the Bible should be
-read, or we should not pen these "Notes;" but nothing demands greater
-watchfulness than the matter of reading. All things are to be done in
-the name of Jesus, and to the glory of God, and this is amongst the
-"all things." We should read no book that we cannot read to the glory
-of God, and on which we cannot ask God's blessing.
-
-We feel that this entire subject demands the most serious
-consideration of all God's people, and we trust that the Spirit of God
-may use our meditation on the chapter before us to stir up our hearts
-and consciences in reference to what is due to the Word of God, both
-in our hearts and in our houses.
-
-No doubt, if it has its right place in the heart, it will have its
-right place also in the house; but if there be no acknowledgment of
-the Word of God in the bosom of the family, it is hard to believe that
-it has its right place in the heart. Heads of houses should ponder
-this matter seriously. We are most fully persuaded that there ought to
-be, in every Christian household, a daily acknowledgment of God and
-His Word. Some may perhaps look upon it as bondage, as legality, as
-religious routine, to have regular family worship. We would ask such
-objectors, Is it bondage for the family to assemble at meals? Are the
-family reunions around the social board ever regarded as a wearisome
-duty--a piece of dull routine? Certainly not, if the family be a
-well-ordered and happy one. Why, then, should it be regarded as a
-burdensome thing for the head of a Christian household to gather his
-children and his servants around him and read a few verses of the
-precious Word of God, and breathe a few words of prayer before the
-throne of grace? We believe it to be a habit in perfect accordance
-with the teaching of both the Old and the New Testaments--a habit
-grateful to the heart of God--a holy, blessed, edifying habit.
-
-What should we think of a professing Christian who never prayed, never
-read the Word of God, in private? Could we possibly regard him as a
-happy, healthy, true Christian? Assuredly not. Indeed we should
-seriously question the existence of divine life in such a soul. Prayer
-and the Word of God are absolutely essential to healthy, vigorous
-Christian life; so that a man who habitually neglects these must be in
-an utterly dead state.
-
-Now, if it be thus in reference to an individual, how can a family be
-regarded as in a right state where there is no family reading, no
-family prayer, no family acknowledgment of God or His Word? Can we
-conceive a God-fearing household going on from Lord's day morning to
-Saturday night without any collective recognition of the One to whom
-they owe every thing? Day after day rolls on, domestic duties are
-attended to, the family assemble regularly at meals, but there is no
-thought of summoning the household around the Word of God, or around
-the mercy-seat. We ask, Where is the difference between such a family
-and any poor heathen household? Is it not most sad--most deplorable to
-find those who make the very highest profession, and who take their
-places at the Lord's table, yet living in the gross neglect of family
-reading--family worship?
-
-Reader, are you the head of a household? If so, what are your
-thoughts on the subject? and what is your line of action? Have you
-family reading and family prayer, daily in your house? If not, (bear
-with us when we ask you,) why not? Search and see what is the real
-root of the matter. Has your heart declined from God, from His Word
-and His ways? Do you read and pray in private? Do you love the Word
-and prayer? do you find delight in them? If so, how is it you neglect
-them in your household? Perhaps you seek to excuse yourself on the
-ground of nervousness and timidity; if so, look to the Lord to enable
-you to overcome the weakness. Just cast yourself on His unfailing
-grace, and gather your household around you at a certain hour each
-day, read a few verses of Scripture and breathe half a dozen words of
-prayer; or, if you cannot do this at first, just let the family kneel
-for a few moments in silence before the throne.
-
-Any thing, in short, like a family acknowledgment, a family testimony:
-any thing but a godless, careless, prayerless life in your household.
-Do, dear friend, suffer the word of exhortation in this matter. Let us
-entreat you to begin at once, looking to God to help you, as He most
-assuredly will, for He never fails a really trusting, dependent heart.
-Do not any longer go on neglecting God and His Word in your family
-circle. It is really terrible. Let no arguments about bondage,
-legality, or formalism weigh with you for a moment. We almost feel
-disposed to exclaim, Blessed bondage! If indeed it be bondage to read
-the Word, we cordially welcome it, and fearlessly glory in it.
-
-But, no; we cannot for a moment regard it in any such light. We
-believe it to be a most delightful privilege for every one whom God
-has set at the head of a household to gather all the members of that
-household around him and read a portion of the blessed book, and pour
-out his heart in prayer to God. We believe it is _specially_ the duty
-of the head so to do. It is by no means necessary to make it a long,
-wearisome service. As a rule, both in our houses and in our public
-assemblies, short, fresh, fervent exercises are by far the most
-edifying.
-
-But this, of course, is an open question, as to which we merely give
-our judgment, which must go for what it is worth. The length and
-character of the service must, in every case, be left to the person
-who conducts it. But we do most earnestly trust that if these lines
-should be scanned by any one who is the head of a household, and if he
-has hitherto neglected the holy privilege of family worship--family
-reading, he will, henceforth, do so no more. May he be enabled to say,
-with Joshua, "Let others do as they will, as for me and my house, we
-will serve the Lord."
-
-It is not, surely, that we would lead any to imagine that the mere act
-of family reading takes in all that is comprehended in that weighty
-sentence, "We will serve the Lord." Far from it. That blessed service
-takes in every thing belonging to our private and domestic history: it
-takes in the most minute details of practical daily life. All this is
-most true and invaluable. But we are most thoroughly persuaded that
-nothing can go right in any household in which family reading and
-family prayer are habitually neglected.
-
-It may be said that there are many families who seem very particular
-about their morning and evening reading and prayer, and yet their
-whole domestic history, from morning till night, is a flagrant
-contradiction of their so-called religious service. It may be that the
-head of the house, instead of shedding sunlight upon the family
-circle, is morose in his temper, rude and coarse in his manners, rough
-and contradictory to his wife, arbitrary and severe to his children,
-unreasonable and exacting to his servants, finding fault with what is
-laid on the table, after having asked God's blessing upon it; and, in
-short, in every way giving the lie to his reading and his prayer in
-the family. So also as to the wife and the mother, and the children
-and the servants. The whole domestic economy is out of order. There is
-disorder and confusion; meals are unpunctual; there is a want of
-kindly consideration one of another; the children are rude, selfish,
-and willful; the servants are thoughtless, wasteful, and disobedient,
-if not much worse; the tone, atmosphere, and style of the entire
-establishment are unchristian, ungodly, utterly unbecoming.
-
-And then, when you travel outside the domestic circle, and mark the
-conduct of the heads and members of the family toward those
-outside--mark their business, if they be in business, hear the
-testimony of those who deal with them, as to the quality of their
-goods, the style and character of their work; the spirit and temper in
-which they carry on their business; such grasping and griping, such
-covetousness, such commercial trickery; nothing of God, nothing of
-Christ, nothing to distinguish them from the most thorough worldlings
-around; yea, the conduct of those very worldlings, of those who would
-never think of such a thing as family worship, would put them to
-shame.
-
-Under such painful and humiliating circumstances, what of the family
-worship--the family reading--the family altar? Alas! it is an empty
-formality--a powerless, worthless, unseemly proceeding; in place of
-being a morning and evening sacrifice, it is a morning and evening
-lie--a solemn mockery--an insult to God.
-
-All this is sadly true. There is a terrible lack of household
-testimony--of common, practical righteousness in our families and in
-the entire economy of our houses. There is but little of the white
-raiment--the fine linen, which is the righteousness of saints. We seem
-to forget those weighty words of the inspired apostle in Romans
-xiv.--"The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but _righteousness_,
-and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost." Some of us seem to think that
-whenever we meet with the word "righteousness," it must needs mean the
-righteousness of God in which we stand, or righteousness imputed to
-us. This is a very great mistake indeed. We must remember there is a
-practical and human side of this question; there is the subjective as
-well as the objective--the walk as well as the standing--the condition
-as well as the position.
-
-These things must never be separated. It is of little use to set up or
-seek to maintain a family altar amid the ruins of family testimony. It
-is nothing short of a hideous caricature to begin and end with
-so-called family worship a day characterized throughout by ungodliness
-and unrighteousness, levity, folly, and vanity. Can aught be more
-unsightly or more miserably inconsistent than an evening spent in
-song-singing, charades, and other light games, closed up with a
-contemptible bit of religion in the shape of reading and prayer?
-
-All this line of things is most deplorable. It ought not to be found
-in connection with the holy name of Christ, with His assembly, or the
-holy exercises of His table. We must measure every thing in our
-private life, in our domestic economy, in our daily history, in all
-our intercourse, and in all our business transactions, with that one
-standard, namely, the glory of Christ. Our one grand question, in
-reference to every thing that comes before us or solicits our
-attention, must be, Is this worthy of the holy name which is called
-upon me? If not, let us not touch it; yea, let us turn our back upon
-it with stern decision, and flee from it with holy energy. Let us not
-listen for a moment to the contemptible question, "What harm is there
-in it?" Nothing but harm if Christ be not in it. No truly devoted
-heart would ever entertain, much less put, such a question. Whenever
-you hear any one speaking thus, you may at once conclude that Christ
-is not the governing object of the heart.
-
-We trust the reader is not weary of all this homely, practical truth.
-We believe it is loudly called for in this day of high profession. We
-have all of us much need to consider our ways, to look well to the
-real state of our hearts as to Christ; for here lies the true secret
-of the whole matter. If the heart be not true to Him, nothing can be
-right--nothing in the private life, nothing in the family, nothing in
-the business, nothing in the assembly, nothing any where; but if the
-heart be true to Him, _all_ will be--must be right.
-
-No marvel, therefore, if the blessed apostle, when he reaches the
-close of that wonderful epistle to the Corinthians, sums all up with
-this solemn declaration: "If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ,
-let him be Anathema Maran-atha." In the course of his letter, he deals
-with various forms of doctrinal error and moral pravity; but when he
-comes to the close, instead of pronouncing his solemn sentence upon
-any particular error or evil, he hurls it with holy indignation
-against any one, no matter who or what, who does not love the Lord
-Jesus Christ. Love to Christ is the grand safeguard against every form
-of error and evil. A heart filled with Christ has no room for aught
-beside; but if there be no love to Him, there is no security against
-the wildest error or the worst form of moral evil.
-
-We must now return to our chapter.
-
-The attention of the people is specially called to the solemn scenes
-at Mount Horeb--scenes which should surely have deeply and abidingly
-impressed their hearts. "Specially the day that thou stoodest before
-the Lord thy God in Horeb, when the Lord said unto me, Gather Me the
-people together, and _I will make them hear My words_." The grand and
-all-important point for Israel of old, for the Church now, for each,
-for all, at all times and in all places, is, to be brought into
-direct, living contact with the eternal Word of the living God, to the
-end "that they may learn to fear Me all the days that they shall live
-upon the earth, and _that they may teach their children_."
-
-It is very beautiful to note the intimate connection between hearing
-God's Word and fearing His name. It is one of those great
-root-principles which never change, never lose their power or their
-intrinsic value. The Word and the name go together; and the heart that
-loves the one will reverence the other, and bow down to its holy
-authority in all things. "He that loveth Me not keepeth not My
-sayings." "He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His
-commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoso
-keepeth His word, in him verily is the love of God perfected." (John
-xiv; 1 John ii.) Every true lover of God will treasure up His Word in
-the heart, and where the Word is thus lovingly treasured in the
-heart, its hallowed influence will be seen in the whole life,
-character, and conduct. God's object in giving His Word is that it may
-govern our conduct, form our character, and shape our ways; and if His
-Word has not this practical effect upon us, it is utterly vain for us
-to speak of loving Him--yea, it is nothing short of positive mockery,
-which He must sooner or later resent.
-
-And let us note particularly the solemn responsibility of Israel as to
-their children. They were not only to "hear" and "learn" for
-themselves, but they were also to teach their children. This is a
-universal and abiding duty, which cannot be neglected with impunity.
-God attaches very great importance to this matter. We hear Him saying
-as to Abraham, "I know him, that he will _command his children and his
-household_ after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do
-justice and judgment; that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which
-He hath spoken of him." (Gen. xviii.)
-
-These words are most important, as setting before us the divine
-estimate of domestic training and family piety. In all ages, and under
-all dispensations, God has been pleased to give expression to His
-approbation of the proper education of the children of His
-people--their faithful training according to His holy Word. We find no
-such thing sanctioned in Scripture as children being allowed to grow
-up in ignorance and carelessness and willfulness. Some professing
-Christians, under the baneful influence of a certain school of
-theology, seem to think that it is, in some way, an interference with
-the sovereignty of God, with His purposes and counsels, to instruct
-their children in the truth of the gospel and the letter of holy
-Scripture. They consider that the children ought to be left to the
-action of the Holy Ghost, which they are sure to experience in God's
-own time if indeed they are of God's elect, and if not, all human
-effort is perfectly useless.
-
-Now, we must, in all faithfulness to the truth of God and to the souls
-of our readers, bear the clearest and strongest testimony against this
-one-sided view of the great practical subject before us. There is
-nothing more mischievous, nothing more pernicious in its effect upon
-the conscience, the heart, the life, the whole practical career and
-moral character, than one-sided theology. It does not matter what side
-you take, so long as you only take one. It is sure to produce what we
-must term a spiritual malformation. We feel we cannot too strongly and
-earnestly warn the reader against this sore evil. It can only lead to
-the most disastrous results; and as to its effect in reference to the
-training of our children and the management of our households--the
-subject now before us--it is mischievous in the extreme. Indeed we
-have seen the most deplorable consequences follow the carrying out of
-this line of thought. We have known the children of Christian parents
-to grow up in utter ignorance of divine things, in carelessness,
-recklessness, and open infidelity; and if a word of admonition were
-offered, it has been met by arguments based upon the dogmas of a
-one-sided divinity--and the one side turned the wrong way. It has been
-said, "We cannot make Christians of our children, and we must not make
-them formalists or hypocrites. It must be a divine work or nothing.
-When God's time comes, He will effectually call them, if indeed they
-are among the number of His elect; if not, all our efforts are
-perfectly useless."
-
-To all this we reply, that this line of argument, if carried to its
-fullest extent, would prevent the farmer from plowing his ground or
-sowing his seed. It is very plain that he cannot make the seed to
-germinate or fructify. He could no more cause a solitary grain of
-wheat to grow than he could create the universe. Does this prevent his
-plowing and sowing? does it cause him to fold his arms and say, I can
-do nothing. I cannot, by any effort of mine, make corn grow. It is a
-divine operation, and therefore I must wait God's time. Does any
-farmer reason and act like this? Surely not, unless he be a lunatic.
-Every sound-minded person knows that plowing and sowing must go before
-the reaping; and if the former be neglected, it is the height of
-extravagant folly to look for the latter.
-
-Nor is it otherwise in the matter of training our children. We know
-God is sovereign; we believe in His eternal counsels and purposes; we
-fully recognize the grand doctrines of election and predestination--yea,
-we are as thoroughly persuaded of them as of the truth that God is, or
-that Christ died and rose again. Moreover, we believe that the new
-birth must take place in every instance--in the case of our children
-as of all beside; we are convinced that this new birth is entirely a
-divine operation, effected by the Holy Ghost, through the Word, as we
-are distinctly taught in our Lord's discourse with Nicodemus in John
-iii, and also in James i. 18 and 1 Peter i. 23.
-
-But does all this touch, in the most remote way, the solemn
-responsibility of Christian parents to teach and train their children,
-diligently and faithfully, from their earliest moments? Most certainly
-not. Woe be to the parents who, on any plea or on any ground
-whatsoever, be it one-sided theology, misapplied Scripture, or aught
-else, deny their responsibility, or neglect their plain, bounden duty,
-in this holy business. True, we cannot make our children Christians,
-and we ought not to make them formalists or hypocrites; but we are not
-called to _make_ them any thing. We are simply called to do our duty
-by them, and leave results to God. We are instructed and commanded to
-bring up our children "in the nurture and admonition of the Lord."
-When is this "bringing up" to commence? when are we to begin the
-sacred work of training our little ones? Surely, at the beginning. The
-very moment we enter upon a relationship, we enter also upon the
-responsibility which that relationship entails. We cannot deny this;
-we cannot shake it off. We may neglect it, and have to reap the sad
-consequences of our neglect, in various ways. It is a very serious
-thing to stand in the sacred relationship of a parent--very
-interesting and very delightful, no doubt; but most serious, because
-of the responsibility involved. True it is, blessed be God, His grace
-is sufficient for us in this as in all beside, and "if any man lack
-wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all liberally, and
-upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." "We are not sufficient of
-ourselves," in this weighty matter, to think or to do any thing as
-ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God, and He will meet our every
-need. We have simply to draw upon Him, for exigence of every hour.
-
-But we must do our duty. Some do not like the homely word "duty." They
-think it has a legal ring about it. We trust the reader does not think
-so, for it is a very great mistake indeed. We look upon the word as a
-very sound and morally wholesome one, and we believe that every true
-Christian loves it. One thing is certain, it is only in the path of
-duty we can count on God. To talk of trusting God, when out of the
-path of duty, is a miserable conceit, and a delusion; and in the
-matter of our relationship as parents, to neglect our duty is to bring
-down upon us the most disastrous consequences.
-
-We believe the whole business of Christian education is summed up in
-two brief sentences, namely, Count on God for your children, and,
-Train your children for God. To take the first without the second is
-antinomianism; to take the second without the first is legality; to
-take both together is sound, practical Christianity--true religion in
-the sight of God and man.
-
-It is the sweet privilege of every Christian parent to count, with all
-possible confidence, upon God for his children. But then we must
-remember that there is, in the government of God, an inseparable link
-connecting this privilege with the most solemn responsibility as to
-training. For a Christian parent to speak of counting on God for the
-salvation of his children, and for the moral integrity of their future
-career in this world, while the duty of training is neglected, is
-simply a miserable delusion.
-
-We press this most solemnly upon all Christian parents, but especially
-upon those who have just entered upon the relationship. There is great
-danger of shirking our duty to our children, of shifting it over upon
-others, or neglecting it altogether. We do not like the trouble of it;
-we shrink from the constant worry as it seems to us. But we shall find
-that the trouble and the worry and the sorrow and the heart-scalding
-arising from the neglect of our duty will be a thousand times worse
-than all that can be involved in the discharge of it. To every true
-lover of God there is deep delight in treading the path of duty. Every
-step taken in that path strengthens our confidence to go on. And then
-we can always count upon the infinite resources that we have in God
-when we are keeping His commandments. We have simply to betake
-ourselves, morning by morning, yea, hour by hour, to our Father's
-exhaustless treasury, and there get all we want, in the way of grace
-and wisdom and moral power, to enable us to discharge aright the holy
-functions of our relationship. "He giveth more grace." This always
-holds good. But if we, instead of seeking grace to discharge our duty,
-seek ease in neglecting it, we are simply laying up a store of sorrow
-which will accumulate rapidly and fall upon us heavily at a future
-day. "Be not deceived; God is not mocked; for whatsoever a man soweth,
-that shall he also reap. For he that soweth to his flesh, shall of the
-flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the Spirit, shall of the
-Spirit reap life everlasting." (Gal. vi.)
-
-This is the condensed statement of a great principle of God's moral
-government--a principle of universal application, and one which
-applies, with singular force, to the subject before us. _As_ we sow,
-in the matter of the education of our children, _so_ we shall, most
-assuredly, reap. There is no getting out of this.
-
-But let not any dear Christian parent, whose eye may scan these lines,
-be at all discouraged or faint-hearted. There is no reason whatever
-for this, but, on the contrary, every reason for the most joyful
-confidence in God. "The name of the Lord is a strong tower; the
-righteous runneth into it, and is safe." Let us tread, with firm step,
-the path of duty; and then we can count, with unwavering confidence,
-upon our ever-faithful and gracious God for the need of each day as it
-rolls along. And in due time we shall reap the precious fruit of our
-labor, according to the appointment of God, and in pursuance of the
-enactments of His moral government.
-
-We do not attempt to lay down any rules or regulations for the
-training. We do not believe in such. Children cannot be trained by dry
-rules. Who could attempt to embody in rules all that is wrapped up in
-that one sentence, "Bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the
-Lord"?
-
-Here we have, indeed, a golden rule which takes in every thing from
-the cradle to matured manhood. Yes, we repeat, "from the cradle;" for
-we are most fully persuaded that all true Christian training begins at
-the very beginning. Some of us have little idea of how soon and how
-sharply children begin to observe, and how much they take in as they
-gaze at us through their dear expressive eyes.
-
-And then how marvelously susceptible they are of the moral atmosphere
-which surrounds them! Yes; and it is this very moral atmosphere that
-constitutes the grand secret of training our families. Our children
-should be permitted to breathe, from day to day, the atmosphere of
-love and peace, purity, holiness, and true practical righteousness.
-This has an amazing effect in forming the character. It is a great
-thing for our children to see their parents walking in love, in
-harmony, in tender care one for the other, in kind consideration for
-the servants, in love and sympathy for the poor. Who can measure the
-moral effect upon a child of the very first angry look, or unkind
-word, between father and mother? And in cases where the daily history
-is one of unsightly strife and contention--the father contradicting
-the mother, and the mother disparaging the father--how are children to
-grow in such an atmosphere as this?
-
-The fact is, it is not within the compass of human language to set
-forth all that is involved in the moral tone of the entire family
-circle--the spirit, style, and atmosphere of the whole household, the
-drawing-room, the dining-room, the nursery, the kitchen; where
-circumstances admit of such distinctions, or where the family have to
-confine themselves to two rooms. It is not a question of rank,
-position, or wealth, but of the beauteous grace of God shining out in
-all. There may be the stalled ox or the dinner of herbs--these are
-not, at present, in question. But what we press on all fathers and
-mothers--all heads of households, high and low, rich and poor, learned
-and ignorant, is the necessity of training their children in an
-atmosphere of love and peace, truth and holiness, purity and kindness.
-Thus will our households be the practical exhibition of the character
-of God; and all who come in contact with them will, at least, have
-before their eyes a practical witness to the truth of Christianity.
-
-But, ere we turn from the subject of domestic government, there is one
-special point to which we desire to call the attention of Christian
-parents--a point of the utmost possible moment, yet too much neglected
-amongst us, and that is, the need of inculcating upon our children
-the duty of implicit obedience. This cannot be too strongly insisted
-upon, inasmuch as it not only affects the order and comfort of our
-households, but, what is infinitely more important, it concerns the
-glory of God and the practical carrying out of His truth. "Children,
-obey your parents in the Lord; for this is right." And again,
-"Children, obey your parents _in all things_; for this is well
-pleasing unto the Lord." (Eph. vi.; Col. iii.)
-
-This is absolutely essential, and must be firmly insisted upon from
-the very outset. The child must be taught to obey from his earliest
-moments. He must be trained to submit himself to divinely appointed
-authority, and that, as the apostle puts it, "in all things." If this
-be not attended to from the very first, it will be found almost
-impossible to attend to it afterwards. If the will be allowed to act,
-it grows, with terrible rapidity, and each day's growth increases the
-difficulty of bringing it under control. Hence, the parent should
-begin at once to establish his authority on a basis of moral strength
-and firmness; and when this is done, he may be as gentle and tender as
-the most loving heart could desire. We do not believe in sternness,
-harshness, or severity. They are by no means necessary, and are
-generally the accompaniments of bad training and the proofs of bad
-temper. God has put into the parent's hand the reins of government and
-the rod of authority, but it is not needful--if we may so express
-it--to be continually chucking the reins and brandishing the rod,
-which are the sure proofs of moral weakness. Whenever you hear a man
-continually talking about his authority, you may be sure his authority
-is not properly established. There is a quiet dignity about true moral
-power which is perfectly unmistakable.
-
-Furthermore, we judge it to be a mistake for a parent to be
-perpetually crossing a child's will in matters of no moment. Such a
-line of action tends to break the child's spirit, whereas the object
-of all sound training is to break the will. The child should ever be
-impressed with the idea that the parent seeks _only_ his real good,
-and that if he has to refuse or prohibit any thing, it is not for the
-purpose of curtailing the child's enjoyment, but simply for the
-promotion of his true interests.
-
-One grand object of domestic government is to protect each member of
-the household in the enjoyment of his privileges, and in the proper
-discharge of his relative duties. Now, inasmuch as it is the divinely
-appointed duty of a child to obey, the parent is responsible to see
-this duty discharged, for if it be neglected, some other members of
-the domestic circle must suffer.
-
-There can be no greater nuisance in a house than a naughty, willful
-child; and, as a general rule, wherever you find such, it is to be
-traced to bad training. We are aware, of course, that children differ
-in temper and disposition--that some children have peculiarly strong
-wills and sturdy tempers, and are therefore specially hard to manage.
-
-All this we quite understand; but it leaves wholly untouched the
-question of the parent's responsibility to insist upon implicit
-obedience. He can always count on God for the needed grace and power
-to carry out this point. Even in the case of a widowed mother, we
-believe, most assuredly, she can look to God to enable her to command
-her children and her household. In no case, therefore, should parental
-authority be surrendered for a moment.
-
-It sometimes happens that, through injudicious fondness, the parent is
-tempted to pamper the will of the child; but it is sowing to the
-flesh, and must yield corruption. It is not true love at all to
-indulge a child's will, neither can it possibly minister to his true
-happiness or legitimate enjoyment. An over-indulged, self-willed child
-is miserable himself and a grievous infliction on all who have to do
-with him. Children should be taught to think of others, and to seek to
-promote their comfort and happiness in every way. How very unseemly it
-is, for example, for a child to enter the house and ascend the stairs
-whistling, singing, and shouting, in total disregard of other members
-of the household who may be seriously disturbed and annoyed by such
-conduct! No properly trained child would think of acting in such a
-way; and where such unsubdued, unruly, inconsiderate conduct is
-allowed, there is a serious defect in the domestic government.
-
-It is essential to family peace, harmony, and comfort, that all the
-members should "consider one another." We are responsible to seek the
-good and the happiness of those around us, and not our own. If all
-would but remember this, what different households we should have! and
-what a different tale would families have to tell! Every Christian
-household should be the reflection of the divine character. The
-atmosphere should just be the very atmosphere of heaven. How is this
-to be? Simply by each one--parent, child, master, and servant--seeking
-to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, and manifest His spirit. He never
-pleased Himself, never sought His own interest in any thing; He did
-always the thing that pleased the Father; He came to serve and to
-give; He went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of
-the devil. Thus it was ever with that most blessed One--the gracious,
-loving, sympathizing Friend of all the sons and daughters of want,
-weakness, and sorrow; and if only the various members of each
-Christian family were formed on this perfect model, we should, at
-least, realize something of the power and efficacy of personal and
-domestic Christianity, which, blessed be God, can ever be maintained
-and exhibited notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the professing
-church. "Thou and thy house" suggests a great golden principle which
-runs through the volume of God, from beginning to end. In every age,
-under every dispensation, in the days of the patriarchs, in the days
-of the law, and in the days of Christianity, we find, to our exceeding
-comfort and encouragement, that personal and domestic godliness has
-its place as something grateful to the heart of God and to the glory
-of His holy name.
-
-This we consider to be most consolatory at all times, but more
-particularly at a time like the present, when the professing church
-seems so rapidly sinking into gross worldliness and open infidelity;
-and not this only, but when those who most earnestly desire to walk in
-obedience to the Word of God, and to act on the grand foundation-truth
-of the unity of the body, find it so difficult to maintain a a
-corporate testimony. In view of all this, we may well bless God, with
-overflowing hearts, that personal and family piety can always be
-maintained, and that from the heart and the home of every Christian a
-constant stream of praise may ascend to the throne of God, and a
-stream of active benevolence flow out to a needy, sorrowful,
-sin-stricken world. May it be so more and more, through the mighty
-ministry of God the Holy Ghost, that God, in all things, may be
-glorified in the hearts and homes of His beloved people.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now to consider the very solemn warning addressed to the
-congregation of Israel against the terrible sin of idolatry--a sin to
-which, alas! the poor human heart is ever prone, in one way or
-another. It is quite possible to be guilty of the sin of idolatry
-without bowing down before a graven image; wherefore it behooves us to
-weigh well the words of warning which fell from the lips of Israel's
-venerable lawgiver. They are most assuredly written for our learning.
-
-"And ye came near and stood under the mountain; and the mountain
-burned with fire unto the midst of heaven, with darkness, clouds, and
-thick darkness." Solemn and suited accompaniments of the occasion!
-"And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire." Oh, how
-differently He speaks in the gospel of His grace! "Ye heard the voice
-of the words, but saw no similitude." Important fact for them to
-ponder! "_Only a voice._" And "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
-the Word of God." "And He declared unto you His covenant, which He
-commanded you to perform--ten commandments; and He wrote them upon two
-tables of stone. And the Lord commanded me at that time to teach you
-statutes and judgments," not that they might discuss them, sit in
-judgment upon them, or argue about them, but "that _ye might do
-them_"--the grand old story, the Deuteronomic theme of _obedience_,
-most precious! whether out of or "in the land whither ye go over to
-possess it."
-
-Here lies the solid ground of the appeal against idolatry. They _saw_
-nothing. God did not show Himself to them. He did not assume any
-bodily shape, of which they might form an image. He gave them His
-word--His holy commandments, so plain that a child could understand
-them, and the wayfaring men though fools need not err therein. There
-was no need for them, therefore, to set about imagining what God was
-like; nay, this was _the_ very sin against which they were so
-faithfully warned. They were called to hear God's voice, not to see
-His shape--to obey His commandment, not to make an image of Him.
-Superstition vainly seeks to do honor to God by forming and worshiping
-an image; Faith, on the contrary, lovingly receives and reverently
-obeys His holy commandments. "If a man love Me," says our blessed
-Lord, "he will"--what? make an image of Me, and worship it? Nay, but
-"he will keep My words." This makes it so simple, so safe, so certain.
-We are not called to work up our minds to form any conception of God;
-we have simply to hear His word and keep His commandments. We can have
-no idea whatever of God but as He has been pleased to reveal
-Himself.--"No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son,
-which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him."--"God, who
-commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
-hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
-face of Jesus Christ."
-
-Jesus is declared to be the brightness of God's glory and the exact
-impression of His substance. He could say, "He that hath seen Me hath
-seen the Father." Thus the Son reveals the Father; and it is by the
-Word, through the power of the Holy Ghost, that we know any thing of
-the Son; and therefore for any one to attempt, by any efforts of his
-mind or workings of his imagination, to conceive an image of God, or
-of Christ, is simply idolatry. To endeavor to arrive at any knowledge
-of God or of Christ save by Scripture, is simply mysticism and
-confusion; nay, more, it is to put ourselves directly into the hands
-of the devil, to be led by him into the wildest, darkest, and
-deadliest delusion.
-
-Hence, therefore, as Israel, at Mount Horeb, was shut up to the
-"_voice_" of God and warned against any similitude, so we are shut up
-to holy Scripture and warned against every thing which would draw us
-away, the breadth of a hair, from that holy and all-sufficient
-standard. We must not listen to the suggestions of our own minds, nor
-to those of any other human mind: we must absolutely and sternly
-refuse to listen to any thing but the voice of God--the voice of holy
-Scripture. Here is true security, true rest; here we have absolute
-certainty, so that we can say, "I know _whom_"--not merely _what_--"I
-have believed; and am persuaded that _He_," etc.
-
-"Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, (for ye saw no manner of
-similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the
-midst of the fire,) lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven
-image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female,
-the likeness of any beast that is on the earth, the likeness of any
-winged fowl that flieth in the air, the likeness of any thing that
-creepeth on the ground, the likeness of any fish that is in the waters
-beneath the earth; and lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and
-when thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the
-host of heaven, shouldest be driven to worship them, and serve them,
-which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole
-heaven. But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you forth out of the
-iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a people of
-inheritance, as ye are this day."
-
-There is a very weighty truth set before us here. The people are
-expressly taught that in making any image and bowing down thereto,
-they, in reality, lowered and corrupted themselves. Hence, when they
-made the golden calf, the Lord said unto Moses, "Go, get thee down;
-for thy people, which thou broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have
-corrupted themselves." It could not be otherwise. The worshiper must
-be inferior to the object of his worship; and therefore, in worshiping
-a calf, they actually put themselves below the level of the beasts
-that perish. Well, therefore, might He say, They "have corrupted
-themselves; they have turned aside quickly out of the way which I
-commanded them; they have made them a molten calf, and have worshiped
-it, and have sacrificed thereunto, and said, 'These be thy gods, O
-Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.'"
-
-What a spectacle! A whole congregation, led by Aaron the high-priest,
-bowing in worship before a thing formed by a graving tool out of the
-earrings which had just been taken from the ears of their wives and
-daughters! Only conceive a number of intelligent beings--people
-endowed with reason, understanding, and conscience--saying of a molten
-calf, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of
-the land of Egypt"! They actually displaced Jehovah by an image
-graven by art and man's device! And these were the people who had seen
-the mighty works of Jehovah in the land of Egypt. They had seen plague
-after plague falling upon Egypt and its obdurate king; they had seen
-the land, as it were, shaken to its very centre by the successive
-strokes of Jehovah's governmental rod; they had seen Egypt's
-first-born laid in death by the sword of the destroying angel; they
-had seen the Red Sea divided by one stroke of Jehovah's rod, and they
-had passed through upon dry ground between those crystal walls which
-afterwards fell, in crushing power, upon their enemies--all these
-things had passed before their eyes, and yet they could so soon forget
-all and say of a molten calf, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which have
-brought thee up out of the land of Egypt." Did they really believe
-that a molten image had made the land of Egypt to tremble, humbled its
-proud monarch, and brought them forth victoriously? Had a calf divided
-the sea for them, and led them majestically through its depths? So, at
-least, they said; for what will people not say when the eye and the
-heart are turned away from God and His Word?
-
-But we may perhaps be asked, Has all this a voice for us? Are
-Christians to learn any thing from Israel's molten calf? and do the
-warnings addressed to Israel against idolatry convey any voice to the
-ear of the Church? Are we in danger of bowing down to a graven image?
-Is it possible that we, whose high privilege it is to walk in the
-full-orbed light of New-Testament Christianity, could ever worship a
-molten calf?
-
-To all this we reply, first of all, in the language of Romans xv. 4,
-"_Whatsoever things_ were written aforetime"--Exodus xxxii. and
-Deuteronomy iv. included--"were written for our learning, that we
-through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." This
-brief passage contains our chartered right to range through the wide
-field of Old-Testament scripture and gather up and appropriate its
-golden lessons, to feed upon its "exceeding great and precious
-promises," to drink in its deep and varied consolation, and to profit
-by its solemn warnings and wholesome admonitions.
-
-And then, as to our being capable of or liable to the gross sin of
-idolatry, we have a striking answer in 1 Corinthians x, where the
-inspired apostle uses the very scene at Mount Horeb as a warning to
-the Church of God. We cannot do better than quote the entire passage
-for the reader. There is nothing like the Word of God; may we love,
-prize, and reverence it more and more each day.
-
-"Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that
-_all_ our fathers were under the cloud"--those whose carcasses fell in
-the wilderness, as well as those who reached the land of
-promise,--"and all passed through the sea; and were all baptized unto
-Moses in the cloud and in the sea; and did all eat the same spiritual
-meat; and did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of
-that spiritual Rock that followed them; and that Rock was Christ."
-How strong, how solemn, and how searching is this for all professors!
-"But with many of them God was not well pleased; for they were
-overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were _our examples_"
-(let us carefully mark this), "to the intent we should not lust after
-_evil things_"--things in any way contrary to the mind of Christ, "as
-they also lusted. Neither _be ye idolaters_" (so that professing
-Christians may be idolaters) "as were some of them; as it is written,
-'The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play.' Neither
-let us commit fornication, as some of them committed, and fell in one
-day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ, as some of
-them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. Neither murmur ye,
-as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer.
-Now _all these things_ happened unto them for ensamples; and _they are
-written for our admonition_, upon whom the ends of the ages are come.
-Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
-
-Here we learn, in the plainest manner, that there is no depth of sin
-and folly, no form of moral pravity, into which we are not capable of
-plunging, at any moment, if not kept by the mighty power of God. There
-is no security for us save in the moral shelter of the divine
-presence. We know that the Spirit of God does not warn us against
-things to which we are not liable. He would not say to us, "Neither be
-ye idolaters," if we were not capable of being such. Idolatry takes
-various shapes. It is not, therefore, a question of the shape of the
-thing, but the thing itself--not the outward form, but the root or
-principle of the thing. We read that "covetousness is idolatry," and
-that a covetous man is an idolater; that is, a man desiring to possess
-himself of more than God has given him is an idolater--is actually
-guilty of the sin of Israel when they made the golden calf and
-worshiped it. Well might the blessed apostle say to the
-Corinthians--say to us, "Wherefore, my dearly beloved, flee from
-idolatry." Why be warned to _flee_ from a thing to which we are not
-liable? Are there any idle words in the volume of God? What mean those
-closing words of the first epistle of John--"Little children, keep
-yourselves from idols"? Do they not tell us that we are in danger of
-worshiping idols? Assuredly they do. Our treacherous hearts are
-capable of departing from the living God, and setting up some other
-object beside Him; and what is this but idolatry? Whatever commands
-the heart is the heart's idol, be it what it may--money, pleasure,
-power, or aught else,--so that we may well see the urgent need for the
-many warnings given us by the Holy Ghost against the sin of idolatry.
-
-But we have in the fourth chapter of Galatians a very remarkable
-passage, and one which speaks in most impressive accents to the
-professing church. The Galatians had, like all other Gentiles,
-worshiped idols; but, on the reception of the gospel, had turned from
-idols to serve the living and true God. The Judaizing teachers,
-however, had come among them and taught them that unless they were
-circumcised and kept the law, they could not be saved.
-
-Now this, the blessed apostle unhesitatingly pronounces to be
-idolatry--a going back to the grossness and moral degradation of their
-former days, and all this after having professed to receive the
-glorious gospel of Christ. Hence the moral force of the apostle's
-inquiry, "Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them
-which by nature are no gods. _But now_, after that ye have known God,
-or rather are known of God, how _turn ye again_ to the weak and
-beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire _again_ to be in bondage? Ye
-observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you,
-lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain."
-
-This is peculiarly striking. The Galatians were not outwardly going
-back to the worship of idols. It is not improbable that they would
-have indignantly repudiated any such idea. But, for all that, the
-inspired apostle asks them, "How turn ye again?" What does this
-inquiry mean if they were not going back to idolatry? and what are we
-now to learn from the whole passage? Simply this, that circumcision,
-and getting under the law, and observing days, and months, and times,
-and years--that all this, though apparently so different, was nothing
-more or less than going back to their old idolatry. The observance of
-days and the worship of false gods were both a turning away from the
-living and true God, from His Son Jesus Christ, from the Holy Ghost,
-from that brilliant cluster of dignities and glories which belong to
-Christianity.
-
-All this is peculiarly solemn for professing Christians. We question
-if the full import of Galatians iv. 8-10 is really apprehended by the
-great majority of those who profess to believe the Bible. We solemnly
-press this whole subject upon the attention of all whom it may
-concern. We pray God to use it for the purpose of stirring up the
-hearts and consciences of His people every where to consider their
-position, their habits, ways, and associations; and to inquire how far
-they are really following the example of the assemblies of Galatia, in
-the observance of saints' days and such like, which can only lead away
-from Christ and His glorious salvation. There is a day coming which
-will open the eyes of thousands to the reality of these things, and
-then they will see what they now refuse to see, that the very darkest
-and grossest forms of paganism may be reproduced under the name of
-Christianity, and in connection with the very highest truths that ever
-shone on the human understanding.
-
-But however slow we may be to admit our tendency to fall into the sin
-of idolatry, it is very plain, in Israel's case, that Moses, as taught
-and inspired of God, felt the deep need of warning them against it, in
-the most solemn and affecting terms. He appeals to them on every
-possible ground, and reiterates his counsels and admonitions in a
-manner so impressive as to leave them, assuredly, without any excuse.
-They never could say that they fell into idolatry from the want of
-warning, or of the most gracious and affectionate entreaty. Take such
-words as the following: "But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you
-forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a
-people of inheritance, as ye are this day." (Ver. 20.)
-
-Could any thing be more affecting than this? Jehovah, in His rich and
-sovereign grace, and by His mighty hand, brought them forth from the
-land of death and darkness, a redeemed and delivered people. He had
-brought them to Himself, that they might be to Him a peculiar
-treasure, above all the people upon earth. How, then, could they turn
-away from Him, from His holy covenant, and from His precious
-commandments?
-
-Alas! alas! they could and did. "They _made_ a calf, and said, 'These
-be thy gods, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of
-Egypt.'" Think of this! A calf, made by their own hands--an image,
-graven by art and man's device, had brought them up out of Egypt! A
-thing made out of the women's earrings had redeemed and delivered
-them! And this has been written for our admonition. But why should it
-be written for us if we are not capable of and liable to the very same
-sin? We must either admit that God the Holy Ghost has penned an
-unnecessary sentence, or admit our need of an admonition against the
-sin of idolatry; and assuredly, our needing the admonition proves our
-tendency to the sin.
-
-Are we better than Israel? In no wise. We have brighter light and
-higher privileges, but, so far as we are concerned, we are made of the
-same material, have the same capabilities and the same tendencies, as
-they. Our idolatry may take a different shape from theirs; but
-idolatry is idolatry, be the shape what it may; and the higher our
-privileges, the the greater our sin. We may perhaps feel disposed to
-wonder how a rational people could be guilty of such egregious folly
-as to make a calf and bow down to it, and this, too, after having had
-such a display of the majesty, power, and glory of God. Let us
-remember that their folly is recorded for our admonition; and that we,
-with all our light, all our knowledge, all our privileges, are warned
-to "flee from idolatry."
-
-Let us deeply ponder all this and seek to profit by it. May every
-chamber of our hearts be filled with Christ, and then we shall have no
-room for idols. This is our only safeguard. If we slip away the
-breadth of a hair from our precious Saviour and Shepherd, we are
-capable of plunging into the darkest forms of error and moral evil.
-Light, knowledge, spiritual privileges, church position, sacramental
-benefits, are no security for the soul. They are very good in their
-right place and if rightly used, but in themselves they only increase
-our moral danger.
-
-Nothing can keep us safe, right, and happy but having Christ dwelling
-in our hearts by faith. Abiding in Him and He in us, that wicked one
-toucheth us not. But if personal communion be not diligently
-maintained, the higher our position, the greater our danger and the
-more disastrous our fall. There was not a nation beneath the canopy of
-heaven more favored and exalted than Israel when they gathered around
-Mount Horeb to hear the word of God: there was not a nation on the
-face of the earth more degraded or more guilty than they when they
-bowed before the golden calf--an image of their own formation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now give our attention to a fact of very deep interest,
-presented at verse 21 of our chapter, and that is, that Moses, for the
-third time, reminds the congregation of God's judicial dealing with
-himself. He had spoken of it, as we have seen, in chapter i. 37, and
-again at chapter iii. 26, and here, again, he says to them,
-"Furthermore _the Lord was angry with me for your sakes_, and sware
-that I should not go over Jordan, and that I should not go in unto
-that good land which the Lord thy God giveth thee for an inheritance;
-but I must die in this land, I must not go over Jordan; but ye shall
-go over and possess that good land."
-
-Now, we may ask, Why this threefold reference to the same fact? and
-why the special mention, in each instance, of the circumstance that
-Jehovah was angry with him on their account? One thing is certain, it
-was not for the purpose of throwing the blame over upon the people, or
-of exculpating himself. No one but an infidel could think this. We
-believe the simple object was, to give increased moral force to his
-appeal, more solemnity to his warning voice. If Jehovah was angry with
-such an one as Moses--if he, for his unadvised speaking at the waters
-of Meribah, was forbidden to enter the promised land (much as he
-desired it), how needful for them to take heed! It is a serious thing
-to have to do with God--blessed, no doubt, beyond all human expression
-or thought, but most serious, as the lawgiver himself was called to
-prove in his own person.
-
-That this is the correct view of this interesting question seems
-evident from the following words: "_Take heed unto yourselves_, lest
-ye forget the covenant of the Lord your God, which He made with you,
-and make you a graven image, or the likeness of any thing which the
-Lord thy God hath forbidden thee. For the Lord thy God is a consuming
-fire, even a jealous God."
-
-This is peculiarly solemn. We must allow this statement to have its
-full, moral weight with our souls. We must not attempt to turn aside
-its sharp edge by any false notions about grace. We sometimes hear it
-said that "God is a consuming fire to the world." By and by He will be
-so, no doubt; but now He is dealing in grace, patience, and
-long-suffering mercy with the world. He is not dealing in judgment
-with the world now; but, as the apostle Peter tells us, "the time is
-come that judgment must begin at the house of God; and if it first
-begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel
-of God?" So also, in Hebrews xii, we read, "For _our_ God _is_ a
-consuming fire." He is not speaking of what God will be to the world,
-but of what He is to us. Neither is it, as some put it, "God is a
-consuming fire out of Christ." We know nothing of God out of Christ.
-He could not be "_our_ God" out of Christ.
-
-No, reader; Scripture does not need such twistings and turnings: it
-must be taken as it stands. It is clear and distinct, and all we have
-to do is to hearken and obey. "Our God is a consuming fire," "a
-jealous God," not to consume us, blessed be His holy name, but to
-consume the evil in us and in our ways. He is intolerant of every
-thing in us that is contrary to Himself--contrary to His holiness, and
-therefore contrary to our true happiness, our real, solid blessing. As
-the "Holy Father," He keeps us in a way worthy of Himself, and He
-chastens us in order to make us partakers of His holiness. He allows
-the world to go on its way for the present, not interfering publicly
-with it; but He judges His house, and He chastens His children, in
-order that they may more fully answer to His mind and be the
-expression of His moral image.
-
-And is not this an immense privilege? Yes, verily; it is a privilege
-of the very highest order--a privilege flowing from the infinite grace
-of our God, who condescends to interest Himself in us, and occupy
-Himself even with our infirmities, our failures, and our sins, in
-order to deliver us from them, and make us partakers of His holiness.
-
-There is a very fine passage bearing upon this subject in the opening
-of Hebrews xii, which, because of its immense practical importance, we
-must quote for the reader.--"My son, despise not thou the chastening
-of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him; for _whom the
-Lord loveth He chasteneth_, and _scourgeth every son_ whom He
-receiveth. If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons;
-for _what son_ is he whom the Father chasteneth not? But if ye be
-_without chastisement_, whereof all are partakers, then are ye
-_bastards_ and _not sons_. Furthermore, we have had fathers of our
-flesh which corrected us, and we gave them reverence; shall we not
-much rather be in subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live? For
-they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure; _but
-He for our profit, that we might be partakers of His holiness_. Now no
-chastening for the present _seemeth_ to be joyous, but grievous;
-nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of
-righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby. Wherefore lift up
-the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees."
-
-There are three ways of meeting divine chastening: We may "_despise_"
-it, as something commonplace--something that may happen to any one; we
-do not see _the hand of God_ in it. Again, we may "_faint_" under it,
-as something too heavy for us to bear--something entirely beyond
-endurance; we do not see _the Father's heart_ in it, or recognize His
-gracious object in it, namely, to make us partakers of His holiness.
-Lastly, we may be "_exercised_" by it. This is the way to reap "the
-peaceable fruit of righteousness afterward." We dare not "_despise_" a
-thing in which we trace the hand of God: we need not "_faint_" under a
-trial in which we plainly discern the heart of a loving Father, who
-will not suffer us to be tried above what we are able, but will with
-the trial make an issue, that we may be able to bear it, and who also
-graciously explains to us His object in the discipline, and assures us
-that every stroke of His rod is a proof of His love, and a direct
-response to the prayer of Christ in John xvii. 11, wherein He commends
-us to the care of the "Holy Father," to be kept according to that name
-and all that name involves.
-
-Furthermore, there are three distinct attitudes of heart in reference
-to divine chastening, namely, subjection, acquiescence, and rejoicing.
-When the will is broken, there is subjection; when the understanding
-is enlightened as to the object of the chastening, there is calm
-acquiescence; and when the affections are engaged with the Father's
-heart, there is rejoicing, and we can go forth with glad hearts to
-reap a golden harvest of the peaceable fruit of righteousness, to the
-praise of Him who, in His painstaking love, undertakes to care for us
-and to deal with us in holy government, and concentrate His care upon
-each one as though there were but that one to attend to.
-
-How wonderful is all this! and how the thought of it should help us in
-all our trials and exercises! We are in the hands of One whose love
-is infinite, whose wisdom is unerring, whose power is omnipotent,
-whose resources are inexhaustible. Why, then, should we ever be cast
-down? If He chastens us, it is because He loves us and seeks our real
-good. We may think the chastening grievous--we may feel disposed to
-wonder, at times, how love can inflict pain and sickness upon us; but
-we must remember that divine love is wise and faithful, and only
-inflicts the pain, the sickness, or the sorrow for our profit and
-blessing. We must not always judge of love by the form in which it
-clothes itself. Look at that fond and tender mother applying a blister
-to her child whom she loves as her own soul. She knows full well that
-the blister will cause her child real pain and suffering, and yet she
-unhesitatingly applies it, though her heart feels keenly at having to
-do it. But she knows it is absolutely necessary; she believes that,
-humanly and medically speaking, the child's life depends upon it; she
-feels that a few moments' pain may, with the blessing of God, restore
-the health of her precious child. Thus, while the child is only
-occupied with the transient suffering, the mother is thinking of the
-permanent good; and if the child could but think with the mother, the
-blister would not seem so hard to bear.
-
-Now, it is just thus in the matter of our Father's disciplinary
-dealings with us; and the remembrance of this would greatly help us to
-endure whatever His chastening hand may lay upon us. It may perhaps be
-said that there is a very wide difference between a blister laid on
-for a few minutes, and years of intense bodily suffering. No doubt
-there is; but there is also a very wide difference between the result
-reached in each case. It is only with the principle of the thing we
-have to do. When we see a beloved child of God, or servant of Christ,
-called to pass through years of intense suffering, we may feel
-disposed to wonder why it is; and perhaps the beloved sufferer may
-also feel disposed to wonder, and at times be ready to faint under the
-weight of his long-protracted affliction. He may feel led to cry out,
-Why am I thus? Can this be love? can this be the expression of a
-Father's tender care? "Yes, verily," is Faith's bright and decided
-reply. "It is all love--all divinely right. I would not have it
-otherwise for worlds. I know this transient suffering is working out
-eternal blessing. I know my loving Father has put me into this furnace
-to purge away my dross and bring out in me the expression of His own
-image. I know that divine love will always do the very best for its
-object, and therefore this intense suffering is the very best thing
-for me. Of course, I feel it, for I am not a stick or a stone. My
-Father means me to feel it, just as the mother means the blister to
-rise, for it would do no good otherwise. But I bless Him, with my
-whole heart, for the grace that shines in the wondrous fact of His
-occupying Himself with me, in this way, to correct what He sees to be
-wrong in me. I praise Him for putting me into the furnace; and how can
-I but praise Him, when I see Himself, in infinite grace and patience,
-sitting over the furnace to watch the process, and lift me out the
-moment the work is done?"
-
-This, beloved Christian reader, is the true way, and this the right
-spirit in which to pass through chastening of any kind, be it bodily
-affliction, sore bereavement, loss of property, or pressure of
-circumstances. We have to trace the hand of God, to read a Father's
-heart, to recognize the divine object in it all. This will enable us
-to vindicate, justify, and glorify God in the furnace of affliction.
-It will correct every murmuring thought, and hush every fretful
-utterance; it will fill our hearts with sweetest peace and our mouths
-with praise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now turn, for a few moments, to the remaining verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find some most touching and powerful
-appeals to the heart and conscience of the congregation. The lawgiver,
-in the deep, true, and fervent love of his heart, makes use of the
-most solemn warnings, the most earnest admonition, and the most tender
-entreaties, in order to move the people to the one grand and
-all-important point of obedience. If he speaks to them of the iron
-furnace of Egypt, out of which Jehovah, in His sovereign grace, had
-delivered them; if he dwells upon the mighty signs and wonders wrought
-on their behalf; if he holds up to their view the glories of that land
-on which they were about to plant their foot; or if he recounts the
-marvelous dealings of God with them in the wilderness, it is all for
-the purpose of strengthening the moral basis of Jehovah's claim upon
-their loving and reverent obedience. The past, the present, and the
-future are all brought to bear upon them--all made to furnish powerful
-arguments in favor of their whole-hearted consecration of themselves
-to the service of their gracious and almighty Deliverer. In short,
-there was every reason why they should obey, and no possible excuse
-for disobedience. All the facts of their history, from first to last,
-were eminently calculated to give moral force to the exhortation and
-warning of the following passage:--
-
-"Take heed unto yourselves, lest ye forget the covenant of the Lord
-your God, which He made with you, and make you a graven image, or the
-likeness of any thing, which the Lord thy God hath forbidden thee. For
-the Lord thy God is a consuming fire, even a jealous God. When thou
-shalt beget children, and children's children, and ye shall have
-remained long in the land, and shall corrupt yourselves, and make a
-graven image, or the likeness of any thing, and shall do evil in the
-sight of the Lord thy God, to provoke Him to anger; I call heaven and
-earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon utterly
-perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to possess it; ye
-shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly be destroyed.
-And the Lord shall scatter you among the nations, and ye shall be left
-few in number among the heathen, whither the Lord shall lead you. And
-there ye shall serve gods, the work of men's hands, wood and stone,
-which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell."
-
-How solemn is all this! What faithful warnings are here! Heaven and
-earth are summoned to witness. Alas! how soon and how completely all
-this was forgotten! and how literally all those heavy denunciations
-have been fulfilled in the history of the nation!
-
-But, thank God, there is a bright side of the picture--there is mercy
-as well as judgment, and our God (blessed forever be His holy name) is
-something more than "a consuming fire and a jealous God." True, He is
-a consuming fire, because He is holy; He is intolerant of evil, and
-must consume our dross. Moreover, He is jealous, because He cannot
-suffer any rival to have a place in the hearts of those He loves. He
-must have the whole heart, because He alone is worthy of it, as He
-alone can fill and satisfy it forever. And if His people turn away
-from Him and go after idols of their own making, they must be left to
-reap the bitter fruit of their own doings, and to prove, by sad and
-terrible experience, the truth of these words: "Their sorrows shall be
-multiplied that hasten after another."
-
-But mark how touchingly Moses presents to the people the bright side
-of things--a brightness springing from the eternal stability of the
-grace of God, and the perfect provision which that grace has made for
-all His people's need, from first to last. "_But_," he says--and oh,
-how lovely are some of the "buts" of holy Scripture!--"if from thence
-thou shalt seek the Lord thy God, thou shalt find Him, if thou seek
-Him with all thy heart and with all thy soul." Exquisite grace! "When
-thou art in tribulation"--that is the time to find what our God
-is,--"and all these things are come upon thee, even in the latter
-days, if thou turn to the Lord thy God, and shalt be obedient unto His
-voice;"--what then? "A consuming fire"? Nay; but "the Lord _thy God_
-is a merciful God; He will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee, nor
-forget the covenant of thy fathers which He sware unto them."
-
-Here we have a remarkable onlook into Israel's future, their departure
-from God and consequent dispersion among the nations, the complete
-breaking up of their polity, and the passing away of their national
-glory. But, blessed forever be the God of all grace, there is
-something beyond all this failure and sin and ruin and judgment. When
-we get to the far end of Israel's melancholy history--a history which
-may truly be summed up in that one brief but comprehensive sentence,
-"O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself," we are met by the magnificent
-display of the grace, mercy, and faithfulness of Jehovah, the God of
-their fathers, whose heart of love tells itself out in that added
-sentence, "In Me is thy help." Yes; the whole matter is wrapped up in
-these two vigorous sentences, "Thou hast destroyed thyself," "But in
-Me is thy help." In the former, we have the sharp arrow for Israel's
-conscience; in the latter, the soothing balm for Israel's broken
-heart.
-
-In thinking of the nation of Israel, there are two pages which we have
-to study, namely, the historic and the prophetic. The page of history
-records, with unerring faithfulness, their utter ruin: the page of
-prophecy unfolds, in accents of matchless grace, God's remedy.
-Israel's past has been dark and gloomy: Israel's future will be bright
-and glorious. In the former, we see the miserable actings of man; in
-the latter, the blessed ways of God. That gives the forcible
-illustration of what man is; this, the bright display of what God is.
-We must look at both if we would understand aright the history of this
-remarkable people--"a people terrible from their beginning hitherto,"
-and, we may truly add, a people wonderful to the end of time.
-
-We do not, of course, attempt to adduce, in this place, proofs of our
-statement as to Israel's past and Israel's future. To do so would, we
-may say, without any exaggeration, demand a volume, inasmuch as it
-would simply be to quote a very large portion of the historical books
-of the Bible on the one hand, and of the prophetic books on the other.
-This, we need hardly say, is out of the question; but we feel bound to
-press upon the reader's attention the precious teaching contained in
-the quotation given above. It embodies, in its brief compass, the
-whole truth as to Israel's past, present, and future. Mark how their
-past is vividly portrayed in these few words: "When thou shalt beget
-children, and children's children, and ye shall have remained long in
-the land, and shall corrupt yourselves, and make a graven image, or
-the likeness of any thing, and shall do evil in the sight of the Lord
-thy God, to provoke Him to anger."
-
-Is not this precisely what they have done? Is it not here, as it were,
-in a nutshell? They have done evil in the sight of Jehovah their God,
-to provoke Him to anger. That one word, "_evil_" takes all in, from
-the calf at Horeb to the cross at Calvary. Such is Israel's past.
-
-And now, what of their present? Are they not a standing monument of
-the imperishable truth of God? Has a single jot or tittle failed of
-all that God has spoken? Hearken to these glowing words: "I call
-heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon
-utterly perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to
-possess it; ye shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly
-be destroyed. And the Lord shall scatter you among the nations, and ye
-shall be left few in number among the heathen, whither the Lord shall
-lead you."
-
-Has not all this been fulfilled to the letter? Who can question it?
-Israel's past and Israel's present alike attest the truth of God's
-Word. And are we not justified in declaring that inasmuch as the past
-and the present are a literal accomplishment of the truth of God, so
-shall the future? Assuredly. The page of history and the page of
-prophecy were both indited by the same Spirit, and therefore they are
-both alike true; and as the history records Israel's sin and Israel's
-dispersion, so doth the prophecy predict Israel's repentance and
-Israel's restoration. The one is as true to faith as the other. As
-surely as Israel sinned in the past and are scattered at the present,
-so surely shall they repent and be restored in the future.
-
-This, we conceive, is beyond all question; and we rejoice to think of
-it. There is not one of the prophets, from Isaiah to Malachi, that
-does not most distinctly set forth, in accents of sweetest grace and
-most tender mercy, the future blessings, pre-eminence, and glory of
-the seed of Abraham.[11] It would be simply delightful to quote some
-of the sublime passages bearing upon this most interesting subject;
-but we must leave the reader to search them out for himself,
-especially commending to his notice the precious passages contained in
-the closing chapters of Isaiah, in which he will find a perfect feast,
-as well as the fullest confirmation of the apostle's statement that
-"all Israel shall be saved." All the prophets, "from Samuel and those
-that follow after," agree as to this. The teachings of the New
-Testament harmonize with the voices of the prophets, and hence to call
-in question the truth of Israel's restoration to their own land, and
-final blessing there, under the rule of their own Messiah, is simply
-to ignore or deny the testimony of prophets and apostles, speaking and
-writing by the direct inspiration of God the Holy Ghost; it is to set
-aside a body of Scripture evidence perfectly overwhelming.
-
- [11] Jonah, of course, is an exception; his mission was to Nineveh. He
- is the only prophet whose commission had exclusive reference to the
- Gentiles.
-
-It seems passing strange that any true lover of Christ should seek to
-do this; yet so it is, and so it has been, through religious
-prejudice, theological bias, and various other causes. But,
-notwithstanding all this, the glorious truth of Israel's restoration
-and pre-eminence in the earth shines with undimmed lustre on the
-prophetic page, and all who seek to set it aside, or interfere with it in
-any way, are not only flying in the face of holy Scripture--contradicting
-the unanimous voice of apostles and prophets, but also seeking to
-tamper (ignorantly and unwittingly, no doubt) with the counsel,
-purpose, and promise of the Lord God of Israel, and to nullify His
-covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
-
-This is serious work for any one to engage in, and we believe many are
-doing it without being aware of it; for we must understand that any
-one who applies the promises made to the Old-Testament fathers to the
-New-Testament Church is, in reality, doing the serious work of which
-we speak. We maintain that no one has the slightest warrant to
-alienate the promises made to the fathers. We may learn from those
-promises, delight in them, draw comfort and encouragement from their
-eternal stability and direct literal application--all this is
-blessedly true; but it is another thing altogether for men, under the
-influence of a system of interpretation falsely called spiritual, to
-apply to the Church, or to believers of the New-Testament times,
-prophecies which, as simply and plainly as words can indicate, apply
-to Israel--to the literal seed of Abraham.
-
-This is what we consider so very serious. We believe we have very
-little idea of how thoroughly opposed all this is to the mind and
-heart of God. He loves Israel--loves them for the fathers' sake, and
-we may rest assured He will not sanction our interference with their
-place, their portion, or their prospect. We are all familiar with the
-words of the inspired apostle in Romans xi, however we may have missed
-or forgotten their true import and moral force.
-
-Speaking of Israel, in connection with the olive-tree of promise, he
-says, "And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be
-graffed in; for" the most simple, solid, and blessed of all
-reasons--"_God is able_," as He is most surely willing, "to graff them
-in again. For if thou wert cut out of the olive-tree which is wild by
-nature, and wert graffed contrary to nature into a good olive-tree;
-how much more shall these, which be the natural branches, be graffed
-into their own olive-tree? For I would not, brethren, that ye should
-be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own
-conceits; that blindness _in part_ is happened to Israel, until the
-fullness of the Gentiles be come in.[12] And so all Israel shall be
-saved: as it is written, 'There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer,
-and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: _for this is My covenant
-unto them_, when I shall take away their sins.' As concerning the
-gospel, they are enemies for your sakes; but as touching the election,
-they are beloved for the fathers' sakes. For the gifts and calling of
-God are without repentance. For as ye in times past have not believed
-God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief; even so have
-these also now not believed in your mercy [or, mercy to you. _See
-Greek._] that they also may obtain mercy." That is, that instead of
-coming in on the ground of law, or fleshly descent, they should come
-in simply on the ground of sovereign mercy, just as the Gentiles. "For
-God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that He might have _mercy
-upon all_."
-
- [12] The reader must seize the difference between "the fullness of the
- Gentiles" in Romans xi, and "the times of the Gentiles" in Luke xxi.
- The former refers to those who are now being gathered into the Church:
- the latter, on the contrary, refers to the times of Gentile supremacy
- which began with Nebuchadnezzar, and runs on to the time when "the
- stone cut out without hands" shall fall, in crushing power, upon the
- great image of Daniel ii.
-
-Here ends the section bearing upon our immediate subject, but we
-cannot refrain from quoting the splendid doxology which bursts forth
-from the overflowing heart of the inspired apostle as he closes the
-grand dispensational division of his epistle--"O the depth of the
-riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are
-His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who hath known the
-mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counselor? or who hath first
-given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? For _of_
-Him," as the source, "and _through_ Him," as the channel, "and _to_
-Him," as the object, "are all things: to whom be glory forever.
-Amen."
-
-The foregoing splendid passage, as indeed all Scripture, is in perfect
-keeping with the teaching of the fourth chapter of our book. Israel's
-present condition is the fruit of their dark unbelief: Israel's future
-glory will be the fruit of God's rich sovereign mercy.--"The Lord thy
-God is a merciful God, He will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee,
-nor forget the covenant of thy fathers which He sware unto them. For
-ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee, since the
-day that God created man upon the earth, and ask from the one side of
-heaven unto the other"--The utmost bounds of time and space were to be
-appealed to, to see--"whether there hath been any such thing as this
-great thing is, or hath been heard like it? Did ever people hear the
-voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire, as thou hast
-heard, and live? Or hath God assayed to go and take Him a nation from
-the midst of another nation, by temptations, by signs, and by wonders,
-and by war, and by a mighty hand, and by a stretched-out arm, and by
-great terrors, according to all that the Lord your God did for you in
-Egypt before your eyes? Unto thee it was showed, that thou mightest
-know that the Lord He is God; there is none else beside Him. Out of
-heaven He made thee to hear His voice, that He might instruct thee,
-and upon earth He showed thee His great fire; and thou heardest His
-words out of the midst of the fire."
-
-Here we have set forth, with singular moral power, the grand object of
-all the divine actings on Israel's behalf. It was that they might
-know that Jehovah was the one true and living God, and that there was
-and could be none beside Him. In a word, it was the purpose of God
-that Israel should be a witness for Him on the earth; and so they most
-assuredly shall, though hitherto they have signally failed and caused
-His great and holy name to be blasphemed among the nations. Nothing
-can hinder the purpose of God. His covenant shall stand forever.
-Israel shall yet be a blessed and effective witness for God on the
-earth, and a channel of rich and everlasting blessing to all nations.
-Jehovah has pledged His word as to this, and not all the powers of
-earth and hell--men and devils combined can hinder the full
-accomplishment of all that He has spoken. His glory is involved in
-Israel's future, and if a single jot or tittle of His word were to
-fail, it would be a dishonor cast upon His great name, and an occasion
-for the enemy, which is utterly impossible. Israel's future blessing
-and Jehovah's glory are bound together by a link which can never be
-snapped. If this be not clearly seen, we can neither understand
-Israel's past nor Israel's future. Nay, more; we may assert, with all
-possible confidence, that unless this blessed fact be fully grasped,
-our system of prophetic interpretation must be utterly false.
-
-But there is another truth set forth in our chapter--a truth of
-peculiar interest and preciousness. It is not merely that the glory of
-Jehovah is involved in Israel's future restoration and blessedness;
-the love of His heart is also engaged. This comes out with touching
-sweetness in the following words: "And because He loved thy fathers,
-therefore He chose their seed after them, and brought thee out in His
-sight with His mighty power out of Egypt; to drive out nations from
-before thee greater and mightier than thou art, to bring thee in, to
-give thee their land for an inheritance, as it is this day."
-
-Thus the truth of God's word, the glory of His great name, and the
-love of His heart are all involved in His dealings with the seed of
-Abraham His friend; and albeit they have broken the law, dishonored
-His name, despised His mercy, rejected His prophets, crucified His
-Son, and resisted His Spirit--although they have done all this, and,
-in consequence thereof, are scattered and peeled and broken, and shall
-yet pass through unexampled tribulation, yet will the God of Abraham,
-Isaac, and Jacob glorify His name, make good His word, and manifest
-the changeless love of His heart in the future history of His earthly
-people. "Nothing changeth God's affection." Whom He loves and as He
-loves He loves unto the end.
-
-If we deny this in reference to Israel, we have not so much as a
-single inch of solid standing-ground for ourselves: if we touch the
-truth of God in one department, we have no security as to any thing.
-"Scripture cannot be broken." "All the promises of God in Him are yea,
-and in Him Amen, unto the glory of God." God has pledged Himself to
-the seed of Abraham; He has promised to give them the land of Canaan,
-_forever_. "His gifts and calling are without repentance." He never
-repents of His gift or His call; and therefore for any one to attempt
-to alienate His promises and His gifts, or to interfere in any way
-with their application to their true and proper object, must be a
-grievous offense to Him. It mars the integrity of divine truth,
-deprives us of all certainty in the interpretation of holy Scripture,
-and plunges the soul in darkness, doubt, and perplexity.
-
-The teaching of Scripture is clear, definite, and distinct. The Holy
-Ghost, who indited the sacred Volume, means what He says and says what
-He means. If He speaks of Israel, He means Israel--of Zion, He means
-Zion--of Jerusalem, He means Jerusalem. To apply any one of these
-names to the New-Testament Church is to confound things that differ,
-and introduce a method of interpreting Scripture which, from its
-vagueness and looseness, can only lead to the most disastrous
-consequences. If we handle the Word of God in such a loose and
-careless manner, it is utterly impossible to realize its divine
-authority over our conscience, or exhibit its formative power in our
-course, conduct, and character.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now look, for a moment, at the powerful appeal with which
-Moses sums up his address in our chapter: it demands our profound and
-reverent attention.--"Know _therefore_ this day, and _consider it in
-thine heart_, that the Lord He is God in heaven above, and upon the
-earth beneath; there is none else. Thou shalt keep _therefore_ His
-statutes, and His commandments, which I command thee this day, that it
-may go well with thee, and with thy children after thee, and that thou
-mayest prolong thy days upon the earth, which the Lord thy God giveth
-thee, forever." (Ver. 39, 40.)
-
-Here we see that the moral claim upon their hearty obedience is
-grounded upon the revealed character of God, and His marvelous actings
-on their behalf. In a word, they were bound to obey--bound by every
-argument that could possibly act on the heart, the conscience, and the
-understanding. The One who had brought them out of the land of Egypt,
-with a mighty hand and outstretched arm; who had made that land to
-tremble to its very centre, by stroke after stroke of His judicial
-rod; who had opened up a pathway for them through the sea; who had
-sent them bread from heaven, and brought forth water for them out of
-the flinty rock; and all this for the glory of His great name, and
-because He loved their fathers--surely He was entitled to their
-whole-hearted obedience.
-
-This is the grand argument, so eminently characteristic of this
-blessed book of Deuteronomy. And surely this is full of instruction
-for Christians now. If Israel were morally bound to obey, how much
-more are we! If their motives and objects were powerful, how much more
-so are ours! Do we feel their power? do we consider them in our
-hearts? Do we ponder the claims of Christ upon us? Do we remember
-that we are not our own, but bought with a price, even the infinitely
-precious price of the blood of Christ? Do we realize this? Are we
-seeking to live for Him? Is His glory our ruling object?--His love our
-constraining motive? or are we living for ourselves? Are we seeking to
-get on in the world--that world that crucified our blessed Lord and
-Saviour? Are we seeking to make money? do we love it in our hearts,
-either for its own sake or for the sake of what it can procure? does
-money _govern_ us? Are we seeking a place in the world, either for
-ourselves or for our children? Let us honestly challenge our hearts,
-as in the divine presence, in the light of God's truth, what is our
-object--our real, governing, cherished, heart-sought object?
-
-Reader, these are searching questions. Let us not put them aside: let
-us really weigh them in the very light of the judgment-seat of Christ.
-We believe they are wholesome, much-needed questions. We live in very
-solemn times. There is a fearful amount of sham on every side, and in
-nothing is this sham so awfully apparent as in so-called religion.
-
-The very days in which our lot is cast have been sketched by a pen
-that never colors--never exaggerates, but always presents men and
-things precisely as they are.--"This know also, that in _the last
-days_"--quite distinct from "_the latter times_" of 1 Timothy iv.--far
-in advance, more pronounced, more closely defined, more strongly
-marked, these last days in which "perilous [or difficult] times shall
-come. For men shall be _lovers of their own selves_, covetous,
-_boasters_, proud, blasphemers, _disobedient to parents_, unthankful,
-unholy, _without natural affection_, truce-breakers, _false accusers_,
-incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors,
-heady, high-minded, _lovers of pleasures more_ [or rather] _than
-lovers of God_." And then mark the crown which the inspired apostle
-puts upon this appalling superstructure!--"Having a form of godliness,
-but denying the power thereof." (2 Tim. iii. 1-5.)
-
-What a terrible picture! We have here, in a few glowing, weighty
-sentences, _infidel_ christendom, just as in 1 Timothy iv. we have
-_superstitious_ christendom. In the latter, we see popery; in the
-former, infidelity. Both elements are at work around us, but the
-latter will yet rise into prominence--indeed, even now it is advancing
-with rapid strides. The very leaders and teachers of christendom are
-not ashamed or afraid to attack the foundations of Christianity. A
-so-called Christian bishop is not ashamed or afraid to call in
-question the integrity of the five books of Moses, and, with them, of
-the whole Bible; for, most assuredly, if Moses was not the inspired
-writer of the Pentateuch, the entire edifice of holy Scripture is
-swept from beneath our feet. The writings of Moses are so intimately
-bound up with all the other grand divisions of the divine Volume, that
-if they are touched, all is gone. We boldly affirm that if the Holy
-Ghost did not inspire Moses, the servant of God, to write the first
-five books of our English Bible, we have not an inch of solid ground
-to stand upon; we are positively left without a single atom of divine
-authority on which to rest our souls; the very pillars of our glorious
-Christianity are swept away, and we are left to grope our way, in
-hopeless perplexity, amid the conflicting opinions and theories of
-infidel doctors, without so much as a single ray from Inspiration's
-heavenly lamp.
-
-Does this appear too strong for the reader? Does he believe that we
-can listen, for a moment, to the infidel denier of Moses, and yet
-believe in the inspiration of the psalms, the prophets, and the New
-Testament? If he does, let him be well assured he is under the power
-of a fatal delusion. Let him take such passages as the following, and
-ask himself, What do they mean, and what is wrapped up in them? Our
-Lord, in speaking to the Jews--who, by the way, would not have agreed
-with a Christian bishop in denying the authenticity of Moses--says,
-"Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father; there is one that
-accuseth you, even Moses, in whom ye trust. For had ye believed Moses,
-ye would have believed Me; for he wrote of Me. But if ye believe not
-his writings, how shall ye believe My words?" (John v. 45-47.)
-
-Think of this: The man that does not believe in the writings of
-Moses--does not receive every line of his as divinely inspired, does
-not believe in Christ's words, and therefore cannot have any divinely
-wrought faith in Christ Himself--cannot be a Christian at all. This
-makes it a very serious matter for any one to deny the divine
-inspiration of the Pentateuch, and equally serious for any one to
-listen to him or sympathize with him. It is all very well to talk of
-Christian charity and liberality of spirit; but we have yet to learn
-that it is charity or liberality to sanction, in any way, a man who
-has the audacity to sweep from beneath our feet the very foundations
-of our faith. To speak of him as a Christian bishop, or a Christian
-minister of any kind, is only to make the matter a thousand times
-worse. We can understand a Voltaire or a Paine attacking the Bible--we
-do not look for any thing else from them; but when those who assume to
-be the recognized and ordained ministers of religion, and the
-guardians of the faith of God's elect--those who consider themselves
-alone entitled to teach and preach Jesus Christ, and feed and tend the
-Church of God--when they actually call in question the inspiration of
-the five books of Moses, may we not well ask, Where are we? What has
-the professing church come to?
-
-But let us take another passage. It is the powerful appeal of the
-risen Saviour to the two bewildered disciples on their way to
-Emmaus--"'O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets
-have spoken; ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to
-enter into His glory?' And _beginning at Moses_ and all the prophets,
-He expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning
-Himself." And again, to the eleven and others with them, He says,
-"These are the words which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you,
-that all things must be fulfilled, which were written _in the law of_
-_Moses_, and in the prophets, and in the psalms, concerning Me." (Luke
-xxiv. 25-27, 44.)
-
-Here we find that our Lord, in the most distinct and positive manner,
-recognizes the law of Moses as an integral part of the canon of
-inspiration, and binds it up with all the other grand divisions of the
-divine Volume in such a way that it is utterly impossible to touch one
-without destroying the integrity of the whole. If Moses is not to be
-trusted, neither are the prophets, nor the psalms. They stand or fall
-together. And not only so, but we must either admit the divine
-authenticity of the Pentateuch or draw the blasphemous inference that
-our adorable Lord and Saviour gave the sanction of His authority to a
-set of spurious documents, by quoting as the writings of Moses what
-Moses never wrote at all! There is positively not a single inch of
-consistent standing-ground between these two conclusions.
-
-Again, take the following most weighty and important passage at the
-close of the parable of the rich man and Lazarus: "Abraham saith unto
-him, 'They have _Moses and the prophets; let them hear them_.' And he
-said, 'Nay, father Abraham; but if one went unto them from the dead,
-they will repent.' And he said unto him, 'If they hear not Moses and
-the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the
-dead.'" (Luke xvi. 29-31.)
-
-Finally, if we add to all this the fact that our Lord, in His conflict
-with Satan in the wilderness, quotes only from the writings of Moses,
-we have a body of evidence quite sufficient, not only to establish,
-beyond all question, the divine inspiration of Moses, but also to
-prove that the man who calls in question the authenticity of the first
-five books of the Bible, can really have no Bible, no divine
-revelation, no authority, no solid foundation for his faith. He may
-call himself, or be called by others, a Christian bishop or a
-Christian minister; but, in solemn fact, he is a skeptic, and should
-be treated as such by all who believe and know the truth. We cannot
-understand how any one with a spark of divine life in his soul could
-be guilty of the awful sin of denying the inspiration of a large
-portion of the Word of God, or asserting that our Lord Christ could
-quote from spurious documents.
-
-We may be deemed severe in thus writing. It seems the fashion nowadays
-to own as Christians those who deny the very foundations of
-Christianity. It is a very popular notion that, provided people are
-moral, amiable, benevolent, charitable, and philanthropic, it is of
-very small consequence what they believe. Life is better than creed or
-dogma, we are told. All this sounds very plausible: but the reader may
-rest assured that the direct tendency of all this manner of speech and
-line of argument is to get rid of the Bible--rid of the Holy
-Ghost--rid of Christ--rid of God--rid of all that the Bible reveals to
-our souls. Let him bear this in mind, and seek to keep close to the
-precious Word of God; let him treasure that Word in his heart, and
-give himself more and more to the prayerful study of it. Thus he will
-be preserved from the withering influence of skepticism and
-infidelity, in every shape and form; his soul will be fed and
-nourished by the sincere milk of the Word, and his whole moral being
-be kept in the shelter of the divine presence continually. This is
-what is needed: nothing else will do.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now close our meditations on this marvelous chapter which has
-been engaging our attention; but ere doing so, we would glance for a
-moment at the remarkable notice of the three cities of refuge. It
-might, to a cursory reader, seem abrupt; but, so far from that, it is,
-as we might expect, in perfect and beautiful moral order. Scripture is
-always divinely perfect, and if we do not see and appreciate its
-beauties and moral glories, it is simply owing to our blindness and
-insensibility.
-
-"Then Moses severed three cities on this side Jordan toward the
-sunrising; that the slayer might flee thither, which should kill his
-neighbor unawares, and hated him not in times past; and that fleeing
-unto one of those cities he might live; namely, Bezer in the
-wilderness, in the plain country, of the Reubenites; and Ramoth in
-Gilead, of the Gadites; and Golan in Bashan, of the Manassites."
-
-Here we have a lovely display of the grace of God rising, as it ever
-does, above human weakness and failure. The two tribes and a half, in
-choosing their inheritance on this side Jordan, were manifestly
-stopping short of the proper portion of the Israel of God, which lay
-on the other side of the river of death; but, notwithstanding this
-failure, God, in His abounding grace, would not leave the poor slayer
-without a refuge in the day of his distress. If man cannot come up to
-the height of God's thoughts, God can come down to the depths of man's
-need; and so blessedly does He do so in this case, that the two tribes
-and a half were to have as many cities of refuge on this side Jordan
-as the nine tribes and a half had in the land of Canaan.
-
-This, truly, was grace abounding. How unlike the manner of man! How
-far above mere law or legal righteousness! It might, in a legal way,
-have been said to the two tribes and a half, If you are going to
-choose your inheritance short of the divine mark--if you are content
-with less than Canaan, the land of promise, you must not expect to
-enjoy the privileges and blessings of that land. The institutions of
-Canaan must be confined to Canaan, and hence your manslayer must try
-and make his way across the Jordan and find refuge there.
-
-Law might speak thus, but Grace spoke differently. God's thoughts are
-not ours, nor His ways as ours. We might deem it marvelous grace to
-provide even one city for the two and a half tribes; but our God does
-exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, and hence the
-comparatively small district on this side Jordan was furnished with as
-full a provision of grace as the entire land of Canaan.
-
-Does this prove that the two and a half tribes were right? Nay; but it
-proves that God was good, and that He must ever act like Himself,
-spite of all our weakness and folly. Could He leave a poor slayer
-without a place of refuge in the land of Gilead, though Gilead was not
-Canaan? Surely not. This would not be worthy of the One who says, "_I
-bring near_ My righteousness." He took care to bring the city of
-refuge "near" to the slayer. He would cause His rich and precious
-grace to flow over and meet the needy one just where he was. Such is
-the way of our God, blessed be His holy name for evermore!
-
-"And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel:
-these are the testimonies, and the statutes, and the judgments, which
-Moses spake unto the children of Israel, after they came forth out of
-Egypt, on this side Jordan, in the valley over against Beth-peor, in
-the land of Sihon king of the Amorites, who dwelt at Heshbon, whom
-Moses and the children of Israel smote, after they were come forth out
-of Egypt: and they possessed his land, and the land of Og king of
-Bashan, two kings of the Amorites, which were on this side Jordan
-toward the sunrising; from Aroer, which is by the bank of the river
-Arnon, even unto Mount Sion, which is Hermon, and all the plain on
-this side Jordan eastward, even unto the sea of the plain, under the
-springs of Pisgah."
-
-Here closes this marvelous discourse. The Spirit of God delights to
-trace the boundaries of the people, and dwell on the most minute
-details connected with their history. He takes a lively and loving
-interest in all that concerns them--their conflicts, their victories,
-their possessions, all their landmarks; every thing about them is
-dwelt upon with a minuteness which, by its touching grace and
-condescension, fill the heart with wonder, love, and praise. Man, in
-his contemptible self-importance, thinks it beneath his dignity to
-enter upon minute details; but _our_ God counts the hairs of our
-heads, puts our tears into His bottle, takes knowledge of our every
-care, our every sorrow, our every need. There is nothing too small for
-His love, as there is nothing too great for His power. He concentrates
-His loving care upon each one of His people as though He had only that
-one to attend to; and there is not a single circumstance in our
-private history, from day to day, however trivial, in which He does
-not take a loving interest.
-
-Let us ever remember this, for our comfort; and may we learn to trust
-Him better, and use, with a more artless faith, His fatherly love and
-care. He tells us to cast _all_ our care upon Him, in the assurance
-that He careth for us. He would have our hearts as free from care as
-our conscience is free from guilt. "Be careful for _nothing_; but in
-every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
-requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth
-_all_ understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ
-Jesus." (Phil. iv. 6, 7.)
-
-It is to be feared that the great majority of us know but little of
-the real depth, meaning, and power of such words as these. We read
-them and hear them, but we do not take them in and make our own of
-them--we do not digest them and reduce them to practice. How little do
-we really enter into the blessed truth that our Father is interested
-in all our little cares and sorrows, and that we may go to Him with
-all our little wants and difficulties. We imagine that such things are
-beneath the notice of the high and mighty One who inhabiteth eternity
-and sitteth upon the circle of the earth. This is a serious mistake,
-and one that robs us of incalculable blessing in our daily history. We
-should ever remember that there is nothing great or small with our
-God: all things are alike to Him who sustains the vast universe by the
-word of His power, and takes notice of a falling sparrow. It is quite
-as easy to Him to create a world as to provide a breakfast for some
-poor widow. The greatness of His power, the moral grandeur of His
-government, and the minuteness of His tender care, do all alike
-command the wonder and the worship of our hearts.
-
-Christian reader, see that you make your own of all these things. Seek
-to live nearer to God in your daily walk. Lean more upon Him. Use Him
-more. Go to Him in all your need, and you will never have to tell your
-need to a poor fellow-mortal. "My God shall supply _all_ your need,
-according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus." What a
-source--"God"! What a standard--"His riches in glory"! What a
-channel--"Christ Jesus"! It is your sweet privilege to place all _your
-need_ over against _His riches_, and lose sight of the former in the
-presence of the latter. His exhaustless treasury is thrown open to
-you, in all the love of His heart; go and draw upon it, in the
-artless simplicity of faith, and you will never have occasion to look
-to a creature-stream or lean on a creature-prop.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-"And Moses called all Israel, and said unto them, 'Hear, O Israel, the
-statutes and judgments which I speak in your ears this day, that ye
-may learn them, and keep and do them.'"
-
-Let us carefully note these four words, so specially characteristic of
-the book of Deuteronomy, and so seasonable for the Lord's people at
-all times and in all places: "_Hear_," "_Learn_," "_Keep_," "_Do_."
-These are words of unspeakable preciousness to every truly pious
-soul--to every one who honestly desires to walk in that narrow path of
-practical righteousness so pleasing to God, and so safe and so happy
-for us.
-
-The first of these words places the soul in the most blessed attitude
-in which any one can be found, namely, that of _hearing_. "Faith
-cometh by _hearing_, and hearing by the Word of God." "I will _hear_
-what God the Lord will speak." "_Hear_, and your soul shall live." The
-hearing ear lies at the very foundation of all true, practical
-Christian life. It places the soul in the only true and proper
-attitude for the creature. It is the real secret of all peace and
-blessedness.
-
-It can scarcely be needful to remind the reader that when we speak of
-the soul in the attitude of hearing, it is assumed that what is heard
-is simply the Word of God. Israel had to hearken to "the statutes and
-judgments" of Jehovah, and to nothing else. It was not to the
-commandments, traditions, and doctrines of men they were to give ear,
-but to the very words of the living God, who had redeemed and
-delivered them from the land of Egypt--the place of bondage, darkness,
-and death.
-
-It is well to bear this in mind. It will preserve the soul from many a
-snare, many a difficulty. We hear a good deal, in certain quarters,
-about obedience, and about the moral fitness of surrendering our own
-will and submitting ourselves to authority. All this sounds very well,
-and has great weight with a large class of very religious and morally
-excellent people; but when men speak to us about obedience, we must
-ask the question, Obedience to what? when they speak to us about
-surrendering our own will, we must inquire of them, To whom are we to
-surrender it? when they speak to us about submitting to authority, we
-must insist upon their telling us the source or foundation of the
-authority.
-
-This is of the deepest possible moment to every member of the
-household of faith. There are many very sincere and very earnest
-people who deem it very delightful to be saved the trouble of thinking
-for themselves, and to have their sphere of action and line of service
-laid out for them by wiser heads than their own. It seems a very
-restful and very pleasing thing to have each day's work laid out for
-us by some master-hand. It relieves the heart of a great load of
-responsibility, and it looks like humility and self-distrust to submit
-ourselves to some authority.
-
-But we are bound, before God, to look well to the basis of the
-authority to which we surrender ourselves, else we may find ourselves
-in an utterly false position. Take, for example, a monk, or a nun, or
-a member of a sisterhood. A monk obeys his abbot, a nun obeys her
-mother-abbess, "a sister" obeys her "lady-superior;" but the position
-and relationship of each is utterly false. There is not a shadow of
-authority in the New Testament for monasteries, convents, or
-sisterhoods; on the contrary, the teaching of holy Scripture, as well
-as the voice of nature, is utterly opposed to every one of them,
-inasmuch as they take men and women out of the place and out of the
-relationship in which God has set them, and in which they are designed
-and fitted to move, and form them into societies which are utterly
-destructive of natural affection, and subversive of all true Christian
-obedience.
-
-We feel it right to call the attention of the Christian reader to this
-subject just now, seeing that the enemy is making a vigorous effort to
-revive the monastic system in our midst under various forms. Indeed
-some have had the temerity to tell us that monastic life is the only
-true form of Christianity. Surely, when such monstrous statements are
-made and listened to, it becomes us to look at the whole subject in
-the light of Scripture, and to call upon the advocates and adherents
-of monasticism to show us the foundations of the system in the Word of
-God. Where, within the covers of the New Testament, is there any
-thing, in the most remote degree, like a monastery, a convent, or a
-sisterhood? Where can we find an authority for any such office as that
-of an abbot, an abbess, or a lady-superior? There is absolutely no
-such thing, nor the shadow of it; and hence we have no hesitation in
-pronouncing the whole system, from foundation to top-stone, a fabric
-of superstition, alike opposed to the voice of nature and the voice of
-God: nor can we understand how any one, in his sober senses, could
-presume to tell us that a monk or a nun is the only true exponent of
-Christian life. Yet there are those who thus speak, and there are
-those who listen to them, and that, too, in this day when the full,
-clear light of our glorious Christianity is shining upon us from the
-pages of the New Testament.[13]
-
- [13] We must accurately distinguish between "_nature_" and "_flesh_."
- The former is recognized in Scripture; the latter is condemned and set
- aside. "Doth not even nature itself teach you?" says the apostle. (1
- Cor. xi. 14.) Jesus beholding the young ruler in Mark x, "loved him"
- although there was nothing but nature. To be without natural affection
- is one of the marks of the apostasy. Scripture teaches that we are
- dead to sin, not to nature, else what becomes of our natural
- relationships?
-
-But, blessed be God, we are called to obedience. We are called to
-"hear"--called to bow down, in holy and reverent submission, to
-authority. And here we join issue with infidelity and its lofty
-pretensions. The path of the devout and lowly Christian is alike
-removed from superstition on the one hand and from infidelity on the
-other. Peter's noble reply to the council, in Acts v, embodies, in its
-brief compass, a complete answer to both.--"We ought to obey God
-rather than men." We meet infidelity, in all its phases, in all its
-stages, and in its very deepest roots, with this one weighty sentence,
-"We ought to _obey_;" and we meet superstition, in every garb in which
-it clothes itself, with the all-important clause, "We ought to _obey
-God_."
-
-Here we have set forth, in the most simple form, the duty of every
-true Christian. He is to obey God. The infidel may smile
-contemptuously at a monk or a nun, and marvel how any rational being
-can so completely surrender his reason and his understanding to the
-authority of a fellow-mortal, or submit himself to rules and practices
-so absurd, so degrading, and so contrary to nature. The infidel
-glories in his fancied intellectual freedom, and imagines that his own
-reason is quite a sufficient guide for him. He does not see that he is
-further from God than the poor monk or nun whom he so despises. He
-does not know that, while priding himself in his self-will, he is
-really led captive by Satan--the prince and god of this world. Man is
-formed to obey--formed to look up to some one above him. The Christian
-is sanctified unto the obedience of Jesus Christ, that is, to the very
-same character of obedience as that which was rendered by our adorable
-Lord and Saviour Himself.
-
-This is of the deepest possible moment to every one who really desires
-to know what true Christian obedience is. To understand this is the
-real secret of deliverance from the self-will of the infidel and the
-false obedience of superstition. It can never be right to do our own
-will: it may be quite wrong to do the will of our fellow: it must
-always be right to do the will of God. This was what Jesus came to do,
-and what He always did.--"Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God."--"I
-delight to do Thy will, O My God; yea, Thy law is within My heart."
-
-Now, we are called and set apart to this blessed character of
-obedience, as we learn from the inspired apostle Peter, in the opening
-of his first epistle, where he speaks of believers as "elect according
-to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the
-Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ."
-
-This is an immense privilege, and at the same time a most holy and
-solemn responsibility. We must never forget for a moment that God has
-elected us, and the Holy Spirit has set us apart, not only to the
-sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ, but also to His obedience.
-Such is the obvious meaning and moral force of the words just
-quoted--words of unspeakable preciousness to every lover of
-holiness--words which effectually deliver us from self-will, from
-legality, and from superstition. Blessed deliverance!
-
-But it may be that the pious reader feels disposed to call our
-attention to the exhortation in Hebrews xiii.--"Obey them that have
-the rule over you, and submit yourselves; for they watch for your
-souls, as they that must give account; that they may do it with joy
-and not with grief; for that is unprofitable for you."
-
-A deeply important word, most surely, with which we should also
-connect a passage in 1 Thessalonians--"And we beseech you, brethren,
-to know them that labor among you, and are over you in the Lord, and
-admonish you, and to esteem them very highly in love for their work's
-sakes." (Chap. v. 12, 13.) And again, in 1 Corinthians xvi. 15, 16--"I
-beseech you, brethren, (ye know the house of Stephanas, that it is the
-first-fruits of Achaia, and that they have addicted themselves to the
-ministry [or service] of the saints,) that ye submit yourselves unto
-such, and to every one that helpeth with us and laboreth." To all
-these we must add another very lovely passage from the first epistle
-of Peter--"The elders which are among you I exhort, who am also an
-elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker
-of the glory that shall be revealed: feed the flock of God which is
-among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but
-willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; neither as being
-lords over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock. And when
-the chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory
-that fadeth not away." (Chap. v. 1-4.)
-
-We may be asked, Do not the above passages set forth the principle of
-obedience to certain men? and if so, why object to human authority?
-The answer is very simple. Wherever Christ imparts a spiritual gift,
-whether it be the gift of teaching, the gift of rule, or the gift of
-pastorship, it is the bounden duty and privilege of Christians to
-recognize and appreciate such gifts. Not to do so would be to forsake
-our own mercies. But then we must bear in mind that in all such cases
-the gift must be a reality--a plain, palpable, _bona-fide_, divinely
-given thing. It is not a man assuming a certain office or position, or
-being appointed by his fellow to any so-called ministry. All this is
-perfectly worthless, and worse than worthless; it is a daring
-intrusion upon a sacred domain which must, sooner or later, bring down
-the judgment of God.
-
-All true ministry is of God, and based upon the possession of a
-positive gift from the Head of the Church; so that we may truly say,
-No gift, no ministry. In all the passages quoted above, we see
-positive gift possessed, and actual work done. Moreover, we see a true
-heart for the lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ; we see divine
-grace and power. The word in Hebrews xiii. is, "Obey them that guide
-you [+hêgoumenois+]." Now, it is essential to a true guide that
-he should go before you in the way. It would be the height of folly
-for any one to assume the title of guide if he were ignorant of the
-way, and neither able nor willing to go in it. Who would think of
-obeying such?
-
-So also when the apostle exhorts the Thessalonians to "know" and
-"esteem" certain persons, on what does he found his exhortation? Is it
-upon the mere assumption of a title, an office, or a position?
-Nothing of the kind. He grounds his appeal upon the actual, well-known
-fact that these persons were "over them, _in the Lord_," and that they
-admonished them. And why were they to "esteem them very highly in
-love"? Was it for their office or their title? No; but "for their
-work's sake." And why were the Corinthians exhorted to submit
-themselves to the household of Stephanas? Was it because of an empty
-title or assumed office? By no means; but because "they addicted
-themselves to the ministry of the saints." They were actually in the
-work. They had received gift and grace from Christ, and they had a
-heart for His people. They were not boasting of their office or
-insisting upon their title, but giving themselves devotedly to the
-service of Christ, in the persons of His dear people.
-
-Now this is the true principle of ministry. It is not human authority
-at all, but divine gift and spiritual power communicated by Christ to
-His servants, exercised by them, in responsibility to Him, and
-thankfully recognized by His saints. A man may set up to be a teacher
-or a pastor, or he may be appointed by his fellows to the office or
-title of a pastor; but unless he possesses a positive gift from the
-Head of the Church, it is all the merest sham, a hollow assumption, an
-empty conceit; and his voice will be the voice of a stranger, which
-the true sheep of Christ do not know and ought not to recognize.[14]
-
- [14] The reader will do well to ponder the fact that there is no such
- thing in the New Testament as human appointment to preach the gospel,
- teach in the assembly of God, or feed the flock of Christ. Elders and
- deacons were ordained by the apostles or their delegates, Timothy and
- Titus; but evangelists, pastors, and teachers were never so ordained.
- We must distinguish between gift and local charge. Elders and deacons
- might possess a special gift or not; it had nothing to do with their
- local charge. If the reader would understand the subject of ministry,
- let him study 1 Corinthians xii.-xiv. and Ephesians iv. 8-13. In the
- former we have, first, the _basis_ of all true ministry in the Church
- of God, namely, _divine appointment_--"God hath set the members,"
- etc.; secondly, _the motive-spring_--"love;" thirdly, _the
- object_--"that the Church may receive edifying." In Ephesians iv. we
- have the _source_ of all ministry--a risen and ascended Lord; the
- _design_--"to perfect the saints for the work of the ministry;" the
- _duration_--"till we all come unto a perfect man, unto the measure of
- the stature of the fullness of Christ."
-
- In a word, ministry, in all its departments, is _entirely_ a divine
- institution. It is not of man or by man, but of God. The Master must,
- in every case, fit, fill, and appoint the vessel. There is no
- authority in Scripture for the notion that every man has a right to
- minister in the Church of God. Liberty for men is radicalism and not
- Scripture. Liberty for the Holy Ghost to minister by whom He will is
- what we are taught in the New Testament. May we learn it.
-
-But, on the other hand, where there is the divinely gifted teacher,
-the true, loving, wise, faithful, laborious pastor, watching for
-souls, weeping over them, waiting upon them, like a gentle, tender
-nurse, able to say to them, "Now we live, if ye stand fast in the
-Lord"--where these things are found, there will not be much difficulty
-in recognizing and appreciating them. How do we know a good dentist?
-Is it by seeing his name on a brass plate? No; but by his work. A man
-may call himself a dentist ten thousand times over, but if he be only
-an unskillful operator, who would think of employing him?
-
-Thus it is in all human affairs, and thus it is in the matter of
-ministry. If a man has a gift, he is a minister; if he has not, all
-the appointment, authority, and ordination in the world could not make
-him a minister of Christ. It may make him a minister of religion; but
-a minister of religion and a minister of Christ--a minister in
-christendom and a minister in the Church of God, are two totally
-different things. All true ministry has its source in God; it rests on
-divine authority, and its object is to bring the soul into His
-presence, and link it on to Him. False ministry, on the contrary, has
-its source in man; it rests on human authority, and its object is to
-link the soul on to itself. This marks the immense difference between
-the two. The former leads to God; the latter leads away from Him: that
-feeds, nourishes, and strengthens the new life; this hinders its
-progress, in every way, and plunges it in doubt and darkness. In a
-word, we may say, true ministry is of God, through Him, and to Him:
-false ministry is of man, through him, and to him. The former we prize
-more than we can say; the latter we reject with all the energy of our
-moral being.
-
-We trust sufficient has been said to satisfy the mind of the reader in
-reference to the matter of obedience to those whom the Lord may see
-fit to call to the work of the ministry. We are bound, in every case,
-to judge by the Word of God, and to be assured that it is a divine
-reality and not a human sham--a positive gift from the Head of the
-Church, and not an empty title conferred by men. In all cases where
-there is real gift and grace, it is a sweet privilege to obey and
-submit ourselves, inasmuch as we discern Christ in the person and
-ministry of His beloved servants.
-
-There is no difficulty, to a spiritual mind, in owning real grace and
-power. We can easily tell whether a man is seeking, in true love, to
-feed our souls with the bread of life, and lead us on in the ways of
-God, or whether he is seeking to exalt himself, and promote his own
-interests. Those who are living near the Lord can readily discern
-between true power and hollow assumption. Moreover, we never find
-Christ's true ministers parading their authority, or vaunting
-themselves of their office; they do the work and leave it to speak for
-itself. In the case of the blessed apostle Paul, we find him referring
-again and again to the plain proofs of his ministry--the
-unquestionable evidence afforded in the conversion and blessing of
-souls. He could say to the poor misguided Corinthians, when, under the
-influence of some self-exalting pretender, they foolishly called in
-question his apostleship, "Since ye seek a proof of Christ speaking in
-me ... examine yourselves."
-
-This was close, pointed dealing with them. They themselves were the
-living proofs of his ministry. If his ministry was not of God, what
-and where were they? But it was of God, and this was his joy, his
-comfort, and his strength. He was "an apostle, not of men, neither by
-man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised Him from the
-dead." He gloried in the source of his ministry; and as to its
-character, he had but to appeal to a body of evidence quite sufficient
-to carry conviction to any right mind. In his case, it could be truly
-said, it was not the speech, but the power.
-
-Thus it must be, in measure, in every case. We must look for the
-power: we must have reality. Mere titles are nothing. Men may
-undertake to confer titles and appoint to offices, but they have no
-more authority to do so than they have to appoint admirals in her
-majesty's fleet or generals in her army. If we were to see a man
-assuming the style and title of an admiral or a general, without her
-majesty's commission, we should pronounce him an idiot or a lunatic.
-This is but a feeble illustration to set forth the folly of men taking
-upon them the title of ministers of Christ without one atom of
-spiritual gift or divine authority.
-
-Shall we be told, We must not judge? We are bound to judge. "Beware of
-false prophets." How can we beware if we are not to judge? But how are
-we to judge? "By their fruits ye shall know them." Can the Lord's
-people not tell the difference between a man who comes to them in the
-power of the Spirit, gifted by the Head of the Church, full of love to
-their souls, earnestly desiring their true blessing, seeking not
-theirs but them--a holy, gracious, humble, self-emptied servant of
-Christ; and a man who comes with a self-assumed or a humanly conferred
-title, without a single trace of any thing divine or heavenly either
-in his ministry or in his life? Of course they can; no one in his
-senses would think of calling in question a fact so obvious.
-
-But further, we may ask, What mean those words of the venerable
-apostle John--"Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits
-whether they are of God; because many false prophets are gone out into
-the world"? How are we to try the spirits, or how are we to discern
-between the true and the false, if we are not to judge? Again, the
-same apostle, writing to "the elect lady," gives her the following
-most solemn admonition: "If there come any unto you, and bring not
-this doctrine, receive him not into your house, neither bid him
-Godspeed; for he that biddeth him Godspeed is partaker of his evil
-deeds." Was she not responsible to act on this admonition? Assuredly.
-But how could she if we are not to judge? And what had she to judge?
-Was it as to whether those who came to her house were ordained,
-authorized, or licensed by any man or body of men? Nothing of the
-kind. The one great and all-important question for her was as to the
-doctrine. If they brought the true, the divine doctrine of Christ--the
-doctrine of Jesus Christ come in the flesh, she was to receive them;
-if not, she was to shut her door, with a firm hand, against them, no
-matter who they were or where they came from. If they had all the
-credentials that man could bestow upon them, yet if they brought not
-_the truth_, she was to reject them with stern decision. This might
-seem very harsh, very narrow-minded, very bigoted; but with this she
-had nothing whatever to do. She had just to be as broad and as narrow
-as the truth. Her door and her heart were to be wide enough to admit
-all who brought Christ, and no wider. Was she to pay compliments at
-the expense of her Lord? was she to seek a name for largeness of heart
-or breadth of mind by receiving to her house and to her table the
-teachers of a false Christ? The very thought is absolutely horrible.
-
-But finally, in the second chapter of Revelation, we find the church
-at Ephesus commended for having tried those who said they were
-apostles and were not. How could this be if we are not to judge? Is it
-not most evident to the reader that an utterly false use is made of
-our Lord's words in Matthew vii. 1--"Judge not, that ye be not
-judged," and also of the apostle's words in 1 Corinthians iv.
-5--"Therefore judge nothing before the time"? It is impossible that
-Scripture can contradict itself; and hence, whatever be the true
-meaning of our Lord's "Judge not," or the apostle's "Judge nothing,"
-it is perfectly certain that they do not, in the most remote way,
-interfere with the solemn responsibility of all Christians to judge
-the gift, the doctrine, and the life of all who take the place of
-preachers, teachers, and pastors in the Church of God.
-
-And then, if we be asked as to the meaning of "Judge not" and "Judge
-nothing," we believe the words simply forbid our judging motives, or
-hidden springs of action. With these we have nothing whatever to do.
-We cannot penetrate below the surface, and, thanks be to God, we are
-not asked to do so--yea, we are positively forbidden. We cannot read
-the counsels of the heart; it is the province and prerogative of God
-alone to do this: but to say that we are not to judge the doctrine,
-the gift, or the manner of life of those who take the place of
-preachers, teachers, and pastors in the Church of God, is simply to
-fly in the face of holy Scripture, and to ignore the very instincts of
-the divine nature implanted in us by the Holy Ghost.
-
-Hence, therefore, we can return, with increased clearness and
-decision, to our thesis of Christian obedience. It seems perfectly
-plain that the fullest recognition of all true ministry in the Church,
-and the most gracious submission of ourselves to all those whom our
-Lord Christ may see fit to raise up as pastors, teachers, and guides
-in our midst, can never, in the smallest degree, interfere with the
-grand fundamental principle set forth in Peter's magnificent reply to
-the council--"We ought to obey God rather than men."
-
-It will ever be the aim and object of all true ministers of Christ to
-lead those to whom they minister in the true path of obedience to the
-Word of God. The chapter which lies open before us, as indeed the
-entire book of Deuteronomy, shows us very plainly how Moses, that
-eminent servant of God, ever sought and diligently labored to press
-upon the congregation of Israel the urgent necessity of the most
-implicit obedience to all the statutes and judgments of God. He did
-not seek any place of authority for himself: he never lorded it over
-God's heritage. His one grand theme, from first to last, was
-obedience. This was the burden of all his discourses--obedience, not
-to him, but to his and their Lord. He rightly judged that this was the
-true secret of their happiness, their moral security, their dignity,
-and their strength. He knew that an obedient people must also, of
-necessity, be an invincible and invulnerable people. No weapon formed
-against them could prosper so long as they were governed by the word
-of God. In a word, he knew and believed that Israel's province was to
-obey Jehovah, as it was Jehovah's province to bless Israel. It was
-their one simple business to "hear," "learn," "keep," and "do" the
-revealed will of God; and so doing, they might count on Him, with all
-possible confidence, to be their shield, their strength, their
-safeguard, their refuge, their resource, their all in all. The only
-true and proper path for the Israel of God is that narrow path of
-obedience on which the light of God's approving countenance ever
-shines, and all who, through grace, tread that path will find Him "a
-guide, a glory, a defense, to save from every fear."
-
-This, surely, is quite enough. We have nothing to do with
-consequences: these we may, in simple confidence, leave to Him whose
-we are and whom we are responsible to serve. "The name of the Lord is
-a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it and is safe." If we are
-doing His will, we shall ever find His name a strong tower; but, on
-the other hand, if we are not walking in a path of practical
-righteousness--if we are doing our own will--if we are living in the
-habitual neglect of the plain Word of God, then, verily, it is utterly
-vain for us to think that the name of the Lord will be a strong tower
-to us; rather would His name be a reproof to us, leading us to judge
-our ways and to return to the path of righteousness from which we have
-wandered.
-
-Blessed be His name, His grace will ever meet us, in all its precious
-fullness and freeness, in the place of self-judgment and confession,
-however we may have failed and wandered; but this is a totally
-different thing. We may have to say, with the Psalmist, "Out of the
-depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice; let Thine
-ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications. If Thou, Lord,
-shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? But there is
-forgiveness with Thee, that Thou mayest be feared." But then, a soul
-crying to God from the depths, and getting forgiveness, is one thing;
-and a soul looking to Him in the path of practical righteousness is
-quite another. We must carefully distinguish between these two things.
-Confessing our sins and finding pardon must never be confounded with
-walking uprightly and counting on God. Both are blessedly true, but
-they are not the same thing.
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-At the second verse, Moses reminds the people of their
-covenant-relationship with Jehovah. He says, "The Lord _our_ God made
-a covenant with us in Horeb. The Lord made not this covenant with our
-fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day.
-The Lord talked with you face to face, in the mount, out of the midst
-of the fire, (I stood between the Lord and you at that time, to show
-you the word of the Lord; for ye were afraid by reason of the fire,
-and went not up into the mount) saying," etc.
-
-The reader must distinguish and thoroughly understand the difference
-between the covenant made at Horeb and the covenant made with Abraham,
-Isaac, and Jacob. They are essentially different. The former was a
-covenant of works, in which the people undertook to do all that the
-Lord had spoken: the latter was a covenant of pure grace, in which God
-pledged Himself with an oath to do all which He promised.
-
-Human language would utterly fail us to set forth the immense
-difference, in every respect, between these two covenants. In their
-basis, in their character, in their accompaniments, and in their
-practical result, they are as different as any two things could
-possibly be. The Horeb covenant rested upon human competency for the
-fulfillment of its terms, and this one fact is quite sufficient to
-account for the total failure of the whole thing. The Abrahamic
-covenant rested upon divine competency for the fulfillment of its
-terms, and hence the utter impossibility of its failure in a single
-jot or tittle.
-
-Having in our "Notes on the Book of Exodus" gone somewhat fully into
-the subject of the law, and endeavored to set forth the divine object
-in giving it, and, further, the utter impossibility of any one
-getting life or righteousness by keeping it, we must refer the reader
-to what we have there advanced on this profoundly interesting subject.
-
-It seems strange, to one taught exclusively by Scripture, that such
-confusion of thought should prevail amongst professing Christians in
-reference to a question so distinctly and definitively settled by the
-Holy Ghost. Were it merely a question of the divine authority of
-Exodus xx. or Deuteronomy v. as inspired portions of the Bible, we
-should not have a word to say. We most fully believe that these
-chapters are as much inspired as the seventeenth of John or the eighth
-of Romans.
-
-But this is not the point. All true Christians receive, with devout
-thankfulness, the precious statement that "all Scripture is given by
-inspiration of God;" and, further, they rejoice in the assurance that
-"whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our
-learning; that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might
-have hope;" and, finally, they believe that the morality of the law is
-of abiding and universal application. Murder, adultery, theft, false
-witness, covetousness, are wrong--always wrong--every-where wrong: to
-honor our parents is right--always and every-where right. We read, in
-the fourth chapter of Ephesians, "Let him that stole steal no more;"
-and again, in chapter vi, we read, "Honor thy father and mother; which
-is the first commandment with promise; that it may be well with thee,
-and thou mayest live long on the earth."
-
-All this is so divinely plain and settled that discussion is
-definitively closed; but when we come to look at the law as a ground
-of relationship with God, we get into an entirely different region of
-thought. Scripture, in manifold places, and in the clearest possible
-manner, teaches us that, as Christians, as children of God, we are not
-on that ground at all. The Jew was on that ground, but he could not
-stand there with God. It was death and condemnation. "They could not
-endure that which was commanded, 'And if so much as a beast touch the
-mountain, it shall be stoned, or thrust through with a dart;' and so
-terrible was the sight, that Moses said, 'I exceedingly fear and
-quake.'" The Jew found the law to be a bed on which he could not
-stretch himself, and a covering in which he could not wrap himself.
-
-As to the Gentile, he was never, by any one branch of the divine
-economy, placed under law. His condition is expressly declared, in the
-opening of the epistle to the Romans, to be "without law [+anomôs+]."--"For
-when the Gentiles, which have not the law," etc., and, "As many as have
-sinned without law shall perish without law; and as many as have sinned
-in the law shall be judged by the law."
-
-Here the two classes are brought into sharp and vivid contrast, in the
-matter of their dispensational position. The Jew, under law; the
-Gentile, without law,--nothing can be more distinct. The Gentile was
-placed under government, in the person of Noah; but never under law.
-Should any one feel disposed to call this in question, let him produce
-a single line of Scripture to prove that God ever placed the Gentiles
-under the law. Let him search and see. It is of no possible use to
-argue and reason and object,--it is utterly vain to say, "_We think_"
-this or that: the question is, "What saith the Scripture?" If it says
-that the Gentiles were put under the law, let the passage be produced.
-We solemnly declare it says nothing of the kind, but the very reverse.
-It describes the condition and the position of the Gentile as "without
-law"--"having not the law."
-
-In Acts x, we see God opening the kingdom of heaven to the Gentile; in
-Acts xiv. 27, we see Him opening "the door of faith" to the Gentile;
-in Acts xxviii. 28, we see Him sending His salvation to the Gentile:
-but we search in vain, from cover to cover of the blessed Book, for a
-passage in which He places the Gentile under the law.
-
-We would very earnestly entreat the Christian reader to give this
-deeply interesting and important question his calm attention. Let him
-lay aside all his preconceived thoughts, and examine the matter simply
-in the light of holy Scripture. We are quite aware that our statements
-on this subject will be regarded by thousands as novel, if not
-actually heretical; but this does not move us, in the smallest degree.
-It is our one grand desire to be taught absolutely and exclusively by
-Scripture. The opinions, commandments, and doctrines of men have no
-weight whatever with us. The dogmas of the various schools of divinity
-must just go for what they are worth. We demand Scripture. A single
-line of inspiration is amply sufficient to settle this question, and
-close all discussion, forever. Let us be shown from the Word of God
-that the Gentiles were ever put under the law, and we shall at once
-bow; but inasmuch as we cannot find it there, we reject the notion
-altogether, and we would have the reader to do the same. The
-invariable language of Scripture, in describing the position of the
-Jew, is, "under law;" and, in describing the position of the Gentile,
-is, "without law." This is so obvious that we cannot but marvel how
-any reader of the Bible can fail to see it.[15]
-
- [15] The reader may perhaps feel disposed to inquire, On what ground
- will the Gentile be judged if he is not under the law? Romans i. 20
- teaches us distinctly that the testimony of _creation_ leaves him
- without excuse. Then, in chapter ii. 15, he is taken up on the ground
- of _conscience_.--"For _when the Gentiles, which have not the law_, do
- by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law,
- are a law unto themselves; which show the work of the law written in
- their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness," etc. Finally, as
- regards those nations that have become professedly Christian, they
- will be judged on the ground of their profession.
-
-If the reader will turn, for a few moments, to the fifteenth chapter
-of the Acts of the Apostles, he will see how the first attempt to put
-Gentile converts under the law was met by the apostles and the whole
-church at Jerusalem. The question was raised at Antioch; and God, in
-His infinite goodness and wisdom, so ordered that it should not be
-settled there, but that Paul and Barnabas should go up to Jerusalem
-and have the matter fully and freely discussed, and definitively
-settled by the unanimous voice of the twelve apostles and the whole
-church.
-
-How we can bless our God for this! We can at once see that the
-decision of a local assembly, such as Antioch, even though approved by
-Paul and Barnabas, would not carry the same weight as that of the
-twelve apostles assembled in council at Jerusalem. But the Lord,
-blessed be His name, took care that the enemy should be completely
-confounded, and that the law-teachers of that day, and of every other
-day, should be distinctly and authoritatively taught that it was not
-according to His mind that Christians should be put under law, for any
-object whatsoever.
-
-The subject is so deeply important that we cannot forbear quoting a
-few passages for the reader. We believe it will refresh both the
-reader and the writer to refer to the soul-stirring addresses
-delivered at the most remarkable and interesting council that ever
-sat.
-
-"And certain men which came down from Judæa taught the brethren,
-'Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be
-saved.'" How awful! How terribly chilling! What a death-knell to ring
-in the ears of those who had been converted under Paul's splendid
-address in the synagogue at Antioch!--"Be it known unto you therefore,
-men and brethren, that _through this Man_"--without circumcision or
-works of law of any kind whatsoever--"is preached unto you the
-forgiveness of sins; and _by Him_ all that believe"--irrespective
-altogether of circumcision--"_are_ justified _from all things_, from
-which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses.... And when the
-Jews were gone out of the synagogue, the Gentiles besought that these
-words might be preached to them the next Sabbath."
-
-Such was the glorious message sent to the Gentiles by the lips of the
-apostle Paul--a message of free, full, immediate, and perfect
-salvation--full remission of sins and perfect justification, through faith
-in our Lord Jesus Christ. But according to the teaching of the "certain
-men which came down from Judæa," all this was insufficient--Christ was
-not enough, without circumcision and the law of Moses. Poor Gentiles,
-who had never heard of circumcision or the law of Moses, must add to
-Christ and His glorious salvation the keeping of the whole law.
-
-How must Paul's heart have burned within him to have the beloved
-Gentile converts brought under such monstrous teaching as this! He saw
-in it nothing short of the complete surrender of Christianity. If
-circumcision must be added to the cross of Christ--if the law of Moses
-must supplement the grace of God, then verily all was gone.
-
-But, blessed forever be the God of all grace, He caused a noble stand
-to be made against such deadly teaching. When the enemy came in like a
-flood, the Spirit of the Lord raised up a standard against him. "When
-therefore Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and disputation
-with them, they determined that Paul and Barnabas, and certain other
-of them, should go up to Jerusalem, unto the apostles and elders
-about this question. And being brought on their way by the church,
-they passed through Phenice and Samaria, declaring," not the
-circumcision, but "the conversion of the Gentiles; and they caused
-great joy unto all the brethren."
-
-The brethren were in the current of the mind of Christ, and in sweet
-communion with the heart of God; and hence they rejoiced to hear of
-the conversion and salvation of the Gentiles. We may rest assured it
-would have afforded them no joy to hear of the heavy yoke of
-circumcision and the law of Moses being put upon the necks of those
-beloved disciples who had just been brought into the glorious liberty
-of the gospel. But to hear of their conversion to God, their salvation
-by Christ, their being sealed by the Holy Ghost, filled their hearts
-with a joy which was in lovely harmony with the mind of heaven.
-
-"And when they were come to Jerusalem, they were received of the
-church, and of the apostles and elders, and they declared all things
-that God had done with them. But there rose up certain of the sect of
-the Pharisees which believed, saying that it was needful to circumcise
-them, and to command them to keep the law of Moses."
-
-Who made it "needful"? Not God, surely; inasmuch as He had, in His
-infinite grace, opened the door of faith to them without circumcision
-or any command to keep the law of Moses. No; it was "certain men" who
-presumed to speak of such things as needful--men who have troubled
-the Church of God from that day to the present--men "desiring to be
-teachers of the law, knowing neither what they say nor whereof they
-affirm." Law-teachers never know what is involved in their dark and
-dismal teaching. They have not the most distant idea of how thoroughly
-hateful their teaching is to the God of all grace, the Father of
-mercies.
-
-But, thanks be to God, the chapter from which We are now quoting
-affords the very clearest and most forcible evidence that could be
-given as to the divine mind on the subject. It proves, beyond all
-question, that it was not of God to put Gentile believers under the
-law.
-
-"And the apostles and elders came together for to consider of this
-matter. And when there had been much disputing" (alas! how soon it
-began!) "Peter rose up and said unto them, Men and brethren, ye know
-how that a good while ago God made choice among us, that the Gentiles
-by my mouth should hear," not the law of Moses or circumcision, but
-"the word of the gospel, and believe. And God which knoweth the
-hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as unto
-us. _And put no difference between us and them_, purifying their
-hearts by faith. Now therefore _why tempt ye God_, to put a yoke upon
-the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able
-to bear?"
-
-Mark this, reader. The law had proved an intolerable yoke to those who
-were under it, that is, the Jews; and, further, it was nothing short
-of tempting God to put that yoke upon the neck of Gentile Christians.
-Would that all the law-teachers throughout the length and breadth of
-christendom would but open their eyes to this grand fact! and not only
-so, but that all the Lord's beloved people every where were given to
-see that it is in positive opposition to the will of God that they
-should be put under the law for any object whatsoever. "But," adds the
-blessed apostle of the circumcision, "we believe that through the
-grace of the Lord Jesus Christ," and not by law in any shape or form,
-"_we shall be saved even as they_."
-
-This is uncommonly fine, coming from the lips of the apostle of the
-circumcision. He does not say, They shall be saved even as we; but,
-"We shall be saved even as they." The Jew is well content to come down
-from his lofty dispensational position, and be saved after the pattern
-of the poor uncircumcised Gentile. Surely, those noble utterances must
-have fallen in stunning force upon the ears of the law-party. They
-left them, as we say, not a leg to stand upon.
-
-"Then all the multitude kept silence, and gave audience to Barnabas
-and Paul, declaring what miracles and wonders God had wrought among
-the Gentiles by them." The inspiring Spirit has not thought good to
-tell us what Paul and Barnabas said on this memorable occasion, and we
-can see His wisdom in this. It is evidently His object to give
-prominence to Peter and James, as men whose words would, of necessity,
-have more weight with the law-teachers than those of the apostle to
-the Gentiles and his companion.
-
-"And after they had held their peace, James answered, saying, Men and
-brethren, hearken unto me: Simeon hath declared how God at the first
-did visit the Gentiles," not to convert them all, but "to take out of
-them a people for His name. And to this agree the words of the
-prophets;" (here he brings an overwhelming tide of evidence from the
-Old Testament to bear down upon the Judaizers,) "as it is written,
-After this I will return, and will build again the tabernacle of
-David, which is fallen down; and I will build again the ruins thereof,
-and I will set it up: that the residue of men might seek after the
-Lord, and _all the Gentiles_," without the slightest reference to
-circumcision or the law of Moses, but "upon whom My name is called,
-saith the Lord, who doeth all these things. Known unto God are all His
-works from the beginning of the world. Wherefore my sentence is, that
-we trouble not them, which from among the Gentiles are turned to God."
-
-Here, then, we have this great question definitively settled by the
-Holy Ghost, the twelve apostles, and the whole Church; and we cannot
-but be struck with the fact that, at this most important council, none
-spoke more emphatically, more distinctly, or more decidedly than Peter
-and James; the former, the apostle of the circumcision, and the
-latter, the one who specially addressed the twelve tribes, and whose
-position and ministry were calculated to give great weight to his
-words, in the judgment of all who were still, in any measure,
-occupying Jewish or legal ground. Both these eminent apostles were
-clear and decided in their judgment that the Gentile converts were not
-to be "troubled" or burdened with the law. They proved, in their
-powerful addresses, that to place the Gentile Christians under the law
-was directly contrary to the Word, the will, and the ways of God.
-
-Who can fail to see the marvelous wisdom of God in this? The words of
-Paul and Barnabas are not recorded. We are simply told that they
-rehearsed what things God had wrought among the Gentiles. That they
-should be utterly opposed to putting the Gentiles under the law was
-only what might be expected; but to find Peter and James so decided
-would carry great weight with all parties.
-
-But if the reader would have a clear view of Paul's thoughts on the
-question of the law, he should study the epistle to the Galatians.
-There this blessed apostle, under the direct inspiration of the Holy
-Ghost, pours out his heart to the Gentile converts in words of glowing
-earnestness and commanding power. It is perfectly amazing how any one
-can read this wonderful epistle and yet maintain that Christians are
-under the law, in any way or for any purpose. Hardly has the apostle
-got through his brief opening address when he plunges, with his
-characteristic energy, into the subject with which his large, loving,
-though grieved and troubled heart is full to overflowing. "I marvel,"
-he says--and well he might--"that ye are so soon removed from Him that
-called you into"--what? The law of Moses? Nay, but "the grace of
-Christ into a different gospel which is not another [+heteron
-euangelion ho ouk estin allo+]; but there be some that trouble you,
-and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we or an angel from
-heaven preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have
-preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so say I
-now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye
-have received, let him be accursed."
-
-Let all law-teachers ponder these burning words. Do they seem strong
-and severe? Let us remember that they are the very words of God the
-Holy Ghost. Yes, reader, God the Holy Ghost hurls His awful anathema
-at any one who presumes to add the law of Moses to the gospel of
-Christ--any one who attempts to place Christians under the law. How is
-it that men are not afraid, in the face of such words, to contend for
-the law? Are they not afraid of coming under the solemn curse of God
-the Holy Ghost?
-
-Some, however, seek to meet this question by telling us that they do
-not take the law for justification, but as a rule of life; but this is
-neither reasonable nor intelligent, inasmuch as we may very lawfully
-inquire, Who gave us authority to decide as to the use we are to make
-of the law? We are either under the law or we are not. If we are under
-it at all, it is not a question of how we take it, but how it takes
-us.
-
-This makes all the difference. The law knows no such distinctions as
-those which some theologians contend for. If we are under it for any
-object whatsoever, we are under the curse; for it is written, "Cursed
-is every one that continueth not in _all_ things which are written in
-the book of the law to do them." To say that I am born again, I am a
-Christian, will not meet the case at all; for what has the law to do
-with the question of new birth, or of Christianity? Nothing whatever.
-The law is addressed to man, as a responsible being. It demands
-perfect obedience, and pronounces its curse upon every one who fails
-to render it.
-
-Moreover, it will not do to say that though we have failed to keep the
-law, yet Christ has fulfilled it in our room and stead. The law knows
-nothing of obedience by proxy. Its language is, "The man that doeth
-them shall live in them."
-
-Nor is it merely on the man who fails to keep the law that the curse
-is pronounced, but, as if to put the principle in the clearest
-possible light before us, we read that "as many as are of works of law
-are under the curse." (See Greek.) That is, as many as take their
-stand on legal ground--as many as are on that principle--in a word, as
-many as have to do with works of law, are, of necessity, under the
-curse. Hence we may see at a glance the terrible inconsistency of a
-Christian's maintaining the idea of being under the law as a rule of
-life and yet not being under the curse. It is simply flying in the
-face of the very plainest statements of holy Scripture. Blessed be
-the God of all grace, the Christian is not under the curse. But why?
-Is it because the law has lost its power, its majesty, its dignity,
-its holy stringency? By no means. To say so were to blaspheme the law.
-To say that any "man," call him what you please--Christian, Jew, or
-heathen--can be under the law, can stand on that ground, and yet not
-be under the curse, is to say that he perfectly fulfills the law or
-that the law is abrogated--it is to make it null and void. Who will
-dare to say this? Woe be to all who do so.
-
-But how comes it to pass that the Christian is not under the curse?
-Because he is not under the law. And how has he passed from under the
-law? Is it by another having fulfilled it in his stead? Nay; we repeat
-the statement, there is no such idea throughout the entire legal
-economy as obedience by proxy. How is it, then? Here it is, in all its
-moral force, fullness, and beauty: "_I_ through law am dead to law,
-that I might live unto God."[16]
-
- [16] The omission of the article adds immensely to the force,
- fullness, and clearness of the passage. It is +dia nomou nomô
- apethanon+. A wonderful clause, surely. Would that it were better
- understood! It demolishes a vast mass of human theology. It leaves the
- law in its own proper sphere; but takes the believer completely from
- under its power, and out of its range, by death. "Wherefore, my
- brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ;
- that ye should be married to another, even to Him who is raised from
- the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God" (which we never
- could do if under the law). "For when we were in the flesh"--a
- correlative term with being under the law--"the motions of sins, which
- were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto
- death." Mark the melancholy combination--"under the law"--"in the
- flesh"--"motions of sins"--"fruit unto death"! Can any thing be more
- strongly marked? But there is another side, thank God, to this
- question--His own bright and blessed side. Here it is: "But now _we
- are delivered from the law_." How? Is it by another's having fulfilled
- it for us? Nay; but, "_Having died to that_ [+apothanontes en
- hô] wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit,
- and not in the oldness of the letter." How perfect and how lovely is
- the harmony of Romans vii. and Galatians ii.! "I through law am dead
- to law, that I might live unto God."]
-
-Now, if it be true, and the apostle says it is, that we are _dead to
-law_, how can the law, by any possibility, be a rule of life to us? It
-proved _only_ a rule of death, curse, and condemnation to those who
-were under it--those who had received it by the disposition of angels.
-Can it prove to be aught else to us? Did the law ever produce a single
-cluster of living fruit, or of the fruits of righteousness, in the
-history of any son or daughter of Adam? Hear the apostle's
-reply--"When we were in the flesh," that is, when we were viewed as
-men in our fallen nature, "the motions of sins, which were by the law,
-did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death."
-
-It is very important for the reader to understand the real force of
-the expression, "in the flesh." It does not, in this passage, mean "in
-the body." It simply sets forth the condition of unconverted men and
-women responsible to keep the law. Now, in this condition, all that
-was or ever could be produced was "fruit unto death"--"motions of
-sins." No life, no righteousness, no holiness, nothing for God,
-nothing right at all.[17]
-
- [17] It is needful to bear in mind that although the Gentile was
- never, by the dispensational dealings of God, put under the law, yet,
- in point of fact, all baptized professors take that ground. Hence
- there is a vast difference between christendom and the heathen in
- reference to the question of the law. Thousands of unconverted people,
- every week, ask God to incline their hearts to keep the law. Surely,
- such persons stand on very different ground from the heathen who never
- heard of the law, and never heard of the Bible.
-
-But where are we now, as Christians? Hear the reply--"I through law am
-dead to law, that I might live unto God. I am crucified with Christ:
-nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life
-which I now live in the flesh" (here it means in the body) "I
-live"--how? By the law, as a rule of life? Not a hint at such a thing,
-but "by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself
-for me."
-
-This, and nothing else, is Christianity. Do we understand it? do we
-enter into it? are we in the power of it? There are two distinct evils
-from which we are completely delivered by the precious death of
-Christ, namely, legality on the one hand and licentiousness on the
-other. Instead of those terrible evils, it introduces us into the holy
-liberty of grace--liberty to serve God--liberty to "mortify our
-members which are upon the earth"--liberty to deny "ungodliness and
-worldly lusts"--liberty to "live soberly, righteously, and
-godly"--liberty to "keep under the body and bring it into subjection."
-
-Yes, beloved Christian reader, let us remember this; let us deeply
-ponder the words, "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live;
-yet not I, but Christ liveth in me." The old "I" dead--crucified,
-buried: the new "I" alive in Christ. Let us not mistake this. We know
-of nothing more awful, nothing more dangerous, than for the old "I" to
-assume the new ground; or, in other words, the glorious doctrines of
-Christianity taken up in the flesh--unconverted people talking of
-being free from the law, and turning the grace of God into
-lasciviousness. We must confess we would rather, a thousand times,
-have legality than licentiousness. It is this latter that many of us
-have to watch against with all possible earnestness. It is growing
-around us with appalling rapidity, and paving the way for that dark
-and desolating tide of infidelity which shall, ere long, roll over the
-length and breadth of christendom.
-
-To talk of being free from the law in any way save by being dead to
-it, and alive to God, is not Christianity at all, but licentiousness,
-from which every pious soul must shrink with holy horror. If we are
-dead to the law, we are dead to sin also; and hence we are not to do
-our own will, which is only another name for sin; but the will of God,
-which is true practical holiness.
-
-Further, let us ever bear in mind that if we are dead to the law, we
-are dead to this present evil world also, and linked with a risen,
-ascended, and glorified Christ. Hence, we are not of the world, even
-as Christ is not of the world. To contend for position in the world is
-to deny that we are dead to the law; for we cannot be alive to the one
-and dead to the other. The death of Christ has delivered us from the
-law, from the power of sin, from this present evil world, and from
-the fear of death. But then all these things hang together, and we
-cannot be delivered from one without being delivered from all. To
-assert our freedom from the law, while pursuing a course of carnality,
-self-indulgence, and worldliness, is one of the darkest and deadliest
-evils of the last days.
-
-The Christian is called to prove, in his daily life, that grace can
-produce results that law could never reach. It is one of the moral
-glories of Christianity to enable a man to surrender self and live for
-others. Law never could do this. It occupied a man with himself. Under
-its rule, every man had to do the best he could for himself. If he
-tried to love his neighbor, it was to work out a righteousness for
-himself. Under grace, all is blessedly and gloriously reversed--self
-is set aside as a thing crucified, dead, and buried; the old "I" is
-gone, and the new "I" is before God in all the acceptability and
-preciousness of Christ; He is our life, our righteousness, our
-holiness, our object, our model, our all; He is in us and we are in
-Him, and our daily practical life is to be simply Christ reproduced in
-us by the power of the Holy Ghost. Hence, we are not only called to
-love our neighbor, but our enemy; and this, not to work out a
-righteousness, for we have become the righteousness of God in Christ:
-it is simply the outflow of the life which we possess--which is in us,
-and this life is Christ. A Christian is a man who should live Christ.
-He is neither a Jew "under law" nor a Gentile "without law," but "a
-man in Christ," standing in grace, called to the same character of
-obedience as that which was rendered by the Lord Jesus Himself.
-
-We shall not pursue this subject further here, but we earnestly
-entreat the Christian reader to study attentively the fifteenth
-chapter of Acts and the epistle to the Galatians. Let him drink in the
-blessed teaching of these scriptures, and we feel assured he will
-arrive at a clear understanding of the great question of the law. He
-will see that the Christian is not under the law for any purpose
-whatsoever; that his life, his righteousness, his holiness, are on a
-different ground or principle altogether; that to place the Christian
-under law in any way is to deny the very foundations of Christianity
-and contradict the plainest statements of the Word. He will learn,
-from the third chapter of Galatians, that to put ourselves under the
-law is to give up Christ, to give up the Holy Ghost, to give up faith,
-to give up the promises.
-
-Tremendous consequences! But there they are, plainly set forth before
-our eyes; and truly, when we contemplate the state of the professing
-church, we cannot but see how terribly those consequences are being
-realized.
-
-May God the Holy Ghost open the eyes of all Christians to the truth of
-these things. May He lead them to study the Scriptures, and to submit
-themselves to their holy authority in all things. This is the special
-need of this our day. We do not study Scripture sufficiently; we are
-not governed by it; we do not see the absolute necessity of testing
-every thing by the light of Scripture, and rejecting all that will not
-stand the test; we go on with a quantity of things that have no
-foundation whatever in the Word--yea, that are positively opposed to
-it.
-
-What must be the end of all this? We tremble to think of it. We know,
-blessed be God, that our Lord Jesus Christ will soon come and take His
-own beloved and blood-bought people home to the prepared place in the
-Father's house, to be forever with Himself, in the ineffable
-blessedness of that bright home; but what of those who shall be left
-behind? what of that vast mass of baptized worldly profession? These
-are solemn questions, which must be weighed in the immediate presence
-of God, in order to have the true, the divine answer. Let the reader
-ponder them there, in all tenderness of heart and teachableness of
-spirit, and the Holy Ghost will lead him to the true answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having sought to set forth, from various parts of Scripture, the
-glorious truth that believers are not under law, but under grace, we
-may now pursue our study of this fifth chapter of Deuteronomy. In it
-we have the ten commandments, but not exactly as we have them in the
-twentieth chapter of Exodus. There are some characteristic touches
-which demand the reader's attention.
-
-In Exodus xx, we have history; in Deuteronomy v, we have not only
-history, but commentary. In the latter, the lawgiver presents moral
-motives, and makes appeals which would be wholly out of place in the
-former. In the one, we have naked facts; in the other, facts and
-comments--facts and their practical application. In a word, there is
-not the slightest ground for imagining that Deuteronomy v. is intended
-to be a literal repetition of Exodus xx; and hence the miserable
-arguments which infidels ground upon their apparent divergence just
-crumble into dust beneath our feet. They are simply baseless, and
-utterly contemptible.
-
-Let us, for instance, compare the two scriptures in reference to the
-subject of the Sabbath. In Exodus xx, we read, "Remember the Sabbath
-day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work;
-but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou
-shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy
-man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger
-that is within thy gates: _for in six days the Lord made heaven and
-earth, the sea, and all that in them is_, and rested the seventh day;
-wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it."
-
-In Deuteronomy v, we read, "Keep the Sabbath day to sanctify it, _as
-the Lord thy God hath commanded thee_. Six days thou shalt labor, and
-do all thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
-God; in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy
-daughter, nor thy man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, _nor thine ox,
-nor thine ass_, nor any of thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is
-within thy gates; that thy man-servant and thy maid-servant may rest
-as well as thou. _And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of
-Egypt, and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence, through a
-mighty hand and by a stretched-out arm; therefore the Lord thy God
-commanded thee to keep the Sabbath day._" (Ver. 12-15.)
-
-Now, the reader can see at a glance the difference between the two
-passages. In Exodus xx, the command to keep the Sabbath is grounded on
-_creation_; in Deuteronomy v, it is grounded on _redemption_, without
-any allusion to creation at all. In short, the points of difference
-arise out of the distinct character of each book, and are perfectly
-plain to every spiritual mind.
-
-With regard to the institution of the Sabbath, we must remember that
-it rests wholly upon the direct authority of the word of God. Other
-commandments set forth plain moral duties. Every man knows it to be
-morally wrong to kill or steal; but as to the observance of the
-Sabbath, no one could possibly recognize it as a duty had it not been
-distinctly appointed by divine authority. Hence its immense importance
-and interest. Both in our chapter and in Exodus xx. it stands side by
-side with all those great moral duties which are universally
-recognized by the human conscience.
-
-And not only so, but we find, in various other scriptures, that the
-Sabbath is singled out and presented, with special prominence, as a
-precious link between Jehovah and Israel, a seal of His covenant with
-them, and a powerful test of their devotedness to Him. Every one could
-recognize the moral wrong of theft and murder; only those who loved
-Jehovah and His word would love and honor His Sabbath.
-
-Thus, in the sixteenth chapter of Exodus, in connection with the
-giving of the manna, we read, "And it came to pass, that on the sixth
-day they gathered twice as much bread, two omers for one man; and all
-the rulers of the congregation came and told Moses. And he said unto
-them, 'This is that which the Lord hath said, To-morrow is _the rest
-of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord_: bake that which ye will bake
-to-day, and seethe that ye will seethe; and that which remaineth over
-lay up for you, to be kept until the morning.'... And Moses said,
-'Eat that to-day; for to-day is _a Sabbath unto the Lord_; to-day ye
-shall not find it in the field. Six days ye shall gather it; but on
-the seventh day, which is the Sabbath, in it there shall be none.' And
-it came to pass,"--so little were they capable of appreciating the
-high and holy privilege of keeping Jehovah's Sabbath--"that there went
-out some of the people on the seventh day for to gather, and they
-found none. And the Lord said unto Moses, 'How long refuse ye to keep
-My commandments and My laws?'" Their neglect of the Sabbath proved
-their moral condition to be all wrong--proved them to be astray as to
-all the commandments and laws of God. The Sabbath was the great
-touchstone--the measure and gauge of the real state of their hearts
-toward Jehovah. "See, for that the Lord hath _given you_ the Sabbath,
-therefore He giveth you on the sixth day the bread of two days; abide
-ye every man in his place; let no man go out of his place on the
-seventh day. So the people rested on the seventh day." They found rest
-and food on the holy Sabbath.
-
-Again, at the close of chapter xxxi, we have a very remarkable passage
-in proof of the importance and interest attaching to the Sabbath in
-the mind of Jehovah. A full description of the tabernacle and its
-furniture had been given to Moses, and he was about to receive the two
-tables of testimony from the hand of Jehovah; but, as if to prove the
-prominent place which the holy Sabbath held in the divine mind, we
-read, "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 'Speak thou also unto
-the children of Israel, saying, Verily My Sabbaths ye shall keep: _for
-it is a sign between Me and you throughout your generations_; that ye
-may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify you. Ye shall keep the
-Sabbath therefore; for it is holy unto you: every one that defileth it
-shall surely be put to death; for whosoever doeth any work therein,
-that soul shall be cut off from among his people. Six days may work be
-done; but in the seventh is the Sabbath of rest, holy to the Lord:
-whosoever doeth any work in the Sabbath day, he shall surely be put to
-death. Wherefore the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to
-observe the Sabbath throughout their generations, _for a perpetual
-covenant_. _It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel
-forever_: for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and on the
-seventh day He rested, and was refreshed." (Exod. xxxi. 12-17.)
-
-Now, this is a very important passage. It proves very distinctly the
-abiding character of the Sabbath. The terms in which it is spoken of
-are quite sufficient to show that it was no mere temporary
-institution.--"A sign between Me and you throughout your
-generations."--"A perpetual covenant."--"A sign forever."
-
-Let the reader carefully mark these words. They prove, beyond all
-question, first, that the Sabbath was for Israel; secondly, that the
-Sabbath is, in the mind of God, a permanent institution. It is needful
-to bear these things in mind in order to avoid all vagueness of
-thought and looseness of expression on this deeply interesting
-subject.
-
-The Sabbath was distinctly and exclusively for the Jewish nation. It
-is spoken of emphatically as a sign between Jehovah and His people
-Israel. There is not the most remote hint of its being intended for
-the Gentiles. We shall see, further on, that it is a lovely type of
-the times of the restitution of all things, of which God has spoken by
-the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began; but this in
-no wise touches the fact of its being an exclusively Jewish
-institution. There is not so much as a single sentence of Scripture to
-show that the Sabbath had any reference whatever to the Gentiles.
-
-Some would teach us that inasmuch as we read of the Sabbath day in the
-second chapter of Genesis, it must, of necessity, have a wider range
-than the Jewish nation. But let us turn to the passage and see what it
-says.--"And on the seventh day God ended His work which He had made;
-and He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made.
-And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it; because that in it
-He had rested from all His work which God created and made."
-
-This is simple enough. There is no mention here of man at all. We are
-not told that man rested on the seventh day. Men may infer, conclude,
-or imagine that he did so; but the second of Genesis says nothing
-about it. And not only so, but we look in vain for any allusion to the
-Sabbath throughout the entire book of Genesis. The very first notice
-we have of the Sabbath in connection with man, is in the sixteenth of
-Exodus, a passage already quoted; and there we see, most distinctly, that
-it was given to Israel, as a people in recognized covenant-relationship
-with Jehovah. That they did not understand or appreciate it is
-perfectly plain; that they never entered into it is equally plain,
-according to psalm xcv. and Hebrews iv. But we are now speaking of
-what it was in the mind of God; and He tells us it was a sign between
-Him and His people Israel, and a powerful test of their moral
-condition and of the state of their heart as to Him. It was not only
-an integral part of the law, as given by Moses to the congregation of
-Israel, but it is specially referred to and singled out, again and
-again, as an institution holding a very peculiar place in the mind of
-God.
-
-Thus, in the book of the prophet Isaiah, we read, "Blessed is the man
-that doeth this, and the son of man that layeth hold on it; that
-keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and keepeth his hand from doing
-any evil. Neither let the son of the stranger, that hath joined
-himself to the Lord, speak, saying, The Lord hath utterly separated me
-from His people; neither let the eunuch say, Behold I am a dry tree.
-For thus saith the Lord unto the eunuchs that keep My Sabbaths, and
-choose the things that please Me, and take hold of My covenant; even
-unto them will I give in Mine house, and within My walls, a place and
-a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an
-everlasting name that shall not be cut off. Also the sons of the
-stranger," (here, of course, viewed in connection with Israel, as in
-Numbers xv. and other scriptures,) "that join themselves to the Lord,
-to serve Him, and to love the name of the Lord, to be His servants,
-every one that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and taketh hold
-of My covenant; even them will I bring to My holy mountain, and make
-them joyful in My house of prayer: their burnt-offerings and their
-sacrifices shall be accepted upon Mine altar; for Mine house shall be
-called a house of prayer for all people."
-
-Again, "If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy
-pleasure on My holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of
-the Lord, honorable; and shalt honor Him, not doing thine own ways,
-nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words: then
-shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride
-upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of
-Jacob thy father; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." (Isaiah
-lviii. 13, 14.)
-
-The foregoing quotations are amply sufficient to show the place which
-the Sabbath holds in the mind of God. It is needless to multiply
-passages, but there is just one to which we must refer the reader, in
-connection with our present subject, namely, Leviticus xxiii.--"And
-the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 'Speak unto the children of Israel,
-and say unto them, Concerning the feasts of the Lord, which ye shall
-proclaim to be holy convocations, even these are My feasts. Six days
-shall work be done; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of rest, a holy
-convocation; ye shall do no work therein: it is the Sabbath of the
-Lord in all your dwellings." (Ver. 1-3.)
-
-Here it stands at the head of all the feasts given in this marvelous
-chapter, in which we have foreshadowed the entire history of God's
-dealings with His people Israel. The Sabbath is the expression of
-God's eternal rest, into which it is His purpose yet to bring His
-people, when all their toils and sorrows, their trials and
-tribulations, shall have passed away--that blessed "Sabbath-keeping
-[+sabbatismos+]" which "remaineth for the people of God." In
-various ways He sought to keep this glorious rest before the hearts of
-His people; the seventh day, the seventh year, the year of
-jubilee--all these lovely sabbatic seasons were designed to set forth
-that blessed time when Israel shall be gathered back to their own
-beloved land, when the Sabbath shall be kept, in all its deep, divine
-blessedness, as it never has been kept yet.
-
-And this leads us, naturally, to the second point in connection with
-the Sabbath, namely, its permanency. This is plainly proved by such
-expressions as, "perpetual," "a sign forever," "throughout your
-generations." Such words would never be applied to any merely
-temporary institution. True it is, alas! that Israel never really kept
-the Sabbath according to God; they never understood its meaning, never
-entered into its blessedness, never drank into its spirit. They made
-it a badge of their own righteousness; they boasted in it as a
-national institution, and used it for self-exaltation; but they never
-celebrated it in communion with God.
-
-We speak of the nation as a whole. We doubt not there were precious
-souls who, in secret, enjoyed the Sabbath, and entered into the
-thoughts of God about it; but as a nation, Israel never kept the
-Sabbath according to God. Hear what Isaiah says, "Bring no more vain
-oblations; incense is an abomination unto Me; the new moons and
-_Sabbaths_, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is
-iniquity, even the solemn meeting." (Chap. i. 13.)
-
-Here we see that the precious and beautiful institution of the Sabbath
-which God had given as a sign of His covenant with His people, had, in
-their hands, become a positive abomination, perfectly intolerable to
-Him. And when we open the pages of the New Testament, we find the
-leaders and heads of the Jewish people continually at issue with our
-Lord Jesus Christ in reference to the Sabbath. Look, for example, at
-the opening verses of Luke vi.--"And it came to pass on the second
-Sabbath after the first, that He went through the corn-fields; and His
-disciples plucked the ears of corn, and did eat, rubbing them in their
-hands. And certain of the Pharisees said unto them, 'Why do ye that
-which is not lawful to do on the Sabbath days?' And Jesus answering
-them said, 'Have ye not read so much as this, what David did, when
-himself was a hungred, and they which were with him; how he went into
-the house of God, and did take and eat the show-bread, and gave also
-to them that were with him; which it is not lawful to eat, but for the
-priests alone?' And He said unto them that the Son of Man is Lord also
-of the Sabbath."
-
-And again, we read, "It came to pass also on another Sabbath, that He
-entered into the synagogue and taught; and there was a man whose right
-hand was withered. And the scribes and Pharisees _watched Him_,
-whether He would heal on the Sabbath day, that they might find an
-accusation against Him." (Only conceive, an accusation for healing a
-poor, afflicted fellow-mortal!) "But He knew their thoughts"--yes, He
-read their hearts through to their very centre, "and said to the man
-which had the withered hand, 'Rise up, and stand forth in the midst.'
-And he arose and stood forth. Then said Jesus unto them, 'I will ask
-you one thing, Is it lawful on the Sabbath day to do good, or to do
-evil? to save life, or to destroy it?' And looking round about upon
-them all, He said unto the man, 'Stretch forth thine hand.' And he did
-so; and his hand was restored whole as the other. And they were filled
-with madness; and communed one with another what they might do to
-Jesus."
-
-What an insight we have here into the hollowness and worthlessness of
-man's Sabbath-keeping! Those religious guides would rather let the
-disciples starve than have _their_ Sabbath interfered with; they would
-allow the man to carry his withered hand to the grave rather than have
-him healed on _their_ Sabbath. Alas! alas! it was indeed their
-Sabbath, and not God's. His rest could never comport with hunger and
-withered hands. They had never read aright the record of David's act
-in eating the show-bread. They did not understand that legal
-institutions must give way in the presence of divine grace meeting
-human need. Grace rises, in its magnificence, above all legal
-barriers, and faith rejoices in its lustre; but mere religiousness is
-offended by the activities of grace and the boldness of faith. The
-Pharisees did not see that the man with the withered hand was a
-striking commentary upon the nation's moral condition, a living proof
-of the fact that they were far away from God. If they were as they
-ought to be, there would have been no withered hands to heal; but they
-were not, and hence their Sabbath was an empty formality--a powerless,
-worthless ordinance--a hideous anomaly, hateful to God, and utterly
-inconsistent with the condition of man.
-
-Take another instance, in Luke xiii.--"And He was teaching in one of
-the synagogues on the Sabbath." (Assuredly, the Sabbath was no day of
-rest to Him.) "And, behold, there was a woman which had a spirit of
-infirmity eighteen years, and was bowed together, and could in no wise
-lift up herself. And when Jesus saw her, He called her to Him, and
-said unto her, 'Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity.' And He
-laid His hands on her, and _immediately she was made straight, and
-glorified God_." Beautiful illustration of the work of grace in the
-soul, and the practical result, in every case. All on whom Christ lays
-His blessed hands are "immediately made straight," and enabled to
-glorify God.
-
-But man's Sabbath was touched. "The ruler of the synagogue answered
-with indignation, because that Jesus had healed on the Sabbath day."
-He was indignant at the gracious work of healing, though quite
-indifferent as to the humiliating case of infirmity; and he "said unto
-the people, 'There are six days in which men ought to work: in them
-therefore come and be healed, and not on the Sabbath day.'" How little
-this poor hollow religionist knew that he was in the very presence of
-the Lord of the true Sabbath! How utterly insensible he was to the
-moral inconsistency of attempting to keep a Sabbath while man's
-condition called aloud for divine work! "The Lord then answered him,
-and said, 'Thou hypocrite, doth not each one of you on the Sabbath
-loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead him away to
-watering? And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom
-Satan hath bound, lo, these eighteen years, be loosed from this bond
-on the Sabbath day?'"
-
-What a withering rebuke! What an opening up of the hollowness and
-utter wretchedness of their whole system of Judaism! Only think of the
-glaring incongruity of a Sabbath and a daughter of Abraham bound by
-the cruel hand of Satan for eighteen years! There is nothing in all
-this world so blinding to the mind, so hardening to the heart, so
-deadening to the conscience, so demoralizing to the whole being, as
-religion without Christ. Its deceiving and degrading power can only be
-thoroughly judged in the light of the divine presence. For aught that
-the ruler of the synagogue cared, that poor woman might have gone on
-to the end of her days bowed together and unable to lift up herself.
-He would have been well content to let her go on as a sad witness of
-the power of Satan, provided he could keep his Sabbath. His religious
-indignation was excited, not by the power of Satan as seen in the
-woman's condition, but by the power of Christ as seen in her complete
-deliverance.
-
-But the Lord gave him his answer. "And when He had said these things,
-all His adversaries were ashamed" (as well they might); "and all the
-people rejoiced for all the glorious things that were done by Him."
-What a striking contrast! The advocates of a powerless, heartless,
-worthless religion unmasked and covered with shame and confusion on
-the one hand, and on the other, all the people rejoicing in the
-glorious actings of the Son of God, who had come into their midst to
-deliver them from the crushing power of Satan, and fill their hearts
-with the joy of God's salvation, and their mouths with His praise!
-
-We must now ask the reader to turn to the gospel of John for further
-illustration of our subject. We earnestly desire that this vexed
-question of the Sabbath should be thoroughly examined in the light of
-Scripture. We are convinced that there is very much more involved in
-it than many professing Christians are aware.
-
-At the opening of John v, we are introduced to a scene strikingly
-indicative of Israel's condition. We do not here attempt to go fully
-into the passage, we merely refer to it in connection with the subject
-before us.
-
-The pool of Bethesda, or "house of mercy"--while it was undoubtedly
-the expression of the mercy of God toward His people--afforded
-abundant evidence of the miserable condition of man in general, and of
-Israel in particular. Its five porches were thronged with "a great
-multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the
-moving of the water." What a sample of the whole human family, and of
-the nation of Israel! What a striking illustration of their moral and
-spiritual condition as viewed from a divine stand-point. "Blind, halt,
-withered"--such is man's real state, if he only knew it.
-
-But there was one man in the midst of this impotent throng so far
-gone--so feeble and helpless, that the pool of Bethesda could not meet
-his case. "A certain man was there, which had an infirmity thirty and
-eight years. When Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been now a
-long time in that case, He saith unto him, 'Wilt thou _be made_
-whole?'" What grace and power in this question! It went far beyond the
-utmost stretch of the impotent man's thoughts. He thought only of
-human help, or of his own ability to get into the pool. He knew not
-that the speaker was above and beyond the pool, with its occasional
-movement--beyond angelic ministry--beyond all human help and effort,
-the Possessor of all power in heaven and on earth. "The impotent man
-answered Him, 'Sir, I have no man, when the water is troubled, to put
-me into the pool; but while I am coming, another steppeth down before
-me.'" What a true picture of all those who are seeking salvation by
-ordinances! Each one doing the best he could for himself. No care for
-others. No thought of helping them. "Jesus saith unto him, 'Rise, take
-up thy bed, and walk.' And immediately the man was made whole, and
-took up his bed, and walked: _and on the same day was the Sabbath_."
-
-Here we have man's Sabbath again. It certainly was not God's Sabbath.
-The miserable multitude gathered around the pool proved that God's
-full rest had not yet come--that His glorious antitype of the Sabbath
-had not yet dawned on this sin-stricken earth. When that bright day
-comes, there will be no blind, halt, and withered folk thronging the
-porches of the pool of Bethesda. God's Sabbath and human misery are
-wholly incompatible.
-
-But it was man's Sabbath. It was no longer the seal of Jehovah's
-covenant with the seed of Abraham (as it was once, and will be again),
-but the badge of man's self-righteousness. "The Jews therefore said
-unto him that was cured, 'It is the Sabbath day; it is not lawful for
-thee to carry thy bed.'" It was no doubt lawful enough for him to lie
-on that bed, week after week, month after month, year after year,
-while they were going on with their empty, worthless, hollow attempt
-at Sabbath-keeping. If they had had one ray of spiritual light, they
-would have seen the flagrant inconsistency of attempting to maintain
-their traditionary notions respecting the Sabbath in the presence of
-human misery, disease, and degradation. But they were utterly blind,
-and hence when the glorious fruits of Christ's ministry were being
-displayed, they had the temerity to pronounce them unlawful.
-
-Nor this only; but "therefore did the Jews persecute Jesus, and sought
-to slay Him, because He had done these things on the Sabbath day."
-What a spectacle! Religious people--yea, the leaders and teachers of
-religion--the guides of the professed people of God, seeking to slay
-the Lord of the Sabbath because He had made a man every whit whole on
-the Sabbath day!
-
-But mark our Lord's reply.--"My Father _worketh_ hitherto, and I
-work." This brief but comprehensive statement gives us the root of
-the whole matter. It opens up to us the real condition of mankind in
-general, and of Israel in particular; and, in the most affecting
-manner, presents the grand secret of our Lord's life and ministry.
-Blessed be His name, He had not come into this world to rest. How
-could He rest? how could He keep a Sabbath in the midst of human need
-and misery? Ought not that impotent, blind, halt, and withered
-multitude which thronged the porches of the pool of Bethesda have
-taught "the Jews" the folly of their notions about the Sabbath? For
-what was that multitude but a sample of the condition of the nation of
-Israel, and of the whole human family? and how could divine love rest
-in the midst of such a condition of things? Utterly impossible. Love
-can only be a worker in a scene of sin and sorrow. From the moment of
-man's fall, the Father had been working; then the Son appeared to
-carry on the work; and now, the Holy Ghost is working. Work, and not
-rest, is the divine order in a world like this. "There remaineth
-therefore a rest to the people of God."
-
-The blessed Lord Jesus went about doing good on the Sabbath day as
-well as on every other day; and finally, having accomplished the
-glorious work of redemption, He spent the Sabbath in the grave, and
-rose on the first day of the week, as the First-begotten from the
-dead, and Head of the new creation, in which all things are of God,
-and to which, we may surely add, the question of "days and months and
-times and years" can have no possible application. No one who
-thoroughly understands the meaning of death and resurrection could
-sanction for a moment the observance of days. The death of Christ put
-an end to all that order of things, and His resurrection introduces us
-into another sphere entirely, where it is our high privilege to walk
-in the light and power of those eternal realities which are ours in
-Christ, and which stand in vivid contrast with the superstitious
-observances of a carnal and worldly religiousness.
-
-But here we approach a very interesting point in our subject, namely,
-the difference between the Sabbath and the Lord's day, or first day of
-the week. These two are often confounded. We frequently hear, from the
-lips of truly pious people, the phrase, "Christian Sabbath," an
-expression no where to be found in the New Testament. It may be that
-some who make use of it mean a right thing; but we should not only
-mean right, but also seek to express ourselves according to the
-teaching of holy Scripture.
-
-We are persuaded that the enemy of God and of His Christ has had a
-great deal more to do with the conventionalisms of christendom than
-many of us are aware; and this it is which makes the matter so very
-serious. The reader may perhaps feel disposed to pronounce it mere
-hair-splitting to find any fault with the term "Christian Sabbath;"
-but he may rest assured it is nothing of the sort: on the contrary, if
-he will only calmly examine the matter in the light of the New
-Testament, he will find that it involves questions not only
-interesting, but also weighty and important. It is a common saying,
-"There is nothing in a name;" but in the matter now before us, there
-is much in a name.
-
-We have already remarked that our Lord spent the Sabbath in the grave.
-Is not this a telling and deeply significant fact? We cannot doubt it.
-We read in it, at least, the setting aside of the old condition of
-things, and the utter impossibility of keeping a Sabbath in a world of
-sin and death. Love could not rest in a world like this; it could only
-labor and die. This is the inscription which we read on the tomb where
-the Lord of the Sabbath lay buried.
-
-But what of the first day of the week? Is not it the Sabbath on a new
-footing--the Christian Sabbath? It is never so called in the New
-Testament. There is not so much as a hint of any thing of the kind. If
-we look through the Acts of the Apostles, we shall find the two days
-spoken of in the most distinct way. On the Sabbath, we find the Jews
-assembled in their synagogues for the reading of the law and the
-prophets: on the first day of the week, we find the Christians
-assembled to break bread. The two days were as distinct as Judaism and
-Christianity; nor is there so much as a shadow of Scripture foundation
-for the idea that the Sabbath was merged in the first day of the week.
-Where is the slightest authority for the assertion that the Sabbath is
-changed from the seventh day to the eighth, or first, day of the week?
-Surely, if there be any, nothing is easier than to produce it; but
-there is absolutely none.
-
-And be it remembered that the Sabbath is not merely _a_ seventh day,
-but _the_ seventh day. It is well to note this, inasmuch as some
-entertain the idea that provided a seventh portion of time be given to
-rest and the public ordinances of religion, it is quite sufficient,
-and it does not matter what you call it; and thus different nations
-and different religious systems have their Sabbath day. But this can
-never satisfy any one who desires to be taught exclusively by
-Scripture. The Sabbath of Eden was _the_ seventh day: the Sabbath for
-Israel was _the_ seventh day. But the eighth day leads our thoughts
-onward into eternity; and, in the New Testament, it is called "the
-first day of the week," as indicating the beginning: of that new order
-of things of which the cross is the imperishable foundation, and a
-risen Christ the glorious Head and Centre. To call this day the
-"Christian Sabbath" is simply to confound things earthly and heavenly;
-it is to bring the Christian down from his elevated position as
-associated with a risen and glorified Head in the heavens, and occupy
-him with the superstitious observance of days, the very thing which
-made the blessed apostle stand in doubt of the assemblies in Galatia.
-
-In short, the more deeply we ponder the phrase "Christian Sabbath,"
-the more we are convinced that its tendency is, like many other
-formularies of christendom, to rob the Christian of all those grand
-distinctive truths of the New Testament which mark off the Church of
-God from all that went before and all that is to follow after. The
-Church, though on the earth, is not of this world, even as Christ is
-not of this world. It is heavenly in its origin, heavenly in its
-character, heavenly in its principles, walk, and hope. It stands
-between the cross and the glory. The boundaries of its existence on
-earth are, the day of Pentecost, when the Holy Ghost came down to form
-it, and the coming of Christ to receive it to Himself.
-
-Nothing can be more strongly marked than this; and hence, for any one
-to attempt to enjoin upon the Church of God the legal or superstitious
-observance of "days and months and times and years," is to falsify the
-entire Christian position, mar the integrity of divine revelation, and
-rob the Christian of the place and portion which belong to him through
-the infinite grace of God and the accomplished atonement of Christ.
-
-Does the reader deem this statement unwarrantably strong? If so, let
-him ponder the following splendid passage from Paul's epistle to the
-Colossians--a passage which ought to be written in letters of gold:
-"As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in
-Him; rooted and built up in Him, and stablished in the faith, as ye
-have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving. Beware lest any man
-spoil [or make a prey of] you through _philosophy and vain
-deceit_"--mark the combination! not very flattering to philosophy--"after
-the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after
-Christ. For in Him dwelleth _all the fullness of the Godhead_
-[+theotês+, deity] bodily. And ye are complete in Him, which is the
-head of all principality and power." What more can we possibly want?
-"In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision _made without
-hands_, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the
-circumcision of Christ: buried with Him in baptism, wherein also ye
-are risen with Him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath
-raised Him from the dead. And you, being dead in your sins and the
-uncircumcision of your flesh, hath He quickened together with Him,
-_having forgiven you all trespasses_; blotting out the handwriting of
-ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it
-out of the way, nailing it to His cross; and having spoiled
-principalities and powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing
-over them in it."
-
-Magnificent victory! A victory gained single-handed--gained for us!
-Universal and eternal homage to His peerless name! What remains? "Let
-no man _therefore_ judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a
-holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath: which are a shadow of
-things to come; but the body is of Christ."
-
-What can one who is complete and accepted in a risen and glorified
-Christ have to do with meats, drinks, or holy days? what can
-philosophy, tradition, or human religiousness do for him? What can
-passing shadows add to one who has grasped, by faith, the eternal
-substance? Surely nothing; and hence the blessed apostle
-proceeds--"Let no man beguile you of your reward, in a voluntary
-humility, and worshiping of angels, intruding into those things which
-he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, and _not
-holding the Head_, from which all the body by joints and bands having
-nourishment ministered, and knit together, increaseth with the
-increase of God. Wherefore _if ye be dead with Christ_ from the
-rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
-subject to ordinances, [such as,] 'Touch not [this],' 'Taste not
-[that],' 'Handle not [the other]'; which all are to perish with the
-using; after the commandments and doctrines of men? Which things have
-indeed a show of wisdom in will-worship, and humility, and neglecting
-of the body; not in any honor to the satisfying of the flesh;" that
-is, not giving the measure of honor to the body which is due to it as
-God's vessel, but puffing up the flesh with religious pride, fed by a
-hollow and worthless sanctimoniousness. (Col. ii. 6-23.)
-
-We do not dare to offer any apology for this lengthened quotation. An
-apology for quoting Scripture! Far be the thought! It is not possible
-for any one to understand this marvelous passage and not have a
-complete settlement, not only of the Sabbath question, but also of
-that entire system of things with which this question stands
-connected. The Christian who understands his position, is done
-forever with all questions of meats and drinks, days and months and
-times and years. He knows nothing of holy seasons and holy places. He
-is dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, and as such, is
-delivered from all the ordinances of a traditionary religion. He
-belongs to heaven, where new moons, holy days, and Sabbaths have no
-place. He is in the new creation, where all things are of God; and
-hence he can see no moral force in such words as "Touch not, taste
-not, handle not." They have no possible application to him. He lives
-in a region where the clouds, vapors, and mists of monasticism and
-asceticism are never seen. He has given up all the worthless forms of
-mere fleshly pietism, and got, in exchange, the solid realities of
-Christian life. His ear has been opened to hear, and his heart to
-understand, the powerful exhortation of the inspired apostle, "If ye
-then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where
-Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things
-above, not on things on the earth. For _ye are dead_, and your life is
-hid with Christ in God. When Christ, our life, shall appear, then
-shall ye also appear with Him in glory. Mortify therefore your members
-which are upon the earth."
-
-Here we have unfolded before our eyes some of the glories of true,
-practical, vital Christianity, in striking contrast with all the
-barren and dreary forms of carnal and worldly religiousness. Christian
-life does not consist in the observance of certain rules,
-commandments, or traditions of men. It is a divine reality. It is
-Christ in the heart, and Christ reproduced in the daily life, by the
-power of the Holy Ghost. It is the new man, formed on the model of
-Christ Himself, and displaying itself in all the most minute details
-of our daily history--in the family, in the business, in all our
-intercourse with our fellow-men, in our temper, spirit, style,
-deportment, all. It is not a matter of mere profession, or of dogma,
-or of opinion, or of sentiment; it is an unmistakable, living reality.
-It is the kingdom of God, set up in the heart, asserting its blessed
-sway over the whole moral being, and shedding its genial influence
-upon the entire sphere in which we are called to move from day to day.
-It is the Christian walking in the blessed footsteps of Him who went
-about doing good; meeting, so far as in him lies, every form of human
-need; living not for himself, but for others; finding his delight in
-serving and giving; ready to soothe and sympathize wherever he finds a
-crushed spirit or a bereaved and desolate heart.
-
-This is Christianity. And oh, how it differs from all the forms in
-which legality and superstition clothe themselves! How different from
-the unintelligent and unmeaning observance of days and months and
-times and years, abstaining from meats, forbidding to marry, and such
-like! How different from the vaporings of the mystic, the gloom of the
-ascetic, and the austerities of the monk! How totally different from
-all these! Yes, reader; and we may add, how different from the
-unsightly union of high profession and low practice--lofty truths held
-in the intellect, professed, taught, and discussed, and worldliness,
-self-indulgence, and unsubduedness! The Christianity of the New
-Testament differs alike from all these things. It is the divine, the
-heavenly, and the spiritual, displayed amid the human, the earthly,
-and the natural. May it be the holy purpose of the writer and the
-reader of these lines to be satisfied with nothing short of that
-morally glorious Christianity revealed in the pages of the New
-Testament.
-
-It is needless, we trust, to add more on the question of the Sabbath.
-If the reader has at all seized the import of those scriptures which
-have passed before us, he will have little difficulty in seeing the
-place which the Sabbath holds in the dispensational ways of God. He
-will see that it has direct reference to Israel and the earth--that it
-was a sign of the covenant between Jehovah and His earthly people, and
-a powerful test of their moral condition.
-
-Furthermore, he will see that Israel never really kept the Sabbath,
-never understood its import, never appreciated its value. This was
-made manifest in the life, ministry, and death of our Lord Jesus
-Christ; who performed many of His works of healing on the Sabbath day,
-and, at the end, spent that day in the tomb.
-
-Finally, he will clearly understand the difference between the Jewish
-Sabbath and the first day of the week, or the Lord's day; that the
-latter is never once called the Sabbath in the New Testament, but on
-the contrary, is constantly presented in its own proper distinctness:
-it is not the Sabbath changed or transferred, but a new day
-altogether, having its own special basis and its own peculiar range of
-thought, leaving the Sabbath wholly untouched, as a suspended
-institution, to be resumed by and by, when the seed of Abraham shall
-be restored to their own land. (See Ezek. xlvi. 1, 12.)
-
-But we cannot happily turn from this interesting subject without a few
-words on the place assigned, in the New Testament, to the Lord's day,
-or first day of the week. Though it is not the Sabbath; and though it
-has nothing to do with holy days, or new moons, or "days and months
-and times and years;" yet it has its own unique place in Christianity,
-as is evident from manifold passages in the scriptures of the New
-Testament.
-
-Our Lord rose from the dead on that day; He met His disciples again
-and again on that day; the apostle and the brethren at Troas came
-together to break bread on that day (Acts xx. 7.); the apostle
-instructs the Corinthians, and all that in every place call on the
-name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to lay by their offerings on that day;
-thus teaching us, distinctly, that the first day of the week was _the_
-special day for the Lord's people to assemble for the Lord's supper,
-and the worship, communion, and ministry connected with that most
-precious institution. The blessed apostle John expressly tells us that
-he was in the Spirit on that day, and received that marvelous
-revelation which closes the Divine Volume.[18]
-
- [18] Some are of opinion that the expression, "on the Lord's day"
- ought to be rendered, "on the day of the Lord," meaning that the
- apostle was in the spirit of that day when our Lord Christ shall take
- to Himself His great power and reign. But to this view there are two
- grave objections. In the first place, the words +tê kuriakê
- hêmera+, rendered, in Revelation i. 10, "The Lord's day," are quite
- distinct from +ê hêmera kurion+, in 1 Thessalonians v. 2; 2
- Thessalonians ii. 2; 2 Peter iii. 10, properly rendered, "The day of
- the Lord."
-
- This we consider a very weighty objection, and one quite sufficient to
- settle the question. But in addition to this, we have the argument
- based on the fact that by far the greater portion of the book of
- Revelation is occupied, not with "the day of the Lord," but with
- events prior thereto.
-
- Hence, therefore, we feel persuaded that "the Lord's day" and "the
- first day of the week" are identical; and this we deem a very
- important fact, as proving that that day has a very special place in
- the Word of God--a place which every intelligent Christian will
- thankfully own.
-
-Thus, then, we have a body of Scripture evidence before us amply
-sufficient to prove to every pious mind that the Lord's day must not
-be reduced to the level of ordinary days. It is, to the true
-Christian, neither the Jewish Sabbath on the one hand, nor the Gentile
-Sunday on the other; but the Lord's day, on which His people gladly
-and thankfully assemble around His table, to keep that precious feast
-by which they show forth His death until He come.
-
-Now, it is needless to say that there is not a shade of legal bondage
-or of superstition connected with the first day of the week. To say
-so, or to think so, would be to deny the entire circle of truths with
-which that day stands connected. We have no direct commandment
-respecting the observance of the day, but the passages already
-referred to are amply sufficient for every spiritual mind; and
-further, we may say that the instincts of the divine nature would lead
-every true Christian to honor and love the Lord's day, and to set it
-apart, in the most reverent manner, for the worship and service of
-God. The very thought of any one professing to love Christ engaging in
-business or unnecessary traveling on the Lord's day, would, in our
-judgment, be revolting to every pious feeling. We believe it to be a
-hallowed privilege to retire, as much as possible, from all the
-distractions of natural things, and to devote the hours of the Lord's
-day to Himself and to His service.
-
-It will perhaps be said that the Christian ought to devote every day
-to the Lord. Most surely; we are the Lord's, in the very fullest and
-highest sense. All we have and all we are belongs to Him; this we
-fully, gladly own. We are called to do every thing in His name and to
-His glory. It is our high privilege to buy and sell, eat and drink,
-yea, to carry on all our business, under His eye, and in the fear and
-love of His holy name. We should not put our hand to any thing, on any
-day in the week, on which we could not, with the fullest confidence,
-ask the Lord's blessing.
-
-All this is most fully admitted. Every true Christian joyfully owns
-it. But, at the same time, we deem it impossible to read the New
-Testament and not see that the Lord's day gets a unique place; that it
-is marked off for us, in the most distinct way; that it has a
-significance and an importance which cannot, with justice, be claimed
-for any other day in the week. Indeed, so fully are we convinced of
-the truth of all this, that even though it were not the law of England
-that the Lord's day should be observed, we should deem it to be both
-our sacred duty and holy privilege to abstain from all business
-engagements, save such as were absolutely unavoidable.
-
-Thanks be to God, it is the law of England that the Lord's day should
-be observed. This is a signal mercy to all who love the day for the
-Lord's sake. We cannot but own His great goodness in having wrested
-the day from the covetous grasp of the world, and bestowed it upon His
-people and His servants to be devoted to His worship and to His work.
-
-What a boon is the Lord's day, with its profound retirement from
-worldly things! What should we do without it? What a blessed break in
-upon the week's toil! How refreshing its exercises to the spiritual
-mind! How precious the assembly around the Lord's table to remember
-Him, to show forth His death, and celebrate His praise! How delightful
-the varied services of the Lord's day, whether those of the
-evangelist, the pastor, the teacher, the Sunday-school worker, or the
-tract distributor! What human language can adequately set forth the
-value and interest of all these things? True it is that the Lord's day
-is any thing but a day of bodily rest to His servants; indeed, they
-are often more fatigued on that day than on any other day of the
-week. But oh! it is a blessed fatigue--a delightful fatigue--a fatigue
-which will meet its bright reward in the rest that remains for the
-people of God.
-
-Once more, then, beloved Christian reader, let us lift up our hearts
-in a note of praise to our God for the blessed boon of the Lord's day.
-May He continue it to His Church until He come. May He countervail, by
-His almighty power, every effort of the infidel and the atheist to
-remove the barriers which English law has erected around the Lord's
-day. Truly, it will be a sad day for England when those barriers are
-removed.
-
-It may perhaps be said by some that the Jewish Sabbath is done away,
-and is therefore no longer binding. A large number of professing
-Christians have taken this ground, and pleaded for the opening of the
-parks and places of public recreation on the Sunday. Alas! it is
-easily seen where such people are drifting to, and what they are
-seeking. They would set aside the law, in order to procure a license
-for fleshly indulgence. They do not understand that the only way in
-which any one can be free from the law is by being dead to it; and if
-dead to the law, we are also, of blessed necessity, dead to sin and
-dead to the world.
-
-This makes it a different matter altogether. The Christian is, thank
-God, free from the law; but if he is, it is not that he may amuse and
-indulge himself, on the Lord's day or any other day, but that he may
-live to God. "I through law am dead to law, that I might live unto
-God." This is Christian ground, and it can only be occupied by those
-who are truly born of God. The world cannot understand it; neither can
-they understand the holy privileges and spiritual exercises of the
-Lord's day.
-
-All this is true; but, at the same time, we are thoroughly convinced
-that were England to remove the barriers which surround the Lord's
-day, it would afford a melancholy proof of her abandonment of that
-profession of religion which has so long characterized her as a
-nation, and of her drifting away in the direction of infidelity and
-atheism. We must not lose sight of the weighty fact that England has
-taken the ground of being a Christian nation--a nation professing to
-be governed by the Word of God. She is therefore much more responsible
-than those nations wrapped in the dark shades of heathenism. We
-believe that nations, like individuals, will be held responsible for
-the profession they make; and hence those nations which profess and
-call themselves Christian shall be judged, not merely by the light of
-creation, nor by the law of Moses, but by the full-orbed light of that
-Christianity which they profess--by all the truth contained within the
-covers of that blessed book which they possess, and in which they make
-their boast. The heathen shall be judged on the ground of creation;
-the Jew, on the ground of the law; the nominal Christian, on the
-ground of the truth of Christianity.
-
-Now this grave fact renders the position of England, and all other
-professing Christian nations, most serious. God will most assuredly
-deal with them on the ground of their profession. It is of no use to
-say they do not understand what they profess; for why profess what
-they do not understand and believe? The fact is, they profess to
-understand and believe; and by this fact they shall be judged. They
-make their boast in this familiar sentence, that "the Bible, and the
-Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants."
-
-If this be so, how solemn is the thought of England judged by the
-standard of an open Bible! What will be her judgment?--what her end?
-Let all whom it may concern ponder the appalling answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now turn from the deeply interesting subject of the Sabbath
-and the Lord's day, and draw this section to a close by quoting for
-the reader the remarkable paragraph with which our chapter ends. It
-does not call for any lengthened comment, but we deem it profitable,
-in these "Notes on Deuteronomy," to furnish the reader with very full
-quotations from the book itself, in order that he may have before him
-the very words of the Holy Ghost, without even the trouble of laying
-aside the volume which he holds in his hand.
-
-Having laid before the people the ten commandments, the lawgiver
-proceeds to remind them of the solemn circumstances which accompanied
-the giving of the law, together with their own feelings and utterances
-on the occasion.
-
-"These words the Lord spake unto all your assembly in the mount out of
-the midst of the fire, of the cloud, and of the thick darkness, with
-a great voice; and He added no more. And He wrote them in two tables
-of stone, and delivered them unto me. And it came to pass, when ye
-heard the voice out of the midst of the darkness, (for the mountain
-did burn with fire,) that ye came near unto me, even all the heads of
-your tribes, and your elders; and ye said, 'Behold, the Lord our God
-hath showed us His glory and His greatness, and we have heard His
-voice out of the midst of the fire: we have seen this day that God
-doth talk with man, and he liveth. Now therefore why should we die?
-for this great fire will consume us: if we hear the voice of the Lord
-our God any more, then we shall die. For who is there of all flesh,
-that hath heard the voice of the living God speaking out of the midst
-of the fire, as we have, and lived? Go thou near, and hear all that
-the Lord our God shall say; and speak thou unto us all that the Lord
-our God shall speak unto thee, and _we will hear it and do it_.' And
-the Lord heard the voice of your words, when ye spake unto me; and the
-Lord said unto me, 'I have heard the voice of the words of this
-people, which they have spoken unto thee: they have well said all that
-they have spoken. O that there were such a heart in them, that they
-would fear Me, and keep _all_ My commandments _always_, that it might
-be well with them, and with their children forever! Go say to them,
-Get you into your tents again. But as for thee, stand thou here by Me,
-and I will speak unto thee all the commandments, and the statutes,
-and the judgments, which thou shalt teach them, that they may do them
-in the land which I give them to possess it.' Ye shall observe to do
-therefore as the Lord your God hath commanded you: ye shall not turn
-aside either to the right hand or to the left. Ye shall walk in _all
-the ways_ which the Lord your God hath commanded you, that ye may
-live, and that it may be well with you, and that ye may prolong your
-days in the land which ye shall possess."
-
-Here the grand principle of the book of Deuteronomy shines out with
-uncommon lustre. It is embodied in those touching and forcible words
-which form the very heart's core of the splendid passage just
-quoted.--"O that there were _such a heart in them, that they would
-fear Me_, and keep all My commandments always, that it might be well
-with them, and with their children forever!"
-
-Precious words! They set before us, most blessedly, the secret spring
-of that life which we, as Christians, are called to live from day to
-day--the life of simple, implicit, and unqualified obedience, namely,
-a heart fearing the Lord--fearing Him, not in a servile spirit, but
-with all that deep, true, adoring love which the Holy Ghost sheds
-abroad in our hearts. It is this that delights the heart of our loving
-Father. His word to us is, "My son, give Me thine heart." Where the
-heart is given, all follows, in lovely moral order. A loving heart
-finds its very deepest joy in obeying all God's commandments; and
-nothing is of any value to God but what springs from a loving heart.
-The heart is the source of all the issues of life; and hence, when it
-is governed by the love of God, there is a loving response to all His
-commandments. We love His commandments because we love Him. Every word
-of His is precious to the heart that loves Him. Every precept, every
-statute, every judgment--in a word, His whole law is loved,
-reverenced, and obeyed, because it has His name and His authority
-attached to it.
-
-The reader will find in psalm cxix. an uncommonly fine illustration of
-the special point now before us--a most striking example of one who
-blessedly answered to the words quoted above--"O that there were _such
-a heart_ in them, that they would fear Me, and keep _all_ My
-commandments _always_!" It is the lovely breathing of a soul who found
-its deep, unfailing, constant delight in the law of God. There are no
-less than one hundred and seventy allusions to that precious law,
-under some one title or another. We find scattered along the surface
-of this marvelous psalm, in rich profusion, such gems as the
-following:--
-
-"Thy Word have I _hid_ in mine _heart_, that I might not sin against
-Thee." "I have rejoiced in the way of Thy testimonies as much as in
-all riches." "I will meditate in Thy precepts, and have respect unto
-Thy ways." "_I will delight myself_ in Thy statutes; I will not forget
-Thy Word." "My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto Thy
-judgments at all times." "_Thy testimonies_ are also _my delight_, and
-my counselors." "_I have stuck_ unto Thy testimonies." "Behold, _I
-have longed_ after Thy precepts." "_I trust_ in Thy Word." "_I have
-hoped_ in Thy judgments." "_I seek_ Thy precepts." "_I will delight
-myself_ in Thy commandments, which _I have loved_." "_I remembered_
-Thy judgments." "_Thy statutes_ have been _my songs_ in the house of
-my pilgrimage." "I turned _my feet_ unto _Thy testimonies_." "_I have
-believed_ Thy commandments." "_The law of Thy mouth_ is better unto me
-than thousands of gold and silver." "_I have hoped_ in Thy Word."
-"_Thy law_ is _my delight_." "_Mine eyes_ fail for _Thy Word_." "_All_
-Thy commandments are faithful." "Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is settled
-in heaven." "_I will never forget_ Thy precepts." "_I have sought_ Thy
-precepts." "_I will consider_ Thy testimonies." "Thy commandment is
-exceeding broad." "O how love I _Thy law_! it is _my meditation_ all
-the day." "How sweet are _Thy words_ unto _my taste_! yea, sweeter
-than honey to my mouth." "_Thy testimonies_ have I taken as a
-_heritage forever_; for they are _the rejoicing of my heart_." "I will
-have respect unto Thy statutes _continually_." "I love Thy
-commandments above gold, yea, above find gold." "I esteem _all_ Thy
-precepts concerning _all_ things to be _right_." "Thy testimonies are
-wonderful." "I opened my mouth and _panted_, for I _longed_ for Thy
-commandments." "Upright are Thy judgments." "Thy testimonies ... are
-righteous, and very faithful." "Thy Word is very pure." "Thy law is
-the truth." "The righteousness of thy testimonies is everlasting."
-"All Thy commandments are truth." "Thy Word is _true from the
-beginning_; and every one of Thy righteous judgments _endureth
-forever_." "_My heart_ standeth _in awe_ of _Thy Word_." "_I rejoice_
-at Thy Word, as one that findeth great spoil." "Great peace have they
-that love Thy law." "_My soul_ hath kept _Thy testimonies_; and I love
-them exceedingly." "I have chosen Thy precepts." "Thy law is my
-delight."
-
-Truly, it does the heart good, and refreshes the spirit, to transcribe
-such utterances as the foregoing, many of which are the suited
-utterances of our Lord Himself, in the days of His flesh. He ever
-lived upon the Word. It was the food of His soul, the authority of His
-path, the material of His ministry. By it He vanquished Satan; by it
-He silenced Sadducees, Pharisees, and Herodians; by it He taught His
-disciples; to it He commended His servants, as He was about to ascend
-into the heavens.
-
-How important is all this for us! How intensely interesting! How
-deeply practical! What a place it gives the holy Scriptures! For we
-remember that it is, in very deed, the blessed Volume of inspiration
-which is brought before us in all those golden sentences culled from
-psalm cxix. How strengthening, refreshing, and encouraging for us to
-mark the way in which our Lord uses the holy Scriptures at all times,
-the place He gives them, and the dignity He puts upon them! He appeals
-to them on all occasions as a divine authority from which there can be
-no appeal. He, though Himself as God over all, the Author of the
-Volume, having taken His place as man on the earth, sets forth with
-all possible plainness what is man's bounden duty and high privilege,
-namely, to live by the Word of God, to bow down in reverent subjection
-to its divine authority.
-
-And have we not here a very complete answer to the oft-raised question
-of infidelity, "How do we know that the Bible is the Word of God?" If
-indeed we believe in Christ--if we own Him to be the Son of God, God
-manifest in the flesh, very God and very man, we cannot fail to see
-the moral force of the fact that this divine Person constantly appeals
-to the Scriptures--to Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, as to a
-divine standard. Did He not know them to be the Word of God?
-Undoubtedly. As God, He had given them; as Man, He received them,
-lived by them, and owned their paramount authority, in all things.
-
-What a weighty fact is here for the professing church! What a
-withering rebuke to all those so-called Christian doctors and writers
-who have presumed to tamper with the grand fundamental truth of the
-plenary inspiration of the holy Scriptures in general, and of the five
-books of Moses in particular! How terrible to think of the professed
-teachers of the Church of God daring to designate as spurious,
-writings which our Lord and Master received and owned as divine!
-
-And yet we are told, and we are expected to believe that things are
-improving! Alas! alas! it is a miserable delusion. The degrading
-absurdities of ritualism, and the blasphemous reasonings of
-infidelity, are rapidly increasing around us; and where these
-influences are not actually dominant, we observe, for the most part, a
-cold indifference, carnal ease, self-indulgence, and worldliness--any
-thing and every thing, in short, but the evidence of improvement. If
-people are not led away by infidelity on the one hand, or by ritualism
-on the other, it is, for the most part, owing to the fact that they
-are too much occupied with pleasure and gain to think of any thing
-else. And as to the religion of the day, if you subtract money and
-music, you will have a lamentably trifling balance.
-
-Hence, therefore, it is impossible to shake off the conviction that
-the combined testimony of observation and experience is directly
-opposed to the notion that things are improving. Indeed, for any one,
-in the face of such an array of evidence to the contrary, to cling to
-such a theory, can only be regarded as the fruit of a most
-unaccountable credulity.
-
-But perhaps some may feel disposed to say that we must not judge by
-the sight of our eyes; we must be hopeful. True, provided only we have
-a divine warrant for our hopefulness. If a single line of Scripture
-can be produced to prove that the present system of things is to be
-marked by gradual improvement, religiously, politically, morally, or
-socially, then, by all means, be hopeful. Yes; hope against hope. A
-single clause of inspiration is quite sufficient to form the basis of
-a hope which will lift the heart above the very darkest and most
-depressing surroundings.
-
-But where is such a clause to be found? Simply no where. The testimony
-of the Bible, from cover to cover; the distinct teaching of holy
-Scripture, from beginning to end; the voices of prophets and apostles,
-in unbroken harmony--all, without a single divergent note, go to
-prove, with a force and clearness perfectly unanswerable, that the
-present condition of things, so far from gradually improving, will
-rapidly grow worse; that ere the bright beams of millennial glory can
-gladden this groaning earth, the sword of judgment must do its
-appalling work. To quote the passages in proof of our assertion would
-literally fill a volume; it would simply be to transcribe a large
-portion of the prophetic scriptures of the Old and New Testament.
-
-This, of course, we do not attempt. There is no need. The reader has
-his Bible before him; let him search it diligently. Let him lay aside
-all his preconceived ideas, all the conventionalisms of christendom,
-all the ordinary phraseology of the religious world, all the dogmas of
-the schools of divinity, and come, with the simplicity of a little
-child, to the pure fountain of holy Scripture, and drink in its
-heavenly teaching. If he will only do this, he will rise from the
-study with the clear and settled conviction that the world will, most
-assuredly, not be converted by the means now in operation--that it is
-not the gospel of peace, but the besom of destruction that shall
-prepare the earth for glory.
-
-Is it, then, that we deny the good that is being done? Are we
-insensible to it? Far be the thought! We heartily bless God for every
-atom of it. We rejoice in every effort put forth to spread the
-precious gospel of the grace of God; we render thanks for every soul
-gathered within the blessed circle of God's salvation. We delight to
-think of eighty-five millions of Bibles scattered over the earth. What
-human mind can calculate the results of all these, yea, the results of
-a single copy? We earnestly wish Godspeed to every true-hearted
-missionary who goes forth with the glad tidings of salvation, whether
-into the lanes and court-yards of London, or to the most distant parts
-of the earth.
-
-But, admitting all this, as we most heartily do, we nevertheless do
-not believe in the conversion of the world by the means now in
-operation. Scripture tells us that it is when the divine judgments are
-in the earth, the inhabitants of the world shall learn righteousness.
-This one clause of inspiration ought to be sufficient to prove that it
-is not by the gospel that the world is to be converted; and there are
-hundreds of clauses which speak the same language and teach the same
-truth. It is not by grace, but by judgment, that the inhabitants of
-the world shall learn righteousness.
-
-What, then, is the object of the gospel? If it be not to convert the
-world, for what purpose is it preached? The apostle James, in his
-address at the memorable council at Jerusalem, gives an answer, direct
-and conclusive, to the question. He says, "Simeon hath declared how
-God at the first did visit the Gentiles." For what? To convert them
-all? The very reverse--"_To take out of them_ a people for His name."
-Nothing can be more distinct than this. It sets before us that which
-ought to be the grand object of all missionary effort--that which
-every divinely sent and divinely taught missionary will keep before
-his mind in all his blessed labors. It is "to take out a people for
-His name."
-
-How important to remember this! How needful to have ever before us a
-true object in all our work! Of what possible use can it be to work
-for a false object? Is it not much better to work with a direct view
-to what God is doing? Will it cripple the missionary's energies, or
-clip his wings, to keep before his eyes the divine purpose in his
-work? Surely not. Take the case of two missionaries going forth to
-some distant mission-field: the one has for his object the conversion
-of the world; the other, the gathering out of a people. Will the
-latter, by reason of his object, be less devoted, less energetic, less
-enthusiastic, than the former? We cannot believe it; on the contrary,
-the very fact of his being in the current of the divine mind will
-impart stability and consistency to his work, and, at the same time,
-encourage his heart in the face of the difficulties and hindrances
-which surround him.
-
-But however this may be, it is perfectly plain that the apostles of
-our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ had no such object, in going forth
-to their work, as the conversion of the world. "Go ye into all the
-world, and preach the gospel to every creature; he that believeth and
-is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be
-damned."
-
-This was to the twelve. The world was to be their sphere. The aspect
-of their message was, unto every creature; the application, to him
-that believeth. It was pre-eminently an individual thing. The
-conversion of the whole world was not to be their object; that will be
-effected by a different agency altogether, when God's present action
-by the gospel shall have resulted in the gathering out of a people for
-the heavens.[19] The Holy Ghost came down on the day of Pentecost, not
-to convert the world, but to "_convict_ [+elenxei+]" it, or
-demonstrate its guilt in having rejected the Son of God.[20] The
-effect of His presence was to prove the world guilty; and as to the
-grand object of His mission, it was to form a body composed of
-believers from amongst both Jews and Gentiles. With this He has been
-occupied for the last eighteen hundred years. This is "the mystery" of
-which the apostle Paul was made a minister, and which he unfolds, so
-fully and blessedly, in his epistle to the Ephesians. It is
-impossible for any one to understand the truth set forth in this
-marvelous document, and not see that the conversion of the world and
-the formation of the body of Christ are two totally different things,
-which could not possibly go on together.
-
- [19] We would commend to the reader's attention psalm lxvii. It is one
- of a large class of passages which prove that the blessing of the
- nations is consequent upon Israel's restoration. "God be merciful unto
- us [Israel], and bless us; and cause His face to shine upon us, that
- Thy way may be known upon earth, Thy saving health among _all
- nations_.... God shall bless us; and _all the ends of the earth_ shall
- fear Him." There could not be a more lovely or forcible proof of the
- fact that it is Israel, and not the Church, that will be used for the
- blessing of the nations.
-
- [20] The application of John xvi. 8-11 to the Spirit's work in the
- individual is, in our judgment, a serious mistake. It refers to the
- effect of His presence on earth, in reference to the world as a whole.
- His work in the soul is a precious truth, we need hardly say, but it
- is not the truth taught in this passage.
-
-Let the reader ponder the following beautiful passage: "For this cause
-I Paul, the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles, if ye have
-heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which is given me to
-you-ward: how that by revelation He made known unto me the mystery;
-(as I wrote afore in few words, whereby, when ye read, ye may
-understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ) which in other ages
-was not made known unto the sons of men"--not made known in the
-scriptures of the Old Testament, nor revealed to the Old-Testament
-saints or prophets--"as it is now revealed unto His holy apostles and
-prophets" (that is, to the New-Testament prophets) "by the Spirit;
-that the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and
-partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel: whereof I was made a
-minister according to the gift of the grace of God given unto me by
-the effectual working of His power. Unto me, who am less than the
-least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among
-the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ; and to make all men
-see what is the dispensation [+oikonomia+] of the mystery,
-which _from the beginning of the world_ hath been _hid in God_, who
-created all things by Jesus Christ: to the intent that now unto the
-principalities and powers in the heavenlies might be known by the
-Church the manifold wisdom of God." (Eph. iii. 1-10.)
-
-Take another passage from the epistle to the Colossians.--"If ye
-continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from
-the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to
-every creature which is under heaven, whereof I Paul am made a
-minister, who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that
-which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for His
-body's sake, which is the Church: whereof I am made a minister,
-according to the dispensation of God which is given to me for you, to
-complete the Word of God; even the mystery which hath been hid from
-ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to His saints: to
-whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this
-mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory:
-whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all
-wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus:
-whereunto I also labor, striving according to His working, which
-worketh in me mightily." (Chap. i. 23-29.)
-
-From these and numerous other passages, the reader may see the special
-object of Paul's ministry. Assuredly he had no such thought in his
-mind as the conversion of the world. True, he preached the gospel, in
-all its depth, fullness, and power--preached it "from Jerusalem and
-round about unto Illyricum"--"preached among the Gentiles the
-unsearchable riches of Christ," but with no thought of converting the
-world. He knew better. He knew and taught that the world was ripening
-for judgment--yes, ripening rapidly; that "evil men and seducers shall
-wax worse and worse;" that "in _the latter times_ some shall depart
-from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of
-devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared
-with a hot iron; forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from
-meats, which God had created to be received with thanksgiving of them
-which believe and know the truth."
-
-And further still, this faithful and divinely inspired witness taught
-that "in _the last days_"--far in advance of "the latter
-times"--"perilous [or difficult] times shall come. For men shall be
-lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers,
-disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection,
-truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of
-those that are good, traitors, heady, high-minded, _lovers of
-pleasures rather than lovers of God_; having a form of godliness, but
-denying the power thereof." (Compare 1 Tim. iv. 1-3 with 2 Tim. iii.
-1-5.)
-
-What a picture! It brings us back to the close of the first of Romans,
-where the same inspired pen portrays for us the dark forms of
-heathenism; but with this terrible difference, that in 2 Timothy it
-is not heathenism, but nominal Christianity--"a form of godliness."
-
-And is this to be the end of the present condition of things? Is this
-the converted world of which we hear so much? Alas! alas! there are
-false prophets abroad; there are those who cry, Peace, peace, when
-there is no peace; there are those who attempt to daub the crumbling
-walls of christendom with untempered mortar.
-
-But it will not do. Judgment is at the door. The professing church has
-utterly, shamefully failed; she has grievously departed from the Word
-of God, and revolted from the authority of her Lord. There is not a
-single ray of hope for christendom. It is the darkest moral blot in
-the wide universe of God, or on the page of history. The same blessed
-apostle from whose writings we have already so largely quoted, tells
-us that "the mystery of iniquity doth already work;" hence it has been
-working now for over eighteen centuries. "Only He that now hindereth
-will hinder until He be taken out of the way. And then shall that
-Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His
-mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming: even him,
-whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs
-and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in
-them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth,
-that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them
-strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: that they all might
-be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
-unrighteousness." (2 Thess. ii. 7-12.)
-
-How awful is the doom of christendom! Strong delusion! Dark damnation!
-And all this in the face of the dreams of those false prophets who
-talk to the people about "the bright side of things." Thank God, there
-is a bright side for all those who belong to Christ. To them, the
-apostle can speak in bright and cheering accents.--"We are bound to
-give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord,
-because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through
-sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth: whereunto He
-called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord
-Jesus Christ." (2 Thess. ii. 13, 14.)
-
-Here we have, most surely, the bright side of things--the bright and
-blessed hope of the Church of God--the hope of seeing "the bright and
-morning Star." All rightly instructed Christians are on the look-out,
-not for an improved or a converted world, but for their coming Lord
-and Saviour, who has gone to prepare a place for them in the Father's
-house, and is coming again to receive them to Himself, that where He
-is, there they may be also. This is His own sweet promise, which may
-be fulfilled at any moment. He only waits, as Peter tells us, in
-long-suffering mercy, not willing that any should perish, but that all
-should come to repentance. But when the last member shall be
-incorporated, by the Holy Ghost, into the blessed body of Christ, then
-shall the voice of the archangel and the trump of God summon _all_
-the redeemed, from the beginning, to meet their descending Lord in the
-air, to be forever with Him.
-
-This is the true and proper hope of the Church of God--a hope which He
-would have ever shining down into the hearts of all His beloved
-people, in its purifying and elevating power. Of this blessed hope the
-enemy has succeeded in robbing a large number of the Lord's people.
-Indeed, for centuries it was well-nigh blotted out from the Church's
-horizon; and it has only been partially recovered within the last
-fifty years. And, alas! how partially! Where do we hear of it,
-throughout the length and breadth of the professing church? Do the
-pulpits of christendom ring with the joyful sound, "Behold the
-Bridegroom cometh"? Far from it. Even the few beloved servants of
-Christ who are looking for His coming, hardly dare to preach it,
-because they fear it would be utterly rejected. And so it would. We
-are thoroughly persuaded that, in the vast majority of cases, men who
-should venture to preach the glorious truth that the Lord is coming
-for His Church, would speedily have to vacate their pulpits.
-
-What a solemn and striking proof of Satan's blinding power! He has
-robbed the Church of her divinely given hope, and instead thereof, he
-has given her a delusion--a lie. Instead of looking out for "the
-bright and morning Star," he has set her looking for a converted
-world--a millennium without Christ. He has succeeded in casting such a
-haze over the future, that the Church has completely lost her
-bearings. She does not know where she is. She is like a vessel tossed
-on the stormy ocean, having neither compass nor rudder, seeing neither
-sun nor stars. All is darkness and confusion.
-
-And how is this? Simply because the Church has lost sight of the pure
-and precious word of her Lord, and accepted instead those bewildering
-creeds and confessions of men which so mar and mutilate the truth of
-God that Christians seem utterly at sea as to their proper standing
-and their proper hope.
-
-And yet they have the Bible in their hands. True; but so had the Jews,
-and yet they rejected that blessed One who is the great theme of the
-Bible from beginning to end. This was the moral inconsistency with
-which our Lord charged them in John v.--"Ye search the Scriptures; for
-in them ye think ye have eternal life; and they are they which testify
-of Me; and ye will not come to Me, that ye might have life."[21]
-
- [21] The word +ereunate+ maybe either imperative or indicative;
- but the context, we judge, demands the latter. They had the
- Scriptures; they were read in their synagogues every Sabbath day; they
- professed to believe that in them they had eternal life; they
- testified of Him; and yet they would not come to Him. Here was the
- flagrant inconsistency. Now, if +ereunate+ be taken as a
- command, the whole force of the passage is lost.
-
- Need we remind the reader that there are plenty of arguments and
- inducements leading us to search the Scriptures, without appealing to
- what we believe to be an inaccurate rendering of John v. 39?
-
-And why was this? Simply because their minds were blinded by religious
-prejudice. They were under the influence of the doctrines and
-commandments of men. Hence, although they had the Scriptures, and
-boasted of having them, they were as ignorant of them, and as little
-governed by them, as the poor dark heathen around them. It is one
-thing to have the Bible in our hands, in our homes, and in our
-assemblies, and quite another thing to have the truths of the Bible
-acting on our hearts and consciences, and shining in our lives.
-
-Take, for instance, the great subject now before us, and which has led
-us into this very lengthened digression. Can any thing be more plainly
-taught in the New Testament than this, namely, that the end of the
-present condition of things will be terrible apostasy from the truth,
-and open rebellion against God and the Lamb? The gospels, the
-epistles, and the Revelation all agree in setting forth this most
-solemn truth, with such distinctness and simplicity that a babe in
-Christ may see it.
-
-And yet how few, comparatively, believe it! The vast majority believe
-the very reverse. They believe that by means of the various agencies
-now in operation all nations shall be converted. In vain we call
-attention to our Lord's parables in Matthew xiii.--the tares, the
-leaven, and the mustard-seed. How do these agree with the idea of a
-converted world? If the whole world is to be converted by a preached
-gospel, how is it that tares are found in the field at the end of the
-age? how is it that there are as many foolish virgins as wise ones
-when the Bridegroom comes? If the whole world is to be converted by
-the gospel, then on whom will "the day of the Lord so come as a thief
-in the night"? or what mean those awful words, "For when they shall
-say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as
-travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape"? In view
-of a converted world, what would be the just application, what the
-moral force, of those most solemn words in the first of Revelation,
-"Behold, He cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see Him, and they
-also which pierced Him; and _all kindreds of the earth shall wail_
-because of Him"? Where are all those wailing kindreds to be found if
-the whole world is to be converted?
-
-Reader, is it not as clear as a sunbeam that the two things cannot
-stand for a moment together? Is it not perfectly plain that the theory
-of a world converted by the gospel is diametrically opposed to the
-teaching of the entire New Testament? How is it, then, that the vast
-majority of professing Christians persist in holding it? There can be
-but the one reply, and that is, they do not bow to the authority of
-Scripture. It is most sorrowful and solemn to have to say it; but it
-is, alas! too true. The Bible is read in christendom, but the truths
-of the Bible are not believed--nay, they are persistently rejected;
-and all this in view of the oft-repeated boast that "the Bible, and
-the Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants."
-
-But we shall not pursue this subject further here, much as we feel its
-weight and importance. We trust the reader may be led by the Spirit of
-God to feel its deep solemnity. We believe the Lord's people every
-where need to be thoroughly roused to a sense of how entirely the
-professing church has departed from the authority of Scripture. Here,
-we may rest assured, lies the real cause of all the confusion, all the
-error, all the evil, in our midst. We have departed from the Word of
-the Lord, and from Himself. Until this is seen, felt, and owned, we
-cannot be right. The Lord looks for true repentance, real brokenness
-of spirit, in His presence. "_To this man_ will I look, even to him
-that is _poor_, and of a _contrite_ spirit, and trembleth at My Word."
-
-This always holds good. There is no limit to the blessing when the
-soul is in this truly blessed attitude. But it must be a reality. It
-will not do to talk of being "poor and contrite," we must be in the
-condition. It is an individual matter. "_To this man_ will I look."
-
-Oh may the Lord, in His infinite mercy, lead us, every one, into true
-self-judgment, under the action of His Word. May our ears be open to
-hear His voice. May there be a real turning of our hearts to Himself
-and to His Word. May we turn our backs, in holy decision, once and
-forever, upon every thing that will not stand the test of Scripture.
-This, we are persuaded, is what our Lord Christ looks for on the part
-of all who belong to Him, amid the terrible and hopeless _debris_ of
-christendom.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-"Now these are the commandments, the statutes, and the judgments,
-which the Lord your God commanded to teach you, that ye might do them
-in the land whither ye go to possess it: that thou mightest fear the
-Lord thy God, to keep all His statutes and His commandments, which I
-command thee, thou, and thy son, and thy son's son, all the days of
-thy life; and that thy days may be prolonged. Hear therefore, O
-Israel, and observe to do it; that it may be well with thee, and that
-ye may increase mightily, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath promised
-thee, in the land that floweth with milk and honey. Hear, O Israel:
-The Lord our God is one Lord."
-
-We have here presented to us that great cardinal truth which the
-nation of Israel was specially responsible to hold fast and confess,
-namely, the unity of the Godhead. This truth lay at the very
-foundation of the Jewish economy. It was the grand centre around which
-the people were to rally. So long as they maintained this, they were a
-happy, prosperous, fruitful people; but when it was let go, all was
-gone. It was their great national bulwark, and that which was to mark
-them off from all the nations of the earth. They were called to
-confess this glorious truth in the face of an idolatrous world, with
-"its gods many, and lords many." It was Israel's high privilege and
-holy responsibility to bear a steady witness to the truth contained
-in that one weighty sentence, "The Lord our God is one Lord," in
-marked opposition to the false gods innumerable of the heathen around.
-Their father Abraham had been called out from the very midst of
-heathen idolatry, to be a witness to the one true and living God, to
-trust Him, to walk with Him, to lean on Him, and to obey Him.
-
-If the reader will turn to the last chapter of Joshua, he will find a
-very striking allusion to this fact, and a very important use made of
-it, in his closing address to the people.--"And Joshua gathered all
-the tribes of Israel to Shechem, and called for the elders of Israel,
-and for their heads, and for their judges, and for their officers; and
-they presented themselves before God. And Joshua said unto all the
-people, 'Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Your fathers dwelt on the
-other side of the flood in old time, even Terah, the father of
-Abraham, and the father of Nachor; and _they served other gods_. And I
-took your father Abraham from the other side of the flood, and led him
-throughout all the land of Canaan, and multiplied his seed, and gave
-him Isaac.'"
-
-Here Joshua reminds the people of the fact that their fathers had
-served other gods--a very solemn and weighty fact most surely, and one
-which they ought never to have forgotten, inasmuch as the remembrance
-of it would have taught them their deep need of watchfulness over
-themselves, lest by any means they should be drawn back into that
-gross and terrible evil out of which God, in His sovereign grace and
-electing love, had called their father Abraham. It would have been
-their wisdom to consider that the self-same evil in which their
-fathers had lived, in the olden time, was just the one into which they
-themselves were likely to fall.
-
-Having presented this fact to the people, Joshua brings before them,
-with uncommon force and vividness, all the leading events of their
-history, from the birth of their father Isaac, down to the moment in
-which he was addressing them; and then sums up with the following
-telling appeal: "Now therefore fear the Lord, and serve Him in
-sincerity and in truth; and _put away the gods which your fathers
-served on the other side of the flood, and in Egypt_; and serve ye the
-Lord. And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this
-day whom ye will serve; whether _the gods which your fathers served
-that were on the other side of the flood_, or the gods of the Amorites
-in whose land ye dwell; but as for me and my house, we will serve the
-Lord."
-
-Mark the repeated allusion to the fact that their fathers had
-worshiped false gods; and further, that the land into which Jehovah
-had brought them had been polluted, from one end to the other, by the
-dark abominations of heathen idolatry.
-
-Thus does this faithful servant of the Lord, evidently by the
-inspiration of the Holy Ghost, seek to set before the people their
-danger of giving up the grand central and foundation truth of the one
-true and living God, and falling back into the worship of idols. He
-urges upon them the absolute necessity of whole-hearted decision.
-"Choose you _this day_ whom ye will serve." There is nothing like
-plain, out-and-out decision for God. It is due to Him always. He had
-proved Himself to be unmistakably for them in redeeming them from the
-bondage of Egypt, bringing them through the wilderness, and planting
-them in the land of Canaan; hence, therefore, that they should be
-wholly for Him was nothing more than their reasonable service.
-
-How deeply Joshua felt all this for himself is evident from those very
-memorable words, "As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord."
-Lovely words! Precious decision! National religion might, and, alas!
-did, go to ruin; but personal and family religion could, by the grace
-of God, be maintained every where and at all times.
-
-Thank God for this! May we never forget it. "Me and my house" is
-Faith's clear and delightful response to God's "Thou and thy house."
-Let the condition of the ostensible, professed people of God, at any
-given time, be what it may, it is the privilege of every true-hearted
-man of God to adopt and act upon this immortal decision: "As for me
-and my house, we will serve the Lord."
-
-True, it is only by the grace of God, continually supplied, that this
-holy resolution can be carried out; but we may rest assured that where
-the bent of the heart is to follow the Lord fully, all needed grace
-will be ministered, day by day; for those encouraging words must ever
-hold good, "_My_ grace is sufficient for _thee_; for My strength is
-made perfect in weakness."
-
-Let us now look for a moment at the apparent effect of Joshua's
-soul-stirring appeal to the congregation. It seemed very promising.
-"The people answered and said, 'God forbid that we should forsake the
-Lord, to serve other gods; for the Lord our God, He it is that brought
-us up and our fathers out of the land of Egypt, from the house of
-bondage, and which did those great signs in our sight, and preserved
-us in all the way wherein we went, and among all the people through
-whom we passed: and the Lord drave out from before us all the people,
-even the Amorites which dwelt in the land; therefore will we also
-serve the Lord, for He is our God."
-
-All this sounded very well, and looked very hopeful. They seemed to
-have a clear sense of the moral basis of Jehovah's claim upon them for
-implicit obedience. They could accurately recount all His mighty deeds
-on their behalf, and make very earnest and no doubt sincere
-protestations against idolatry, and promises of obedience to Jehovah,
-their God.
-
-But it is very evident that Joshua was not particularly sanguine about
-all this profession, for he "said unto the people, 'Ye cannot serve
-the Lord: for He is a holy God; He is a jealous God; He will not
-forgive your transgressions nor your sins. If ye forsake the Lord, and
-serve strange gods, then He will turn and do you hurt, and consume
-you, after that He hath done you good.' And the people said unto
-Joshua, 'Nay; but we will serve the Lord.' And Joshua said unto the
-people, 'Ye are witnesses against yourselves that ye have chosen you
-the Lord, to serve Him.' And they said, 'We are witnesses.' 'Now
-therefore put away,' said he, '_the strange gods which are among you_,
-and _incline your heart unto the Lord God of Israel_.' And the people
-said unto Joshua, 'The Lord our God will we serve, and His voice will
-we obey.'"
-
-We do not now stop to contemplate the aspect in which Joshua presents
-God to the congregation of Israel, inasmuch as our object in referring
-to the passage is to show the prominent place assigned, in Joshua's
-address, to the truth of the unity of the Godhead. This was the truth
-to which Israel was called to bear witness, in view of all the nations
-of the earth, and in which they were to find their moral safeguard
-against the ensnaring influences of idolatry.
-
-But, alas! this very truth was _the_ one as to which they most
-speedily and signally failed. The promises, vows, and resolutions made
-under the powerful influence of Joshua's appeal soon proved to be like
-the early dew and the morning cloud, that passeth away. "The people
-served the Lord all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders
-that outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great works of the Lord,
-that He did for Israel. And Joshua, the son of Nun, the servant of the
-Lord, died, being a hundred and ten years old.... And also all that
-generation were gathered unto their fathers; and there arose another
-generation after them, which knew not the Lord, nor yet the works
-which He had done for Israel. And the children of Israel did evil in
-the sight of the Lord, _and served Baalim_; and they forsook the Lord
-God of their fathers, which brought them out of the land of Egypt,
-_and followed_ other gods, of the gods of the people that were round
-about them, _and bowed themselves unto them_, and provoked the Lord to
-anger. And they forsook the Lord, and served Baal and Ashtaroth."
-(Judges ii. 7-13.)
-
-Reader, how admonitory is all this! how full of solemn warning to us
-all! The grand, all-important, special, and characteristic truth so
-soon abandoned! The one only true and living God given up for Baal and
-Ashtaroth! So long as Joshua and the elders lived, their presence and
-their influence kept Israel from open apostasy; but no sooner were
-those moral embankments removed than the dark tide of idolatry rolled
-in and swept away the very foundations of the national faith. Jehovah
-of Israel was displaced by Baal and Ashtaroth. Human influence is a
-poor prop, a feeble barrier. We must be sustained by the power of God,
-else we shall, sooner or later, give way. The faith that stands merely
-in the wisdom of men, and not in the power of God, must prove a poor,
-flimsy, worthless faith. It will not stand the day of trial; it will
-not bear the furnace; it will most assuredly break down.
-
-It is well to remember this. Second-hand faith will never do. There
-must be a living link connecting the soul with God. We must have to do
-with God for ourselves individually, else we shall give way when the
-testing-time comes. Human example and human influence may be all very
-good in their place. It was all very well to look at Joshua and the
-elders, and see how they followed the Lord. It is quite true that "as
-iron sharpeneth iron, so doth the countenance of a man his friend." It
-is very encouraging to be surrounded by a number of truly devoted
-hearts--very delightful to be borne along upon the bosom of the tide
-of collective loyalty to Christ--to His Person and to His cause. But
-if this be all,--if there be not the deep spring of personal faith and
-personal knowledge,--if there be not the divinely formed and the
-divinely sustained link of individual relationship and communion, then
-when the human props are removed,--when the tide of human influence
-ebbs,--when general declension sets in, we shall be, in principle,
-like Israel following the Lord all the days of Joshua and the elders,
-and then giving up the confession of His name and returning to the
-follies and vanities of this present world--things no better, in
-reality, than Baal and Ashtaroth.
-
-But, on the other hand, when the heart is thoroughly established in
-the truth and grace of God,--when we can say--as it is the privilege
-of each true believer to say--"I know _whom_ I have believed, and am
-persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him
-against that day," then, although all should turn aside from the
-public confession of Christ,--although we should find ourselves left
-without the help of a human countenance or the support of a human arm,
-we shall find "the foundation of God" as sure as ever, and the path of
-obedience as plain before us as though thousands were treading it with
-holy decision and energy.
-
-We must never lose sight of the fact that it is the divine purpose
-that the professing church of God should learn deep and holy lessons
-from the history of Israel. "Whatsoever things were written aforetime
-were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of
-the Scriptures might have hope." Nor is it by any means necessary, in
-order to our thus learning from the Old-Testament scriptures, that we
-should occupy ourselves in searching out fanciful analogies, curious
-theories, or far-fetched illustrations. Many, alas! have tried these
-things, and instead of finding "comfort" in the Scriptures, they have
-been led away into empty and foolish conceits, if not into deadly
-errors.
-
-But our business is with the living facts recorded on the page of
-inspired history. These are to be our study; from these we are to draw
-our great practical lessons. Take, for example, the weighty and
-admonitory fact now before us--a fact standing out in characters deep
-and broad on the page of Israel's history from Joshua to Isaiah--the
-fact of Israel's lamentable departure from that very truth which they
-were specially called to hold and confess--the truth of the unity of
-the Godhead. The very first thing they did was to let go this grand
-and all-important truth, this key-stone of the arch, the foundation
-of the whole edifice, the very heart of their national existence, the
-living centre of their national polity. They gave it up, and turned
-back to the idolatry of their fathers on the other side of the flood,
-and of the heathen nations around them. They abandoned that most
-glorious and distinctive truth on the maintenance of which their very
-existence as a nation depended. Had they only held fast this truth,
-they would have been invincible; but in surrendering it, they
-surrendered all, and became much worse than the nations around them,
-inasmuch as they sinned against light and knowledge--sinned with their
-eyes open--sinned in the face of the most solemn warnings and earnest
-entreaties, and, we may add, in the face of the most vehement and
-oft-repeated promises and protestations of obedience.
-
-Yes, reader, Israel gave up the worship of the one true and living
-God, Jehovah-Elohim, their covenant-God; not only their Creator, but
-their Redeemer--the One who had brought them up out of the land of
-Egypt, conducted them through the Red Sea, led them through the
-wilderness, brought them across the Jordan, and planted them in
-triumph in the inheritance which He had promised to Abraham their
-father--"a land flowing with milk and honey, which is the glory of all
-lands." They turned their backs upon Him, and gave themselves up to
-the worship of false gods; "they provoked Him to anger with their high
-places, and moved Him to jealousy with their graven images."
-
-It seems perfectly wonderful that a people who had seen and known so
-much of the goodness and loving-kindness of God--His mighty acts, His
-faithfulness, His majesty, His glory, could ever bring themselves to
-bow down to the stock of a tree; but so it was. Their whole history,
-from the days of the calf at the foot of Mount Sinai, to the day in
-which Nebuchadnezzar reduced Jerusalem to ruins, is marked by an
-unconquerable spirit of idolatry. In vain did Jehovah, in His
-long-suffering mercy and abounding goodness, raise up deliverers for
-them, to lift them from beneath the terrible consequences of their sin
-and folly. Again and again, in His inexhaustable mercy and patience,
-He saved them from the hand of their enemies. He raised up an Othniel,
-an Ehud, a Barak, a Gideon, a Jephthah, a Samson--those instruments of
-His mercy and power--those witnesses of His deep and tender love and
-compassion toward His poor infatuated people. No sooner had each judge
-passed off the scene than back the nation plunged into their besetting
-sin of idolatry.
-
-So, also, in the days of the kings; it is the same melancholy,
-heart-rending story. True, there were bright spots here and
-there--some brilliant stars shining out through the deep gloom of the
-nation's history; we have a David, an Asa, a Jehoshaphat, a Hezekiah,
-a Josiah--refreshing and blessed exceptions to the dark and dismal
-rule. But even men like these failed to eradicate from the heart of
-the nation the pernicious root of idolatry. Even amid the unexampled
-splendors of Solomon's reign, that root sent forth its bitter shoots,
-in the monstrous form of high places to Ashtaroth, the goddess of the
-Zidonians; Milcom, the abomination of the Ammonites; and Chemosh, the
-abomination of Moab.
-
-Reader, only think of this. Pause for a moment, and contemplate the
-astounding fact of the writer of the Canticles, Ecclesiastes, and
-Proverbs bowing at the shrine of Molech! Only conceive, the wisest,
-the wealthiest, and the most glorious of Israel's monarchs burning
-incense and offering sacrifices upon the altar of Chemosh!
-
-Truly, there is something here for us to ponder. It was written for
-our learning. The reign of Solomon affords one of the most striking
-and impressive evidences of the fact which is just now engaging our
-attention, namely, Israel's complete and hopeless apostasy from the
-grand truth of the unity of the Godhead--their unconquerable spirit of
-idolatry. The truth which they were specially called out to hold and
-confess was the very truth which they first of all and most
-persistently abandoned.
-
-We shall not pursue the dark line of evidence further, neither shall
-we dwell upon the appalling picture of the nation's judgment in
-consequence of their idolatry. They are now in the condition of which
-the prophet Hosea speaks--"The children of Israel shall abide many
-days without a king, and without a prince, and without a sacrifice,
-and without an image, and without an ephod, and without teraphim."
-"The unclean spirit of idolatry has gone out of them," during these
-"many days," to return, by and by, with "seven other spirits more
-wicked than himself"--the very perfection of spiritual wickedness. And
-then will come days of unparalleled tribulation upon that long
-misguided and deeply revolted people--"the time of Jacob's trouble."
-
-But deliverance will come, blessed be God! Bright days are in store
-for the restored nation--"days of heaven upon earth"--as the same
-prophet Hosea tells us, "Afterward shall the children of Israel
-return, and seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall
-fear the Lord and His goodness in the latter days." All the promises
-of God to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and David shall be blessedly
-accomplished; all the brilliant predictions of the prophets, from
-Isaiah to Malachi, shall be gloriously fulfilled. Yes, both promises
-and prophecies shall be literally and gloriously made good to restored
-Israel, in the land of Canaan; for "the Scripture cannot be broken."
-The long, dark, dreary night shall be followed by the brightest day
-that has ever shone upon this earth; the daughter of Zion shall bask
-in the bright and blessed beams of "the Sun of Righteousness;" and
-"the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the
-waters cover the sea."
-
-It would indeed be a most delightful exercise to reproduce upon the
-pages of this volume those glowing passages from the prophets which
-speak of Israel's future; but this we cannot attempt; it is not
-needful; and we have a duty to fulfill which, if not so pleasing to us
-or so refreshing to the reader, will, we earnestly hope, prove not
-less profitable.
-
-The duty is this: to press upon the attention of the reader (and upon
-the attention of the whole Church of God) the practical application of
-that solemn fact in Israel's history on which we have dwelt at such
-length--the fact of their having so speedily and so completely given
-up the great truth set forth in Deuteronomy vi. 4, "Hear, O Israel;
-the Lord our God is one Lord."
-
-We may perhaps be asked, What bearing can this fact have upon the
-Church of God? We believe it has a most solemn bearing; and further,
-we believe we should be guilty of a very culpable shirking of our duty
-to Christ and to His Church if we failed to point it out. We know that
-all the great facts of Israel's history are full of instruction, full
-of admonition, full of warning, for us. It is our business, our
-bounden duty, to see that we profit by them--to take heed that we
-study them aright.
-
-Now, in contemplating the history of the Church of God as a public
-witness for Christ on the earth, we find that hardly had it been set
-up, in all the fullness of blessing and privilege which marked the
-opening of its career, ere it began to slip away from those very
-truths which it was specially responsible to maintain and confess.
-Like Adam in the garden of Eden; like Noah in the restored earth; like
-Israel in Canaan; so the Church, as the responsible steward of the
-mysteries of God, was no sooner set in its place than it began to
-totter and fall. It almost immediately began to give up those grand
-truths which were characteristic of its very existence, and which were
-to mark off Christianity from all that had gone before. Even under the
-eyes of the apostles of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, errors and
-evils had begun to work which sapped the very foundations of the
-Church's testimony.
-
-Are we asked for proofs? Alas! we have them in melancholy abundance.
-Hear the words of that blessed apostle who shed more tears and heaved
-more sighs over the ruins of the Church than any man that ever lived.
-"I marvel," he says, and well he might, "that ye are _so soon_ removed
-from Him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another
-gospel: which is not another." "O foolish Galatians, who hath
-bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth, before whose eyes
-Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth, crucified among you?"
-"Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service to them which by
-nature are no gods. But now, after that ye have known God, or rather
-are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements,
-whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? Ye observe days and months
-and times and years;" Christian festivals, so called, very imposing
-and gratifying to religious nature; but, in the judgment of the
-apostle, the judgment of the Holy Ghost, it was simply giving up
-Christianity and going back to the worship of idols. "I am afraid of
-you"--and no wonder, when they could thus so speedily turn away from
-the grand characteristic truths of a heavenly Christianity, and occupy
-themselves with superstitious observances. "I am afraid of you, lest I
-have bestowed upon you labor in vain." "Ye did run well; who did
-hinder you, that ye should not obey the truth? This persuasion cometh
-not of Him that calleth you. A little leaven leaveneth the whole
-lump."
-
-And all this in the apostle's own day. The departure was even more
-rapid than in Israel's case; for they served the Lord all the days of
-Joshua, and all the days of the elders that outlived Joshua; but in
-the Church's sad and humiliating history, the enemy succeeded almost
-immediately in introducing leaven into the meal, tares among the
-wheat. Ere the apostles themselves had left the scene, seed was sown
-which has been bearing its pernicious fruit ever since, and shall
-continue to bear till angelic reapers clear the field.
-
-But we must give further proof from Scripture. Let us hearken to the
-same inspired witness, near the close of his ministry, pouring out his
-heart to his beloved son Timothy, in accents at once pathetic and
-solemn. "This thou knowest, that all they which are in Asia be turned
-away from me." Again, "Preach the Word; be instant in season, out of
-season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine.
-For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but
-after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having
-itching ears; and _they shall turn away their ears from the truth_,
-and shall be turned unto fables."
-
-Here is the testimony of the man who, as a wise master-builder, had
-laid the foundation of the Church. And what was his own personal
-experience? He was, like his blessed Master, left alone, deserted by
-those who had once gathered around him in the freshness, bloom, and
-ardor of early days. His large loving heart was broken by Judaizing
-teachers, who sought to overturn the very foundations of Christianity,
-and to overthrow the faith of God's elect. He wept over the ways of
-many who, while they made a profession, were nevertheless "the enemies
-of the cross of Christ."
-
-In a word, the apostle Paul, as he looked forth from his prison at
-Rome, saw the hopeless wreck and ruin of the professing body. He saw
-that it would happen to that body as it had happened to the ship in
-which he had made his last voyage--a voyage strikingly significant and
-illustrative of the Church's sad history in this world.
-
-But here let us just remind the reader that we are dealing now only
-with the question of the Church as a responsible witness for Christ on
-the earth. This must be distinctly seen, else we shall greatly err in
-our thoughts on the subject. We must accurately distinguish between
-the Church as the body of Christ, and as His light-bearer or witness
-in the world. In the former character, failure is impossible; in the
-latter, the ruin is complete and hopeless.
-
-The Church as the body of Christ, united to her living and glorified
-Head in the heavens, by the presence and indwelling of the Holy Ghost,
-can never, by any possibility, fail--never be smashed to pieces, like
-Paul's ship, by the storms and billows of this hostile world. It is as
-safe as Christ Himself. The Head and the body are one--indissolubly
-one. No power of earth or hell--men or devils can ever touch the
-feeblest and most obscure member of that blessed body. All stand
-before God, all are under His gracious eye, in the fullness, beauty,
-and acceptability of Christ Himself. As is the Head, so are the
-members--all the members together--each member in particular. All
-stand in the full eternal results of Christ's finished work on the
-cross. There is, there can be, no question of responsibility here. The
-Head made Himself responsible for the members. He perfectly met every
-claim, and discharged every liability. Nothing remains but love--love,
-deep as the heart of Christ, perfect as His work, unchanging as His
-throne. Every question that could possibly be raised against any one
-or all of the members of the Church of God was raised, gone into, and
-definitively settled, between God and His Christ, on the cross. All
-the sins, all the iniquities, all the transgressions, all the guilt,
-of each member in particular, and all the members together--yes, all,
-in the fullest and most absolute way, was laid on Christ and borne by
-Him. God, in His inflexible justice, in His infinite holiness, in His
-eternal righteousness, dealt with every thing that could ever, in any
-possible manner, stand in the way of the full salvation, perfect
-blessedness, and everlasting glory of every one of the members of the
-body of Christ--the assembly of God. Every member of the body is
-permeated by the life of the Head; every stone in the building is
-animated by the life of the Chief Corner-Stone. All are bound together
-in the power of a bond which can never--no, never be dissolved.
-
-And furthermore, let it be distinctly understood that the unity of the
-body of Christ is absolutely indissoluble. This is a cardinal point
-which must be tenaciously held and faithfully confessed. But obviously
-it cannot be held and confessed unless it is understood and believed;
-and, judging from the expressions which one sometimes hears in
-speaking on the subject, it is very questionable indeed if people so
-expressing themselves have ever grasped in a divine way the glorious
-truth of the unity of the body of Christ--a unity maintained on earth
-by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost.
-
-Thus, for example, we sometimes hear people speak of "rending the body
-of Christ." It is a complete mistake. Such a thing is utterly
-impossible. The Reformers were accused of rending the body of Christ
-when they turned their backs upon the Romish system. What a gross
-misconception! It simply amounted to the monstrous assumption that a
-vast mass of moral evil, doctrinal error, ecclesiastical corruption,
-and debasing superstition was to be owned as the body of Christ! How
-could any one with the New Testament in his hand regard the so-called
-church of Rome, with its numberless and nameless abominations, as the
-body of Christ? How could any one possessing the very faintest idea of
-the true Church of God ever think of bestowing that title upon the
-darkest mass of wickedness, the greatest masterpiece of Satan the
-world has ever beheld?
-
-No, reader; we must never confound the ecclesiastical systems of this
-world--ancient, medieval, or modern; Greek, Latin, Anglican; national
-or popular, established or dissenting--with the true Church of God,
-the body of Christ. There is not, beneath the canopy of heaven, this
-day, nor ever was, a religious system, call it what you please,
-possessing the very smallest claim to be called "the Church of God,"
-or "the body of Christ." And, as a consequence, it can never be
-rightly or intelligently called schism, or rending the body of Christ,
-to separate from such systems; nay, on the contrary, it is the bounden
-duty of every one who would faithfully maintain and confess the truth
-of the unity of the body to separate, with the most unqualified
-decision, from every thing falsely calling itself a church. It can
-only be viewed as schism to separate from those who are unmistakably
-and unquestionably gathered on the ground of the assembly of God.
-
-No body of Christians can now lay claim to the title of the body of
-Christ, or Church of God. The members of that body are scattered every
-where; they are to be found in all the various religious organizations
-of the day, save such as deny the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ. We
-cannot admit the idea that any true Christian could continue to
-frequent a place where his Lord is blasphemed. But although no body of
-Christians can lay claim to the title of the assembly of God, all
-Christians are responsible to be gathered on the ground of that
-assembly, and on no other.
-
-And if we be asked, How are we to know--where are we to find this
-ground? We reply, "If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be
-full of light." "If any man _will do_ His will, he shall know of the
-doctrine." "_There is a path_" (thanks be to God for it!) though "no
-fowl knoweth, and the vulture's eye hath not seen it. The lion's
-whelps have not trodden it, nor the fierce lion passed by it."
-Nature's keenest vision cannot see this path, nor its greatest
-strength tread it. Where is it, then? Here it is: "_Unto man_"--to the
-reader and to the writer, to each, to all--"He said, 'Behold, _the
-fear of the Lord_, that is wisdom; and _to depart from evil_ is
-understanding.'" (Job xxviii.)
-
-But there is another expression which we not unfrequently hear from
-persons from whom we might expect more intelligence, namely, "Cutting
-off the members of the body of Christ."[22] This, too, blessed be God,
-is impossible. Not a single member of the body of Christ can ever be
-severed from the Head, or ever disturbed from the place into which he
-has been incorporated by the Holy Ghost, in pursuance of the eternal
-purpose of God, and in virtue of the accomplished atonement of our
-Lord Jesus Christ. The divine Three in One are pledged for the eternal
-security of the very feeblest member of the body, and for the
-maintenance of the indissoluble unity of the whole.
-
- [22] The expression, "Cutting off the members of Christ's body" is
- generally applied in cases of discipline; but it is quite a
- misapplication. The discipline of the assembly can never touch the
- unity of the body. A member of the body may so fail in morals or err
- in doctrine as to call for the action of the assembly in putting him
- away from the table, but that has nothing to do with his place in the
- body. The two things are perfectly distinct.
-
-In a word, then, it is as true to-day as it was when the inspired
-apostle penned the fourth chapter of his epistle to the Ephesians,
-that "there is one body," of which Christ is Head, of which the Holy
-Ghost is the formative power, and of which all true believers are
-members. This body has been on earth since the day of Pentecost, is on
-earth now, and shall continue on earth until that moment, so rapidly
-approaching, when Christ shall come and take it to His Father's house.
-It is the same body, with a continual succession of members, just as
-we speak of a certain regiment of her majesty's army having been at
-Waterloo, and now quartered at Aldershot, though not a man in the
-regiment of to-day appeared at the memorable battle of 1815.
-
-Does the reader feel any difficulty as to all this? It may be that he
-finds it hard, in the present broken and scattered condition of the
-members, to believe and confess the unbroken unity of the whole. He
-may feel disposed, perhaps, to limit the application of Ephesians iv.
-4 to the day in which the apostle penned the words, when Christians
-were manifestly one, and when there was no such thing thought of as
-being a member of this church or a member of that church, because all
-believers were members of _the_ one Church.[23]
-
- [23] The unity of the Church may be compared to a chain thrown across
- a river; we see it at each side, but it dips in the middle. But though
- it dips, it is not broken; though we do not _see_ the union in the
- middle, we _believe_ it is there all the same. The Church was seen in
- its unity on the day of Pentecost, and it will be seen in its unity in
- the glory; and although we do not see it now, we nevertheless believe
- it most surely.
-
- And be it remembered that the unity of the body is a great practical,
- formative truth; and one very weighty practical deduction from it is
- that the state and walk of each member affect the whole body. "If one
- member suffer, all the members suffer with it." A member of what? Some
- local assembly? Nay; but a member of the body. We must not make the
- body of Christ a matter of geography.
-
- But, we may be asked, are we affected by what we do not see or know?
- Assuredly. Are we to limit the grand truth of the unity of the body,
- with all its practical consequences, to the measure of our personal
- knowledge and experience? Far be the thought. It is the presence of
- the Holy Ghost that unites the members of the body to the Head and to
- one another; and hence it is that the walk and ways of each affect
- all. Even in Israel's case, where it was not a corporate but a
- national unity, when Achan sinned, it was said, "Israel hath sinned;"
- and the whole congregation suffered a humiliating defeat on account of
- a sin of which they were ignorant.
-
- It is perfectly marvelous how little the Lord's people seem to
- understand the glorious truth of the unity of the body, and the
- practical consequences flowing from it.
-
-In reply, we must protest against the very idea of limiting the Word
-of God. What possible right have we to single out one clause from
-Ephesians iv. 4-6, and say it only applied to the days of the
-apostles? If one clause is to be so limited, why not all? Are there
-not still "one Spirit, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and
-Father of all"? Will any question this? Surely not. Well, then, it
-follows that there is as surely one body as there is one Spirit, one
-Lord, one God. All are intimately bound up together, and you cannot
-touch one without touching all. We have no more right to deny the
-existence of the one body than we have to deny the existence of God,
-inasmuch as the self-same passage that declares to us the one declares
-to us the other also.
-
-But some will doubtless inquire, Where is this one body to be seen? Is
-it not an absurdity to speak of such a thing, in the face of the
-almost numberless denominations of christendom? Our answer is this: We
-are not going to surrender the truth of God because man has so
-signally failed to carry it out. Did not Israel utterly fail to
-maintain, confess, and carry out the truth of the unity of the
-Godhead? and was that glorious truth, in the smallest degree, touched
-by their failure? Was it not as true that there was one God, though
-there were as many idolatrous altars as streets in Jerusalem, and
-every housetop sent up a cloud of incense to the queen of heaven, as
-when Moses sounded forth, in the ears of the whole congregation, those
-sublime words, "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord"? Blessed
-be God, His truth does not depend upon the faithless, foolish ways of
-men. It stands in its own divine integrity; it shines in its own
-heavenly, undimmed lustre, spite of the grossest human failure. Were
-it not so, what should we do? whither should we turn? or what would
-become of us? In fact, it comes to this: if we were only to believe
-the measure of truth which we see practically carried out in the ways
-of men, we might give up in despair, and be of all men most
-miserable.
-
-But how is the truth of the one body to be practically carried out? By
-refusing to own any other principle of Christian fellowship--any other
-ground of meeting. All true believers should meet on the simple ground
-of membership of the body of Christ, and on no other. They should
-assemble, on the first day of the week, around the Lord's table, and
-break bread, as members of the one body, as we read in 1 Corinthians
-x, "For we, being many, are one loaf, one body; for we are all
-partakers of that one loaf." This is as true and as practical to-day
-as it was when the apostle addressed the assembly at Corinth. True,
-there were divisions at Corinth as there are divisions in christendom;
-but that did not in any wise touch the truth of God. The apostle
-rebuked the divisions--pronounced them carnal. He had no sympathy with
-the poor, low idea which one sometimes hears advocated, that divisions
-are good things, as superinducing emulation. He believed they were
-very bad things--the fruit of the flesh, the work of Satan.
-
-Neither, we feel persuaded, would the apostle have accepted the
-popular illustration that divisions in the Church are like so many
-regiments, with different facings, all fighting under the same
-commander-in-chief. It would not hold good for a moment; indeed, it
-has no application whatever, but rather gives a flat contradiction to
-that distinct and emphatic statement, "There is one body."
-
-Reader, this is a most glorious truth. Let us ponder it deeply. Let us
-look at christendom in the light of it. Let us judge our own position
-and ways by it. Are we acting on it? Do we give expression to it, at
-the Lord's table, every Lord's day? Be assured it is our sacred duty
-and high privilege so to do. Say not there are difficulties of all
-sorts, many stumbling-blocks in the way, much to dishearten us in the
-conduct of those who profess to meet on this very ground of which we
-speak.
-
-All this is, alas! but too true. We must be quite prepared for it. The
-devil will leave no stone unturned to cast dust in our eyes, so that
-we may not see God's blessed way for His people. But we must not give
-heed to his suggestions or be snared by his devices. There always have
-been, and there always will be difficulties in the way of carrying out
-the precious truth of God; and perhaps one of the greatest
-difficulties is found in the inconsistent conduct of those who profess
-to act upon it.
-
-But then we must ever distinguish between the truth and those who
-profess it--between the ground and the conduct of those who occupy it.
-Of course, they ought to harmonize, but they do not; and hence we are
-imperatively called to judge the conduct by the ground, not the ground
-by the conduct. If we saw a man farming on a principle which we knew
-to be thoroughly sound, but he was a bad farmer, what should we do? Of
-course, we should reject his mode of working, but hold the principle
-all the same.
-
-Not otherwise is it in reference to the truth now before us. There
-were heresies at Corinth, schisms, errors, evils of all sorts. What
-then? Was the truth of God to be surrendered as a myth, as something
-wholly impracticable? was it all to be given up? Were the Corinthians
-to meet on some other principle? were they to organize themselves on
-some new ground? were they to gather around some fresh centre? No,
-thank God! His truth was not to be surrendered for a moment, although
-Corinth was split up into ten thousand sects, and its horizon darkened
-by ten thousand heresies. The body of Christ is one; and the apostle
-simply displays in their view the banner with this blessed
-inscription: "Ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular."
-
-Now, these words were addressed, not merely "unto the church at
-Corinth," but also "to all that in every place call upon the name of
-Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours." Hence, the truth of the
-one body is abiding and universal. Every true Christian is bound to
-recognize it and to act on it, and every assembly of Christians,
-wherever convened, should be the local expression of this grand and
-all-important truth.
-
-Some might perhaps feel disposed to ask how it could be said to any
-one assembly, "Ye are the body of Christ." Were there not saints at
-Ephesus, Colosse, and Philippi? No doubt; and had the apostle been
-addressing them on the same subject, he could have said to them
-likewise, "Ye are the body of Christ," inasmuch as they were the
-local expression of the body; and not only so, but, in addressing
-them, he had before his mind all saints, to the end of the Church's
-earthly career.
-
-But we must bear in mind that the apostle could not possibly address
-such words to any human organization, ancient or modern. No; nor if
-all such organizations, call them what you please, were amalgamated
-into one, could he speak of it as "the body of Christ." That body, let
-it be distinctly understood, consists of all true believers on the
-face of the earth. That they are not gathered on that only divine
-ground, is their serious loss and their Lord's dishonor. The precious
-truth holds good all the same--"There is one body," and this is the
-divine standard by which to measure every ecclesiastical association
-and every religious system under the sun.
-
-We deem it needful to go somewhat fully into the divine side of the
-question of the Church, in order to guard the truth of God from the
-results of misapprehension, and also that the reader may clearly
-understand that in speaking of the utter failure and ruin of the
-Church, we are looking at the human side of the subject. To this
-latter we must return for a moment.
-
-It is impossible to read the New Testament with a calm and
-unprejudiced mind and not see that the Church as a responsible witness
-for Christ on the earth has most signally and shamefully failed. To
-quote all the passages in proof of this statement would literally
-fill a small volume; but let us glance at the second and third
-chapters of the book of Revelation, where the Church is seen under
-judgment. We have, in these solemn chapters, what we may call a divine
-Church-history. Seven assemblies are taken up, as illustrative of the
-various phases of the Church's history, from the day in which it was
-set up, in responsibility, on the earth, until it shall be spued out
-of the Lord's mouth, as something utterly intolerable. If we do not
-see that these two chapters are prophetic, as well as historic, we
-shall deprive ourselves of a vast field of most valuable instruction.
-For ourselves, we can only assure the reader that no human language
-could adequately set forth what we have gathered from Revelation ii.
-and iii., in their prophetic aspect.
-
-However, we are only referring to them now as the last of a series of
-Scripture proofs of our present thesis. Take the address to Ephesus,
-the self-same church to which the apostle Paul wrote his marvelous
-epistle, opening up so blessedly the heavenly side of things, God's
-eternal purpose respecting the Church--the position and portion of the
-Church, as accepted in Christ and blessed with all spiritual blessings
-in the heavenlies in Him. No failure here; no thought of such a thing;
-no possibility of it. All is in God's hands here. The counsel is His;
-the work His. It is His grace, His glory, His mighty power, His good
-pleasure; and all founded upon the blood of Christ. There is no
-question of responsibility here. The Church was "dead in trespasses
-and sins;" but Christ died for her; He placed Himself judicially where
-she was morally; and God, in His sovereign grace, entered the scene
-and raised up Christ from the dead, and the Church in Him. Glorious
-fact! Here all is sure and settled. It is the Church in the heavenlies
-_in_ Christ, not the Church on earth _for_ Christ,--it is _the body_
-"_accepted_," not _the candlestick judged_. If we do not see both
-sides of this great question, we have much to learn.
-
-But there is the earthly side as well as the heavenly--the human as
-well as the divine--the candlestick as well as the body. Hence it is
-that in the judicial address in Revelation ii. we read such solemn
-words as these: "_I have against thee_, that thou hast left thy first
-love."
-
-How very distinct! Nothing like this in Ephesians; nothing against the
-body, nothing against the bride; but there is something against the
-candlestick. The light had even already become dim. Hardly had it been
-lighted ere the snuffers were needed.
-
-Thus, at the very outset, symptoms of decline showed themselves,
-unmistakably, to the penetrating eye of Him who walked amongst the
-seven golden candlesticks; and when we reach the close, and
-contemplate the last phase of the Church's condition--the last stage
-of its earthly history, as illustrated by the assembly at
-Laodicea--there is not a single redeeming feature. The case is almost
-hopeless. The Lord is outside the door.--"Behold, I stand at the
-door, and knock." It is not here as at Ephesus, "I have somewhat
-against thee." The whole condition is bad. The whole professing body
-is about to be given up.--"I will spue thee out of My mouth." He still
-lingers, blessed be His name, for He is ever slow to leave the place
-of mercy, or enter the place of judgment. It reminds us of the
-departure of the glory, in the opening of Ezekiel. It moved with a
-slow and measured pace, loth to leave the house, the people, and the
-land. "Then the glory of the Lord went up from the cherub, and stood
-over the threshold of the house; and the house was filled with the
-cloud, and the court was full of the brightness of the Lord's glory."
-"Then the glory of the Lord departed from off the threshold of the
-house, and stood over the cherubim." And finally, "the glory of the
-Lord went up from the midst of the city, and stood upon the mountain
-which is on the east side of the city." (Ezek. x. 4, 18; xi. 23.)
-
-This is deeply affecting. How striking the contrast between this slow
-departure of the glory and its speedy entrance, in the day of
-Solomon's dedication of the house in 2 Chronicles vii. 1. Jehovah was
-quick to enter His abode in the midst of His people; slow to leave it.
-He was, to speak after the manner of men, forced away by the sins and
-hopeless impenitence of His infatuated people.
-
-So also with the Church. We see in the second of Acts His rapid
-entrance into His spiritual house. He came like a rushing mighty wind
-to fill the house with His glory. But in the third of Revelation, see
-His attitude: He is outside. Yes; but He is knocking. He lingers, not
-indeed with any hope of corporate restoration, but if haply "_any man_
-would hear His voice and open the door." The fact of His being outside
-shows what the church is. The fact of His knocking shows what He is.
-
-Christian reader, see that you thoroughly understand this whole
-subject: it is of the very last importance that you should. We are
-surrounded on all sides with false notions as to the present condition
-and future destiny of the professing church. We must fling these all
-behind our backs, with holy decision, and listen, with circumcised ear
-and reverent mind, to the teaching of holy Scripture. That teaching is
-as clear as noonday. The professing church is a hopeless ruin, and
-judgment is at the door. Read the epistle of Jude; read 2 Peter ii.
-and iii.; read 2 Timothy. Just lay aside this volume and look closely
-into those solemn scriptures, and we feel persuaded you will rise from
-the study with the deep and thorough conviction that there is nothing
-whatever before christendom but the unmitigated wrath of Almighty God.
-Its doom is set forth in that brief but solemn sentence in Romans xi.,
-"Thou also shalt be cut off."
-
-Yes; such is the language of Scripture.--"Cut off"--"spued out." The
-professing church has utterly failed as Christ's witness on the earth.
-As with Israel, so with the Church, the very truth which she was
-responsible to maintain and confess, she had faithlessly surrendered.
-Hardly had the canon of New-Testament scripture closed, hardly had the
-first set of laborers left the field, ere gross darkness set in, and
-settled down upon the whole professing body. Turn where you will,
-range through the ponderous tomes of "the fathers," as they are
-called, and you will not find a trace of those grand characteristic
-truths of our glorious Christianity. All, all was shamefully
-abandoned. As Israel in Canaan abandoned Jehovah for Baal and
-Ashtaroth, so the Church abandoned the pure and precious truth of God
-for puerile fables and deadly errors. The rapid departure is perfectly
-astounding; but it was just as the apostle Paul forewarned the elders
-of Ephesus.--"Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the
-flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed
-the Church of God, which He hath purchased with His own blood. For I
-know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in
-among you, not sparing the flock. Also from among your own selves
-shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples
-after them." (Acts xx.)
-
-How truly deplorable! The holy apostles of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
-Christ almost immediately succeeded by "grievous wolves" and teachers
-of perverse things; the whole Church plunged into thick darkness; the
-lamp of divine revelation almost hidden from view; ecclesiastical
-corruption in every form; priestly domination with all its terrible
-accompaniments. In short, the history of the Church--the history of
-christendom is the most appalling record ever penned.
-
-True it is, thanks be to God, He left not Himself without a witness.
-Here and there, from time to time, just as in Israel of old, He raised
-up one and another to speak for Him. Even amid the deepest gloom of
-the middle ages, an occasional star appears upon the horizon. The
-Waldenses and others were enabled, by the grace of God, to hold fast
-His Word and to confess the name of Jesus in the face of Rome's dark
-and terrible tyranny, and diabolical cruelty.
-
-Then came that gracious season, in the sixteenth century, when God
-raised up Luther and his beloved and honored fellow-laborers to preach
-the great truth of justification by faith, and to give the precious
-volume of God to the people, in their own tongue wherein they were
-born. It is not within the compass of human language to set forth the
-blessing of that memorable time. Thousands heard the glad tidings of
-salvation--heard, believed, and were saved. Thousands, who had long
-groaned beneath the intolerable weight of Romish superstition, hailed,
-with profound thankfulness, the heavenly message. Thousands flocked,
-with intense delight, to draw water from those wells of inspiration
-which had been stopped for ages by papal ignorance and intolerance.
-The blessed lamp of divine revelation, so long hidden by the enemy's
-hand, was permitted to cast its rays athwart the gloom, and thousands
-rejoiced in its heavenly light.
-
-But while we heartily bless God for all the glorious results of what
-is commonly called the reformation, in the sixteenth century, we
-should make a very grave mistake indeed were we to imagine that it was
-any thing approaching to a restoration of the Church to its original
-condition. Far--very far from it. Luther and his companions, if we are
-to judge from their writings--precious writings, many of them--never
-grasped the divine idea of the Church as the body of Christ. They did
-not understand the unity of the body; the presence of the Holy Ghost
-in the assembly, as well as His indwelling in the individual believer;
-they never reached the grand truth of ministry in the Church, "its
-nature, source, power, and responsibility;" they never got beyond the
-idea of human authority as the basis of ministry; they were silent as
-to the specific hope of the Church, namely, the coming of Christ for
-His people--the bright and morning Star; they failed to seize the
-proper scope of prophecy, and proved themselves incompetent rightly to
-divide the word of truth.
-
-Let us not be misunderstood. We love the memory of the reformers.
-Their names are familiar household words amongst us. They were dear,
-devoted, earnest, blessed servants of Christ. Would that we had their
-like amongst us in this day of revived popery and rampant infidelity.
-We would yield to none in our love and esteem for Luther, Melanchthon,
-Farel, Latimer, and Knox. They were truly bright and shining lights in
-their day; and thousands--yea, millions will thank God throughout
-eternity that they ever lived and preached and wrote. And not only
-so, but, looked at in their private life and public ministry, they put
-to shame many of those who have been favored with a range of truth for
-which we look in vain in the voluminous writings of the reformers.
-
-But, admitting all this, as we most freely and gratefully do, we are
-nevertheless convinced that those beloved and honored servants of
-Christ failed to seize, and therefore failed to preach and teach, many
-of the special and characteristic truths of Christianity; at least, we
-have failed to find these truths in their writings. They preached the
-precious truth of justification by faith; they gave the holy
-Scriptures to the people; they trampled under foot much of the rubbish
-of Romish superstition.
-
-All this they did, by the grace of God, and for all this we bow our
-heads in deep thankfulness and praise to the Father of mercies. But
-Protestantism is not Christianity; nor are the so-called churches of
-the reformation, whether national or dissenting, the Church of God.
-Far from it. We look back over the course of eighteen centuries, and
-spite of the occasional revivals, spite of the brilliant lights which
-at various times have shone upon the Church's horizon--lights which
-appeared all the brighter in contrast with the deep gloom that
-surrounded them--spite of the many gracious visitations of God's
-Spirit, both in Europe and America, during the past and present
-century--spite of all these things, for which we most heartily bless
-God, we return with decision to the statement already advanced, that
-the professing church is a hopeless wreck; that christendom is rapidly
-hastening down the inclined plane, to the blackness of darkness
-forever; that those highly favored lands, where much evangelical truth
-has been preached, where Bibles have been circulated in millions, and
-gospel tracts in billions, shall yet be covered with thick
-darkness--given over to strong delusion to believe a lie.
-
-And then?--ah, what then? _A converted world?_ Nay, but a _judged
-church_. The true saints of God, scattered throughout christendom--all
-the true members of the body of Christ, will be caught up to meet
-their coming Lord--the dead saints raised, the living changed, in a
-moment, and all taken up together to be forever with the Lord. Then
-the mystery will rise to a head in the person of the man of sin--the
-lawless one, the Antichrist. The Lord Jesus shall come, and all His
-saints with Him, to execute judgment on the beast, or revived Roman
-empire, and the false prophet, or Antichrist--the former in the west,
-the latter in the east.
-
-This will be a summary act of direct warrior judgment, without any
-judicial process whatever, inasmuch as both the beast and false
-prophet shall be found in open rebellion and blasphemous opposition to
-God and the Lamb. Then comes the sessional judgment of the living
-nations, as recorded in Matthew xxv. 31-46.
-
-Thus, all evil having been put down, Christ shall reign, in
-righteousness and peace, for a thousand years. A bright and blessed
-time! the true Sabbath for Israel and the whole earth--a period marked
-by the grand facts, Satan bound and Christ reigning. Glorious facts!
-The very reference to them causes the heart to overflow in praise and
-thanksgiving. What will the reality be?
-
-But Satan shall be loosed from his thousand years' captivity, and
-allowed to make one more effort against God and His Christ.--"And when
-the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his
-prison, and shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four
-quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to
-battle, the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.[24] And they
-went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the
-saints about, and the beloved city; and fire came down from God out of
-heaven, and devoured them. And the devil that deceived them was cast
-into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false
-prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night forever and ever."
-(Rev. xx. 7-10.)
-
- [24] The reader must distinguish between the Gog and Magog of
- Revelation xx. and those of Ezekiel xxxviii. and xxxix. The former are
- post-millennial; the latter, pre-millennial.
-
-This will be Satan's last effort, issuing in his eternal perdition.
-Then we have the judgment of the dead, "small and great"--the
-sessional judgment of all those who shall have died in their sins,
-from the days of Cain down to the last apostate from millennial glory.
-Tremendous scene! No heart can conceive, no tongue--no pen set forth,
-its awful solemnity.
-
-Finally, we have unfolded to the vision of our souls the everlasting
-state--the new heaven and the new earth wherein righteousness shall
-dwell, throughout the golden ages of eternity.
-
-Such is the order of events as set forth, with all possible clearness,
-on the page of inspiration. We have given a brief summary of them in
-connection with the line of truth on which we have been dwelling--a
-line, as we are fully aware, by no means popular; but we dare not
-withhold it on that account. Our business is to declare the whole
-counsel of God, not to seek popularity. We do not expect the truth of
-God to be popular in christendom; so far from this, we have been
-seeking to prove that just as Israel abandoned the truth which they
-were responsible to maintain, so the professing church has let slip
-all those great truths which characterize the Christianity of the New
-Testament. And we may assure the reader that our one object in
-pursuing this line of argument is to arouse the hearts of all true
-Christians to a sense of the value of those truths, and of their
-responsibility, not only to receive them, but to seek a fuller
-realization and a bolder confession of them. We long to see a band of
-men raised up, in these closing hours of the Church's earthly history,
-who shall go forth, in true spiritual power, and proclaim, with
-unction and energy, the long-forgotten truths of the gospel of God.
-May God, in His great mercy to His people, raise up such and send
-them forth. May the Lord Jesus knock louder and louder at the door, so
-that many may hear and open to Him, according to the desire of His
-loving heart, and taste the blessedness of deep personal communion
-with Himself, while waiting for His coming.
-
-Blessed be God, there is no limit whatever to the blessing of the
-individual soul who hears Christ's voice and opens the door; and what
-is true of one is true of hundreds or thousands. Only let us be real
-and simple and true, feeling and owning our utter feebleness and
-nothingness, laying aside all assumption and empty pretension, not
-seeking to be any thing or to set up any thing, but holding fast
-Christ's word and not denying His name, finding our happy place at His
-feet, our satisfying portion in Himself, and our real delight in
-serving Him in any little way. Thus we shall get on harmoniously,
-lovingly, and happily together, finding our common centre in Christ,
-and our common object in seeking to further His cause and promote His
-glory. O that it were thus with all the Lord's beloved people in this
-our day! we should then have a very different tale to tell, and
-present a very different aspect to the world around. May the Lord
-revive His work.
-
-It may perhaps seem to the reader that we have wandered a long way
-from the sixth chapter of Deuteronomy; but we must remind him, once
-for all, that it is not merely what each chapter _contains_ that
-demands our attention, but also what it _suggests_. And further, we
-may add that, in sitting down to write, from time to time, it is our
-one desire to be led by God's Spirit into the very line of truth which
-may be suited to the need of all our readers. If only the beloved
-flock of Christ be fed, instructed, and comforted, we care not whether
-it be by well-connected notes or broken fragments.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-Moses having laid down the grand foundation-truth contained in the
-fourth verse--"Hear, O Israel; the Lord our God is one Lord," proceeds
-to press upon the congregation their sacred duty in respect to this
-blessed One. It was not merely that there was _a_ God, but He was
-_their_ God. He had deigned to link Himself with them, in
-covenant-relationship. He had redeemed them, borne them on eagles'
-wings, and brought them unto Himself, in order that they might be to
-Him a people, and that He might be their God.
-
-Blessed fact! Blessed relationship! But Israel had to be reminded of
-the conduct suited to such a relationship-conduct which could only
-flow from a loving heart. "Thou shalt love the Lord _thy_ God with
-_all_ thy _heart_, and with _all_ thy soul, and with _all_ thy might."
-Here lies the secret of all true practical religion. Without this, all
-is valueless to God. "My son, give me thine heart." Where the heart is
-given, all will be right. The heart may be compared to the regulator
-of a watch, which acts on the hair-spring, and the hair-spring acts on
-the main-spring, and the main-spring acts on the hands, as they move
-around the dial. If your watch goes wrong, it will not do merely to
-alter the hands, you must touch the regulator. God looks for real
-heart-work, blessed be His name! His word to us is, "My little
-children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue; but in deed and
-in truth."
-
-How we ought to bless Him for such touching words! they do so reveal
-His own loving heart to us. Assuredly, He loved us in deed and in
-truth, and He cannot be satisfied with any thing else, whether in our
-ways with Him or our ways one with another: all must flow straight
-from the heart.
-
-"And these words which I command thee this day, shall be _in thine
-heart_"--at the very source of all the issues of life. This is
-peculiarly precious. Whatever is in the heart comes out through the
-lips and in the life. How important, then, to have the heart full of
-the Word of God--so full, that we shall have no room for the vanities
-and follies of this present evil world. Thus shall our conversation be
-always with grace, seasoned with salt. "Out of the abundance of the
-heart the mouth speaketh." Hence we can judge of what is in the heart
-by what cometh out of the mouth. The tongue is the organ of the
-heart--the organ of the man. "A good man out of the good treasure of
-the heart bringeth forth good things; and an evil man out of the evil
-treasure bringeth forth evil things." When the heart is really
-governed by the Word of God, the whole character reveals the blessed
-result. It must be so, inasmuch as the heart is the main-spring of
-our entire moral condition; it lies at the centre of all those moral
-influences which govern our personal history and shape our practical
-career.
-
-In every part of the divine volume, we see how much importance God
-attaches to the attitude and state of the heart, with respect to Him
-or to His Word, which is one and the same thing. When the heart is
-true to Him, all is sure to come right; but on the other hand, we
-shall find that where the heart grows cold and careless as to God and
-His truth, there will, sooner or later, be open departure from the
-path of truth and righteousness. There is, therefore, much force and
-value in the exhortation addressed by Barnabas to the converts at
-Antioch--"He exhorted them all, that with _purpose of heart_ they
-would cleave unto the Lord."
-
-How needful then, now, always! This "purpose of heart" is most
-precious to God. It is what we may venture to call the grand moral
-regulator. It imparts a lovely earnestness to the Christian character
-which is greatly to be coveted by all of us. It is a divine antidote
-against coldness, deadness, and formality, all of which are so hateful
-to God. The outward life may be very correct, and the creed may be
-very orthodox; but if the earnest purpose of heart be lacking--the
-affectionate cleaving of the whole moral being to God and His Christ,
-all is utterly worthless.
-
-It is through the heart that the Holy Ghost instructs us. Hence, the
-apostle prayed for the saints at Ephesus, that "the eyes of their
-_heart_ [+kardias+, not +dianoias+] might be enlightened;" and again,
-"That Christ may dwell in your _heart_ by faith."
-
-Thus we see how all Scripture is in perfect harmony with the
-exhortation recorded in our chapter, "And these words which I command
-thee this day, shall be in thine heart." How near this would have kept
-them to their covenant-God! How safe, too, from all evil, and
-specially from the abominable evil of idolatry--their national sin,
-their terrible besetment! If Jehovah's precious words had only found
-their right place in the heart, there would have been little fear of
-Baal, Chemosh, or Ashtaroth. In a word, all the idols of the heathen
-would have found their right place, and been estimated at their true
-value, if only the word of Jehovah had been allowed to dwell in
-Israel's heart.
-
-And be it specially noted here how beautifully characteristic all this
-is of the book of Deuteronomy. It is not so much a question of keeping
-up a certain order of religious observances, the offering of
-sacrifices, or attention to rites and ceremonies. All these things, no
-doubt, had their place, but they are by no means the prominent or
-paramount thing in Deuteronomy. No; THE WORD is the all-important
-matter here. It is _Jehovah's word_ in _Israel's heart_.
-
-The reader must seize this fact if he really desires to possess the
-key to the lovely book of Deuteronomy. It is not a book of ceremonial;
-it is a book of moral and affectionate obedience. It teaches, in
-almost every section, that invaluable lesson, that the heart that
-loves, prizes, and honors the Word of God is ready for every act of
-obedience, whether it be the offering of a sacrifice or the observance
-of a day. It might so happen that an Israelite would find himself in a
-place and under circumstances in which a rigid adherence to rites and
-ceremonies would be impossible; but he never could be in a place or in
-circumstances in which he could not love, reverence, and obey the Word
-of God. Let him go where he would--let him be carried, as a captive
-exile, to the ends of the earth, nothing could rob him of the high
-privilege of uttering and acting on those blessed words, "Thy Word
-have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against Thee."
-
-Precious words! They contain, in their brief compass, the great
-principle of the book of Deuteronomy, and, we may add, the great
-principle of the divine life, at all times and in all places. It can
-never lose its moral force and value: it always holds good. It was
-true in the days of the patriarchs, true for Israel in the land, true
-for Israel scattered to the ends of the earth, true for the Church as
-a whole, true for each individual believer amid the Church's hopeless
-ruins. In a word, obedience is always the creature's holy duty and
-exalted privilege--simple, unhesitating, unqualified obedience to the
-Word of the Lord. This is an unspeakable mercy for which we may well
-praise our God, day and night. He has given us His Word, blessed be
-His name, and He exhorts us to let that Word dwell in us
-richly--dwell in our hearts, and assert its holy sway over our entire
-course and character.
-
-"And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine
-heart: and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and
-shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou
-walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.
-And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be
-as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou shalt write them upon the
-posts of thy house, and on thy gates."
-
-All this is perfectly beautiful. The Word of God hidden in the heart;
-flowing out in loving instruction to the children, and in holy
-conversation in the bosom of the family; shining out in all the
-activities of daily life, so that all who came inside the gates or
-entered the house might see that the Word of God was the standard for
-each, for all, and in every thing.
-
-Thus it was to be with Israel of old, and surely thus it ought to be
-with Christians now. But is it so? Are our children thus taught? Is it
-our constant aim to present the Word of God, in all its heavenly
-attractiveness, to their young hearts? Do they see it shining out in
-our daily life? do they see its influence upon our habits, our temper,
-our family intercourse, our business transactions? This is what we
-understand by binding the Word as a sign upon the hands, having it as
-a frontlet between the eyes, writing it upon the door-posts and upon
-the gates.
-
-Reader, is it thus with us? It is of little use attempting to teach
-our children the Word of God if our lives are not governed by that
-Word. We do not believe in making the blessed Word of God a mere
-school-book for our children; to do so is to turn a delightful
-privilege into a wearisome drudgery. Our children should see that we
-live in the very atmosphere of Scripture; that it forms the material
-of our conversation when we sit in the bosom of the family, in our
-moments of relaxation.
-
-Alas! how little is this the case! Have we not to be deeply humbled in
-the presence of God when we reflect upon the general character and
-tone of our conversation at table, and in the family circle? How
-little there is of Deuteronomy vi. 7! How much of "foolish talking and
-jesting, which are not convenient"! How much evil-speaking of our
-brethren, our neighbors, our fellow-laborers! How much idle gossip!
-How much worthless small talk!
-
-And from what does all this proceed? Simply from the state of the
-heart. The Word of God, the commandments and sayings of our Lord and
-Saviour Jesus Christ, are not dwelling in our hearts; and hence they
-are not welling up and flowing out in living streams of grace and
-edification.
-
-Will any one say that Christians do not need to consider these things?
-If so, let him ponder the following wholesome words: "Let no corrupt
-communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the
-use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers." And
-again, "Be filled with the Spirit; speaking to yourselves in psalms
-and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart
-to the Lord; giving thanks always for all things unto God and the
-Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." (Eph. iv. 29; v. 18-20.)
-
-These words were addressed to the saints at Ephesus; and, most
-assuredly, we should apply our hearts diligently to them. We are
-little aware, perhaps, of how deeply and constantly we fail in
-maintaining the habit of spiritual conversation. It is specially in
-the bosom of the family, and in our ordinary intercourse, that this
-failure is most manifest. Hence our need of those words of exhortation
-which we have just penned. It is evident the Holy Spirit foresaw the
-need, and graciously anticipated it. Hear what He says "to the saints
-and faithful brethren in Christ at Colosse,"--"Let the peace of Christ
-rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and
-be ye thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all
-wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and
-spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord." (Col.
-iii.)
-
-Lovely picture of ordinary Christian life! It is but a fuller and
-higher development of what we have in our chapter, where the Israelite
-is seen in the midst of his family, with the Word of God flowing forth
-from his heart in loving instruction to his children--seen in his
-daily life, in all his intercourse at home and abroad, under the
-hallowed influence of Jehovah's words.
-
-Beloved Christian reader, do we not long to see more of all this in
-our midst? Is it not, at times, very sorrowful and very humbling to
-mark the style of conversation that obtains in the midst of our family
-circles? Should we not sometimes blush if we could see our
-conversation reproduced in print? What is the remedy? Here it is--a
-heart filled with the peace of Christ, the word of Christ, Christ
-Himself: nothing else will do. We must begin with the heart, and where
-that is thoroughly preoccupied with heavenly things, we shall make
-very short work with all attempts at evil-speaking, foolish talking,
-and jesting.
-
-"And it shall be, when the Lord thy God shall have brought thee into
-the land which He sware unto thy fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to
-Jacob, to give thee great and goodly cities which thou buildedst not,
-and houses full of all good things which thou filledst not, and wells
-digged which thou diggedst not, and vineyards and olive-trees which
-thou plantedst not; when thou shalt have eaten and be full; then
-beware lest thou forget the Lord, which brought thee forth out of the
-land of Egypt, from the house of bondage." (Ver. 10-12.)
-
-Amid all the blessings, the mercies, and the privileges of the land of
-Canaan, they were to remember that gracious and faithful One who had
-redeemed them out of the land of bondage. They were to remember, too,
-that all these things were His free gift. The land, with all that it
-contained, was bestowed upon them in virtue of His promises to
-Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Cities built and houses furnished, flowing
-wells, fruitful vineyards and olive-yards, all ready to their hand,
-the free gift of sovereign grace and covenant mercy. All they had to
-do was to take possession, in simple faith, and to keep ever in the
-remembrance of the thoughts of their hearts the bounteous Giver of it
-all. They were to think of Him, and find in His redeeming love the
-true motive-spring of a life of loving obedience. Wherever they turned
-their eyes, they beheld the tokens of His great goodness--the rich
-fruit of His marvelous love. Every city, every house, every well,
-every vine, olive and fig-tree, spoke to their hearts of Jehovah's
-abounding grace, and furnished a substantial proof of His infallible
-faithfulness to His promise.
-
-"Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and serve Him, and shalt swear by
-His name. Ye shall not go after other gods, of the gods of the people
-which are round about you; (for the Lord thy God is a jealous God
-among you) lest the anger of the Lord thy God be kindled against thee,
-and destroy thee from off the face of the earth."
-
-There are two great motives set before the congregation, in our
-chapter, namely, "love," in verse 5, and "fear," in verse 13. These
-are found all through Scripture; and their importance in guiding the
-life and forming the character cannot possibly be too highly
-estimated. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." We are
-exhorted to be "in the fear of the Lord all the day." It is a grand
-moral safeguard against all evil. "Unto man He said, 'Behold, the fear
-of the Lord, that is wisdom; and to depart from evil is
-understanding.'"
-
-The blessed Book abounds in passages setting forth, in every possible
-form, the immense importance of the fear of God. "How," says Joseph,
-"can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?" The man who
-walks habitually in the fear of God is preserved from every form of
-moral pravity. The abiding realization of the divine presence must
-prove an effectual shelter from every temptation. How often do we find
-the presence of some very holy and spiritual person a wholesome check
-upon levity and folly; and if such be the moral influence of a
-fellow-mortal, how much more powerful would be the realized presence
-of God!
-
-Christian reader, let us give our serious attention to this weighty
-matter. Let us seek to live in the consciousness that we are in the
-immediate presence of God. Thus shall we be preserved from a thousand
-forms of evil, to which we are exposed from day to day, and to which,
-alas! we are predisposed. The remembrance that the eye of God rests
-upon us would exert a far more powerful influence upon our life and
-conversation than the presence of all the saints upon earth and all
-the angels in heaven. We could not speak falsely, we could not utter
-with our lips what we do not feel in the heart, we could not talk
-folly, we could not speak evil of our brother or our neighbor, we
-could not speak unkindly of any one, if only we felt ourselves in the
-presence of God. In a word, the holy fear of the Lord, of which
-Scripture speaks so much, would act as a most blessed restraint upon
-evil thoughts, evil words, evil ways, evil in every shape and form.
-
-Moreover, it would tend to make us very real and genuine in all our
-sayings and doings. There is a sad amount of sham and nonsense about
-us. We frequently say a great deal more than we feel. We are not
-honest; we do not speak, every man, truth with our neighbor; we give
-expressions to sentiments which are not the genuine utterance of the
-heart; we act the hypocrite one with another.
-
-All these things afford melancholy proof of how little we live, move,
-and have our being in the presence of God. If we could only bear in
-mind that God hears us and sees us--hears our every word and sees our
-every thought, our every way, how differently we should carry
-ourselves! What holy watchfulness we should maintain over our
-thoughts, our tempers, and our tongues! What purity of heart and mind!
-What truth and uprightness in all our intercourse with our fellows!
-What reality and simplicity in our deportment! What happy freedom from
-all affectation, assumption, and pretension! What deliverance from
-every form of self-occupation! O, to live ever in the deep sense of
-the divine presence! to walk in the fear of the Lord all the day long!
-
-And then to prove the "vast constraining influence" of His love! To be
-led out in all the holy activities which that love would ever
-suggest! To find our delight in doing good! To taste the spiritual
-luxury of making hearts glad! To be continually meditating plans of
-usefulness! To live close by the fountain of divine love, so that we
-must be streams of refreshing in the midst of this thirsty scene--rays
-of light amid the moral gloom around us! "The love of Christ," says
-the blessed apostle, "constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if
-one died for all, then were all dead; and that He died for all, that
-they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto
-Him which died for them, and rose again."
-
-How morally lovely is all this! "Would that it were more fully
-realized and faithfully exhibited amongst us! May the fear and love of
-God be continually in our hearts, in all their blessed power and
-formative influence, that thus our daily life may shine to His praise
-and the real profit, comfort, and blessing of all who come in contact
-with us, whether in private or in public. God, in His infinite mercy,
-grant it, for Christ's sake!
-
-The sixteenth verse of our chapter demands our special attention.--"Ye
-shall not tempt the Lord your God, as ye tempted Him in Massah." These
-words were quoted by our blessed Lord when tempted by Satan to cast
-Himself from the pinnacle of the temple.--"Then the devil taketh Him
-up into the holy city, and setteth Him on a pinnacle of the temple,
-and saith unto Him, 'If Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down; for
-it is written, He shall give His angels charge concerning Thee; and
-in their hands they shall bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy
-foot against a stone.'"
-
-This is a very remarkable passage. It proves how Satan can quote
-Scripture when it suits his purpose. But he omits a most important
-clause--"To keep Thee in all Thy ways." Now, it formed no part of the
-ways of Christ to cast Himself from the pinnacle of the temple. It was
-not the path of duty. He had no command from God to do any such thing,
-and hence He refused to do it. He had no need to tempt God--to put Him
-to the test. He had, as a man, the most perfect confidence in God--the
-fullest assurance of His protection.
-
-Moreover, He was not going to abandon the path of duty in order to
-prove God's care of Him; and herein He teaches us a most valuable
-lesson. We can always count on God's protecting hand when we are
-treading the path of duty; but if we are walking in a self-chosen
-path--if we are seeking our own pleasure or our own interest, our own
-ends or objects, then to talk of counting on God would be simply
-wicked presumption.
-
-No doubt, our God is very merciful, very gracious, and His tender
-mercy is over us, even when we wander off the path of duty; but this
-is another thing altogether, and it leaves wholly untouched the
-statement that we can only count on divine protection when our feet
-are in the pathway of duty, if a Christian goes out boating for his
-amusement, or if he goes clambering over the Alps merely for
-sight-seeing, has he any right to believe that God will take care of
-him? Let conscience give the answer. If God calls us to cross a stormy
-lake to preach the gospel, if He summons us to cross the Alps on some
-special service for Him, then, assuredly, we can commit ourselves to
-His mighty hand to protect us from all evil. The grand point for all
-of us is, to be found in the holy path of duty. It may be narrow,
-rough, and lonely; but it is a path overshadowed by the wings of the
-Almighty and illumined by the light of His approving countenance.
-
-Ere turning from the subject suggested by verse 16, we would briefly
-notice the very interesting and instructive fact that our Lord, in His
-reply to Satan, takes no notice whatever of his misquotation of psalm
-xci. 11. Let us carefully note this fact and seek to bear it in mind.
-In place of saying to the enemy, You have left out a most important
-clause of the passage which you undertake to quote, He simply quotes
-another passage, as authority for His own conduct. Thus He vanquished
-the tempter, and thus He left us a blessed example.
-
-It is worthy of our special notice that the Lord Jesus Christ did not
-overcome Satan in virtue of His divine power. Had He done so, it could
-not be an example for us. But when we see Him as a man using the Word
-as His only weapon, and thus gaining a glorious victory, our hearts
-are encouraged and comforted; and not only so, but we learn a most
-precious lesson as to how we, in our sphere and measure, are to stand
-in the conflict. The Man Christ Jesus overcame by simple dependence
-upon God and obedience to His Word.
-
-Blessed fact! A fact full of comfort and consolation for us. Satan
-could do nothing with one who would only act by divine authority, and
-by the power of the Spirit. Jesus never did His own will, though, as
-we know, (blessed be His holy name!) His will was absolutely perfect.
-He came down from heaven, as He Himself tells us, in John vi, not to
-do His own will, but the will of the Father that sent Him. He was a
-perfect servant, from first to last. His rule of action was the Word
-of God; His power of action, the Holy Ghost; His only motive for
-action, the will of God; hence the prince of this world had nothing in
-Him. Satan could not, by all his subtle wiles, draw Him out of the
-path of obedience, or out of the place of dependence.
-
-Christian reader, let us consider these things; let us deeply ponder
-them; let us remember that our blessed Lord and Master left us an
-example that we should follow His steps. Oh, may we follow them
-diligently during the little while that yet remains. May we, by the
-gracious ministry of the Holy Ghost, enter more fully into the great
-fact that we are called to walk even as Jesus walked. He is our great
-Exemplar in all things. Let us study Him more profoundly, so that we
-may reproduce Him more faithfully.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now close this lengthened section by quoting for the reader
-the last paragraph of the chapter on which we have been dwelling; it
-is a passage of singular fullness, depth, and power, and strikingly
-characteristic of the entire book of Deuteronomy.
-
-"Ye shall _diligently_ keep the commandments of the Lord your God, and
-His testimonies, and His statutes, which He hath commanded thee. And
-thou shalt do that which is right and good in the sight of the Lord;
-that it may be well with thee, and that thou mayest go in and possess
-the good land which the Lord sware unto thy fathers; to cast out all
-thine enemies from before thee, as the Lord hath spoken. And when thy
-son asketh thee in time to come, saying, What mean the testimonies and
-the statutes and the judgments which the Lord our God hath commanded
-you? Then thou shalt say unto thy son, We were Pharaoh's bondmen in
-Egypt; and the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand; and
-the Lord showed signs and wonders, great and sore, upon Egypt, upon
-Pharaoh, and upon all his household, before our eyes; and He brought
-us out from thence, that He might bring us in, to give us the land
-which He sware unto our fathers. And the Lord commanded us to do all
-these statutes, to fear the Lord our God, for our good always, that He
-might preserve us alive, as it is at this day. And it shall be our
-righteousness, if we observe to do all these commandments before the
-Lord our God, as He hath commanded us."
-
-How prominently is the Word of God kept before the soul, in every page
-and every paragraph of this book! It is the one great subject on the
-heart and in all the discourses of the revered lawgiver. It is his one
-aim to exalt the Word of God, in all its aspects, whether in the form
-of testimonies, commandments, statutes, or judgments; and to set forth
-the moral importance, yea, the urgent necessity of whole-hearted,
-earnest, diligent obedience, on the part of the people. "Ye shall
-_diligently_ keep the commandments of the Lord your God." And again,
-"Thou shalt do that which is _right_ and _good_ in the sight of the
-Lord."
-
-All this is morally lovely. We have here unfolded before our eyes
-those eternal principles which no change of dispensation, no change of
-scene, place, or circumstances can ever touch. "That which is right
-and good" must ever be of universal and abiding application. It
-reminds us of the words of the apostle John to his beloved friend
-Gaius--"Beloved, follow not that which is evil, but that which is
-good." The assembly might be in a very low condition; there might be
-very much to try the heart and depress the spirit of Gaius; Diotrephes
-might be carrying himself most unbecomingly and unwarrantably toward
-the beloved and venerable apostle and others; all this might be true,
-and much more--yea, the whole professing body might go wrong. What
-then? What remained for Gaius to do? Simply to follow that which was
-right and good; to open his heart and his hand and his house to every
-one who brought _the truth_; to seek to help on the cause of Christ in
-every right way.
-
-This was the business of Gaius in his day, and this is the business of
-every true lover of Christ at all times, in all places, and under all
-circumstances. We may not have many to join us; we may perhaps find
-ourselves, at times, almost alone; but we are still to follow what is
-good, cost what it may. We are to _depart_ from iniquity--_purge_
-ourselves from dishonorable vessels--_flee_ youthful lusts--_turn
-away_ from powerless professors. And what then? "Follow righteousness,
-faith, love, peace"--How? In isolation? Nay. I may find myself alone
-in any given place for a time, but there can be no such thing as
-isolation so long as the body of Christ is on earth, and that will be
-till He comes for us. Hence we never expect to see the day in which we
-cannot find a few that call on the Lord out of a pure heart; whoever
-they are and wherever they are, it is our bounden duty to find them,
-and, having found them, to walk with them in holy fellowship "until
-the end."
-
- * * * * *
-
-_P.S._--We must reserve the remaining chapters of Deuteronomy for
-another volume. May the Lord be graciously pleased to grant His rich
-blessing upon our meditations thus far. May He clothe these pages with
-the power of the Holy Ghost, and make them to be a direct message from
-Himself to the hearts of His people throughout the whole world. May He
-also grant spiritual power to unfold the truth contained in the
-remaining sections of this most profound, comprehensive, and
-suggestive book.
-
-We earnestly beseech the Christian reader to join us in prayer as to
-all this, remembering those most precious words, "If two of you shall
-_agree_ on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall
-be done for them by My Father which is in heaven."
-
- _C. H. M._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-Greek is enclosed in +Greek+.
-
-Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
-
-Variations in spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been retained
-except in obvious cases of typographical error.
-
-
-
-
-
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-Volume I, by Charles Henry Mackintosh
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<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy Volume 1, by Charles Henry Mackintosh.
@@ -157,48 +157,7 @@ div.fn {
<link rel="coverpage" href="images/coverpage.jpg"/>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I, by
-Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I
-
-Author: Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-Release Date: December 6, 2012 [EBook #41571]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES ON DEUTERONOMY, VOL 1 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Júlio Reis, Moisés S. Gomes, Julia Neufeld and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
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-
-
-</pre>
-
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-
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 41571 ***</div>
<h1>
NOTES<br />
@@ -10291,7 +10250,7 @@ to refer to the soul-stirring addresses delivered at
the most remarkable and interesting council that
ever sat.</p>
-<p>"And certain men which came down from Judæa
+<p>"And certain men which came down from Judæa
taught the brethren, 'Except ye be circumcised after
the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved.'" How
awful! How terribly chilling! What a death-knell
@@ -10314,7 +10273,7 @@ free, full, immediate, and perfect salvation&mdash;full
remission of sins and perfect justification, through
faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. But according to
the teaching of the "certain men which came down
-from Judæa," all this was insufficient&mdash;Christ was
+from Judæa," all this was insufficient&mdash;Christ was
not enough, without circumcision and the law of
Moses. Poor Gentiles, who had never heard of
circumcision or the law of Moses, must add to
@@ -14870,381 +14829,6 @@ except in obvious cases of typographical error.</p>
</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy,
-Volume I, by Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES ON DEUTERONOMY, VOL 1 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I, by
-Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume I
-
-Author: Charles Henry Mackintosh
-
-Release Date: December 6, 2012 [EBook #41571]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOTES ON DEUTERONOMY, VOL I ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Julio Reis, Moises S. Gomes, Julia Neufeld and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- NOTES
-
- _on the book of_
-
- DEUTERONOMY
-
- _Volume I_
-
- C. H. MACKINTOSH
-
- "_Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is settled in heaven._"
-
- "_Thy Word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin
- against Thee._"
-
- LOIZEAUX BROTHERS
-
- _Neptune, New Jersey_
-
-
-
-
- FIRST EDITION 1880
- TWENTY-SEVENTH PRINTING 1965
-
- LOIZEAUX BROTHERS, INC., PUBLISHERS
-
- _A Nonprofit Organization, Devoted to the Lord's Work
- and to the Spread of His Truth_
-
- NEPTUNE, NEW JERSEY
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE
-
-TO THE AMERICAN EDITION
-
-
-As several persons in America have, without any authority whatever
-from me, undertaken to publish my four[1] volumes of "Notes," I deem
-it my duty to inform the reader that I have given full permission to
-Messrs. LOIZEAUX BROTHERS to publish an edition of those books in such
-form as they shall consider most suitable.
-
- C. H. MACKINTOSH.
-
- _6 West Park Terrace, Scarborough,
- May 1st, 1879._
-
- [1] Now six.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The value and importance of the Word of God cannot be over-estimated
-at the present moment. Its integrity and authority are being assailed
-from almost every quarter and in every form of attack. "If the
-foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?" (Ps. xi. 3.)
-
-Infidel thoughts and principles are not limited to a few literary and
-speculative minds, as they were fifty years ago, but are now asserted
-by many who ought to be the true guardians of Christianity and the
-defenders of the Bible as a revelation from God.
-
-In this way the multitude of the simple and unsuspecting are deceived.
-If the style of address be pleasing, few care to compare what they
-have been hearing with the holy Scriptures. The conscience not being
-aroused, they take no further trouble.
-
-But what of the state of immortal souls, under such a ministry, in
-view of eternity? On whom does the weight of responsibility rest?
-Fine-spun theories will never awaken a soul asleep in sin: the lost
-sinner must be brought face to face with the plain Word of God and the
-solemn realities of eternity. His voice must be heard. All is
-absolute, positive, and definite here, whatever infidelity may say.
-"The Word of the Lord endureth forever."
-
-The burden of the following pages, I am thankful to find, is well
-calculated to meet and counteract the looseness and indefiniteness of
-the prevailing teaching of the present day.
-
-And this, I may also say, is the burden of the book of Deuteronomy.
-The Jewish lawgiver presses with great earnestness the Word of Jehovah
-on the heart of Israel. It is not a book of ceremonials, but the
-reminding of the people of their obligation to keep the commandments,
-the statutes, and the judgments of the Lord.
-
-This is the first moral duty of man in every age--implicit obedience
-and submission to the revealed will of God. Moses speaks to the
-children of Israel as a father, and appeals to them in the most tender
-and loving way. "Hearken, O Israel," he says, "unto the statutes and
-unto the judgments which I teach you ... ye shall not add unto the
-word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish aught from it,
-that ye may keep the commandments of the Lord your God which I command
-you." And again, he says, "Thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine
-hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou
-shalt write them upon the posts of thy house, and on thy gates."
-
-The welfare of the people individually and nationally depended on
-their faithfully observing these oft-repeated laws. To neglect them
-was to bring upon themselves the displeasure and chastening of the God
-of Israel.
-
-But more need not be said here on these subjects. The reader will find
-in the following pages the most ample unfolding and practical
-application of these divine exhortations and warnings. But the writer
-has not confined himself to what Deuteronomy teaches, but has enlarged
-on what it suggests. In this way we have brought before us the grand
-cardinal truths of Christianity: a wide circle of truth is embraced,
-and much that applies to the individual Christian, the family, the
-household, and the Church of God will be found in the accompanying
-book.
-
-It now goes forth with the earnest desire that the Lord may be
-graciously pleased to use it for the glory of His own name, the help
-of His people, and the eternal blessing of many precious souls.
-
- _A. M._
-
- _London, November, 1880._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- _Page._
-
- INTRODUCTION, 1
-
- CHAPTER I, 22
-
- " II, 107
-
- " III, 132
-
- " IV, 162
-
- " V, 284
-
- " VI, 377
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-ON
-
-THE BOOK OF DEUTERONOMY
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The character of the book on which we now enter is quite as distinct
-as that of any of the four preceding sections of the Pentateuch. Were
-we to judge from the title of the book, we might suppose that it is a
-mere repetition of what we find in previous books. This would be a
-very grave mistake. There is no such thing as mere repetition in the
-Word of God. Indeed, God never repeats Himself, either in His Word or
-in His works. Wherever we trace our God, whether on the page of holy
-Scripture or in the vast fields of creation, we see divine fullness,
-infinite variety, marked design; and just in proportion to our
-spirituality of mind will be our ability to discern and appreciate
-these things. Here, as in all beside, we need the eye anointed with
-heavenly eye-salve. What a poor idea must the man entertain of
-inspiration who could imagine for a moment that the fifth book of
-Moses is a barren repetition of what is to be found in Exodus,
-Leviticus, and Numbers! Why, even in human composition we should not
-expect to find such a flagrant imperfection, much less in the perfect
-revelation which God has so graciously given us in His holy Word. The
-fact is, there is not, from cover to cover of the inspired volume, a
-single superfluous sentence, not one redundant clause, not one
-statement without its own distinct meaning--its own direct
-application. If we do not see this, we have yet to learn the depth,
-force, and meaning of the words, "All scripture is given by
-inspiration of God."
-
-Precious words! Would they were more thoroughly understood in this our
-day! It is of the utmost possible importance that the Lord's people
-should be rooted, grounded, and settled in the grand truth of the
-plenary inspiration of holy Scripture. It is to be feared that laxity
-as to this most weighty subject is spreading in the professing church
-to an appalling extent. In many quarters it has become fashionable to
-pour contempt upon the idea of plenary inspiration. It is looked upon
-as the veriest childishness and ignorance. It is regarded by many as a
-great proof of profound scholarship, breadth of mind, and original
-thinking to be able, by free criticism, to find out flaws in the
-precious volume of God. Men presume to sit in judgment upon the Bible
-as though it were a mere human composition. They undertake to
-pronounce upon what is and what is not worthy of God. In fact, they do
-virtually sit in judgment upon God Himself. The present result is, as
-might be expected, utter darkness and confusion, both for those
-learned doctors themselves and for all who are so foolish as to listen
-to them. And as for the future, who can conceive the eternal destiny
-of all those who shall have to answer before the judgment-seat of
-Christ for the sin of blaspheming the Word of God, and leading
-hundreds astray by their infidel teaching?
-
-We shall not, however, occupy time in dwelling upon the sinful folly
-of infidels and skeptics (even though called Christians), or their
-puny efforts to cast dishonor upon that peerless volume which our
-gracious God has caused to be written for our learning. They will some
-day or other find out their fatal mistake. God grant it may not be too
-late! And as for us, let it be our deep joy and consolation to
-meditate upon the Word of God, that so we may ever be discovering some
-fresh treasure in that exhaustless mine--some new moral glories in
-that heavenly revelation!
-
-The book of Deuteronomy holds a very distinct place in the inspired
-canon. Its opening lines are sufficient to prove this.--"These be the
-words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side Jordan in the
-wilderness, in the plain over against the Red Sea, between Paran, and
-Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab."
-
-Thus much as to the place in which the lawgiver delivered the contents
-of this marvelous book. The people had come up to the eastern bank of
-the Jordan, and were about to enter upon the land of promise. Their
-desert wanderings were nearly ended, as we learn from the third verse,
-in which the point of time is as distinctly marked as is the
-geographical position in verse 1.--"It came to pass in the fortieth
-year, in the eleventh month, on the first day of the month, that Moses
-spake unto the children of Israel, according unto all that the Lord
-had given him in commandment unto them."
-
-Thus, not only have we both time and place set forth with divine
-precision and minuteness, but we also learn, from the words just
-quoted, that the communications made to the people in the plains of
-Moab were very far indeed from being a repetition of what has come
-before us in our studies on the books of Exodus, Leviticus, and
-Numbers. Of this we have further and very distinct proof in a passage
-in chapter xxix. of the book on which we are now entering.--"These are
-the words of the covenant which the Lord commanded Moses to make with
-the children of Israel in the land of Moab, _beside the covenant which
-He made with them in Horeb_."
-
-Let the reader note particularly these words. They speak of two
-covenants--one at Horeb and one in Moab; and the latter, so far from
-being a mere repetition of the former, is as distinct from it as any
-two things can be. Of this we shall have the fullest and clearest
-evidence in our study of the profound book which now lies open before
-us.
-
-True, the Greek title of the book, signifying the law a second time,
-might seem to give rise to the idea of its being a mere recapitulation
-of what has gone before; but we may rest assured it is not so.
-Indeed, it would be a very grave error to think so. The book has its
-own specific place. Its scope and object are as distinct as possible.
-The grand lesson which it inculcates, from first to last, is
-_obedience_; and that, too, not in the mere letter, but in the spirit
-of love and fear--an obedience grounded upon a known and enjoyed
-relationship--an obedience quickened by the sense of moral obligations
-of the weightiest and most influential character.
-
-The aged lawgiver--the faithful, beloved, and honored servant of the
-Lord was about to take leave of the congregation. He was going to
-heaven and they were about to cross the Jordan, and hence his closing
-discourses are solemn and affecting in the very highest degree. He
-reviews the whole of their wilderness history, and that, too, in a
-manner most touching and impressive. He recounts the scenes and
-circumstances of their forty eventful years of desert life, in a style
-eminently calculated to touch the deepest moral springs of the heart.
-We hang over these most precious discourses with wonder and delight.
-They possess an incomparable charm, arising from the circumstances
-under which they were delivered, as well as from their own divinely
-powerful contents. They speak to us no less effectively than to those
-for whom they were specially intended. Many of the appeals and
-exhortations come home to us with a power of application as if they
-had been uttered but yesterday.
-
-And is it not thus with all Scripture? Are we not continually struck
-with its marvelous power of adaptation to our own very state, and to
-the day in which our lot is cast? It speaks to us with a point and
-freshness as if it were written expressly for us--written this very
-day. There is nothing like Scripture. Take any human writing of the
-same date as the book of Deuteronomy; if you could lay your hand on
-some volume written three thousand years ago, what would you find? A
-curious relic of antiquity--something to be placed in the British
-Museum, side by side with an Egyptian mummy, having no application
-whatever to us or to our time--a musty document--a piece of obsolete
-writing, practically useless to us, referring only to a state of
-society and to a condition of things long since passed away and buried
-in oblivion.
-
-The Bible, on the contrary, is the book for to-day. It is God's own
-book--His perfect revelation. It is His own very voice speaking to
-each one of us. It is a book for every age, for every clime, for every
-class, for every condition--high and low, rich and poor, learned and
-ignorant, old and young. It speaks in a language so simple that a
-child can understand it, and yet so profound that the most gigantic
-intellect cannot exhaust it. Moreover, it speaks right home to the
-heart; it touches the deepest springs of our moral being; it goes down
-to the hidden roots of thought and feeling in the soul; it judges us
-thoroughly. In a word, it is, as the inspired apostle tells us, "quick
-and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to
-the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow,
-and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." (Heb.
-iv. 12.)
-
-And then mark the marvelous comprehensiveness of its range. It deals
-as accurately and as forcibly with the habits and customs, the manners
-and maxims of the nineteenth century of the Christian era as with
-those of the very earliest ages of human existence. It displays a
-perfect acquaintance with man in every stage of his history. The
-London of to-day and the Tyre of three thousand years ago are
-mirrored, with like precision and faithfulness, on the sacred page.
-Human life, in every stage of its development, is portrayed by a
-master-hand in that wonderful volume which our God has graciously
-penned for our learning.
-
-What a privilege to possess such a book!--to have in our hands a
-divine revelation!--to have access to a book, every line of which is
-given by inspiration of God!--to have a divinely given history of the
-past, the present, and the future! Who can estimate aright such a
-privilege as this?
-
-But then, this book judges man--judges his ways--judges his heart. It
-tells him the truth about himself. Hence man does not like God's book.
-An unconverted man would vastly prefer a newspaper or a sensational
-novel to the Bible. He would rather read the report of a trial in one
-of our criminal courts than a chapter in the New Testament.
-
-Hence, too, the constant effort to pick holes in God's blessed book.
-Infidels in every age and of every class have labored hard to find
-out flaws and contradictions in holy Scripture. The determined enemies
-of the Word of God are to be found, not only in the ranks of the
-vulgar, the coarse, and the demoralized, but amongst the educated, the
-refined, and the cultivated. Just as it was in the days of the
-apostles, "certain lewd fellows of the baser sort," and "devout and
-honorable women"--two classes so far removed from each other socially
-and morally--found one point in which they could heartily agree,
-namely, the utter rejection of the Word of God and of those who
-faithfully preached it. (Comp. Acts xiii. 50 with xvii. 5.) So we ever
-find that men who differ in almost every thing else, agree in their
-determined opposition to the Bible. Other books are let alone. Men
-care not to point out defects in Virgil, in Horace, in Homer, or
-Herodotus; but the Bible they cannot endure, because it exposes them
-and tells them the truth about themselves and the world to which they
-belong.
-
-And was it not exactly the same with the living Word--the Son of
-God--the Lord Jesus Christ when He was here among men? Men hated Him
-because He told them the truth. His ministry, His words, His ways--His
-whole life was a standing testimony against the world; hence their
-bitter and persistent opposition. Other men were allowed to pass on,
-but He was watched and waylaid at every turn of His path. The great
-leaders and guides of the people "sought to entangle Him in His talk,"
-to find occasion against Him, in order that they might deliver Him to
-the power and authority of the governor. Thus it was during His
-marvelous life; and at the close, when the blessed One was nailed to
-the cross between two malefactors, these latter were let alone; there
-were no insults heaped upon them--the chief priests and elders did not
-wag their heads at them. No; all the insults, all the mockery, all the
-coarse and heartless vulgarity--all was heaped upon the divine
-Occupant of the centre cross.
-
-Now, it is well we should thoroughly understand the real source of all
-the opposition to the Word of God--whether it be the living Word or
-the written Word. It will enable us to estimate it at its real worth.
-The devil hates the Word of God--hates it with a perfect hatred; and
-hence he employs learned infidels to write books to prove that the
-Bible is not the Word of God, that it cannot be, inasmuch as there are
-mistakes and discrepancies in it; and not only so, but in the Old
-Testament we find laws and institutions, habits and practices,
-unworthy of a gracious and benevolent Being.
-
-To all this style of argument we have one brief and pointed reply. Of
-all these learned infidels we simply say, They know nothing whatever
-about the matter. They may be very learned, very clever, very deep and
-original thinkers, well made up in general literature, very competent
-to give an opinion on any subject within the domain of natural and
-moral philosophy, very able to discuss any scientific question;
-moreover, they may be very amiable in private life--truly estimable
-characters--kind, benevolent, philanthropic, beloved in private and
-respected in public,--all this they may be, but being unconverted, and
-not having the Spirit of God, they are wholly unfit to form, much less
-to give, a judgment on the subject of holy Scripture. If any one
-wholly ignorant of astronomy were to presume to sit in judgment on the
-principles of the Copernican system, these very men of whom we speak
-would at once pronounce him utterly incompetent to speak, and unworthy
-to be heard on such a subject. In short, no one has any right whatever
-to offer an opinion on a matter with which he is unacquainted. This is
-an admitted principle on all hands; and therefore its application in
-the case now before us cannot justly be called in question.
-
-Now, the inspired apostle tells us, in his first epistle to the
-Corinthians, that "the natural man receiveth not the things of the
-Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him; _neither can he know
-them_, because they are spiritually discerned." This is conclusive. He
-speaks of man in his natural state, be he ever so learned, ever so
-cultivated. He is not speaking of any special class of men, but simply
-of man in his unconverted state--man destitute of the Spirit of God.
-Some may imagine that the apostle refers to man in a state of
-barbarism, or savage ignorance. By no means; it is simply man in
-nature, be he a learned philosopher or an ignorant clown. "He cannot
-know the things of the Spirit of God." How, then, can he form or give
-a judgment as to the Word of God? How can he take it upon him to say
-what is or what is not worthy of God to write? And if he is audacious
-enough to do so (as, alas! he is), who will be foolish enough to
-listen to him? His arguments are baseless, his theories worthless, his
-books only fit for the wastepaper basket; and all this, be it
-observed, on the universally admitted principle above stated, that no
-one has any title to be heard on a subject of which he is wholly
-ignorant.
-
-In this way we dispose of the whole tribe of infidel writers. Who
-would think of listening to a blind man on the subject of light and
-shade? And yet such a man has much more claim to be heard than an
-unconverted man on the subject of inspiration. Human learning, however
-extensive and varied--human wisdom, however profound, cannot qualify a
-man to form a judgment upon the Word of God. No doubt a scholar may
-examine and collate MSS. simply as a matter of criticism; he may be
-able to form a judgment as to the question of authority for any
-particular reading of a passage; but this is a different matter
-altogether from an infidel writer undertaking to pronounce judgment
-upon the revelation which God has, in His infinite goodness, given to
-us. We maintain that no man can do this. It is only by the Spirit, who
-Himself inspired the holy Scriptures, that those Scriptures can be
-understood and appreciated. The Word of God must be received upon its
-own authority. If man can judge it or reason upon it, it is not the
-Word of God at all. Has God given us a revelation, or has He not? If
-He has, it must be absolutely perfect in every respect; and being
-such, it must be entirely beyond the range of human judgment. Man is
-no more competent to judge Scripture than he is to judge God. The
-Scriptures judge man; not man the Scriptures.
-
-This makes all the difference. Nothing can be more miserably
-contemptible than the books which infidels write against the Bible.
-Every page, every paragraph, every sentence, only goes to illustrate
-the truth of the apostle's statement, that "the natural man receiveth
-not the things of the Spirit of God; ... _neither can he know them_,
-because they are spiritually discerned." Their gross ignorance of the
-subject with which they undertake to deal is only equaled by their
-self-confidence. Of their irreverence we say nothing; for who would
-think of looking for reverence in the writings of infidels? We might
-perhaps look for a little modesty were it not that we are fully aware
-of the bitter _animus_ which lies at the root of all such writings,
-and renders them utterly unworthy of a moment's consideration. Other
-books may have a dispassionate examination; but the precious book of
-God is approached with the foregone conclusion that it is not a divine
-revelation, because, forsooth, infidels tell us that God could not
-give us a written revelation of His mind.
-
-How strange! Men can give us a revelation of their thoughts (and
-infidels have done so pretty plainly), but God cannot! What folly!
-What presumption! Why, we may lawfully inquire, could not God reveal
-His mind to His creatures? Why should it be thought a thing
-incredible? For no reason whatever, but because infidels would have it
-so. The wish is, in this case assuredly, father to the thought. The
-question raised by the old serpent in the garden of Eden nearly six
-thousand years ago, has been passed on from age to age by all sorts of
-skeptics, rationalists, and infidels, namely, "Hath God said?" We
-reply, with intense delight, Yes; blessed be His holy name, He has
-spoken--spoken to us. He has revealed His mind; He has given us the
-holy Scriptures. "_All scripture is given by inspiration of God_, and
-is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
-instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect
-[+artios+], thoroughly furnished unto all good works." And
-again, "Whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our
-learning, that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might
-have hope." (2 Tim. iii. 16, 17; Rom. xv. 4.)
-
-The Lord be praised for such words! They assure us that all Scripture
-is given of God, and that all Scripture is given to us. Precious link
-between the soul and God! What tongue can tell the value of such a
-link? God has spoken--spoken to us. His Word is a rock against which
-all the waves of infidel thought dash themselves in contemptible
-impotency, leaving it in its own divine strength and eternal
-stability. Nothing can touch the Word of God. Not all the powers of
-earth and hell, men and devils combined can ever move the Word of
-God. There it stands, in its own moral glory, spite of all the
-assaults of the enemy, from age to age. "Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is
-settled in heaven." "Thou hast magnified Thy Word above all Thy name."
-What remains for us? Just this: "Thy Word have I hid in my heart, that
-I might not sin against Thee." Here lies the deep secret of peace. The
-heart is linked to the throne--yea, to the very heart of God by means
-of His most precious Word, and is thus put in possession of a peace
-which the world can neither give nor take away. What can all the
-theories, the reasonings, and the arguments of infidels effect? Just
-nothing. They are esteemed as the dust of the summer threshing-floor.
-To one who has really learnt, through grace, to confide in the Word of
-God--to rest on the authority of holy Scripture, all the infidel books
-that ever were written are utterly worthless, pointless, powerless;
-they display the ignorance and terrible presumption of the writers;
-but as to Scripture, they leave it just where it ever has been and
-ever will be--"settled in heaven," as immovable as the throne of
-God.[2] The assaults of infidels cannot touch the throne of God,
-neither can they touch His Word; and, blessed be His name, neither can
-they touch the peace that flows through the heart that rests on that
-imperishable foundation. "Great peace have they that love Thy law, and
-nothing shall offend them." "The Word of our God shall stand forever."
-"All flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of
-grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away; but
-the Word of the Lord endureth forever. And this is the Word which by
-the gospel is preached unto you." (1 Pet. i. 24, 25.)
-
- [2] In referring to infidel writers, we should bear in mind that by
- far the most dangerous of such are those calling themselves
- Christians. In our young days, whenever we heard the word "infidel,"
- we at once thought of a Tom Paine or a Voltaire; now, alas! we have to
- think of so-called bishops and doctors of the professing church.
- Tremendous fact!
-
-Here we have the same precious golden link again. The Word which has
-reached us in the form of glad tidings is the Word of the Lord which
-endureth forever; and hence our salvation and our peace are as stable
-as the Word on which they are founded. If _all_ flesh is as grass, and
-_all_ the glory of man as the flower of grass, then what are the
-arguments of infidels worth? They are as worthless as withered grass
-or a faded flower; and the men who put them forth and those who are
-moved by them will find them to be so, sooner or later. Oh, the sinful
-folly of arguing against the Word of God--arguing against the only
-thing in all this world that can give rest and consolation to the
-poor, weary human heart--arguing against that which brings the glad
-tidings of salvation to poor lost sinners--brings them fresh from the
-heart of God!
-
-But we may perhaps here be met by the question so often raised, and
-which has troubled many and led them to fly for refuge to what is
-called "the authority of the church." The question is this: "How are
-we to know that the book which we call the Bible is the Word of God?"
-Our answer to this question is a very simple one--it is this: The One
-who has graciously given us the blessed book can give us also the
-certainty that the book is from Him. The same Spirit who inspired the
-various writers of the holy Scriptures can make us know that those
-Scriptures are the very voice of God speaking to us. It is only by the
-Spirit that any one can discern this. As we have already seen, "the
-natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; ... neither
-can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned." If the Holy
-Spirit does not make us know, and give us the certainty that the Bible
-is the Word of God, no man or body of men can possibly do it; and on
-the other hand, if He does give us the blessed certainty, we do not
-need the testimony of man.
-
-We freely admit that on this great question a shadow of uncertainty
-would be positive torture and misery; but who can give us certainty?
-God alone. If all the men upon earth were to agree in their testimony
-to the authority of holy Scripture--if all the councils that ever sat,
-all the doctors that ever taught, all the fathers that ever wrote,
-were in favor of the dogma of plenary inspiration--if the universal
-church, if every denomination in christendom were to assent to the
-truth that the Bible is, in very deed, the Word of God--in a word, if
-we had all the human authority that could possibly be had in reference
-to the integrity of the Word of God, it would be utterly insufficient
-as a ground of certainty; and if our faith were founded on that
-authority, it would be perfectly worthless. God alone can give us the
-certainty that He has spoken in His Word; and blessed be His name,
-when He gives it, all the arguments, all the cavilings, all the
-quibblings, all the questionings of infidels, ancient and modern, are
-as the foam on the water, the smoke from the chimney-top, or the dust
-on the floor. The true believer rejects them as so much worthless
-rubbish, and rests in holy tranquillity in that peerless revelation
-which our God has graciously given us.
-
-It is of the very last possible importance for the reader to be
-thoroughly clear and settled as to this grave question, if he would be
-raised above the influence of infidelity on the one hand and
-superstition on the other. Infidelity undertakes to tell us that God
-has not given us a book-revelation of His mind--could not give it:
-Superstition undertakes to tell us that even though God has given us a
-revelation, yet we cannot be assured of it without man's authority,
-nor understand it without man's interpretation. Now it is well to see
-that by both alike we are deprived of the precious boon of holy
-Scripture. And this is precisely what the devil aims at. He wants to
-rob us of the Word of God; and he can do this quite as effectually by
-the apparent self-distrust that humbly and reverently looks to wise
-and learned men for authority, as by an audacious infidelity that
-boldly rejects all authority, human or divine.
-
-Take a case. A father writes a letter to his son at Canton--a letter
-full of the affection and tenderness of a father's heart. He tells him
-of his plans and arrangements, tells him of every thing that he thinks
-would interest the heart of a son--every thing that the love of a
-father's heart could suggest. The son calls at the post-office in
-Canton to inquire if there is a letter from his father. He is told by
-one official that there is no letter, that his father has not written
-and could not write--could not communicate his mind by such a medium
-at all, that it is only folly to think of such a thing. Another
-official comes forward, and says, Yes; there is a letter here for you,
-but you cannot possibly understand it; it is quite useless to you,
-indeed it can only do you positive mischief inasmuch as you are quite
-unable to read it aright. You must leave the letter in our hands, and
-we will explain to you such portions of it as we consider suitable for
-you. The former of these two officials represents Infidelity; the
-latter, Superstition. By both alike would the son be deprived of the
-longed-for letter--the precious communication from his father's heart.
-But what, we may inquire, would be his answer to these unworthy
-officials? A very brief and pointed one we may rest assured. He would
-say to the first, I know my father can communicate his mind to me by
-letter, and that he has done so. He would say to the second, I know my
-father can make me understand his mind far better than you can. He
-would say to both, and that, too, with bold and firm decision. Give me
-up at once my father's letter; it is addressed to me, and no man has
-any right to withhold it from me.
-
-Thus, too, should the simple-hearted Christian meet the _insolence_ of
-Infidelity and the _ignorance_ of Superstition--the two special
-agencies of the devil, in this our day, in setting aside the precious
-Word of God. "My Father has communicated His mind, and He can make me
-understand the communication."--"All Scripture is given _by
-inspiration of God_;" and, "Whatsoever things were written aforetime
-were written _for our learning_." Magnificent answer to every enemy of
-God's precious and peerless revelation, be he rationalist or
-ritualist!
-
-We do not attempt to offer any apology to the reader for this
-lengthened introduction to the book of Deuteronomy. Indeed we are only
-too thankful for an opportunity of bearing our feeble testimony to the
-grand truth of the divine inspiration of the holy Scriptures. We feel
-it to be our sacred duty, as most surely it is our high privilege, to
-press upon all to whom we have access, the immense importance--yea,
-the absolute necessity of the most uncompromising decision on this
-point. We must faithfully maintain, at all cost, the divine authority,
-and therefore the absolute supremacy and all-sufficiency, of the Word
-of God at all times, in all places, for all purposes. We must hold to
-it that the Scriptures, having been given of God, are complete, in the
-very highest and fullest sense of the word; that they do not need any
-human authority to accredit them, or any human voice to make them
-available: they speak for themselves, and carry their own credentials
-with them. All we have to do is to believe and obey, not to reason or
-discuss. God has spoken it: it is ours to hearken, and yield an
-unreserved and reverent obedience.
-
-This is one grand leading point throughout the book of Deuteronomy, as
-we shall see in the progress of our meditations; and never was there a
-moment, in the history of the Church of God, in which it was more
-needful to urge home on the human conscience the necessity of implicit
-obedience to the Word of God. It is, alas! but little felt. Professing
-Christians, for the most part, seem to consider that they have a right
-to think for themselves--to follow their own reason, their own
-judgment, or their own conscience. They do not believe that the Bible
-is a divine and universal guide-book. They think there are very many
-things in which we are left to choose for ourselves; hence the almost
-numberless sects, parties, creeds, and schools of thought. If human
-opinion be allowed at all, then, as a matter of course, one man has as
-good a right to think as another; and thus it has come to pass that
-the professing church has become a proverb and a by-word for division.
-
-And what is the sovereign remedy for this widespread disease? Here it
-is: _Absolute and complete subjection to the authority of holy
-Scripture_. It is not men going to Scripture to get _their_ opinions
-and _their_ views confirmed; but going to Scripture to get the mind of
-God as to every thing, and bowing down their whole moral being to
-divine authority. This is the one pressing need of the day in which
-our lot is cast--reverent subjection, in all things, to the supreme
-authority of the Word of God. No doubt, there will be variety in our
-measure of intelligence, in our apprehension and appreciation of
-Scripture; but what we specially urge upon all Christians is that
-condition of soul, that attitude of heart expressed in those precious
-words of the psalmist, "Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I
-might not sin against Thee." This, we may rest assured, is grateful to
-the heart of God. "To this man will I look, even to him that is poor
-and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at My Word."
-
-Here lies the true secret of moral security. Our knowledge of
-Scripture may be very limited; but if our reverence for it be
-profound, we shall be preserved from a thousand errors--a thousand
-snares. And then there will be steady growth. We shall grow in the
-knowledge of God, of Christ, and of the written Word; we shall delight
-to draw from those living and exhaustless depths of holy Scripture,
-and to range through those green pastures which infinite grace has so
-freely thrown open to the flock of Christ. Thus shall the divine life
-be nourished and strengthened; the Word of God will become more and
-more precious to our souls, and we shall be lead, by the powerful
-ministry of the Holy Ghost, into the depth, fullness, majesty, and
-moral glory of holy Scripture. We shall be delivered completely from
-the withering influences of all mere systems of theology, high, low,
-or moderate--a most blessed deliverance! We shall be able to tell the
-advocates of all the schools of divinity under the sun that whatever
-elements of truth they may have in their systems we have in divine
-perfectness in the Word of God; not twisted and tortured to make them
-fit into a system, but in their right place in the wide circle of
-divine revelation which has its eternal centre in the blessed Person
-of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-"These be the words which Moses spake unto all Israel on this side
-Jordan in the wilderness, in the plain over against the Red Sea,
-between Paran, and Tophel, and Laban, and Hazeroth, and Dizahab.
-(There are eleven days' journey from Horeb, by the way of Mount Seir,
-unto Kadesh-barnea.)"
-
-The inspired writer is careful to give us, in the most precise manner,
-all the bearings of the place in which the words of this book were
-spoken in the ears of the people. Israel had not yet crossed the
-Jordan; they were just beside it, and over against the Red Sea where
-the mighty power of God had been so gloriously displayed nearly forty
-years before. The whole position is described with a minuteness which
-shows how thoroughly God entered into every thing that concerned His
-people. He was interested in all their movements and in all their
-ways. He kept a faithful record of all their encampments. Their was
-not a single circumstance connected with them, however trifling,
-beneath His gracious notice. He attended to every thing. His eye
-rested continually on that assembly as a whole, and on each member in
-particular. By day and by night He watched over them. Every stage of
-their journey was under His immediate and most gracious
-superintendence. There was nothing, however small, beneath His notice;
-nothing, however great, beyond His power.
-
-Thus it was with Israel in the wilderness of old, and thus it is with
-the Church now--the Church as a whole, and each member in particular.
-A Father's eye rests upon us continually, His everlasting arms are
-around and underneath us day and night. "He withdraweth not His eyes
-from the righteous." He counts the hairs of our heads, and enters,
-with infinite goodness, into every thing that concerns us. He has
-charged Himself with all our wants and all our cares. He would have us
-to cast our every care on Him, in the sweet assurance that He careth
-for us. He most graciously invites us to roll our every burden over on
-Him, be it great or small.
-
-All this is truly wonderful. It is full of deepest consolation. It is
-eminently calculated to tranquilize the heart, come what may. The
-question is, Do we believe it? are our hearts governed by the faith of
-it? Do we really believe that the almighty Creator and Upholder of all
-things, who bears up the pillars of the universe, has graciously
-undertaken to do for us all the journey through? Do we thoroughly
-believe that "the Possessor of heaven and earth" is our Father? and
-that He has charged Himself with all our wants from first to last? Is
-our whole moral being under the commanding power of those words of the
-inspired apostle, "He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him
-up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all
-things?" Alas! it is to be feared that we know but little of the power
-of these grand yet simple truths. We talk about them, we discuss them,
-we profess them, we give a nominal assent to them; but with all this,
-we prove, in our daily life--in the actual details of our personal
-history, how feebly we enter into them. If we truly believed that our
-God has charged Himself with all our necessities--if we were finding
-all our springs in Him--if He were a perfect covering for our eyes and
-a resting-place for our hearts, could we possibly be looking to poor
-creature-streams, which so speedily dry up and disappoint our hearts?
-We do not and cannot believe it. It is one thing to hold the theory of
-the life of faith, and another thing altogether to live that life. We
-constantly deceive ourselves with the notion that we are living by
-faith, when in reality we are leaning on some human prop, which sooner
-or later is sure to give way.
-
-Reader, is it not so? Are we not constantly prone to forsake the
-Fountain of living waters, and hew out for ourselves broken cisterns,
-which can hold no water? And yet we speak of living by faith! We
-profess to be looking only to the living God for the supply of our
-need, whatever that need may be, when, in point of fact, we are
-sitting beside some creature-stream and looking for something there.
-Need we wonder if we are disappointed? How could it possibly be
-otherwise? Our God will not have us dependent upon aught or any one
-but Himself. He has, in manifold places in His Word, given us His
-judgment as to the true character and sure result of all
-creature-confidence. Take the following most solemn passage from the
-prophet Jeremiah: "Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh
-flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. For he shall
-be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when good cometh;
-but shall inhabit the parched places in the wilderness, in a salt land
-and not inhabited." And then mark the contrast--"Blessed is the man
-that trusteth in the Lord, and whose hope the Lord is: for he shall be
-as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by
-the river, and shall not see when heat cometh, but her leaf shall be
-green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall
-cease from yielding fruit." (Jer. xvii. 5-8.)
-
-Here we have, in language divinely forcible, clear, and beautiful, both
-sides of this most weighty subject put before us. Creature-confidence
-brings a certain curse; it can only issue in barrenness and
-desolation. God, in very faithfulness, will cause every human stream
-to dry up--every human prop to give way, in order that we may learn
-the utter folly of turning away from Him. What figure could be more
-striking or impressive than those used in the above passage?--"A heath
-in the desert," "parched places in the wilderness," "a salt land not
-inhabited." Such are the figures used by the Holy Ghost to illustrate
-all mere human dependence--all confidence in man.
-
-But on the other hand, what can be more lovely or more refreshing than
-the figures used to set forth the deep blessedness of simple trust in
-the Lord?--"A tree planted by the waters," "spreading out her roots by
-the rivers," the leaf ever green, the fruit never ceasing. Perfectly
-beautiful! Thus it is with the man who trusteth in the Lord, and whose
-hope the Lord is. He is nourished by those eternal springs that flow
-from the heart of God. He drinks at the Fountain, life-giving and
-free. He finds all his resources in the living God. There may be
-"heat," but he does not see it; "the year of drought" may come, but he
-is not careful. Ten thousand creature-streams may dry up, but he does
-not perceive it, because he is not dependent upon them; he abides hard
-by the ever-gushing Fountain. He can never want any good thing. He
-lives by faith.
-
-And here, while speaking of the life of faith--that most blessed life,
-let us clearly understand what it is, and carefully see that we are
-living it. We sometimes hear this life spoken of in a way by no means
-intelligent. It is not unfrequently applied to the mere matter of
-trusting God for food and raiment. Certain persons who happen to have
-no visible source of temporal supplies--no settled income--no property
-of any kind, are singled out and spoken of as "living by faith," as if
-that marvelous and glorious life had no higher sphere or wider range
-than temporal things--the mere supply of our bodily wants.
-
-Now, we cannot too strongly protest against this most unworthy view of
-the life of faith. It limits its sphere and lowers its range in a
-manner perfectly intolerable to any one who understands aught of its
-most holy and precious mysteries. Can we for a moment admit that a
-Christian who happens to have a settled income of any kind is to be
-deprived of the privilege of living by faith? Or, further, can we
-permit that life to be limited and lowered to the mere matter of
-trusting God for the supply of our bodily wants? Does it soar no
-higher than food and raiment? Does it give no more elevated thought of
-God than that He will not let us starve or go naked?
-
-Far away, and away forever, be the unworthy thought! The life of faith
-must not be so treated. We cannot allow such a gross dishonor to be
-offered to it, or such a grievous wrong done to those who are called
-to live it. What, we would ask, is the meaning of those few but
-weighty words, "The just shall live by faith"? They occur, first of
-all, in Habakkuk ii. They are quoted by the apostle in Romans i, where
-he is, with a master-hand, laying the solid foundations of
-Christianity. He quotes them again in Galatians iii, where he is, with
-intense anxiety, recalling those bewitched assemblies to those solid
-foundations which they, in their folly, were abandoning. Finally, he
-quotes them again in chapter x. of his epistle to the Hebrews, where
-he is warning his brethren against the danger of casting away their
-confidence and giving up the race.
-
-From all this we may assuredly gather the immense importance and
-practical value of the brief but far-reaching sentence, "The just
-shall live by faith." But to whom does it apply? Is it only for a few
-of the Lord's servants, here and there, who happen to have no settled
-income? We utterly reject the thought. It applies to every one of the
-Lord's people. It is the high and happy privilege of all who come
-under the title--that blessed title, "The just." We consider it a very
-grave error to limit it in any way. The moral effect of such
-limitation is most injurious. It gives undue prominence to one
-department of the life of faith which, if any distinction be
-allowable, we should judge to be the very lowest. But in reality,
-there should be no distinction: the life of faith is one. Faith is the
-grand principle of the divine life from first to last. By faith we are
-justified, and by faith we live; by faith we stand, and by faith we
-walk. From the starting-post to the goal of the Christian course it is
-all by faith.
-
-Hence, therefore, it is a serious mistake to single out certain
-persons who trust the Lord for temporal supplies, and speak of them as
-living by faith, as if they alone did so. And not only so, but such
-persons are held up to the gaze of the Church of God as something
-wonderful; and the great mass of Christians are led to think that the
-privilege of living by faith lies entirely beyond their range. In
-short, they are led into a complete mistake as to the real character
-and sphere of the life of faith, and thus they suffer materially in
-the inner life.
-
-Let the Christian reader, then, distinctly understand that it is his
-happy privilege, whoever he be or whatever be his position, to live a
-life of faith, in all the depth and fullness of that word. He may,
-according to his measure, take up the language of the blessed apostle,
-and say, "The life that I live in the flesh, I live by the faith of
-the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me." Let nothing
-rob him of this high and holy privilege which belongs to every member
-of the household of faith. Alas! we fail. Our faith is weak, when it
-ought to be strong, bold, and vigorous. Our God delights in a bold
-faith. If we study the gospels, we shall see that nothing so refreshed
-and delighted the heart of Christ as a fine bold faith--a faith that
-understood Him and drew largely upon Him. Look, for example, at the
-Syrophenician in Mark vii, and the centurion in Luke vii.
-
-True, He could meet a weak faith--the very weakest. He could meet an
-"If Thou _wilt_" with a gracious "I will"--an "If Thou _canst_" with
-"If thou canst believe, all things are possible." The faintest look,
-the feeblest touch, was sure to meet with a gracious response; but the
-Saviour's heart was gratified and His spirit refreshed when He could
-say, "O woman, great is thy faith; be it unto thee even as thou wilt;"
-and again, "I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel."
-
-Let us remember this. We may rest assured it is the very same to-day
-as when our blessed Lord was here amongst men. He loves to be trusted,
-to be used, to be drawn upon. We can never go too far in counting on
-the love of His heart or the strength of His hand. There is nothing
-too small, nothing too great for Him; He has all power in heaven and
-on earth; He is head over all things to His Church; He holds the
-universe together; He upholds all things by the word of His power.
-Philosophers talk of the forces and laws of nature: the Christian
-thinks with delight of Christ, His hand, His Word, His mighty power.
-By Him all things were created, and by Him all things consist.
-
-And then His love! What rest, what comfort, what joy, to know and
-remember that the almighty Creator and Upholder of the universe is the
-everlasting Lover of our souls! that He loves us perfectly; that His
-eye is ever upon us, His heart ever toward us; that He has charged
-Himself with all our wants, whatever these wants may be--whether
-physical, mental, or spiritual! There is not a single thing within the
-entire range of our necessities that is not treasured up for us in
-Christ. He is Heaven's treasury--God's storehouse, and all this for
-us.
-
-Why, then, should we ever turn to another? Why should we ever,
-directly or indirectly, make known our wants to a poor fellow-mortal?
-Why not go straight to Jesus? Do we want sympathy? Who can sympathize
-with us like our most merciful High-Priest, who is touched with the
-feeling of our infirmities? Do we want help of any kind? Who can help
-us like our almighty Friend, the Possessor of unsearchable riches? Do
-we want counsel or guidance? Who can give it like the blessed One who
-is the very wisdom of God, and who is made of God unto us wisdom? Oh,
-let us not wound His loving heart, and dishonor His glorious name by
-turning away from Him. Let us jealously watch against the tendency so
-natural to us to cherish human hopes, creature-confidences, and
-earthly expectations. Let us abide hard by the Fountain, and we shall
-never have to complain of the streams. In a word, let us seek to live
-by faith, and thus glorify God in our day and generation.
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter; and in so doing, we would call
-the reader's attention to verse 2. It is certainly a very remarkable
-parenthesis. "(There are eleven days' journey from Horeb, by the way
-of Mount Seir, unto Kadesh-barnea.)" Eleven days! and yet it took them
-forty years! How was this? Alas! we need not travel far for the
-answer. It is only too like ourselves. How slowly we get over the
-ground! What windings and turnings! How often we have to go back and
-travel over the same ground again and again! We are slow travelers,
-because we are slow learners. It may be we feel disposed to marvel how
-Israel could have taken forty years to accomplish a journey of eleven
-days; but we may, with much greater reason, marvel at ourselves. We,
-like them, are kept back by our unbelief and slowness of heart; but
-there is far less excuse for us than for them, inasmuch as our
-privileges are so very much higher.
-
-Some of us have much reason to be ashamed of the time we spend over
-our lessons. The words of the blessed apostle do but too forcibly
-apply to us--"For when for the time ye ought to be teachers, ye have
-need that one teach you again which be the first principles of the
-oracles of God; and are become such as have need of milk, and not of
-strong meat." Our God is a faithful and wise as well as a gracious and
-patient Teacher. He will not permit us to pass cursorily over our
-lessons. Sometimes, perhaps, we think we have mastered a lesson, and
-we attempt to move on to another; but our wise Teacher knows better,
-and He sees the need of deeper ploughing. He will not have us mere
-theorists or smatterers: He will keep us, if need be, year after year
-at our scales until we learn to sing.
-
-Now, while it is very humbling to us to be so slow in learning, it is
-very gracious of Him to take such pains with us, in order to make us
-sure. We have to bless Him for His mode of teaching as for all
-beside--for the wonderful patience with which He sits down with us
-over the same lesson again and again, in order that we may learn it
-thoroughly.[3]
-
- [3] The journey of Israel from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea illustrates but
- too forcibly the history of many souls in the matter of finding peace.
- Many of the Lord's beloved people go on for years, doubting and
- fearing, never knowing the blessedness of the liberty wherewith Christ
- makes His people free. It is most distressing, to any one who really
- cares for souls, to see the sad condition in which some are kept all
- their days, through legality, bad teaching, false manuals of devotion,
- and such like. It is a rare thing now-a-days to find in christendom a
- soul fully established in the peace of the gospel. It is considered a
- good thing--a sign of humility--to be always doubting. Confidence is
- looked upon as presumption. In short, things are turned completely
- upside down. The gospel is not known: souls are under law instead of
- under grace,--they are kept at a distance instead of being taught to
- draw nigh. Much of the religion of the day is a deplorable mixture of
- Christ and self, law and grace, faith and works. Souls are kept in a
- perfect muddle all their days.
-
- Surely these things demand the grave consideration of all who occupy
- the responsible place of teachers and preachers in the professing
- church. There is a solemn day approaching, when all such will be
- called to render an account of their ministry.
-
-"And it came to pass in the fortieth year, in the eleventh month, on
-the first day of the month, that Moses spake unto the children of
-Israel, according unto all that the Lord had given him in commandment
-unto them." (Ver. 3.) These few words contain a volume of weighty
-instruction for every servant of God--for all who are called to
-minister in the Word and doctrine. Moses gave the people just what he
-himself had received from God--nothing more, nothing less. He brought
-them into direct contact with the living Word of Jehovah. This is the
-grand principle of ministry at all times. Nothing else is of any real
-value. The Word of God is the only thing that will stand. There is
-divine power and authority in it. All mere human teaching, however
-interesting--however attractive at the time, will pass away and leave
-the soul without any foundation to rest upon.
-
-Hence it should be the earnest, jealous care of all who minister in
-the assembly of God, to preach the Word in all its purity, in all its
-simplicity; to give it to the people as they get it from God; to bring
-them face to face with the veritable language of holy Scripture. Thus
-will their ministry tell, with living power, on the hearts and
-consciences of their hearers. It will link the soul with God Himself,
-by means of the Word, and impart a depth and solidity which no human
-teaching can ever produce.
-
-Look at the blessed apostle Paul. Hear him express himself on this
-weighty subject.--"And I, brethren, when I came to you, came not with
-excellency of speech or of wisdom, declaring unto you the testimony of
-God. For I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus
-Christ, and Him crucified. And I was with you in weakness, and in
-fear, and in much trembling. And my speech and my preaching was not
-with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the
-Spirit and of power." What was the object of all this fear and
-trembling? "That your faith should not stand in the wisdom of men, but
-in the power of God." (1 Cor. ii. 1-5.)
-
-This true-hearted faithful servant of Christ sought only to bring the
-souls of his hearers into direct personal contact with God Himself. He
-sought not to link them with Paul. "Who then is Paul, and who is
-Apollos, but ministers _by whom ye believed_?" All false ministry has
-for its object the attaching of souls to itself. Thus the minister is
-exalted, God is shut out, and the soul left without any divine
-foundation to rest upon. True ministry, on the contrary, as seen in
-Paul and Moses, has for its blessed object the attaching of the soul
-to God. Thus the minister gets his true place--simply an instrument,
-God is exalted, and the soul established on a sure foundation which
-can never be moved.
-
-But let us hear a little more from our apostle on this most weighty
-subject. "Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I
-preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand;
-by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto
-you, unless ye have believed in vain. _For I delivered unto you first
-of all that which I also received_"--nothing more, nothing less,
-nothing different--"how that Christ died for our sins _according to
-the Scriptures_; and that He was buried, and that He rose again the
-third day _according to the Scriptures_."
-
-This is uncommonly fine. It demands the serious consideration of all
-who would be true and effective ministers of Christ. The apostle was
-careful to allow the pure stream to flow down from its living
-source--the heart of God, into the souls of the Corinthians. He felt
-that nothing else was of any value. If he had sought to link them on
-to himself, he would have sadly dishonored his Master, done them a
-grievous wrong, and he himself would most assuredly suffer loss in the
-day of Christ.
-
-But no; Paul knew better. He would not, for worlds, lead any to build
-upon himself. Hear what he says to his much-loved Thessalonians.--"For
-this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when _ye
-received the Word of God_ which ye heard of us, ye received it _not as
-the word of men_, but _as it is in truth, the Word of God_, which
-effectually worketh also in you that believe." (1 Thess. ii. 13.)
-
-We feel solemnly responsible to commend this grave and important point
-to the serious consideration of the Church of God. If all the
-professed ministers of Christ were to follow the example of Moses and
-Paul, in reference to the matter now before us, we should witness a
-very different condition of things in the professing church. But the
-plain and serious fact is, that the Church of God, like Israel of old,
-has wholly departed from the authority of His Word. Go where you will,
-and you find things done and taught which have no foundation in
-Scripture. Things are not only tolerated but sanctioned and stoutly
-defended which are in direct opposition to the mind of Christ. If you
-ask for the divine authority for this, that, and the other institution
-or practice, you will be told that Christ has not given us directions
-as to matters of church government; that in all questions of
-ecclesiastical polity, clerical orders, and liturgical services, He
-has left us free to act according to our consciences, judgment, or
-religious feelings; that it is simply absurd to demand a "Thus saith
-the Lord" for all the details connected with our religious
-institutions: there is a broad margin left to be filled up according
-to our national customs and our peculiar habits of thought. It is
-considered that professing Christians are left perfectly free to form
-themselves into so-called churches, to choose their own form of
-government, to make their own arrangements, and to appoint their own
-office-bearers.
-
-Now the question which the Christian reader has to consider is, "Are
-these things so?" Can it be that our Lord Christ has left His Church
-without guidance as to matters so interesting and momentous? Can it be
-possible that the Church of God is worse off, in the matter of
-instruction and authority, than Israel? In our studies on the books of
-Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers, we have seen (for who could help
-seeing?) the marvelous pains which Jehovah took to instruct His people
-as to the most minute particulars connected with their public worship
-and private life. As to the tabernacle, the temple, the priesthood,
-the ritual, the various feasts and sacrifices, the periodical
-solemnities, the months, the days, the very hours, all was ordered and
-settled with divine precision. Nothing was left to mere human
-arrangement. Man's wisdom, his judgment, his reason, his conscience,
-had nothing whatever to do in the matter. Had it been left to man, how
-should we ever have had that admirable, profound, and far-reaching
-typical system which the inspired pen of Moses has set before us? If
-Israel had been allowed to do what (as some would fain persuade us)
-the Church is allowed, what confusion, what strife, what division,
-what endless sects and parties, would have been the inevitable result!
-
-But it was not so. The Word of God settled every thing. "As the Lord
-commanded Moses." This grand and influential sentence was appended to
-every thing that Israel had to do, and to every thing they were not to
-do. Their national institutions and their domestic habits--their
-public and their private life, all came under the commanding authority
-of "Thus saith the Lord." There was no occasion for any member of the
-congregation to say, I cannot see this, or, I cannot go with that, or,
-I cannot agree with the other. Such language could only be regarded as
-the fruit of self-will. He might just as well say, I cannot agree with
-Jehovah. And why? Simply because the Word of God had spoken as to
-every thing, and that, too, with a clearness and simplicity which left
-no room whatever for human discussion. Throughout the whole of the
-Mosaic economy there was not the breadth of a hair of margin left in
-which to insert the opinion or the judgment of man. It pertained not
-to man to add the weight of a feather to that vast system of types and
-shadows which had been planned by the divine mind, and set forth in
-language so plain and pointed, that all Israel had to do was to
-_obey_--not to argue, not to reason, not to discuss, but to obey.
-
-Alas! alas! they failed, as we know. They did their own will; they
-took their own way; they did "every man that which was right in his
-own eyes." They departed from the Word of God, and followed the
-imaginations and devices of their own evil heart, and brought upon
-themselves the wrath and indignation of offended Deity, under which
-they suffer till this day, and shall yet suffer unexampled
-tribulation.
-
-But all this leaves untouched the point on which we are just now
-dwelling. Israel had the oracles of God, and these oracles were
-divinely sufficient for their guidance in every thing. There was no
-room left for the commandments and doctrines of men. The Word of the
-Lord provided for every possible exigence, and that Word was so plain
-as to render human comment needless.
-
-Is the Church of God worse off, as regards guidance and authority,
-than Israel of old? Are Christians left to think and arrange for
-themselves in the worship and service of God? Are there any questions
-left open for human discussion? Is the Word of God sufficient, or is
-it not? Has it left any thing unprovided for? Let us hearken
-diligently to the following powerful testimony: "All Scripture is
-given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for
-reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness; that the
-man of God may be _perfect_ [+artios+] _throughly furnished
-unto all good works_." (2 Tim. iii.)
-
-This is perfectly conclusive. Holy Scripture contains all that the man
-of God can possibly require to make him perfect, to equip him
-thoroughly for every thing that can be called a "good work." And if
-this be true as to the man of God individually, it is equally true as
-to the Church of God collectively. Scripture is all-sufficient--for
-each, for all. Thank God that it is so! What a signal mercy to have a
-divine guide-book! Were it not so, what should we do? whither should
-we turn? what would become of us? If we were left to human tradition
-and human arrangement in the things of God, what hopeless confusion!
-what clashing of opinions! what conflicting judgments! And all this of
-necessity, inasmuch as one man would have quite as good a right as
-another to put forth his opinion and to suggest his plan.
-
-We shall perhaps be told that, notwithstanding our possession of the
-holy Scripture, we have, nevertheless, sects, parties, creeds, and
-schools of thought almost innumerable. But why is this? Simply because
-we refuse to submit our whole moral being to the authority of holy
-Scripture. This is the real secret of the matter--the true source of
-all those sects and parties which are the shame and sorrow of the
-Church of God.
-
-It is vain for men to tell us that these things are good in
-themselves--that they are the legitimate fruit of that free exercise
-of thought and private judgment which form the very boast and glory of
-Protestant Christianity. We do not and cannot believe for a moment
-that such a plea will stand before the judgment-seat of Christ. We
-believe, on the contrary, that this very boasted freedom of thought
-and independence of judgment are in direct opposition to that spirit
-of profound and reverent obedience which is due to our adorable Lord
-and Master. What right has a servant to exercise his private judgment
-in the face of his master's plainly expressed will? None whatever. The
-duty of a servant is simply to obey--not to reason or to question, but
-to do what he is told. He fails, as a servant, just in so far as he
-exercises his own private judgment. The most lovely moral trait in a
-servant's character is implicit, unquestioning, and unqualified
-obedience. The one grand business of a servant is to do his master's
-will.
-
-All this will be fully admitted in human affairs; but in the things of
-God, men think themselves entitled to exercise their private judgment.
-It is a fatal mistake. God has given us His Word; and that Word is so
-plain, that wayfaring men, though fools, need not err therein. Hence,
-therefore, if we were all guided by that Word,--if we were all to bow
-down in a spirit of unquestioning obedience to its divine authority,
-there could not be conflicting opinions and opposing sects. It is
-quite impossible that the voice of holy Scripture can teach opposing
-doctrines. It cannot possibly teach one man Episcopacy; another,
-Presbyterianism; and another, Independency. It cannot possibly furnish
-a foundation for opposing schools of thought. It would be a positive
-insult offered to the divine volume to attempt to attribute to it all
-the sad confusion of the professing church. Every pious mind must
-recoil, with just horror, from such an impious thought. Scripture
-cannot contradict itself; and therefore if two men or ten thousand men
-are exclusively taught by Scripture, they will think alike.
-
-Hear what the blessed apostle says to the church at Corinth--says to
-us, "Now I beseech you, brethren, _by the name of our Lord Jesus
-Christ_" (mark the mighty moral force of this appeal) "that ye all
-_speak the same thing_, and that there be no divisions among you; but
-that ye be perfectly joined together in _the same mind_, and in _the
-same judgment_."
-
-Now the question is, how was this most blessed result to be reached?
-Was it by each one exercising the right of private judgment? Alas! it
-was this very thing that gave birth to all the division and contention
-in the assembly at Corinth, and drew forth the sharp rebuke of the
-Holy Ghost. Those poor Corinthians thought they had a right to think
-and judge and choose for themselves, and what was the result? "It hath
-been declared unto me of you, my brethren, by them which are of the
-house of Chloe, that there are contentions among you. Now this I say,
-that _every one of you saith_, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I
-of Cephas; and I of Christ. Is Christ divided?"
-
-Here we have private judgment and its sad fruit--its necessary fruit.
-One man has quite as good a right to think for himself as another; and
-no man has any right whatsoever to force his opinion upon his fellow.
-Where, then, lies the remedy? In flinging to the winds our private
-judgments, and reverently submitting ourselves to the supreme and
-absolute authority of holy Scripture. If it be not thus, how could
-the apostle beseech the Corinthians to "speak the same thing, and to
-be perfectly joined together in the same mind, and in the same
-judgment"? Who was to prescribe the "thing" that all were to "speak"?
-In whose "mind" or whose "judgment" were all to be "perfectly joined
-together"? Had any one member of the assembly, however gifted or
-intelligent, the slightest shadow of a right to set forth what his
-brethren were to speak, to think, or to judge? Most certainly not.
-There was one absolute, because divine, authority to which all were
-bound, or rather privileged, to submit themselves. Human opinions,
-man's private judgment, his conscience, his reason--all these things
-must go for what they are worth; and most assuredly they are perfectly
-worthless as authority. The Word of God is the _only_ authority; and
-if we are all governed by that, we shall "all speak the same thing,"
-and "there will be no divisions among us;" but we shall "be perfectly
-joined together in the same mind, and in the same judgment."
-
-Lovely condition! But, alas! it is not the present condition of the
-Church of God; and therefore it is perfectly evident that we are not
-all governed by the one supreme, absolute, and all-sufficient
-authority--the voice of holy Scripture--that most blessed voice that
-can never utter one discordant note--a voice ever divinely harmonious
-to the circumcised ear.
-
-Here lies the root of the whole matter. The Church has departed from
-the authority of Christ, as set forth in His Word. Until this is
-seen, it is only lost time to discuss the claims of conflicting
-systems, ecclesiastical or theological. If a man does not see that it
-is his sacred duty to test every ecclesiastical system, every
-liturgical service, and every theological creed by the Word of God,
-discussion is perfectly useless. If it be allowable to settle things
-according to expediency--according to man's judgment, his conscience,
-or his reason, then verily we may as well at once give up the case as
-hopeless. If we have no divinely settled authority--no perfect
-standard--no infallible guide, we cannot see how it is possible for
-any one to possess the certainty that he is treading in the true path.
-If indeed it be true that we are left to choose for ourselves, amid
-the almost countless paths which lie around us, then farewell to all
-certainty--farewell to peace of mind and rest of heart--farewell to
-all holy stability of purpose and fixedness of aim. If we cannot say
-of the ground we occupy, of the path we pursue, and of the work in
-which we are engaged, "This is the thing which the Lord hath
-commanded," we may rest assured we are in a wrong position, and the
-sooner we abandon it the better.
-
-Thank God, there is no necessity whatever for His child or His servant
-to continue for one hour in connection with what is wrong. "Let every
-one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity." But how are
-we to know what is iniquity? By the Word of God. Whatever is contrary
-to Scripture, whether in morals or in doctrines, is iniquity, and I
-must depart from it, cost what it may. It is an individual
-matter.--"_Let every one._"--"_He_ that hath ears."--"_He_ that
-overcometh."--"If _any_ man hear My voice."
-
-Here is the point. Let us mark it well. It is _Christ's_ voice. It is
-not the voice of this good man or that good man; it is not the voice
-of the church, the voice of the fathers, the voice of general
-councils, but the voice of our own beloved Lord and Master. It is the
-individual conscience in direct, living contact with the voice of
-Christ--the living, eternal Word of God--the holy Scriptures. Were it
-merely a question of human conscience or judgment or authority, we are
-at once plunged in hopeless uncertainty, inasmuch as what one man
-might judge to be iniquity, another might consider to be perfectly
-right. There must be some fixed standard to go by--some supreme
-authority from which there can be no appeal; and, blessed be God,
-there is. God has spoken; He has given us His Word; and it is at once
-our bounden duty, our high privilege, our moral security, our true
-enjoyment, to obey that Word.
-
-Not man's interpretation of the Word, but the Word itself. This is
-all-important. We must have nothing--absolutely nothing between the
-human conscience and divine revelation. Men talk to us about the
-authority of the church. Where are we to find it? Suppose a really
-anxious, earnest, honest soul, longing to know the true way. He is
-told to listen to the voice of the church. He asks, Which church? Is
-it the Greek, Latin, Anglican, or Scotch church? Not two of them
-agree. Nay, more; there are conflicting parties, contending sects,
-opposing schools of thought, in one and the self-same body. Councils
-have differed, fathers have disagreed, popes have anathematized one
-another. In the Anglican Establishment, we have high-church,
-low-church, and broad-church, each differing from the rest. In the
-Scotch or Presbyterian church, we have the Established church, the
-United Presbyterian, and the Free church. And then if the anxious
-inquirer turns away in hopeless perplexity from those great bodies, in
-order to seek guidance amid the ranks of Protestant dissenters, is he
-likely to fare any better?
-
-Ah! reader, it is perfectly hopeless. The whole professing church has
-revolted from the authority of Christ, and cannot possibly be a guide
-or an authority for any one. In the second and third chapters of the
-book of Revelation, the church is seen under judgment, and the appeal,
-seven times repeated, is, "He that hath an ear, let him hear"--what?
-The voice of the church? Impossible! The Lord could never direct us to
-hear the voice of that which is itself under judgment. Hear what,
-then? "Let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches."
-
-And where is this voice to be heard? _Only_ in the holy Scriptures,
-given of God, in His infinite goodness, to guide our souls in the way
-of peace and truth, notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the church,
-and the thick darkness and wild confusion of baptized christendom. It
-lies not within the compass of human language to set forth the value
-and importance of having a divine and therefore an infallible and
-all-sufficient guide and authority for our individual path.
-
-But be it remembered, we are solemnly responsible to bow to that
-authority, and follow that guide. It is utterly vain, indeed morally
-dangerous, to profess to have a divine guide and authority unless we
-are thoroughly subject thereto. This it was that characterized the
-Jews in the days of our Lord. They had the Scriptures, but they did
-not obey them. And one of the saddest features in the present
-condition of christendom is its boasted possession of the Bible, while
-the authority of that Bible is boldly set aside.
-
-We deeply feel the solemnity of this, and would earnestly press it
-upon the conscience of the Christian reader. The Word of God is
-virtually ignored amongst us. Things are practiced and sanctioned, on
-all hands, which not only have no foundation in Scripture, but are
-diametrically opposed to it. We are not exclusively taught and
-absolutely governed by Scripture.
-
-All this is most serious, and demands the attention of all the Lord's
-people in every place. We feel compelled to raise a warning note in
-the ears of all Christians in reference to this most weighty subject.
-Indeed, it is the sense of its gravity and vast moral importance that
-has led us to enter upon the service of writing these "Notes on the
-book of Deuteronomy." It is our earnest prayer that the Holy Ghost
-may use these pages to recall the hearts of the Lord's dear people to
-their true and proper place--even the place of reverent allegiance to
-His blessed Word. We feel persuaded that what will characterize all
-those who will walk devotedly in the closing hours of the Church's
-earthly history will be profound reverence for the Word of God, and
-genuine attachment to the Person of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
-The two things are inseparably bound together by a sacred and
-imperishable link.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The Lord our God spake unto us in Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long
-enough in this mount: turn you, and take your journey, and go to the
-mount of the Amorites, and unto all the places nigh thereunto, in the
-plain, in the hills, and in the vale, and in the south, and by the
-sea-side, to the land of the Canaanites, and unto Lebanon, unto the
-great river, the river Euphrates.'" (Ver. 6, 7.)
-
-We shall find, throughout the whole of the book of Deuteronomy, the
-Lord dealing much more directly and simply with the people than in any
-of the three preceding books; so far is it from being true that
-Deuteronomy is a mere repetition of what has passed before us in
-previous sections. For instance, in the passage just quoted there is
-no mention of the movement of the cloud--no reference to the sound of
-the trumpet. "The Lord our God spake unto us." We know, from the book
-of Numbers, that the movements of the camp were governed by the
-movements of the cloud, as communicated by the sound of the trumpet.
-But neither the trumpet nor the cloud is alluded to in this book. It
-is much more simple and familiar. "The Lord our God spake unto us in
-Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long enough in this mount.'"
-
-This is very beautiful. It reminds us somewhat of the lovely
-simplicity of patriarchal times, when the Lord spake unto the fathers
-as a man speaketh to his friend. It was not by the sound of a trumpet,
-or by the movement of a cloud, that the Lord communicated His mind to
-Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He was so very near to them that there was
-no need, no room for an agency characterized by ceremony and distance.
-He visited them, sat with them, partook of their hospitality, in all
-the intimacy of personal friendship.
-
-Such is the lovely simplicity of the order of things in patriarchal
-times; and this it is which imparts a peculiar charm to the narratives
-of the book of Genesis.
-
-But in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers we have something quite
-different. There, we have set before us a vast system of types and
-shadows, rites, ordinances, and ceremonies, imposed on the people for
-the time being, the import of which is unfolded to us in the epistle
-to the Hebrews.--"The Holy Ghost this signifying, that the way into
-the holiest of all was not yet made manifest, while as the first
-tabernacle was yet standing; which was a figure for the time then
-present, in which were offered both gifts and sacrifices, that could
-not make him that did the service perfect, as pertaining to the
-conscience; which stood only in meats and drinks, and divers washings,
-and carnal ordinances, imposed on them until the time of reformation."
-(Heb. ix. 8-10.)
-
-Under this system, the people were at a distance from God. It was not
-with them as it had been with their fathers in the book of Genesis.
-God was shut in from them, and they were shut out from Him. The
-leading features of the Levitical ceremonial, so far as the people
-were concerned, were bondage, darkness, distance; but on the other
-hand, its types and shadows pointed forward to that one great
-Sacrifice which is the foundation of all God's marvelous counsels and
-purposes, and by which He can, in perfect righteousness, and according
-to all the love of His heart, have a people near unto Himself, to the
-praise of the glory of His grace, throughout the golden ages of
-eternity.
-
-Now, it has been already remarked, we shall find in Deuteronomy
-comparatively little of rites and ceremonies. The Lord is seen more in
-direct communication with the people; and even the priests, in their
-official capacity, come rarely before us; and if they are referred to,
-it is very much more in a moral than in a ceremonial way. Of this we
-shall have ample proof as we pass along; it is a marked feature of
-this beautiful book.
-
-"The Lord our God spake unto us in Horeb, saying, 'Ye have dwelt long
-enough in this mount: turn you, and take your journey, and go to the
-mount of the Amorites.'" What a rare privilege for any people to have
-the Lord so near to them, and so interested in all their movements and
-in all their concerns, great and small! He knew how long they ought to
-remain in any one place, and whither they should next bend their
-steps. They had no need to harass themselves about their journeyings,
-or about any thing else. They were under the eye and in the hands of
-One whose wisdom was unerring, whose power was omnipotent, whose
-resources were inexhaustible, whose love was infinite, who had charged
-Himself with the care of them, who knew all their need, and was
-prepared to meet it, according to all the love of His heart and the
-strength of His holy arm.
-
-What, then, we may ask, remained for them to do? What was their plain
-and simple duty? Just to obey. It was their high and holy privilege to
-rest in the love and obey the commandments of Jehovah, their covenant
-God. Here lay the blessed secret of their peace, their happiness, and
-their moral security. They had no need whatever to trouble themselves
-about their movements, no need of planning or arranging. Their
-journeyings were all ordered for them by One who knew every step of
-the way from Horeb to Kadesh-barnea, and they had just to live by the
-day, in happy dependence upon Him.
-
-Happy position! Privileged path! Blessed portion! But it demanded a
-broken will, an obedient mind, a subject heart. If when Jehovah had
-said, "Ye have compassed this mountain long enough," they, on the
-contrary, were to form the plan of compassing it a little longer, they
-would have had to compass it without Him. His companionship, His
-counsel, and His aid could only be counted upon in the path of
-obedience.
-
-Thus it was with Israel in their desert wanderings, and thus it is
-with us. It is our most precious privilege to leave all our matters in
-the hands, not merely of a covenant God, but of a loving Father. He
-arranges our movements for us; He fixes the bounds of our habitation;
-He tells us how long to stay in a place, and where to go next. He has
-charged Himself with all our concerns, all our movements, all our
-wants. His gracious word to us is, "Be careful for nothing; but in
-every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
-requests be made known unto God." And what then? "The peace of God,
-which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds
-through Christ Jesus."
-
-But it may be the reader feels disposed to ask, How does God guide His
-people now? We cannot expect to hear His voice telling us when to move
-or where to go. To this we reply, at once, It cannot surely be that
-the members of the Church of God--the body of Christ--are worse off in
-the matter of divine guidance than Israel in the wilderness. Cannot
-God guide His children--cannot Christ guide His servants--in all their
-movements and in all their service? Who would think, for a moment, of
-calling in question a truth so plain and so precious? True, we do not
-expect to hear a voice, or see the movement of a cloud; but we have
-what is very much better, very much higher, very much more intimate.
-We may rest assured our God has made ample provision for us in this,
-as in all beside, according to all the love of His heart.
-
-Now, there are three ways in which we are guided: we are guided by the
-Word, we are guided by the Holy Ghost, and we are guided by the
-instincts of the divine nature; and we have to bear in mind that the
-instincts of the divine nature, the leadings of the Holy Ghost, and
-the teaching of holy Scripture will always harmonize. This is of the
-utmost importance to keep before us. A person might fancy himself to
-be led by the instincts of the divine nature, or by the Holy Spirit,
-to pursue a certain line of action involving consequences at issue
-with the Word of God. Thus his mistake would be made apparent. It is a
-very serious thing for any one to act on mere impulse or impression.
-By so doing, he may fall into a snare of the devil, and do very
-serious damage to the cause of Christ. We must calmly weigh our
-impressions in the balances of the sanctuary, and faithfully test them
-by the standard of the divine Word. In this way we shall be preserved
-from error and delusion. It is a most dangerous thing to trust
-impressions or act on impulse. We have seen the most disastrous
-consequences produced by so doing. Facts _may be_ reliable. Divine
-authority is absolutely infallible. Our own impressions may prove as
-delusive as a will-o'-the-wisp, or a mirage of the desert: human
-feelings are most untrustworthy. We must ever submit them to the most
-severe scrutiny, lest they betray us into some fatally false line of
-action. We can trust Scripture without a shadow of misgiving; and we
-shall find, without exception, that the man who is led by the Holy
-Ghost, or guided by the instincts of the divine nature, will never act
-in opposition to the Word of God. This is what we may call an axiom in
-the divine life--an established rule in practical Christianity. Would
-that it had been more attended to in all ages of the Church's history!
-Would that it were more pondered in our own day!
-
-But there is another point in this question of divine guidance which
-demands our serious attention. We not unfrequently hear people speak
-of "the finger of divine Providence" as something to be relied upon
-for guidance. This may be only another mode of expressing the idea of
-being guided by circumstances, which, we do not hesitate to say, is
-very far indeed from being the proper kind of guidance for a
-Christian.
-
-No doubt, our Lord may and does, at times, intimate His mind and
-indicate our path by His providence; but we must be sufficiently near
-to Him to be able to interpret the providence aright, else we may find
-that what is called "an opening of Providence" may actually prove an
-opening by which we slip off the holy path of obedience. Surrounding
-circumstances, just like our inward impressions, must be weighed in
-the presence of God, and judged by the light of His Word, else they
-may lead us into the most terrible mistakes. Jonah might have
-considered it a remarkable providence to find a ship going to
-Tarshish; but had he been in communion with God, he would not have
-needed a ship. In short, the Word of God is the one grand test and
-perfect touchstone for every thing--for outward circumstances and
-inward impressions--for feelings, imaginations, and tendencies--all
-must be placed under the searching light of holy Scripture and there
-calmly and seriously judged. This is the true path of safety, peace,
-and blessedness for every child of God.
-
-It may, however, be said, in reply to all this, that we cannot expect
-to find a text of Scripture to guide us in the matter of our
-movements, or in the thousand little details of daily life. Perhaps
-not; but there are certain great principles laid down in Scripture,
-which, if properly applied, will afford divine guidance even where we
-might not be able to find a particular text. And not only so, but we
-have the fullest assurance that our God can and does guide His
-children in all things. "The steps of a good man are ordered of the
-Lord."--"The meek will He guide in judgment; and the meek will He
-teach His way."--"I will guide thee with Mine eye." He can signify His
-mind to us as to this or that particular act or movement. If not,
-where are we? How are we to get on? How are we to regulate our
-movements? Are we to be drifted hither and thither by the tide of
-circumstances? Are we left to blind chance, or to the mere impulse of
-our own will?
-
-Thank God, it is not so. He can, in His own perfect way, give us the
-certainty of His mind in any given case; and without that certainty we
-should never move. Our Lord Christ (all homage to His peerless name!)
-can intimate His mind to His servant as to where He would have him to
-go and what He would have him to do; and no true servant will ever
-think of moving or acting without such intimation. We should never act
-or move in uncertainty. If we are not sure, let us be quiet and wait.
-Very often it happens that we harass and fret ourselves about
-movements that God would not have us make at all. A person once said
-to a friend, "I am quite at a loss to know which way to turn." "Then,
-don't turn at all," was the friend's wise reply.
-
-But here an all-important moral point comes in, and that is, our whole
-condition of soul. This, we may rest assured, has very much to do with
-the matter of guidance. It is "the meek He will guide in judgment, and
-teach His way." We must never forget this. If only we are humble and
-self-distrusting--if we wait on our God, in simplicity of heart,
-uprightness of mind, and honesty of purpose, He will most assuredly
-guide us. But it will never do to go and ask counsel of God in a
-matter about which our mind is made up, or our will is at work.
-
-This is a fatal delusion. Look at the case of Jehoshaphat, in 1 Kings
-xxii.--"It came to pass in the third year, that Jehoshaphat the king
-of Judah came down to the king of Israel"--a sad mistake, to begin
-with.--"And the king of Israel said unto his servants, 'Know ye that
-Ramoth in Gilead is ours, and we be still, and take it not out of the
-hand of the king of Syria?' And he said unto Jehoshaphat, 'Wilt thou
-go with me to battle to Ramoth-gilead?' And Jehoshaphat said to the
-king of Israel, 'I am as thou art, my people as thy people, my horses
-as thy horses; and, (as we have it in 2 Chronicles xviii. 3,) we will
-be with thee in the war.'"
-
-Here we see that his mind was made up before ever he thought of asking
-counsel of God in the matter. He was in a false position and a wrong
-atmosphere altogether. He had fallen into the snare of the enemy,
-through lack of singleness of eye, and hence he was not in a fit state
-to receive or profit by divine guidance. He was bent on his own will,
-and the Lord left him to reap the fruits of it; and but for infinite
-and sovereign mercy, he would have fallen by the sword of the Syrians,
-and been borne a corpse from the battle-field.
-
-True, he did say to the king of Israel, "Inquire, I pray thee, at the
-word of the Lord to-day." But where was the use of this, when he had
-already pledged himself to a certain line of action? What folly for
-any one to make up his mind and then go and ask for counsel! Had he
-been in a right state of soul, he never would have sought counsel in
-such a case at all; but his state of soul was bad, his position false,
-and his purpose in direct opposition to the mind and will of God.
-Hence, although he heard, from the lips of Jehovah's messenger, His
-solemn judgment on the entire expedition, yet he took his own way, and
-well-nigh lost his life in consequence.
-
-We see the same thing in the forty-second chapter of Jeremiah. The
-people applied to the prophet to ask counsel as to their going down
-into Egypt; but they had already made up their minds as to their
-course--they were bent on their own will. Miserable condition! Had
-they been meek and humble, they would not have needed to ask counsel
-in the matter; but they said unto Jeremiah the prophet, "'Let, we
-beseech thee, our supplication be accepted before thee, and pray for
-us unto the Lord _thy_ God [Why not say, The Lord _our_ God?] even for
-all this remnant; (for we are left but a few of many, as thine eyes do
-behold us:) that the Lord _thy_ God may show us the way wherein we may
-walk, and the thing that we may do.' Then Jeremiah the prophet said
-unto them, 'I have heard you; behold, I will pray unto the Lord _your_
-God according to your words; and it shall come to pass, that
-whatsoever thing the Lord shall answer you, I will declare it unto
-you; I will keep nothing back from you.' Then they said to Jeremiah,
-'The Lord be a true and faithful witness between us, if we do not even
-according to all things for the which the Lord _thy_ God shall send
-thee to us. Whether it be good, or whether it be evil [How could the
-will of God be aught but good?], we will obey the voice of the Lord
-our God, to whom we send thee; that it may be well with us, when we
-obey the voice of the Lord our God.'"
-
-Now, all this seemed very pious and very promising; but mark the
-sequel. When they found that the judgment and counsel of God did not
-tally with their will, "then spake ... _all the proud men_, saving
-unto Jeremiah, 'Thou speakest falsely: the Lord our God hath not sent
-thee to say, Go not into Egypt to sojourn there.'"
-
-Here, the real state of the case comes clearly out. Pride and
-self-will were at work; their vows and promises were false. "Ye
-dissembled in your hearts," says Jeremiah, "when ye sent me unto the
-Lord your God, saying, 'Pray for us unto the Lord our God; and
-according unto all that the Lord our God shall say, so declare unto
-us, and we will do it.'" It would have been all very well had the
-divine response fallen in with their will in the matter; but inasmuch
-as it ran counter, they rejected it altogether.
-
-How often is this the case! The Word of God does not suit man's
-thoughts; it judges them, it stands in direct opposition to his will,
-it interferes with his plans, and hence he rejects it. The human will
-and human reason are ever in direct antagonism to the Word of God, and
-the Christian must refuse both the one and the other if he really
-desires to be divinely guided. An unbroken will and blind reason, if
-we listen to them, can only lead us into darkness, misery, and
-desolation. Jonah _would_ go to Tarshish, when he ought to have gone
-to Nineveh; and the consequence was that he found himself "in the
-belly of hell," with "the weeds wrapped about his head." Jehoshaphat
-_would_ go to Ramoth-gilead, when he ought to have been at Jerusalem;
-and the consequence was that he found himself surrounded by the swords
-of the Syrians. The remnant, in the days of Jeremiah, _would_ go into
-Egypt, when they ought to have remained at Jerusalem; and the
-consequence was that they died by the sword, by the famine, and by the
-pestilence in the land of Egypt, "whither they _desired_ to go and to
-sojourn."
-
-Thus it must ever be. The path of self-will is sure to be a path of
-darkness and misery; it cannot be otherwise: the path of obedience, on
-the contrary, is a path of peace, a path of light, a path of blessing,
-a path on which the beams of divine favor are ever poured in living
-lustre. It may, to the human eye, seem narrow, rough, and lonely; but
-the obedient soul finds it to be the path of life, peace, and moral
-security. "The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth
-more and more unto the perfect day." Blessed path! May the writer and
-the reader ever be found treading it, with a steady step and earnest
-purpose.
-
-Before turning from this great practical subject of divine guidance
-and human obedience, we must ask the reader to refer, for a few
-moments, to a very beautiful passage in the eleventh chapter of Luke.
-He will find it full of the most valuable instruction.
-
-"The light of the body is the eye: therefore when thine eye is
-single, thy whole body also is full of light; but when thine eye is
-evil, thy body also is full of darkness. Take heed, therefore, that
-the light which is in thee be not darkness. If thy whole body
-therefore be full of light, having no part dark, the whole shall be
-full of light, as when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee
-light." (Ver. 34-36.)
-
-Nothing can exceed the moral force and beauty of this passage. First
-of all, we have the "single eye." This is essential to the enjoyment
-of divine guidance. It indicates a broken will--a heart honestly fixed
-upon doing the will of God. There is no under-current, no mixed
-motive, no personal end in view. There is the one simple desire and
-earnest purpose to do the will of God, whatever that will may be.
-
-Now, when the soul is in this attitude, divine light comes streaming
-in and fills the whole body. Hence it follows that if the body is not
-full of light, the eye is not single; there is some mixed motive;
-self-will or self-interest is at work; we are not upright before God.
-In this case, any light which we profess to have is darkness; and
-there is no darkness so gross or so terrible as that judicial darkness
-which settles down upon the heart governed by self-will while
-professing to have light from God. This will be seen in all its
-horrors by and by in christendom, when "that Wicked shall be revealed,
-whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His mouth, and shall
-destroy with the brightness of His coming; even him, whose coming is
-after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders,
-and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish;
-because _they received not the love of the truth_, that they might be
-saved. And _for this cause_ God shall send them strong delusion, that
-they should believe a lie; that they all might be damned who believed
-not the truth, but _had pleasure in unrighteousness_." (2 Thess. ii.
-8-12.)
-
-How awful is this! How solemnly it speaks to the whole professing
-church! How solemnly it addresses the conscience of both the writer
-and the reader of these lines! Light not acted upon becomes
-darkness.--"If the light which is in thee be darkness, how great is
-that darkness!" But on the other hand, a little light honestly acted
-upon is sure to increase; for "to him that hath shall more be given,"
-and "the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more
-and more unto the perfect day."
-
-This moral progress is beautifully and forcibly set forth in Luke xi.
-36.--"If thy whole body therefore be full of light, having _no part
-dark_"--no chamber kept closed against the heavenly rays--no dishonest
-reserve--the whole moral being laid open, in genuine simplicity, to
-the action of divine light; then "the whole shall be full of light, as
-when the bright shining of a candle doth give thee light." In a word,
-the obedient soul has not only light for his own path, but the light
-shines out, so that others see it, like the bright shining of a
-candle. "Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your
-good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven."
-
-We have a very vivid contrast to all this in the thirteenth chapter of
-Jeremiah.--"Give glory to the Lord your God, _before He cause
-darkness_, and before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains, and
-while ye look for light, He turn it into the shadow of death, and make
-it gross darkness." The way to give glory to the Lord our God is to
-obey His Word. The path of duty is a bright and blessed path; and the
-one who, through grace, treads that path will never stumble on the
-dark mountains. The truly humble, the lowly, the self-distrusting,
-will keep far away from those dark mountains, and walk in that blessed
-path which is ever illuminated by the bright and cheering beams of
-God's approving countenance.
-
-This is the path of the just, the path of heavenly wisdom, the path of
-perfect peace. May we ever be found treading it, beloved reader; and
-let us never, for one moment, forget that it is our high privilege to
-be divinely guided in the most minute details of our daily life. Alas!
-for the one who is not so guided. He will have many a stumble, many a
-fall, many a sorrowful experience. If we are not guided by our
-Father's eye, we shall be like the horse or the mule, which have no
-understanding, whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle,--like
-the horse, impetuously rushing where he ought not, or the mule,
-obstinately refusing to go where he ought. How sad for a Christian to
-be like these! How blessed to move, from day to day, in the path
-marked out for us by our Father's eye!--a path which the vulture's eye
-hath not seen, or the lion's whelp trodden; the path of holy
-obedience; the path in which the meek and lowly will ever be found, to
-their deep joy, and the praise and glory of Him who has opened it for
-them and given them grace to tread it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the remainder of our chapter, Moses rehearses in the ears of the
-people, in language of touching simplicity, the facts connected with
-the appointment of the judges, and the mission of the spies. The
-appointment of the judges, Moses here attributes to his own
-suggestion: the mission of the spies was the suggestion of the people.
-That dear and most honored servant of God felt the burden of the
-congregation too heavy for him; and assuredly it was very heavy;
-though we know well that the grace of God was amply sufficient for the
-demand, and, moreover, that that grace could act as well by one man as
-by seventy.
-
-Still, we can well understand the difficulty felt by "the meekest man
-in all the earth" in reference to the responsibility of so grave and
-important a charge; and truly the language in which he states his
-difficulty is affecting in the highest degree. We feel as though we
-must quote it for the reader.
-
-"And I spake unto you at that time, saying, 'I am not able to bear you
-myself alone [Surely not; what mere mortal could? But God was there
-to be counted upon for exigence of every hour.]: the Lord your God
-hath multiplied you, and, behold, ye are this day as the stars of
-heaven for multitude.' (The Lord God of your fathers make you a
-thousand times so many more as ye are, and bless you, as He hath
-promised you.)" Lovely parenthesis! Exquisite breathing of a large and
-lowly heart! "How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance, and your
-burden, and _your strife_?"
-
-Alas! here lay the secret of much of the "cumbrance" and the "burden."
-They could not agree among themselves,--there were controversies,
-contentions, and questions; and who was sufficient for these things?
-what human shoulder could sustain such a burden? How different it
-might have been with them! Had they walked lovingly together, there
-would have been no cases to decide, and therefore no need of judges to
-decide them. If each member of the congregation had sought the
-prosperity, the interest, and the happiness of his brethren, there
-would have been no "strife," no "cumbrance," no "burden." If each had
-done all that in him lay to promote the common good, how lovely would
-have been the result!
-
-But, ah! it was not so with Israel in the desert; and, what is still
-more humbling, it is not so in the Church of God, although our
-privileges are so much higher. Hardly had the assembly been formed by
-the presence of the Holy Ghost ere the accents of murmuring and
-discontent were heard. And about what? About "neglect," whether
-fancied or real. Whatever way it was, _self_ was at work. If the
-neglect was merely imaginary, the Grecians were to blame; and if it
-was real, the Hebrews were to blame. It generally happens, in such
-cases, that there are faults on both sides; but the true way to avoid
-all strife, contention, and murmuring is to put self in the dust and
-earnestly seek the good of others. Had this excellent way been
-understood and adopted, from the outset, what a different task the
-ecclesiastical historian would have had to perform! But, alas! it has
-not been adopted; and hence the history of the professing church, from
-the very beginning, has been a deplorable and humiliating record of
-controversy, division, and strife. In the very presence of the Lord
-Himself, whose whole life was one of complete self-surrender, the
-apostles disputed about who should be greatest. Such a dispute could
-never have arisen had each known the exquisite secret of putting self
-in the dust and seeking the good of others. No one who knows aught of
-the true moral elevation of self-emptiness could possibly seek a good
-or a great place for himself. Nearness to Christ so satisfies the
-lowly heart, that honors, distinctions, and rewards are little
-accounted of; but where self is at work, there you will have envy and
-jealousy, strife and contention, confusion and every evil work.
-
-Witness the scene between the two sons of Zebedee and their ten
-brethren, in the tenth chapter of Mark. What was at the bottom of it?
-Self. The two were thinking of a good place for themselves in the
-kingdom, and the ten were angry with the two for thinking of any such
-thing. Had each set self aside, and sought the good of others, such a
-scene would never have been enacted,--the two would not have been
-thinking about themselves, and hence there would have been no ground
-for the "indignation" of the ten.
-
-But it is needless to multiply examples. Every age of the church's
-history illustrates and proves the truth of our statement that self
-and its odious workings are the producing cause of strife, contention,
-and division, always. Turn where you will--from the days of the
-apostles down to the days in which our lot is cast, and you will find
-unmortified self to be the fruitful source of strife and schism; and
-on the other hand, you will find that to sink self and its interests
-is the true secret of peace, harmony, and brotherly love. If only we
-learn to set self aside, and seek earnestly the glory of Christ and
-the prosperity of His beloved people, we shall not have many "cases"
-to settle.
-
-We must now return to our chapter.
-
-"How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance, and your burden, and your
-strife? Take you wise men, and understanding, and known among your
-tribes, and I will make them rulers over you. And ye answered me, and
-said, 'The thing which thou hast spoken is good for us to do.' So I
-took the chief of your tribes, _wise_ men, and _known_"--men fitted of
-God, and possessing, because entitled to, the confidence of the
-congregation--"and made them heads over you, captains over thousands,
-and captains over hundreds, and captains over fifties, and captains
-over tens, and officers among your tribes."
-
-Admirable arrangement! If indeed it had to be made, nothing could be
-better adapted to the maintenance of order than the graduated scale of
-authority, varying from the captain of ten to the captain of a
-thousand; the lawgiver himself at the head of all, and he in immediate
-communication with the Lord God of Israel.
-
-We have no allusion here to the fact recorded in Exodus xviii, namely,
-that the appointment of those rulers was at the suggestion of Jethro,
-Moses' father-in-law; neither have we any reference to the scene in
-Numbers xi. We call the reader's attention to this as one of the many
-proofs which lie scattered along the pages of Deuteronomy that it is
-very far indeed from being a mere repetition of the preceding sections
-of the Pentateuch. In short, this delightful book has a marked
-character of its own, and the mode in which facts are presented is in
-perfect keeping with that character. It is very evident that the
-object of the venerable lawgiver, or rather of the Holy Ghost in him,
-was to bring every thing to bear, in a moral way, upon the hearts of
-the people, in order to produce that one grand result which is the
-special object of the book from beginning to end, namely, a loving
-obedience to all the statutes and judgments of the Lord their God.
-
-We must bear this in mind if we would study aright the book which lies
-open before us. Infidels, skeptics, and rationalists may impiously
-suggest to us the thought of discrepancies in the various records
-given in the different books; but the pious reader will reject, with a
-holy indignation, every such suggestion, knowing that it emanates
-directly from the father of lies, the determined and persistent enemy
-of the precious revelation of God. This, we feel persuaded, is the
-true way in which to deal with all infidel assaults upon the Bible.
-Argument is useless, inasmuch as infidels are not in a position to
-understand or appreciate its force; they are profoundly ignorant of
-the matter. Nor is it merely a question of profound ignorance, but of
-determined hostility; so that, in every way, the judgment of all
-infidel writers on the subject of divine inspiration is utterly
-worthless and perfectly contemptible. We would pity and pray for the
-men, while we thoroughly despise and indignantly reject their
-opinions. The Word of God is entirely above and beyond them. It is as
-perfect as its Author, and as imperishable as His throne; but its
-moral glories, its living depths, and its infinite perfections are
-only unfolded to faith and need. "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of
-heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and
-prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes."
-
-If we are only content to be as simple as a babe, we shall enjoy the
-precious revelation of a Father's love, as given by His Spirit in the
-holy Scriptures; but on the other hand, those who fancy themselves
-wise and prudent--who build upon their learning, their philosophy, and
-their reason--who think themselves competent to sit in judgment on the
-Word of God, and hence on God Himself, are given over to judicial
-darkness, blindness, and hardness of heart. Thus it comes to pass that
-the most egregious folly and the most contemptible ignorance that man
-can display will be found in the pages of those learned writers who
-have dared to write against the Bible. "Where is the wise? where is
-the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God made
-foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of God
-the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of
-preaching to save them that believe." (1 Cor. i. 20, 21.)
-
-"If any man will be wise, let him become a fool." Here lies the grand
-moral secret of the matter. Man must get to the end of his own wisdom,
-as well as of his own righteousness. He must be brought to confess
-himself a fool ere he can taste the sweetness of divine wisdom. It is
-not within the range of the most gigantic human intellect, aided by
-all the appliances of human learning and philosophy, to grasp the very
-simplest elements of divine revelation; and therefore, when
-unconverted men, whatever may be the force of their genius or the
-extent of their learning, undertake to handle spiritual subjects, and
-more especially the subject of the divine inspiration of holy
-Scripture, they are sure to exhibit their profound ignorance, and
-utter incompetency to deal with the question before them. Indeed,
-whenever we look into an infidel book, we are struck with the
-feebleness of their most forcible arguments; and not only so, but in
-every instance in which they attempt to find a discrepancy in the
-Bible, we see only divine wisdom, beauty, and perfectness.
-
-We have been led into the foregoing line of thought in connection with
-the subject of the appointment of the elders, which is given to us in
-each book according to the wisdom of the Holy Ghost, and in perfect
-keeping with the scope and object of the book. We shall now proceed
-with our quotation.
-
-"And I charged your judges at that time, saying, 'Hear the causes
-between your brethren, and _judge righteously_ between every man and
-his brother, and _the stranger_ that is with him. _Ye shall not
-respect persons_ in judgment; but _ye shall hear the small as well as
-the great_; _ye shall not be afraid of the face of man_; for the
-judgment is God's; and the cause that is too hard for you, bring it
-unto me, and I will hear it.'"
-
-What heavenly wisdom is here! what even-handed justice! what holy
-impartiality! In every case of difference, all the facts on both sides
-were to be fully heard and patiently weighed. The mind was not to be
-warped by prejudice, predilection, or personal feeling of any kind.
-The judgment was to be formed, not by impressions, but by
-facts--clearly established, undeniable facts. Personal influence was
-to have no weight whatever. The position and circumstances of either
-party in the cause were not to be considered. The case must be
-decided entirely upon its own merits. "Ye shall hear the small as well
-as the great." The poor man was to have the same even-handed justice
-meted out to him as the rich; the stranger as one born in the land. No
-difference was to be allowed.
-
-How important is all this! how worthy of our attentive consideration!
-how full of deep and valuable instruction for us all! True, we are not
-all called to be judges or elders or leaders; but the great moral
-principles laid down in the above quotation are of the very utmost
-value to every one of us, inasmuch as cases are continually occurring
-which call for their direct application. Wherever our lot may be cast,
-whatever our line of life or sphere of action, we are liable, alas! to
-meet with cases of difficulty and misunderstanding between our
-brethren,--cases of wrong, whether real or imaginary; and hence it is
-most needful to be divinely instructed as to how we ought to carry
-ourselves in respect to such.
-
-Now, in all such cases, we cannot be too strongly impressed with the
-necessity of having our judgment based on facts--all the facts on both
-sides. We must not allow ourselves to be guided by our own
-impressions, for we all know that mere impressions are most
-untrustworthy. They may be correct, and they may be utterly false.
-Nothing is more easily received and conveyed than a false impression,
-and therefore any judgment based on mere impressions is worthless. We
-must have solid, clearly established facts--facts established by two
-or three witnesses, as Scripture so distinctly enforces. (Deut. xvii.
-6; Matt. xviii. 16; 2 Cor. xiii. 1; 1 Tim. v. 19.)
-
-But further, we must never be guided in judgment by an _ex parte_
-statement. Every one is liable, even with the best intentions, to give
-a color to his statement of a case. It is not that he would
-intentionally make a false statement, or tell a deliberate lie; but
-through inaccuracy of memory, or one cause or another, he may not
-present the case as it really is. Some fact may be omitted, and that
-one fact may so affect all the other facts as to alter their bearing
-completely. "_Audi alteram partem_" ("Hear the other side") is a
-wholesome motto. And not only hear the other side, but hear all the
-facts on both sides, and thus you will be able to form a sound and
-righteous judgment. We may set it down as a standing rule, that any
-judgment formed without an accurate knowledge of all the facts is
-perfectly worthless. "Hear the causes between your brethren, and judge
-righteously between every man and his brother, and the stranger that
-is with him." Seasonable, needed words, most surely, at all times, in
-all places, and under all circumstances. May we apply our hearts to
-them.
-
-And how important the admonition in verse 17! "Ye shall not respect
-persons in judgment; but ye shall hear the small as well as the great;
-ye shall not be afraid of the face of man." How these words discover
-the poor human heart! How prone we are to respect persons--to be
-swayed by personal influence--to attach importance to position and
-wealth--to be afraid of the face of man!
-
-What is the divine antidote against all these evils? Just this: the
-fear of God. If we set the Lord before us, at all times, it will
-effectually deliver us from the pernicious influence of partiality,
-prejudice, and the fear of men. It will lead us to wait humbly and
-patiently on the Lord for guidance and counsel in all that may come
-before us, and thus we shall be preserved from forming hasty and
-one-sided judgments of men and things--that fruitful source of
-mischief amongst the Lord's people in all ages.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now dwell for a few moments on the very affecting manner in
-which Moses brings before the congregation all the circumstances
-connected with the mission of the spies, which, like the appointment
-of the judges, is in perfect keeping with the scope and object of the
-book. This is only what we might expect. There is not, there could not
-be, a single sentence of useless repetition in the divine volume;
-still less could there be a single flaw, a single discrepancy, a
-single contradictory statement. The Word of God is absolutely
-perfect--perfect as a whole, perfect in all its parts. We must firmly
-hold and faithfully confess this in the face of this infidel age.
-
-We speak not of human translations of the Word of God, in which there
-must be more or less of imperfection; though even here, we cannot but
-be "filled with wonder, love, and praise" when we mark the way in
-which our God so manifestly presided over our excellent English
-translation, so that the poor man at the back of a mountain may be
-assured of possessing, in his common English Bible, the revelation of
-God to his soul. And most surely we are warranted in saying that this
-is just what we might look for at the hands of our God. It is but
-reasonable to infer that the One who inspired the writers of the Bible
-would also watch over the translation of it; for inasmuch as He gave
-it originally, in His grace, to those who could read Hebrew and Greek,
-so would He not, in the same grace, give it in every language under
-heaven? Blessed forever be His holy name, it is His gracious desire to
-speak to every man in the very tongue in which he was born,--to tell
-us the sweet tale of His grace--the glad tidings of salvation in the
-very accents in which our mothers whispered into our infant ears those
-words of love that went right home to our very hearts. (See Acts ii.
-5-8.)
-
-Oh that men were more impressed and affected with the truth and power
-of all this, and then we should not be troubled with so many foolish
-and unlearned questions about the Bible.
-
-Let us now hearken to the account given by Moses of the mission of the
-spies--its origin and its result. We shall find it full of most
-weighty instruction, if only the ear be open to hear and the heart
-duly prepared to ponder.
-
-"And I commanded you at that time all the things which ye should do."
-The path of simple obedience was plainly set before them. They had
-but to tread it with an obedient heart and firm step. They had not to
-reason about consequences, or weigh the results; all these they had
-just to leave in the hands of God, and move on with steady purpose in
-the blessed path of obedience.
-
-"And when we departed from Horeb, we went through all that _great and
-terrible wilderness_, which ye saw by the way of the mountain of the
-Amorites, as the Lord our God commanded us; and we came to
-Kadesh-barnea. And I said unto you, 'Ye are come unto the mountain of
-the Amorites, which the Lord our God doth give unto us. Behold, the
-Lord thy God hath set the land before thee: go up and possess it, as
-the Lord God of thy fathers hath said unto thee; fear not, neither be
-discouraged.'"
-
-Here was their warrant for entering upon immediate possession. The
-Lord their God had given them the land and set it before them. It was
-theirs by His free gift--the gift of His sovereign grace, in pursuance
-of the covenant made with their fathers. It was His eternal purpose to
-possess the land of Canaan through the seed of Abraham His friend.
-This ought to have been enough to set their hearts perfectly at rest,
-not only as to the character of the land, but also as to their
-entrance upon it. There was no need of spies. Faith never wants to spy
-what God has given. It argues that what He has given must be worth
-having, and that He is able to put us in full possession of all that
-His grace has bestowed. Israel might have concluded that the same
-hand that had conducted them "through all that great and terrible
-wilderness" could bring them in and plant them in their destined
-inheritance.
-
-So Faith would have reasoned; for it always reasons from God down to
-circumstances, never from circumstances up to God. "If God be for us,
-who can be against us?" This is Faith's argument, grand in its
-simplicity and simple in its moral grandeur. When God fills the whole
-range of the soul's vision, difficulties are little accounted of. They
-are either not seen, or, if seen, they are viewed as occasions for the
-display of divine power. Faith exults in seeing God triumphing over
-difficulties.
-
-But, alas! the people were not governed by faith on the occasion now
-before us, and therefore they had recourse to spies. Of this Moses
-reminds them, and that, too, in language at once most tender and
-faithful.--"And ye came near unto me, _every one of you_, and said,
-'We will send men before us, and they shall search us out the land,
-and bring us word again, by what way we must go up, and into what
-cities we shall come.'"
-
-Surely, they might well have trusted God for all this. The One who had
-brought them up out of Egypt, made a way for them through the sea,
-guided them through the trackless desert, was fully able to bring them
-into the land. But no; they would send spies, simply because their
-hearts had not simple confidence in the true, the living, the almighty
-God.
-
-Here lay the moral root of the matter; and it is well that the reader
-should thoroughly seize this point. True it is that, in the history
-given in Numbers, the Lord told Moses to send the spies; but why?
-Because of the moral condition of the people. And here we see the
-characteristic difference and yet the lovely harmony of the two books.
-Numbers gives us the public history, Deuteronomy the secret source of
-the mission of the spies; and as it is in perfect keeping with Numbers
-to give us the former, so it is in perfect keeping with Deuteronomy to
-give us the latter. The one is the complement of the other. We could
-not fully understand the subject had we only the history given in
-Numbers. It is the touching commentary given in Deuteronomy which
-completes the picture. How perfect is Scripture! All we need is the
-eye anointed to see and the heart prepared to appreciate its moral
-glories.
-
-It may be, however, that the reader still feels some difficulty in
-reference to the question of the spies. He may feel disposed to ask
-how it could be wrong to send them when the Lord told them to do so.
-The answer is, The wrong was not in the act of sending them when they
-were told, but in the wish to send them at all. The wish was the fruit
-of unbelief, and the command to send them was because of that
-unbelief.
-
-We may see something of the same in the matter of divorce in Matthew
-xix.--"The Pharisees also came unto Him, tempting Him, and saying unto
-Him, 'Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?'
-And He answered and said unto them, 'Have ye not read, that He which
-made them at the beginning made them male and female, and said, For
-this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to
-his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they are no
-more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together,
-let not man put asunder.' They say unto Him, 'Why did Moses, then,
-command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away? He
-saith unto them, 'Moses _because of the hardness of your hearts_
-suffered you to put away your wives; but from the beginning it was not
-so.'"
-
-It was not in keeping with God's original institution, or according to
-His heart, that a man should put away his wife; but, in consequence of
-the hardness of the human heart, divorce was permitted by the
-lawgiver. Is there any difficulty in this? Surely not; unless the
-heart is bent on making one. Neither is there any difficulty in the
-matter of the spies. Israel ought not to have needed them: simple
-faith would never have thought of them. But the Lord saw the real
-condition of things and issued a command accordingly; just as, in
-after ages, He saw the heart of the people bent on having a king, and
-He commanded Samuel to give them one.--"And the Lord said unto Samuel,
-'Hearken unto the voice of the people in all that they say unto thee;
-for they have not rejected thee, but they have rejected Me, that I
-should not reign over them. According to all the works which they have
-done since the day that I brought them up out of Egypt even unto this
-day, wherewith they have forsaken Me, and served other gods, so do
-they also unto thee. Now therefore hearken unto their voice: _howbeit
-yet protest solemnly_ unto them, and shew them the manner of the king
-that shall reign over them.'" (1 Sam. viii. 7-9.)
-
-Thus we see that the mere granting of a desire is no proof whatever
-that such desire is according to the mind of God. Israel ought not to
-have asked for a king. Was not Jehovah sufficient? was not He their
-King? could not He, as He had ever done, lead them forth to battle and
-fight for them? Why seek an arm of flesh? why turn away from the
-living, the true, the almighty God to lean on a poor fellow-worm? What
-power was there in a king but that which God might see fit to bestow
-upon him? None whatever. All the power, all the wisdom, all real good,
-was in the Lord their God; and it was there for them--there at all
-times, to meet their every need. They had but to lean upon His
-almighty arm--to draw upon His exhaustless resources, to find all
-their springs in Him.
-
-When they did get a king, according to their hearts' desire, what did
-he do for them? "All the people followed him trembling." The more
-closely we study the melancholy history of Saul's reign, the more we
-see that he was, almost from the very outset, a positive hindrance
-rather than a help. We have but to read his history, from first to
-last, in order to see the truth of this. His whole reign was a
-lamentable failure, aptly and forcibly set forth in two glowing
-sentences of the prophet Hosea,--"I gave thee a king in Mine anger,
-and took him away in My wrath." In a word, he was the answer to the
-unbelief and self-will of the people, and therefore all their
-brilliant hopes and expectations respecting him were most lamentably
-disappointed. He failed to answer the mind of God, and, as a necessary
-consequence, he failed to meet the people's need. He proved himself
-wholly unworthy of the crown and sceptre, and his ignominious fall on
-Mount Gilboa was in melancholy keeping with his whole career.
-
-Now, when we come to consider the mission of the spies, we find it
-too, like the appointment of a king, ending in complete failure and
-disappointment. It could not be otherwise, inasmuch as it was the
-fruit of unbelief. True, God gave them spies, and Moses, with touching
-grace, says, "The saying pleased me well; and I took twelve men of
-you, one of a tribe,"--it was Grace coming down to the condition of
-the people and consenting to a plan which was suited to that
-condition; but this by no means proves that either the plan or the
-condition was according to the mind of God. Blessed be His name, He
-can meet us in our unbelief though He is grieved and dishonored by it.
-He delights in a bold, artless faith; it is the only thing in all this
-world that gives Him His proper place. Hence, when Moses said to the
-people, "Behold, the Lord thy God hath set the land before thee: go up
-and possess it, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath said unto thee;
-fear not, neither be discouraged," what would have been the proper
-response from them? Here we are: lead on, almighty Lord--lead on to
-victory. Thou art enough. With Thee as our leader, we move on with
-joyful confidence. Difficulties are nothing to Thee, and therefore
-they are nothing to us. Thy word and Thy presence are all we want. In
-these we find at once our authority and power. It matters not in the
-least to us who or what may be before us: mighty giants, towering
-walls, frowning bulwarks--what are they all in the presence of the
-Lord God of Israel, but as withered leaves before the whirlwind? Lead
-on, O Lord.
-
-This would have been the language of Faith; but, alas! it was not the
-language of Israel on the occasion before us. God was not sufficient
-for them. They were not prepared to go up, leaning on His arm alone:
-they were not satisfied with His report of the land; they would send
-spies. Any thing for the poor human heart but simple dependence upon
-the one living and true God. The natural man cannot trust God, simply
-because he does not know Him. "They that know Thy name will put their
-trust in Thee."
-
-God must be known, in order to be trusted; and the more fully He is
-trusted, the better He becomes known. There is nothing in all this
-world so truly blessed as a life of simple faith; but it must be a
-reality and not a mere profession. It is utterly vain to talk of
-living by faith, while the heart is secretly resting on some
-creature-prop. The true believer has to do exclusively with God. He
-finds in Him all his resources. It is not that he undervalues the
-instruments or the channels which God is pleased to use; quite the
-reverse. He values them exceedingly; and cannot but value them, as the
-means which God uses for his help and blessing; but he does not allow
-them to displace God. The language of his heart is, "My soul, wait
-thou only upon God; for my expectation is from Him. He _only_ is my
-rock."
-
-There is peculiar force in the word "only." It searches the heart
-thoroughly. To look to the creature, directly or indirectly, for the
-supply of any need, is, in principle, to depart from the life of
-faith; and, oh! it is miserable work, this looking, in any way, to
-creature-streams. It is just as morally degrading as the life of faith
-is morally elevating. And not only is it degrading, but disappointing.
-Creature-props give way, and creature-streams run dry; but they that
-trust in the Lord shall never be confounded, and never want any good
-thing. Had Israel trusted the Lord instead of sending spies, they
-would have had a very different tale to tell; but spies they would
-send, and the whole affair proved a most humiliating failure.
-
-"And they turned, and went up into the mountain, and came unto the
-valley of Eschol, and searched it out. And they took of the fruit of
-the land in their hands, and brought it down unto us, and brought us
-word again, and said, 'It is a good land which the Lord our God doth
-give us.'" How could it possibly be otherwise when God was giving it?
-Did they want spies to tell them that the gift of God was good?
-Assuredly, they ought not. An artless faith would have argued thus:
-Whatever God gives must be worthy of Himself; we want no spies to
-assure us of this. But, ah! this artless faith is an uncommonly rare
-gem in this world; and even those who possess it know but little of
-its value or how to use it. It is one thing to talk of the life of
-faith, and another thing altogether to live it,--the theory is one
-thing, the living reality quite another. But let us never forget that
-it is the privilege of every child of God to live by faith, and,
-further, that the life of faith takes in every thing that the believer
-can possibly need, from the starting-post to the goal of his earthly
-career. We have already touched upon this important point; it cannot
-be too earnestly or constantly insisted upon.
-
-With regard to the mission of the spies, the reader will note with
-interest the way in which Moses refers to it. He confines himself to
-that portion of their testimony which was according to truth; he says
-nothing about the ten infidel spies. This is in perfect keeping with
-the scope and object of the book. Every thing is brought to bear, in a
-moral way, on the conscience of the congregation. He reminds them that
-they themselves had proposed to send the spies; and yet, although the
-spies had placed before them the fruit of the land, and borne
-testimony to its goodness, they would not go up.--"Notwithstanding ye
-would not go up, but rebelled against the commandment of the Lord your
-God." There was no excuse whatever. It was evident that their hearts
-were in a state of positive unbelief and rebellion, and the mission of
-the spies, from first to last, only made this fully manifest.
-
-"And ye murmured in your tents, and said, 'Because the Lord hated
-us'--a terrible lie on the very face of it!--'He hath brought us forth
-out of the land of Egypt, to deliver us into the hand of the Amorites,
-to destroy us.'" What a strange proof of hatred! How utterly absurd
-are the arguments of unbelief! Surely, had He hated them, nothing was
-easier than to leave them to die amid the brick-kilns of Egypt,
-beneath the cruel lash of Pharaoh's taskmasters. Why take so much
-trouble about them? Why those ten plagues sent upon the land of their
-oppressors? Why, if He hated them, did He not allow the waters of the
-Red Sea to overwhelm them as they had overwhelmed their enemies? Why
-had He delivered them from the sword of Amalek? In a word, why all
-these marvelous triumphs of grace on their behalf if He hated them?
-Ah! if they had not been governed by a spirit of dark and senseless
-unbelief, such a brilliant array of evidence would have led them to a
-conclusion the direct opposite of that to which they gave utterance.
-There is nothing beneath the canopy of heaven so stupidly irrational
-as unbelief; and, on the other hand, there is nothing so sound, clear,
-and logical as the simple argument of a childlike faith. May the
-reader ever be enabled to prove the truth of this.
-
-"And ye murmured in your tents." Unbelief is not only a blind and
-senseless reasoner, but a dark and gloomy murmurer. It neither gets
-to the right side of things nor the bright side of things. It is
-always in the dark--always in the wrong, simply because it shuts out
-God, and looks only at circumstances. They said, "Whither shall we go
-up? our brethren have discouraged our hearts, saying, 'The people is
-greater and taller than we'--but they were not greater than
-Jehovah--'and the cities are great and _walled up to heaven_'--the
-gross exaggeration of unbelief--'and moreover we have seen the sons of
-the Anakims there.'"
-
-Now, Faith would say, Well, what though the cities be walled up to
-heaven, our God is above them, for He is _in_ heaven. What are great
-cities or lofty walls to Him who formed the universe, and sustains it
-by the Word of His power? What are Anakims in the presence of the
-almighty God? If the land were covered with walled cities from Dan to
-Beersheba, and if the giants were as numerous as the leaves of the
-forest, they would be as the chaff of the threshing-floor before the
-One who has promised to give the land of Canaan to the seed of
-Abraham, His friend, for an everlasting possession.
-
-But Israel had not faith, as the inspired apostle tells us in the
-third chapter of Hebrews, "They could not enter in because of
-unbelief." Here lay the great difficulty. The walled cities and the
-terrible Anakims would soon have been disposed of had Israel only
-trusted God. He would have made very short work of all these; but, ah!
-that deplorable unbelief! it ever stands in the way of our blessing.
-It hinders the outshining of the glory of God; it casts a dark shadow
-over our souls, and robs us of the privilege of proving the
-all-sufficiency of our God to meet our every need and remove our every
-difficulty.
-
-Blessed be His name, He never fails a trusting heart. It is His
-delight to honor the very largest drafts that Faith hands in at His
-exhaustless treasury. His assuring word to us ever is, "Be not afraid;
-only believe." And again, "According to your faith be it unto you."
-Precious soul-stirring words! may we all realize more fully their
-living power and sweetness. We may rest assured of this, we can never
-go too far in counting on God; it would be a simple impossibility. Our
-grand mistake is that we do not draw more largely upon His infinite
-resources. "Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou
-shouldest see the glory of God?"
-
-Thus we can see why it was that Israel failed to see the glory of God
-on the occasion before us,--they did not believe. The mission of the
-spies proved a complete failure. As it began, so it ended--in the most
-deplorable unbelief. God was shut out: difficulties filled their
-vision.
-
-"They could not enter in." They could not see the glory of God.
-Hearken to the deeply affecting words of Moses. It does the heart good
-to read them. They touch the very deepest springs of our renewed
-being.--"Then I said unto you, 'Dread not, neither be afraid of them.
-The Lord your God which goeth before you, He shall fight for
-you'--only think of God fighting for people! think of Jehovah as a Man
-of war!--'He shall fight for you, according to all that He did for you
-in Egypt before your eyes; and in the wilderness, where thou hast seen
-how that _the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son_, in
-all the way that ye went, until ye came into this place.' Yet in this
-thing _ye did not believe the Lord your God_, who went in the way
-before you, to search you out a place to pitch your tents in, in fire
-by night, to show you by what way ye should go, and in a cloud by
-day."
-
-What moral force, what touching sweetness in this appeal! How clearly
-we can see here, as indeed on every page of the book, that Deuteronomy
-is not a barren repetition of facts, but a most powerful commentary on
-those facts. It is well that the reader should be thoroughly clear as
-to this. If in the book of Exodus or Numbers the inspired lawgiver
-records the actual facts of Israel's wilderness-life, in the book of
-Deuteronomy he comments on those facts with a pathos that quite melts
-the heart. And here it is that the exquisite style of Jehovah's acts
-is pointed out and dwelt upon with such inimitable skill and delicacy.
-Who could consent to give up the lovely figure set forth in the words,
-"As a man doth bear his son"? Here we have the style of the action.
-Could we do without this? Assuredly not. It is the style of an action
-that touches the heart, because it is the style that so peculiarly
-expresses the heart. If the power of the _hand_ or the wisdom of the
-_mind_ is seen in the _substance_ of an action, the love of the
-_heart_ comes out in the _style_. Even a little child can understand
-this, though he might not be able to explain it.
-
-But, alas! Israel could not trust God to bring them into the land.
-Notwithstanding the marvelous display of His power, His faithfulness,
-His goodness, and loving-kindness, from the brick-kilns of Egypt to
-the very borders of the land of Canaan, yet they did not believe. With
-an array of evidence which ought to have satisfied any heart, they
-still doubted. "And the Lord heard the voice of your words, and was
-wroth, and sware, saying, 'Surely there shall not one of these men of
-this evil generation see that good land, which I sware to give unto
-your fathers, save Caleb the son of Jephunneh; he shall see it; and to
-him will I give the land that he hath trodden upon, and to his
-children, because he hath wholly followed the Lord.'"
-
-"Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest
-see the glory of God?" Such is the divine order. Men will tell you
-that seeing is believing, but in the kingdom of God, believing is
-seeing. Why was it that not a man of that evil generation was allowed
-to see the good land? Simply because they did not believe in the Lord
-their God. On the other hand, why was Caleb allowed to see and take
-possession? Simply because he believed. Unbelief is ever the great
-hindrance in the way of our seeing the glory of God.--"He did not many
-mighty works there because of their unbelief." If Israel had only
-believed, only trusted the Lord their God, only confided in the love
-of His heart and in the power of His arm, He would have brought them
-in and planted them in the mountain of His inheritance.
-
-And just so is it with the Lord's people now. There is no limit to the
-blessings which we might enjoy, could we only count more fully upon
-God. "All things are possible to him that believeth." Our God will
-never say, You have drawn too largely; you expect too much.
-Impossible. It is the joy of His loving heart to answer the very
-largest expectations of Faith.
-
-Let us, then, draw largely. "Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it."
-The exhaustless treasury of heaven is thrown open to Faith. "_All
-things_ whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall
-receive." "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth
-to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.
-But let him ask in faith, _nothing wavering_." Faith is the divine
-secret of the whole matter--the main-spring of Christian life from
-first to last. Faith wavers not, staggers not: Unbelief is ever a
-waverer and a staggerer, and hence it never sees the glory of God,
-never sees His power. It is deaf to His voice and blind to His
-actings; it depresses the heart and weakens the hands; it darkens the
-path and hinders all progress. It kept Israel out of the land of
-Canaan for forty years; and we have no conception of the amount of
-blessing, privilege, power and usefulness which we are constantly
-missing through its terrible influence. If faith were in more lively
-exercise in our hearts, what a different condition of things we should
-witness in our midst. What is the secret of the deplorable deadness
-and barrenness throughout the wide field of Christian profession? How
-are we to account for our impoverished condition, our low tone, our
-stunted growth? Why is it that we see such poor results in every
-department of Christian work? Why are there so few genuine
-conversions? Why are our evangelists so frequently cast down by reason
-of the paucity of their sheaves? How are we to answer all these
-questions? what is the cause? Will any one attempt to say it is not
-our unbelief?
-
-No doubt, our divisions have much to do with it; our worldliness, our
-carnality, our self-indulgence, our love of ease. But what is the
-remedy for all these evils? How are our hearts to be drawn out in
-genuine love to all our brethren? By faith, that precious principle
-"that worketh by love." Thus the blessed apostle says to the dear
-young converts at Thessalonica, "Your faith groweth exceedingly." And
-what then? "The love of every one of you all toward each other
-aboundeth." Thus it must ever be. Faith puts us into direct contact
-with the eternal spring of love in God Himself, and the necessary
-consequence is that our hearts are drawn out in love to all who belong
-to Him--all in whom we can, in the very feeblest way, trace His
-blessed image. We cannot possibly be near the Lord and not love all
-who in every place call upon His name out of a pure heart. The nearer
-we are to Christ, the more intensely we must be knit, in true
-brotherly love, to every member of His body.
-
-Then as to worldliness, in all its varied forms, how is it to be
-overcome? Hear the reply of another inspired apostle.--"For whatsoever
-is born of God overcometh the world; and this is the victory that
-overcometh the world, even our faith. Who is he that overcometh the
-world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?" The new
-man, walking in the power of faith, lives above the world, above its
-motives, above its objects, its principles, its habits, its fashions;
-he has nothing in common with it. Though in it, he is not of it; he
-moves right athwart its current; he draws all his springs from heaven;
-his life, his hope, his all is there, and he ardently longs to be
-there himself when his work on earth is done.
-
-Thus we see what a mighty principle faith is. It purifies the heart,
-it works by love, and it overcomes the world. In short, it links the
-heart in living power with God Himself, and this is the secret of true
-elevation, holy benevolence, and divine purity. No marvel, therefore,
-that Peter calls it "precious faith," for truly it is precious beyond
-all human thought.
-
-See how this mighty principle acted in Caleb, and the blessed fruit it
-produced. He was permitted to realize the truth of those words,
-uttered hundreds of years afterwards, "According to your faith be it
-unto you." He believed that God was able to bring them into the land,
-and that all the difficulties and hindrances were simply bread for
-faith. And God, as He ever does, answered his faith. "Then the
-children of Judah came unto Joshua in Gilgal; and Caleb the son of
-Jephunneh the Kenezite said unto him, 'Thou knowest the thing that the
-Lord said unto Moses the man of God concerning me and thee in
-Kadesh-barnea. Forty years old was I when Moses the servant of the
-Lord sent me from Kadesh-barnea to espy out the land; and I brought
-him word again as it was in my heart'--the simple testimony of a
-bright and lovely faith.--'Nevertheless my brethren that went up with
-me made the heart of the people melt; but I wholly followed the Lord
-my God. And Moses sware on that day, saying, Surely the land whereon
-thy feet have trodden shall be thine inheritance, and thy children's
-forever, because thou hast wholly followed the Lord my God. And now,
-behold, the Lord hath kept me alive, _as He said_, these forty and
-five years, ever since the Lord spake this word unto Moses, while the
-children of Israel wandered in the wilderness; and now, lo, I am this
-day fourscore and five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as I
-was in the day that Moses sent me; as my strength was then, even so is
-my strength now, for war, both to go out, and to come in. Now
-therefore give me this mountain, whereof the Lord spake in that day;
-for thou heardest in that day how the Anakims were there, and that the
-cities were great and fenced: if so be the Lord will be with me, then
-I shall be able to drive them out, as the Lord said.'"
-
-How refreshing are the utterances of an artless faith! How edifying!
-how truly encouraging! How vividly they contrast with the gloomy,
-depressing, withering accents of dark, God-dishonoring unbelief! "And
-Joshua blessed him, and gave unto Caleb the son of Jephunneh Hebron
-for an inheritance. Hebron therefore became the inheritance of Caleb
-the son of Jephunneh the Kenezite unto this day, because that he
-wholly followed the Lord God of Israel." (Joshua xiv.) Caleb, like his
-father Abraham, was strong in faith, giving glory to God; and we may
-say, with all possible confidence, that inasmuch as faith ever honors
-God, He ever delights to honor faith; and we feel persuaded that if
-only the Lord's people could more fully confide in God, if they would
-but draw more largely upon His infinite resources, we should witness a
-totally different condition of things from what we see around us.
-"Said I not unto thee that if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest
-see the glory of God?" Oh for a more lively faith in God--a bolder
-grasp of His faithfulness, His goodness, and His power! Then we might
-look for more glorious results in the gospel-field; more zeal, more
-energy, more intense devotedness in the Church of God; and more of the
-fragrant fruits of righteousness in the life of believers
-individually.
-
-We shall now, for a moment, look at the closing verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find some very weighty instruction. And,
-first of all, we see the actings of divine government displayed in a
-most solemn and impressive manner. Moses refers, in a very touching
-way, to the fact of his exclusion from the promised land.--"Also the
-Lord was angry with me _for your sakes_, saying, 'Thou also shalt not
-go in thither.'"
-
-Mark the words, "for your sakes." It was very needful to remind the
-congregation that it was on their account that Moses, that beloved and
-honored servant of the Lord, was prevented from crossing the Jordan,
-and setting his foot upon the land of Canaan. True, "he spake
-unadvisedly with his lips," but "they provoked his spirit" to do so.
-This ought to have touched them to the quick. They not only failed,
-through unbelief, to enter in themselves, but they were the cause of
-his exclusion, much as he longed to see "that goodly mountain and
-Lebanon." (See Ps. cvi. 32.)
-
-But the government of God is a grand and awful reality. Let us never
-for one moment forget this. The human mind may marvel why a few
-ill-advised words, a few hasty sentences, should be the cause of
-keeping such a beloved and honored servant of God from that which he
-so ardently desired; but it is our place to bow the head in humble
-adoration and holy reverence, not to reason or judge. "Shall not the
-Judge of all the earth do right?" Most surely. He can make no mistake.
-"Great and marvelous are Thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true
-are Thy ways, Thou King of nations." "God is greatly to be feared in
-the assembly of the saints; and to be had in reverence of all them
-that are about Him." "Our God is a consuming fire;" and "it is a
-fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God."
-
-Does it in any wise interfere with the action and range of the divine
-government that we, as Christians, are under the reign of grace? By no
-means. It is as true to-day as ever it was that "whatsoever _a man_
-soweth, that shall he also reap." Hence, therefore, it would be a
-serious mistake for any one to draw a plea from the freedom of divine
-grace to trifle with the enactments of divine government. The two
-things are perfectly distinct, and should never be confounded. Grace
-can pardon--freely, fully, eternally; but the wheels of Jehovah's
-governmental chariot roll on, in crushing power and appalling
-solemnity. Grace pardoned Adam's sin; but Government drove him out of
-Eden, to earn a living by the sweat of his brow, amid the thorns and
-thistles of a cursed earth: Grace pardoned David's sin, but the sword
-of Government hung over his house to the end,--Bathsheba was the
-mother of Solomon, but Absalom rose in rebellion.
-
-So with Moses; Grace brought him to the top of Pisgah and showed him
-the land, but Government sternly and absolutely forbad his entrance
-thither. Nor does it in the least touch this weighty principle to be
-told that Moses, in his official capacity as the representative of the
-legal system, could not bring the people into the land. This is quite
-true; but it leaves wholly untouched the solemn truth now before us.
-Neither in the twentieth chapter of Numbers nor in the first chapter
-of Deuteronomy have we any thing about Moses in his official capacity.
-It is himself personally we have before us, and he is forbidden to
-enter the land because of having spoken unadvisedly with his lips.
-
-It will be well for us all to ponder deeply, as in the immediate
-presence of God, this great practical truth. We may rest assured that
-the more truly we enter into the knowledge of grace, the more we shall
-feel the solemnity of government, and entirely justify its enactments.
-Of this we are most fully persuaded. But there is imminent danger of
-taking up, in a light and careless manner, the doctrines of grace
-while the heart and the life are not brought under the sanctifying
-influence of those doctrines. This has to be watched against with holy
-jealousy. There is nothing in all this world more awful than mere
-fleshly familiarity with the theory of salvation by grace. It opens
-the door for every form of licentiousness. Hence it is that we feel
-the necessity of pressing upon the conscience of the reader the
-practical truth of the government of God. It is most salutary at all
-times, but particularly so in this our day, when there is such a
-fearful tendency to turn the grace of our God into lasciviousness. We
-shall invariably find that those who most fully enter into the deep
-blessedness of being under the reign of grace, do also most
-thoroughly justify the actings of divine government.
-
-But we learn, from the closing lines of our chapter, that the people
-were by no means prepared to submit themselves under the governmental
-hand of God; in short, they would neither have grace nor government.
-When invited to go up at once and take possession of the land, with
-the fullest assurances of the divine presence and power with them,
-they hesitated and refused to go. They gave themselves up completely
-to a spirit of dark unbelief. In vain did Joshua and Caleb sound in
-their ears the most encouraging words, in vain did they set before
-their eyes the rich fruit of the goodly land, in vain did Moses seek
-to move them by the most soul-stirring words; they would not go up
-when they were told to go. And what then? They were taken at their
-word. According to their unbelief, so was it unto them. "Moreover,
-your little ones, which ye said should be a prey, and your children,
-which in that day had no knowledge between good and evil, they shall
-go in thither, and unto them will I give it, and they shall possess
-it. But as for you, turn you, and take your journey into the
-wilderness, by the way of the Red Sea."
-
-How sad! and yet how else could it be? If they would not, in simple
-faith, go up into the land, there remained nothing for them but
-turning back into the wilderness. But to this they would not submit.
-They would neither avail themselves of the provisions of grace nor bow
-to the sentence of judgment.--"Then ye answered and said unto me, 'We
-have sinned against the Lord; we will go up and fight, according to
-all that the Lord our God commanded us.' And when ye had girded on
-every man his weapon of war, ye were ready to go up into the hill."
-
-This looked like contrition and self-judgment; but it was hollow and
-false. It is a very easy thing to _say_, "We have sinned." Saul said
-it in his day; but he said it without heart, without any genuine sense
-of what he was saying. We may easily gather the force and value of the
-words "I have sinned" from the fact that they were immediately
-followed by "_Honor me_ now, I pray thee, before the elders of my
-people." What a strange contradiction!--"I have sinned," yet "Honor
-me." If he had really felt his sin, how different his language would
-have been! how different his spirit, style, and deportment! but it was
-all a solemn mockery. Only conceive a man full of himself, making use
-of a form of words, without one atom of true heart-feeling; and then,
-in order to get honor for himself, going through the empty formality
-of worshiping God. What a picture! Can any thing be more sorrowful?
-How terribly offensive to Him who desires truth in the inward parts,
-and who seeks those to worship Him who worship Him in spirit and in
-truth! The feeblest breathings of a broken and contrite heart are
-precious to God; but, oh, how offensive to Him are the hollow
-formalities of a mere religiousness, the object of which is to exalt
-man in his own eyes and in the eyes of his fellows! How perfectly
-worthless is the mere lip-confession of sin where the heart does not
-feel it! As a recent writer has well remarked, "it is an easy thing to
-say, 'We have sinned,' but how often we have to learn that it is not
-the quick, abrupt confession of sin which affords evidence that sin is
-felt! It is rather a proof of hardness of heart. The conscience feels
-that a certain act of confessing the sin is necessary, but perhaps
-there is hardly any thing which more hardens the heart than the habit
-of confessing sin without feeling it. This, I believe, is one of the
-great snares of christendom from of old and now, that is, the
-stereotyped acknowledgment of sin--the mere habit of hurrying through
-a formula of confession to God. I dare say we have almost all done so,
-without referring to any particular mode; for, alas! there is
-formality enough; and without having written forms, the heart may
-frame forms of its own, as we may have observed, if not known it, in
-our own experience, without finding fault with other people."[4]
-
- [4] "Lectures Introductory to the Pentateuch," by W. Kelly.
-
-Thus it was with Israel at Kadesh. Their confession of sin was utterly
-worthless; there was no truth in it. Had they felt what they were
-saying, they would have bowed to the judgment of God, and meekly
-accepted the consequence of their sin. There is no finer proof of true
-contrition than quiet submission to the governmental dealings of God.
-Look at the case of Moses. See how he bowed his head to the divine
-discipline. "The Lord," he says, "was angry with me for your sakes,
-saying, 'Thou also shalt not go in thither. But Joshua the son of Nun,
-which standeth before thee, he shall go in thither: encourage him; for
-he shall cause Israel to inherit it.'"
-
-Here, Moses shows them that they were the cause of his exclusion from
-the land; and yet he utters not a single murmuring word, but meekly
-bows to the divine judgment, not only content to be superseded by
-another, but ready to appoint and encourage his successor. There is no
-trace of jealousy or envy here. It was enough for that beloved and
-honored servant if God was glorified and the need of the congregation
-met. He was not occupied with himself or his own interests, but with
-the glory of God and the blessing of His people.
-
-But the people manifested a very different spirit. "We will go up and
-fight." How vain! How foolish! When commanded by God and encouraged by
-His true-hearted servants to go up and possess the land, they replied,
-"Whither shall we go up?" and when commanded to turn back into the
-wilderness, they replied, "We will go up and fight."
-
-"And the Lord said unto me, 'Say unto them, Go not up, neither fight;
-for I am not among you; lest ye be smitten before your enemies.' So I
-spake unto you; and ye would not hear, but rebelled against the
-commandment of the Lord, and went presumptuously up into the hill. And
-the Amorites, which dwelt in that mountain, came out against you, and
-chased you, as bees do, and destroyed you in Seir, even unto Hormah."
-
-It was quite impossible for Jehovah to accompany them along the path
-of self-will and rebellion; and, most assuredly, Israel, without the
-divine presence, could be no match for the Amorites. If God be for us
-and with us, all must be victory; but we cannot count on God if we are
-not treading the path of obedience. It is simply the height of folly
-to imagine that we can have God with us if our ways are not right.
-"The name of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous runneth into it
-and is safe." But if we are not walking in practical righteousness, it
-is wicked presumption to talk of having the Lord as our strong tower.
-
-Blessed be His name, He can meet us in the very depths of our weakness
-and failure, provided there be the genuine and hearty confession of
-our true condition; but to assume that we have the Lord with us while
-we are doing our own will and walking in palpable unrighteousness, is
-nothing but wickedness and hardness of heart. "Trust in the Lord, and
-do good"--this is the divine order; but to talk of trusting in the
-Lord while doing evil, is to turn the grace of our God into
-lasciviousness, and place ourselves completely in the hands of the
-devil, who only seeks our moral ruin. "The eyes of the Lord run to and
-fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong in the behalf
-of them whose heart is perfect toward Him." When we have a good
-conscience, we can lift up the head and move on through all sorts of
-difficulties; but to attempt to tread the path of faith with a bad
-conscience, is the most dangerous thing in this world. We can only
-hold up the shield of faith when our loins are girt with truth, and
-the breast covered with the breastplate of righteousness.
-
-It is of the utmost importance that Christians should seek to maintain
-practical righteousness, in all its branches. There is immense moral
-weight and value in these words of the blessed apostle Paul, "Herein
-do I exercise myself, to have always a conscience void of offense
-toward God and men." He ever sought to wear the breastplate, and to be
-clothed in that white linen which is the righteousness of saints. And
-so should we. It is our holy privilege to tread, day by day, with firm
-step, the path of duty, the path of obedience, the path on which the
-light of God's approving countenance ever shines; then, assuredly, we
-can count on God, lean upon Him, draw from Him, find all our springs
-in Him, wrap ourselves up in His faithfulness, and thus move on, in
-peaceful communion and holy worship, toward our heavenly home.
-
-It is not, we repeat, that we cannot look to God in our weakness, our
-failure, and even when we have erred and sinned. Blessed be His name,
-we can; and His ear is ever open to our cry. "If we confess our sins,
-He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from
-all unrighteousness." (1 John i.) "Out of the depths have I cried unto
-thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice: let Thine ears be attentive to the
-voice of my supplications. If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquities, O
-Lord, who shall stand? But there is forgiveness with Thee, that Thou
-mayest be feared." (Ps. cxxx.) There is absolutely no limit to divine
-forgiveness, inasmuch as there is no limit to the extent of the
-atonement, no limit to the virtue and efficacy of the blood of Jesus
-Christ, God's Son, which cleanseth from all sin; no limit to the
-prevalency of the intercession of our adorable Advocate, our great
-High-Priest, who is able to save to the uttermost--right through and
-through to the end--them that come unto God by Him.
-
-All this is most blessedly true; it is largely taught and variously
-illustrated throughout the volume of inspiration; but the confession
-of sin, and the pardon thereof, must not be confounded with practical
-righteousness. There are two distinct conditions in which we may call
-upon God: we may call upon Him in deep contrition and be heard, or we
-may call upon Him with a good conscience and an uncondemning heart and
-be heard. But the two things are very distinct; and not only are they
-distinct in themselves, but they both stand in marked contrast with
-that indifference and hardness of heart which would presume to count
-on God in the face of positive disobedience and practical
-unrighteousness. It is this which is so dreadful in the sight of the
-Lord, and which must bring down His heavy judgment. Practical
-righteousness He owns and approves; confessed sin He can freely and
-fully pardon; but to imagine that we can put our trust in God while
-our feet are treading the path of iniquity, is nothing short of the
-most shocking impiety. "Trust ye not in lying words, saying, The
-temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord, The temple of the Lord,
-are these. For if ye throughly amend your ways and your doings; if ye
-throughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor; if ye
-oppress not the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, and shed not
-innocent blood in this place, neither walk after other gods to your
-hurt: then will I cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I
-gave to your fathers, forever and ever. Behold, ye trust in lying
-words, that cannot profit. Will ye steal, murder, and commit adultery,
-and swear falsely, and burn incense unto Baal, and walk after other
-gods whom ye know not; and come and stand before Me in this house,
-which is called by My name, and say, 'We are delivered to do all these
-abominations?'" (Jeremiah vii.)
-
-God deals in moral realities. He desires truth in the inward parts;
-and if men will presume to hold the truth in unrighteousness, they
-must look out for His righteous judgment. It is the thought of all
-this that makes us feel the awful condition of the professing church.
-The solemn passage which we have just culled from the prophet
-Jeremiah, though bearing primarily upon the men of Judah and the
-inhabitants of Jerusalem, has a very pointed application to
-christendom. We find, in the third chapter of 2 Timothy, that all the
-abominations of heathenism, as detailed in the close of Romans i, are
-reproduced in the last days under the garb of the Christian
-profession, and in immediate connection with "a form of godliness."
-What must be the end of such a condition of things? Unmitigated wrath.
-The very heaviest judgments of God are reserved for that vast mass of
-baptized profession which we call christendom. The moment is rapidly
-approaching when all the beloved and blood-bought people of God shall
-be called away out of this dark and sinful, though so-called
-"Christian world," to be forever with the Lord, in that sweet home of
-love prepared in the Father's house. Then the "strong delusion" shall
-be sent upon christendom--upon those very countries where the light of
-a full-orbed Christianity has shone, where a full and free gospel has
-been preached, where the Bible has been circulated by millions, and
-where all, in some way or another, profess the name of Christ and call
-themselves Christians.
-
-And what then?--what is to follow this "strong delusion"? Any fresh
-testimony? any further overtures of mercy? any further effort of
-long-suffering grace? Not for christendom! not for the rejecters of
-the gospel of God! not for Christless, Godless professors of the
-hollow and worthless forms of Christianity! The heathen shall hear
-"the everlasting gospel"--"the gospel of the kingdom;" but as for that
-terrible thing, that most frightful anomaly called christendom--"the
-vine of the earth," nothing remains but the wine-press of the wrath
-of Almighty God, the blackness and darkness forever, the lake that
-burneth with fire and brimstone.
-
-Reader, these are the true sayings of God. Nothing would be easier
-than to place before your eyes an array of Scripture proof perfectly
-unanswerable: this would be foreign to our present object. The New
-Testament, from cover to cover, sets forth the solemn truth above
-enunciated; and every system of theology under the sun that teaches
-differently will be found, on this point at least, to be totally
-false.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-The closing lines of chapter i. show us the people weeping before the
-Lord.--"And ye returned and wept before the Lord; but the Lord would
-not hearken to your voice, nor give ear unto you. So ye abode in
-Kadesh many days, according unto the days that ye abode there."
-
-There was no more reality in their tears than in their words,--their
-weeping was no more to be trusted than their confession. It is
-possible for people to confess and shed tears without any true sense
-of sin in the presence of God. This is very solemn. It is really
-mocking God. We know, blessed forever be His name, that a truly
-contrite heart is His delight. He makes His abode with such. "The
-sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart,
-O God, Thou wilt not despise." The tears that flow from a penitent
-heart are more precious, by far, to God than the cattle upon a
-thousand hills, because they prove that there is room in that heart
-for Him; and this is what He seeks, in His infinite grace. He wants to
-dwell in our hearts, and fill us with the deep, unspeakable joy of His
-own most blessed presence.
-
-But Israel's confession and tears at Kadesh were not real, and hence
-the Lord could not accept them. The feeblest cry of a broken heart
-ascends directly to the throne of God, and is immediately answered by
-the soothing, healing balm of His pardoning love; but when tears and
-confession stand connected with self-will and rebellion, they are not
-only utterly worthless, but a positive insult to the divine Majesty.
-
-Thus, then, the people had to turn back into the wilderness, and
-wander there for forty years. There was nothing else for it. They
-would not go up into the land, in simple faith, with God, and He would
-not go up with them in their self-will and self-confidence; they had,
-therefore, simply to accept the consequence of their disobedience. If
-they would not enter the land, they must fall in the wilderness.
-
-How solemn is all this! and how solemn is the Spirit's commentary upon
-it in the third chapter of Hebrews! and how pointed and forcible the
-application to us! We must quote the passage for the benefit of the
-reader.--"Wherefore, as the Holy Ghost saith, 'To-day if ye will hear
-His voice, harden not your hearts, as in the provocation, in the day
-of temptation in the wilderness; when your fathers tempted Me, proved
-Me, and saw My works forty years. Wherefore I was grieved with that
-generation, and said, They do alway err _in heart_; and they have not
-known My ways. So I sware in My wrath, They shall not enter into My
-rest.' Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart
-of unbelief, in departing from the living God. But exhort one another
-daily, while it is called 'To-day;' lest any of you be hardened
-through the deceitfulness of sin. For we are made partakers of Christ,
-if we hold the beginning of our confidence steadfast unto the end;
-while it is said, 'To-day if ye will hear His voice, harden not your
-hearts, as in the provocation. For some, when they had heard, did
-provoke; howbeit not all that came out of Egypt by Moses. But with
-whom was He grieved forty years? was it not with them that had sinned,
-whose carcases fell in the wilderness? And to whom sware He that they
-should not enter into His rest, but to them that believed not? So we
-see that they could not enter in because of unbelief. Let us therefore
-fear, lest, a promise being left us of entering into His rest, any of
-you should seem to come short of it. For unto us was the gospel
-preached, as well as unto them; but the word preached did not profit
-them, not being mixed with faith in them that heard."
-
-Here, as in every page of the inspired volume, we learn that unbelief
-is _the_ thing that grieves the heart and dishonors the name of God;
-and not only so, but it robs us of the blessings, the dignities, and
-the privileges which infinite grace bestows. We have very little idea
-of how much we lose, in every way, through the unbelief of our hearts.
-Just as in Israel's case the land was before them, in all its
-fruitfulness and beauty, and they were commanded to go and take
-possession, but "they could not enter in because of unbelief;" so with
-us--we fail to possess ourselves of the fullness of blessing which
-sovereign grace has put within our reach. The very treasury of heaven
-is thrown open to us, but we fail to appropriate. We are poor, feeble,
-empty, and barren when we might be rich, vigorous, full, and fruitful.
-We are blessed with all spiritual blessings in the heavenlies in
-Christ, but how shallow is our apprehension! how feeble our grasp! how
-poor our thoughts!
-
-Then, again, who can calculate how much we lose, through our unbelief,
-in the matter of the Lord's work in our midst? We read in the gospel
-of a certain place in which our blessed Lord could not do many mighty
-works, because of their unbelief. Has this no voice for us? Do we too
-hinder Him by unbelief? We shall perhaps be told by some that the Lord
-will carry on His work irrespective of us or our faith; He will gather
-out His own and accomplish the number of His elect spite of our
-unbelief. Not all the power of earth and hell--men and devils combined
-can hinder the carrying out of His counsels and purposes; and as to
-His work, It is not by might nor by power, but by His Spirit. Human
-efforts are in vain; and the Lord's cause can never be furthered by
-Nature's excitement.
-
-Now, all this is perfectly true; but it leaves wholly untouched the
-inspired statement quoted above. "He could there do not many mighty
-works, because of their unbelief." Did not those people lose blessing
-through their unbelief? did they not hinder much good being done? We
-must beware how we surrender our minds to the withering influence of a
-pernicious fatalism, which, with a certain semblance of truth, is
-utterly false, inasmuch as it denies all human responsibility and
-paralizes all godly energy in the cause of Christ. We have to bear in
-mind that the same One who, in His eternal counsels, has decreed the
-end, has also designed the means; and if we, in the sinful unbelief of
-our hearts and under the influence of one-sided truth, fold our arms
-and neglect the means, He will set us aside and carry on His work by
-other hands. He will work, blessed be His holy name, but we shall lose
-the dignity, the privilege, and the blessing of being His instruments.
-
-Look at that striking scene in the second of Mark. It most forcibly
-illustrates the great principle which we desire to press upon all who
-may read these lines. It proves the power of faith, in connection with
-the carrying on of the Lord's work. If the four men whose conduct is
-here set forth had suffered themselves to be influenced by a
-mischievous fatalism, they would have argued that it was no use doing
-any thing--if the palsied man was to be cured he would be cured,
-without human effort. Why should they busy themselves in climbing up
-on the house, uncovering the roof, and letting down the sick man into
-the midst before Jesus? Ah, it was well for the palsied man and well
-for themselves that they did not act on such miserable reasoning as
-this. See how their lovely faith wrought. It refreshed the heart of
-the Lord Jesus; it brought the sick man into the place of healing,
-pardon, and blessing; and it gave occasion for the display of divine
-power, which arrested the attention of all present and gave testimony
-to the great truth that God was on earth, in the Person of Jesus of
-Nazareth, healing diseases and forgiving sins.
-
-Many other examples might be adduced, but there in no need. All
-Scripture establishes the fact that unbelief hinders our blessing,
-hinders our usefulness, robs us of the rare privilege of being God's
-honored instruments in the carrying on of His glorious work, and of
-seeing the operations of His hand and His Spirit in our midst; and, on
-the other hand, that faith draws down power and blessing, not only for
-ourselves, but for others,--that it both glorifies and gratifies God,
-by clearing the platform of the creature and making room for the
-display of divine power. In short, there is no limit to the blessing
-which we might enjoy at the hand of our God if our hearts were more
-governed by that simple faith which ever counts on Him, and which He
-ever delights to honor. "According to your faith, be it unto you."
-Precious soul-stirring words! May they encourage us to draw more
-largely upon those exhaustless resources which we have in God. He
-delights to be used, blessed forever be His holy name. His word to us
-is, "Open thy mouth _wide_, and I will fill it." We can never expect
-too much from the God of all grace, who has given us His only begotten
-Son, and will with Him freely give us all things.
-
-But Israel could not trust God to bring them into the land; they
-presumed to go in their own strength, and, as a consequence, were put
-to flight before their enemies. Thus it must ever be. Presumption and
-faith are two totally different things: the former can only issue in
-defeat and disaster; the latter, in sure and certain victory.
-
-"Then we turned and took our journey into the wilderness, by the way
-of the Red Sea, as the Lord spake unto me; and we compassed Mount Seir
-many days." There is great moral beauty in the little word "_we_."
-Moses links himself thoroughly with the people. He and Joshua and
-Caleb had all to turn back into the wilderness, in company with the
-unbelieving congregation. This might, in the judgment of nature, seem
-hard; but we may rest assured it was good and profitable. There is
-always deep blessing in bowing to the will of God, even though we may
-not always be able to see the why and the wherefore of things. We do
-not read of a single murmuring word from these honored servants of God
-at having to turn back into the wilderness for forty years, although
-they were quite ready to go up into the land. No; they simply turned
-back. And well they might, when Jehovah turned back also. How could
-they think of complaining, when they beheld the traveling-chariot of
-the God of Israel facing round to the wilderness? Surely the patient
-grace and long-suffering mercy of God might well teach them to accept,
-with a willing mind, a protracted sojourn in the wilderness, and to
-wait for the blessed moment of entrance upon the promised land.
-
-It is a great thing always to submit ourselves meekly under the hand
-of God. We are sure to reap a rich harvest of blessing from the
-exercise. It is really taking the yoke of Christ upon us, which, as He
-Himself assures us, is the true secret of rest. "Come unto Me, all ye
-that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke
-upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye
-shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My burden is
-light."
-
-What was this yoke? It was absolute and complete subjection to the
-Father's will. This we see in perfection in our adorable Lord and
-Saviour Jesus Christ. He could say, "Even so, Father; for so it seemed
-good in Thy sight." Here was the point with Him--"good in Thy sight."
-This settled every thing. Was His testimony rejected? did He seem to
-labor in vain, and spend His strength for naught and in vain? What
-then? "I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth." It was all
-right. Whatever pleased the Father, pleased Him. He never had a
-thought or wish that was not in perfect consonance with the will of
-God. Hence He, as a man, ever enjoyed perfect rest. He rested in the
-divine counsels and purposes. The current of His peace was unruffled,
-from first to last.
-
-This was the yoke of Christ; and this is what He, in His infinite
-grace, invites us to take upon us, in order that we too may find rest
-unto our souls. Let us mark and seek to understand the words, "ye
-shall _find_ rest." We must not confound the "rest" which _He gives_
-with the "rest" which we find. When the weary, burdened, heavy-laden
-soul comes to Jesus in simple faith, He gives rest--settled rest--the
-rest which flows from the full assurance that all is done,--sins
-forever put away; perfect righteousness accomplished, revealed, and
-possessed; every question divinely and eternally settled; God
-glorified; Satan silenced; conscience tranquillized.
-
-Such is the rest which Jesus gives when we come to Him. But then we
-have to move through the scenes and circumstances of our daily life.
-There are trials, difficulties, exercises, buffetings, disappointments,
-and reverses of all sorts. None of these can, in the smallest degree,
-touch the rest which Jesus gives; but they may very seriously
-interfere with the rest which we are to find. They do not trouble the
-conscience, but they may greatly trouble the heart; they may make us
-very restless, very fretful, very impatient. For instance, I want to
-preach at Glasgow; I am announced to do so; but lo! I am shut up in a
-sick-room in London. This does not trouble my conscience, but it may
-greatly trouble my heart; I may be in a perfect fever of restlessness,
-ready to exclaim, How tiresome! How terribly disappointing! Whatever
-am I to do? It is most untoward!
-
-And how is this state of things to be met? How is the troubled heart
-to be tranquillized, and the restless mind to be calmed down? What do
-I want? I want to find rest; how am I to find it? By stooping down and
-taking Christ's precious yoke upon me--the very yoke which He Himself
-ever wore, in the days of His flesh--the yoke of complete subjection
-to the will of God. I want to be able to say, without one atom of
-reserve--to say from the very depths of my heart, "Thy will, O Lord,
-be done." I want such a profound sense of His perfect love to me, and
-of His infinite wisdom in all His dealings with me, that I would not
-have it otherwise if I could--yea, that I would not move a finger to
-alter my position or circumstances, feeling assured that it is very
-much better for me to be suffering on a sick-bed in London than
-speaking on a platform in Glasgow.
-
-Here lies the deep and precious secret of rest of heart, as opposed to
-restlessness. It is the simple ability to thank God for every thing,
-be it ever so contrary to our own will and utterly subversive of our
-own plans. It is not a mere assent to the truth that "all things work
-together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called
-according to His purpose;" it is the positive sense--the actual
-realization of the divine fact that the thing which God appoints is
-the very best thing for us; it is perfect repose in the love, wisdom,
-power, and faithfulness of the One who has graciously undertaken for
-us in every thing, and charged Himself with all that concerns us for
-time and eternity. We know that love will always do its very best for
-its object. What must it be to have God doing His very best for us?
-Where is the heart that would not be satisfied with God's best if only
-it knows aught of Him?
-
-But He must be known ere the heart can be satisfied with His will.
-Eve, in the garden of Eden, beguiled by the serpent, became
-dissatisfied with the will of God. She _wished_ for something which He
-had forbidden, and this something the devil undertook to supply. She
-thought the devil could do better for her than God. She thought to
-better her circumstances by taking herself out of the hands of God and
-placing herself in the hands of Satan. Hence it is that no unrenewed
-heart can ever, by any possibility, rest in the will of God. If we
-search the human heart to the bottom, if we submit it to a faithful
-analysis, we shall not find so much as a single thought in unison with
-the will of God--no, not one. And even in the case of the true
-Christian--the child of God, it is only as he is enabled, by the grace
-of God, to mortify his own will, to reckon himself dead, and to walk
-in the Spirit, that he can delight in the will of God, and give thanks
-in every thing. It is one of the very finest evidences of the new
-birth to be able, without a single shade of reserve, to say, in
-respect to every dealing of the hand of God, "Thy will be done." "Even
-so, Father; for so it seemed good in Thy sight." When the heart is in
-this attitude, Satan can make nothing of it. It is a grand point to be
-able to tell the devil and to tell the world--tell them, not in word
-and in tongue, but in deed and in truth; not merely with the lips, but
-in the heart and the life--_I am perfectly satisfied with the will of
-God_.
-
-This is the way to find rest. Let us see that we understand it. It is
-the divine remedy for that unrest, that spirit of discontent, that
-dissatisfaction with our appointed lot and sphere, so sadly prevalent
-on all hands. It is a perfect cure for that restless ambition so
-utterly opposed to the mind and spirit of Christ, but so entirely
-characteristic of the men of this world.
-
-May we, beloved reader, cultivate, with holy diligence, that meek and
-lowly spirit which is, in the sight of God, of great price, which bows
-to His blessed will in all things, and vindicates His dealings, come
-what may. Thus shall our peace flow as a river, and the name of our
-Lord Jesus Christ shall be magnified in our course, character, and
-conduct.
-
-Ere turning from the deeply interesting and practical subject which
-has been engaging our attention, we would observe that there are three
-distinct attitudes in which the soul may be found in reference to the
-dealings of God, namely, subjection, acquiescence, and rejoicing. When
-the will is broken, there is subjection; when the understanding is
-enlightened as to the divine object, there is acquiescence; and when
-the affections are engaged with God Himself, there is positive
-rejoicing. Hence we read, in the tenth chapter of Luke, "In that hour
-Jesus _rejoiced_ in spirit, and said, '_I thank Thee_, O Father, Lord
-of heaven and earth, that Thou hast hid these things from the wise and
-prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes: even so, Father; for so it
-seemed good in Thy sight.'" That blessed One found His perfect delight
-in all the will of God. It was His meat and drink to carry out that
-will, at all cost. In service or in suffering, in life or in death, He
-never had any motive but the Father's will. He could say, "I do always
-the things that please Him." Eternal and universal homage to His
-peerless name!
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-"And the Lord spake unto me, saying, 'Ye have compassed this mountain
-long enough; turn you northward.'"
-
-The word of the Lord determined every thing. It fixed how long the
-people were to remain in any given place, and it indicated with equal
-distinctness whither they were next to bend their steps. There was no
-need whatever for them to plan or arrange their movements: it was the
-province and prerogative of Jehovah to settle all for them; it was
-theirs to obey. There is no mention here of the cloud and the
-trumpet; it is simply God's word and Israel's obedience.
-
-Nothing can be more precious to a child of God, if only the heart be
-in a right condition, than to be guided, in all his movements, by the
-divine command. It saves a world of anxiety and perplexity. In
-Israel's case, called as they were to journey through a great and
-terrible wilderness, where there was no way, it was an unspeakable
-mercy to have their every movement, their every step, their every
-halting-place, ordered by on infallible Guide. There was no need
-whatever for them to trouble themselves about their movements, no need
-to inquire how long they were to stay in any given place, or where
-they were to go next; Jehovah settled all for them. It was for them
-simply to wait on Him for guidance, and to do what they were told.
-
-Yes, reader, here was the grand point--a waiting and an obedient
-spirit. If this were lacking, they were liable to all sorts of
-questionings, reasonings, and rebellious activities. When God said,
-"Ye have compassed this mountain long enough," had Israel replied, No;
-we want to compass it a little longer: we are very comfortable here,
-and we do not wish to make any change; or, again, if when God said,
-"Turn you northward" they had replied, No; we vastly prefer going
-eastward; what would have been the result? Why, they would have
-forfeited the divine presence with them, and who could guide or help
-or feed them then? They could only count on the divine presence with
-them while they trod the path indicated by the divine command. If
-they chose to take their own way, there was nothing for them but
-famine, desolation, and darkness. The stream from the smitten rock,
-and the heavenly manna, were only to be found in the path of
-obedience.
-
-Now, we Christians have to learn our lesson in all this--a wholesome,
-needed, valuable lesson. It is our sweet privilege to have our path
-marked out for us, day by day, by divine authority. Of this we are to
-be most deeply and thoroughly persuaded. We are not to allow ourselves
-to be robbed of this rich blessing by the plausible reasonings of
-unbelief. God has promised to guide us, and His promise is yea and
-Amen. It is for us to make our own the promise, in the artless
-simplicity of faith. It is as solid and as real and as true as God can
-make it. We cannot admit for a moment that Israel in the desert were
-better off in the matter of guidance than God's heavenly people in
-their passage through this world. How did Israel know the length of
-the haltings or the line of their march? By the word of God. Are we
-worse off? Far be the thought. Yea, we are better off by far than
-they. We have the Word and Spirit of God to guide us. To us pertains
-the high and holy privilege of walking in the footsteps of the Son of
-God.
-
-Is not this perfect guidance? Yes, thank God, it is. Hear what our
-adorable Lord Jesus Christ saith to us,--"I am the light of the world;
-he that followeth Me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the
-light of life." Let us mark these words, "he that _followeth Me_." He
-has left us "an example, that we should follow His steps." This is
-living guidance. How did Jesus walk? Always and only by the
-commandment of His Father. By that He acted; by that He moved; without
-it He never acted, moved, or spoke.
-
-Now, we are called to follow Him; and in so doing, we have the
-assurance of His own word that we shall not walk in darkness, but
-shall have the light of life. Precious words!--"_the light of life_."
-Who can sound their living depths? who can duly estimate their worth?
-"The darkness is past, and the true light now shineth," and it is for
-us to walk in the full blaze of the light that shines along the
-pathway of the Son of God. Is there any uncertainty, any perplexity,
-any ground for hesitation here? Clearly not. How could there be if we
-are following Him? It is utterly impossible to combine the two ideas.
-
-And be it remarked here that it is not by any means a question of
-having a literal text of Scripture for every movement or every act.
-For example, I cannot expect to get a text of Scripture, or a voice
-from heaven, to tell me to go to London or to Edinburgh; or how long I
-am to stay when I go. How, then, it may be asked, am I to know where I
-ought to go, or how long I am to stay? The answer is, Wait on God, in
-singleness of eye and sincerity of heart, and He will make your path
-as plain as a sunbeam. This was what Jesus did; and if we follow Him,
-we shall not walk in darkness. "I will guide thee with Mine eye" is a
-most precious promise; but in order to profit by it, we must be near
-enough to Him to catch the movement of His eye, and intimate enough
-with Him to understand its meaning.
-
-Thus it is, in all the details of our daily life. It would answer a
-thousand questions, and solve a thousand difficulties, if we did but
-wait for divine guidance, and never attempt to move without it. If I
-have not gotten light to move, it is my plain duty to be still. We
-should never move in uncertainty. It often happens that we harass
-ourselves about moving or acting, when God would have us to be still
-and do nothing. We go and ask God about it, but get no answer; we
-betake ourselves to friends for advice and counsel, but they cannot
-help us, for it is entirely a question between our own souls and the
-Lord. Thus we are plunged in doubt and anxiety. And why? Simply
-because the eye is not single; we are not following Jesus, "the light
-of the world." We may set it down as a fixed principle, a precious
-axiom in the divine life, that if we are following Jesus, we shall
-have the light of life. He has said it, and that is enough for faith.
-
-Hence, then, we deem ourselves perfectly warranted in concluding that
-the One who guided His earthly people in all their desert wanderings,
-can and will guide His heavenly people now in all their movements and
-in all their ways. But, on the other hand, let us see to it that we
-are not bent on doing our own will, having our own way, and carrying
-out our own plans. "Be ye not as the horse or as the mule, which have
-no understanding, whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle,
-lest they come near unto thee." Be it our one grand aim to walk in the
-footsteps of that blessed One who pleased not Himself, but ever moved
-in the current of the divine will, never acted without divine
-authority; who, though Himself God over all, blessed forever, yet,
-having taken His place as a man, on the earth, surrendered completely
-His own will, and found His meat and His drink in doing the will of
-His Father. Thus shall our hearts and minds be kept in perfect peace;
-and we shall be enabled to move on, from day to day, with firm and
-decided step, along the path indicated for us by our divine and
-ever-present Guide, who not only knows, as God, every step of the way,
-but who, as man, has trodden it before us, and left us an example that
-we should follow His steps. May we follow Him more faithfully in all
-things, through the gracious ministry of the Holy Ghost, who dwelleth
-in us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now to invite the reader's attention to a subject of very deep
-interest, and one which occupies a large place in Old-Testament
-scripture, and is forcibly illustrated in the chapter which lies open
-before us, namely, God's government of the world, and His wonderful
-ordering of the nations of the earth. It is a grand and all-important
-fact to keep ever before the mind that the One whom we know as "the
-God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ," and our God and Father,
-takes a real, lively, personal interest in the affairs of
-nations--that He takes cognizance of their movements and of their
-dealings one with another.
-
-True, all this is in immediate connection with Israel and the land of
-Palestine, as we read in the thirty-second chapter of our book, and
-eighth verse--a passage of singular interest and of great suggestive
-power.--"When the Most High divided to the nations their inheritance,
-when He separated the sons of Adam, He set the bounds of the people
-according to the number of the children of Israel." Israel was and
-shall yet be God's earthly centre; and it is a fact of the deepest
-interest that, from the very outset, as we see in Genesis x, the
-Creator and Governor of the world formed the nations and fixed their
-bounds according to His own sovereign will, and with direct reference
-to the seed of Abraham, and that narrow strip of land which they are
-to possess, in virtue of the everlasting covenant made with their
-fathers.
-
-But in the second chapter of Deuteronomy, we find Jehovah, in His
-faithfulness and righteousness, interfering to protect three distinct
-nations in the enjoyment of their national rights, and that, too,
-against the encroachments of His own chosen people. He says to Moses,
-"Command thou the people, saying, 'Ye are to pass through the coast of
-your brethren the children of Esau, which dwell in Seir; and they
-shall be afraid of you: take ye good heed unto yourselves therefore:
-meddle not with them; for I will not give you of their land, no, not
-so much as a foot-breadth, because I have given Mount Seir unto Esau
-for a possession. Ye shall buy meat of them for money, that ye may
-eat; and ye shall also buy water of them for money, that ye may
-drink.'"
-
-Israel might imagine that they had nothing to do but seize upon the
-lands of the Edomite; but they had to learn something very
-different,--they had to be taught that the Most High is the Governor
-amongst the nations--that the whole earth belongs to Him, and He
-portions it out to one or another according to His good pleasure.
-
-This is a very magnificent fact to keep before the mind. The great
-majority of men think but little of it. Emperors, kings, princes,
-governors, statesmen, take little account of it. They forget that God
-interests Himself in the affairs of nations--that He bestows kingdoms,
-provinces, and lands as He sees fit. They act, at times, as if it were
-only a question of military conquest, and as if God had nothing to do
-with the question of national boundaries and territorial possessions.
-This is their great mistake. They do not understand the meaning and
-force of this simple sentence, "_I have given_ Mount Seir unto Esau
-for a possession." God will never surrender His rights in this
-respect. He would not allow Israel to touch a single atom of Esau's
-property. They were, to use a modern phrase, to pay ready cash for
-whatever they needed, and go quietly on their way. Indiscriminate
-slaughter and plunder were not to be thought of by the people of God.
-
-And mark the lovely reason for all this. "For the Lord thy God hath
-blessed thee in all the works of thy hand; He knoweth thy walking
-through this great wilderness; these forty years the Lord thy God hath
-been with thee, thou hast lacked nothing." They could well afford,
-therefore, to let Esau alone, and leave his possessions untouched.
-They were the favored objects of Jehovah's tender care. He took
-knowledge of every step of their weary journey through the desert. He
-had, in His infinite goodness, charged Himself with all their
-necessities. He was going to give them the land of Canaan, according
-to His promise to Abraham; but the self-same hand which was giving
-them Canaan had given Mount Seir to Esau.
-
-We see the same thing exactly in reference to Moab and Ammon.--"The
-Lord said unto me, 'Distress not the Moabites, neither contend with
-them in battle; for I will not give thee of their land for a
-possession, because I have given Ar unto the children of Lot for a
-possession.'" And again, "And when thou comest nigh over against the
-children of Ammon, distress them not, nor meddle with them; for I will
-not give thee of the land of the children of Ammon any possession,
-because I have given it onto the children of Lot for a possession."
-
-The possessions here alluded to had been, of old time, in the hands of
-giants; but it was God's purpose to give up their territories to the
-children of Esau and Lot, and therefore He destroyed these giants;
-for who or what can stand in the way of the divine counsels? "That
-also was accounted a land of giants: giants dwelt therein in old time;
-... a people great, and many, and tall, as the Anakims; but the Lord
-destroyed them before them; and they succeeded them, and dwelt in
-their stead: as He did to the children of Esau which dwelt in Seir,
-when He destroyed the Horims from before them; and they succeeded
-them, and dwelt in their stead even unto this day." (Ver. 20-23.)
-
-Hence, then, Israel were not permitted to meddle with the possessions
-of any of these three nations--the Edomites, Ammonites, and Moabites;
-but in the very next sentence, we see another thing altogether in the
-case of the Amorites.--"Rise ye up, take your journey, and pass over
-the river Arnon: behold, I have given into thine hand Sihon the
-Amorite, king of Heshbon, and his land: begin to possess it, and
-contend with him in battle."
-
-The great principle, in all these varied instructions to Israel, is
-that God's word must settle every thing for His people. It was not for
-Israel to inquire why they were to leave the possessions of Esau and
-Lot untouched, and to seize upon those of Sihon. They were simply to
-do what they were told. God can do as He pleases. He has His eye upon
-the whole scene: He scans it all. Men may think He has forsaken the
-earth, but He has not, blessed be His name. He is, as the apostle
-tells us in his discourse at Athens, "Lord of heaven and earth;" and
-"He hath made of one blood all nations of men, for to dwell on all
-the face of the earth; and hath determined the times before appointed,
-and the bounds of their habitations." And, further, "He hath appointed
-a day, in the which He will judge the habitable earth [+oikoumenen+] in
-righteousness, by that Man whom He hath ordained; whereof He hath
-given assurance [given proof] unto all, in that He hath raised Him
-from the dead."
-
-Here we have a most solemn and weighty truth, to which men of all
-ranks and conditions would do well to take heed. God is the Sovereign
-Ruler of the world. He giveth no account of any of His matters. He
-puts down one and sets up another. Kingdoms, thrones, governments, are
-all at His disposal. He acts according to His own will in the ordering
-and arrangement of human affairs. But, at the same time, He holds men
-responsible for their actings in the various positions in which His
-providence has placed them. The ruler and the ruled, the king, the
-governor, the magistrate, the judge--all classes and grades of men
-will have, sooner or later, to give account to God. Each one, as if he
-were the only one, will have to stand before the judgment-seat of
-Christ, and there review his whole course, from first to last. Every
-act, every word, every secret thought, will there come out with awful
-distinctness. There will be no escaping in a crowd. The Word declares
-that they shall be judged "_every man_ according to his works." It
-will be intensely individual, and unmistakably discriminating. In a
-word, it will be a divine judgment, and therefore absolutely perfect.
-Nothing will be passed over. "Every idle word that men shall speak,
-they shall give account thereof at the day of judgment." Kings,
-governors, and magistrates will have to account for the way in which
-they have used the power with which they were intrusted, and the
-wealth which passed through their hands. The noble and the wealthy who
-have spent their fortune and their time in folly, vanity, luxury, and
-self-indulgence will have to answer for it all before the throne of
-the Son of Man, whose eyes are as a flame of fire, to read men through
-and through; and His feet as fine brass, to crush, in unsparing
-judgment, all that is contrary to God.
-
-Infidelity may sneeringly inquire, _How_ can these things be? _How_
-could the untold millions of the human race find room before the
-judgment-seat of Christ? and _how_ could there be time to enter so
-minutely into the details of each personal history? Faith replies, God
-says it shall be so, and this is conclusive; and as to the "How?" the
-answer is, God! Infinity! Eternity! Bring God in, and all questions
-are hushed and all difficulties disposed of in a moment. In fact, the
-one grand, triumphant answer to all the objections of the infidel, the
-skeptic, the rationalist, and the materialist, is just that one
-majestic word, "GOD!"
-
-We press this upon the reader; not, indeed, to enable him to reply to
-infidels, but for the rest and comfort of his own heart. As to
-infidels, we are increasingly persuaded that our highest wisdom is to
-act on our Lord's words in Matthew xv.--"Let them alone." It is
-perfectly useless to argue with men who despise the Word of God, and
-have no other foundation to build upon than their own carnal
-reasonings. But, on the other hand, we deem it to be of the very last
-possible importance that the heart should ever repose, in all the
-artless simplicity of a child, in the truth of God's Word. "Hath He
-said, and shall He not do it? or hath He spoken, and shall He not make
-it good?"
-
-Here is the sweet and hallowed resting-place of faith, the calm haven
-where the soul can find refuge from all the conflicting currents of
-human thought and feeling. "The Word of the Lord endureth forever; and
-this is the Word which by the gospel is preached unto you." Nothing
-can touch the Word of our God. It is settled forever in heaven; and
-all we want is to have it hidden in our hearts, as our own very
-possession--the treasure which we have received from God--the living
-fountain where we may ever drink for the refreshment and comfort of
-our souls. Then shall our peace flow as a river, and our path shall be
-as the shining light, which shineth more and more unto the perfect
-day.
-
-Thus may it be, O Lord, with all Thy beloved people, in these days of
-growing infidelity. May Thy holy Word be increasingly precious to our
-hearts. May our consciences feel its power. May its heavenly doctrines
-form our character and govern our conduct in all the relationships of
-life, that Thy name may be glorified in all things.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-"Then we turned, and went up the way to Bashan; and Og the king of
-Bashan came out against us, he and all his people, to battle at Edrei.
-And the Lord said unto me, 'Fear him not: for I will deliver him, and
-all his people, and his land, into thy hand; and thou shalt do unto
-him as thou didst unto Sihon king of the Amorites, which dwelt at
-Heshbon.' So the Lord our God delivered into our hands Og also, the
-king of Bashan, and all his people; and we smote him until none was
-left to him remaining. And we took all his cities at that time, there
-was not a city which we took not from them, threescore cities, all the
-region of Argob, the kingdom of Og in Bashan. All these cities were
-fenced with high walls, gates, and bars; beside unwalled towns a great
-many. And we utterly destroyed them, as we did unto Sihon king of
-Heshbon, utterly destroying the men, women, and children of every
-city. But all the cattle, and the spoil of the cities, we took for a
-prey to ourselves." (Ver. 1-7.)
-
-The divine instructions as to Og, king of Bashan, were precisely
-similar to those given, in the preceding chapter, with respect to
-Sihon the Amorite; and in order to understand both, we must look at
-them purely in the light of the government of God--a subject but
-little understood, though one of very deep interest and practical
-importance. We must accurately distinguish between grace and
-government. When we contemplate God in government, we see Him
-displaying His power in the way of righteousness--punishing
-evil-doers, pouring out vengeance upon His enemies, overthrowing
-empires, upturning thrones, destroying cities, sweeping away nations,
-tribes, and peoples. We find Him commanding His people to slay men,
-women, and little children with the edge of the sword; to set fire to
-their houses, and turn their cities into desolate heaps.
-
-Again, we hear Him addressing the prophet Ezekiel in the following
-remarkable words: "Son of man, Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon caused
-his army to serve a great service against Tyrus: every head was made
-bald, and every shoulder was peeled; yet had he no wages, nor his
-army, for Tyrus, for the service that he had served against it.
-Therefore, thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will give the land of
-Egypt unto Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon; and he shall take her
-multitude, and take her spoil, and take her prey; and it shall be the
-wages for his army. I have given him the land of Egypt for his labor
-wherewith he served against it, because they wrought for Me, saith the
-Lord God." (Ezek. xxix. 18-20.)
-
-This is a very wonderful passage of Scripture; setting before us a
-subject which runs through the entire volume of Old-Testament
-scripture--a subject demanding our profound and reverent attention.
-Whether we turn to the five books of Moses, to the historical books,
-to the Psalms, or to the prophets, we find the inspiring Spirit giving
-us the most minute details of God's actings in government. We have the
-deluge in the days of Noah, when the whole earth, with all its
-inhabitants, with the exception of eight persons, was destroyed by an
-act of divine government. Men, women, children, cattle, fowl, and
-creeping things were all swept away and buried beneath the billows and
-waves of God's righteous judgment.
-
-Then we have, in the days of Lot, the cities of the plain, with all
-their inhabitants--men, women, and children--in a few short hours,
-consigned to utter destruction, overthrown by the hand of Almighty
-God, and buried beneath the deep, dark waters of the Dead Sea. Those
-guilty cities, "Sodom and Gomorrha, and the cities about them in like
-manner, giving themselves over to fornication, and going after strange
-flesh, are set forth for an example, suffering the vengeance of
-eternal fire."
-
-Then, again, as we pass down along the page of inspired history, we
-see the seven nations of Canaan--men, women, and children--given over
-into the hands of Israel for unsparing judgment; nothing that breathed
-was to be left alive.
-
-But, we may truly say, time would fail us even to refer to all the
-passages of holy Scripture which set before our eyes the solemn
-actings of the divine government. Suffice it to say that the line of
-evidence runs from Genesis to Revelation--beginning with the deluge
-and ending with the burning up of the present system of things.
-
-Now, the question is, Are we competent to understand these ways of God
-in government? Is it any part of our business to sit in judgment upon
-them? Are we capable of unraveling the profound and awful mysteries of
-divine providence? Can we--are we called upon to--account for the
-tremendous fact of helpless babes involved in the judgment of their
-guilty parents? Impious infidelity may sneer at these things; morbid
-sentimentality may stumble over them; but the true believer, the pious
-Christian, the reverent student of holy Scripture, will meet them all
-with this one simple but safe and solid question, "Shall not the Judge
-of all the earth do right?"
-
-This, we may rest assured, reader, is the only true way in which to
-meet such questions. If man is to sit in judgment upon the actings of
-God in government--if he can take upon himself to decide as to what is
-and what is not worthy of God to do, then, verily, we have lost the
-true sense of God altogether. And this is just what the devil is
-aiming at. He wants to lead the heart away from God; and to this end,
-he leads men to reason and question and speculate in a region which
-lies as far beyond their ken as heaven is above the earth. Can we
-comprehend God? If we could, we should ourselves be God.
-
- "We comprehend Him not,
- Yet earth and heaven tell,
- God sits as Sovereign on the throne,
- And ruleth all things well."
-
-It is at once absurd and impious, in the very highest degree, for puny
-mortals to dare to question the counsels, enactments, and ways of the
-almighty Creator and all-wise Governor of the universe. Assuredly, all
-who do so must sooner or later find out their terrible mistake. Well
-would it be for all questioners and cavilers to give heed to the
-pungent question of the inspired apostle in Romans ix.--"Nay but, O
-man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed
-say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? Hath not the
-potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto
-honor, and another unto dishonor?"
-
-How simple! How forcible! How unanswerable! This is the divine method
-of meeting all the hows and whys of infidel reason. If the potter has
-power over the lump of clay which he holds in his hand--a fact which
-none would think of disputing--how much more has the Creator of all
-things power over the creatures which His hand has formed! Men may
-reason and argue interminably as to why God permitted sin to enter;
-why He did not at once annihilate Satan and his angels; why He allowed
-the serpent to tempt Eve; why He did not keep her back from eating the
-forbidden fruit. In short, the hows and whys are endless; but the
-answer is one--"Who art thou, O man, that repliest against God?" How
-monstrous for a poor worm of the earth to attempt to sit in judgment
-upon the unsearchable judgments and ways of the Eternal God! What
-blind and presumptuous folly for a creature, whose understanding is
-darkened by sin, and who is thus wholly incapable of forming a right
-judgment about any thing divine, heavenly, or eternal, to attempt to
-decide how God should act in any given case! Alas! alas! it is to be
-feared that thousands who now argue with great apparent cleverness
-against the truth of God, will find out their fatal mistake when it
-will be too late to correct it.
-
-And as to all those who, though very far from taking common ground
-with the infidel, are nevertheless troubled with doubts and misgivings
-as to some of God's ways in government, and as to the awful question
-of eternal punishment,[5] we would earnestly recommend them to study
-and drink in the spirit of that lovely little psalm, cxxxi.--"Lord, my
-heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty: neither do I exercise
-myself in great matters, or in things too high for me. Surely I have
-behaved and quieted myself as a child that is weaned of his mother: my
-soul is even as a weaned child."
-
- [5] With regard to the solemn subject of eternal punishment, we here
- offer a few remarks, seeing that so very many, both in England and
- America, are troubled with difficulties respecting it.
-
- There are three considerations, which, if duly weighed, will, we
- think, settle every Christian on the doctrine.
-
- I. The first is this: There are seventy passages in the New Testament
- where the word "everlasting," or "eternal," (+aionios+) occurs.
- It is applied to the "life" which believers possess, to the "mansions"
- into which they are to be received, to the "glory" which they are to
- enjoy; it is applied to God (Rom. xvi. 26.), to the "salvation" of
- which our Lord Jesus Christ is the Author, to the "redemption" which
- He has obtained for us, and to the "Spirit."
-
- Then, out of the seventy passages referred to above, which the reader
- can verify in a few moments by a glance at a Greek Concordance, there
- are seven in which the self-same word is applied to the "punishment"
- of the wicked, to the "judgment" which is to overtake them, to the
- "fire" which is to consume them.
-
- Now, the question is, Upon what principle, or by what authority, can
- any one mark off these seven passages and say that in them the word
- +aionios+ does not mean "everlasting," while in the other
- sixty-three it does? We consider the statement utterly baseless, and
- unworthy the attention of any sober mind. We fully admit that, had the
- Holy Spirit thought proper, when speaking of the judgment of the
- wicked, to make use of a different word from that used in the other
- passages, reason would that we should weigh the fact. But no; He uses
- the same word invariably, so that if we deny eternal punishment, we
- must deny eternal life, eternal glory, an eternal Spirit, an eternal
- God, an eternal any thing. In short, if punishment be not eternal,
- nothing is eternal, so far as this argument is concerned. To meddle
- with this stone in the archway of divine revelation, is to reduce the
- whole to a mass of ruin around us. And this is just what the devil is
- aiming at. We are fully persuaded that to deny the truth of eternal
- punishment is to take the first step on that inclined plane which
- leads down to the dark abyss of universal skepticism.
-
- II. Our second consideration is drawn from the great truth of the
- immortality of the soul. We read in the second chapter of Genesis that
- "the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
- his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul." Upon
- this one passage, as upon an immovable rock, even if we had not
- another, we build the great truth of the immortality of the human
- soul. The fall of man made no difference as to this. Fallen or
- unfallen, innocent or guilty, converted or unconverted, the soul must
- live forever.
-
- The tremendous question is, Where is it to live? God cannot allow sin
- into His presence. "He is of purer eyes than to behold evil, and
- cannot look upon iniquity." Hence, if a man dies in his sins--dies
- unrepentant, unwashed, unpardoned, then, most assuredly, where God is
- he never can come; indeed, it is the very last place to which he would
- like to come. There is nothing for him but an endless eternity in the
- lake that burneth with fire and brimstone.
-
- III. And lastly, we believe that the truth of eternal punishment
- stands intimately connected with the infinite nature of the atonement
- of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. If nothing short of an infinite
- sacrifice could deliver us from the consequences of sin, those
- consequences must be eternal. This consideration may not, perhaps, in
- the judgment of some, carry much weight with it; but to us its force
- is absolutely irresistible. We must measure sin and its consequences
- as we measure divine love and its results--not by the standard of
- human sentiment or reason, but only by the standard of the cross of
- Christ.
-
-Then, when the heart has in some measure taken in this exquisite
-breathing, it may turn with real profit to the words of the inspired
-apostle (2 Cor. x.)--"For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal,
-but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds; casting
-down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against
-the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the
-obedience of Christ."
-
-Doubtless, the philosopher, the scholar, the profound thinker, would
-smile contemptuously at such a childish mode of dealing with such
-great questions; but this is a very small matter in the judgment of
-the devout disciple of Christ. The same inspired apostle makes very
-short work of all this world's wisdom and learning. He says, "Let no
-man deceive himself. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this
-world, let him become a fool, that he may be wise. For the wisdom of
-this world is foolishness with God. For it is written, 'He taketh the
-wise in their own craftiness.' And again, 'The Lord knoweth the
-thoughts of the wise, that they are vain.'" (1 Cor. iii.) And again,
-"It is written, 'I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring
-to nothing the understanding of the prudent.' Where is the wise?
-where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? hath not God
-made foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of
-God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the
-foolishness of the preaching _to save them that believe_." (1 Cor. i.
-19-21.)
-
-Here lies the grand moral secret of the whole matter. Man has to find
-out that he is simply a fool, and that all the wisdom of the world is
-foolishness. Humbling but wholesome truth! Humbling, because it puts
-man in his right place; wholesome, yea, most precious, because it
-brings in the wisdom of God. We hear a great deal nowadays about
-science, philosophy, and learning. "Hath not God made foolish the
-wisdom of this world?"
-
-Do we fully take in the meaning of these words? Alas! it is to be
-feared they are but little understood. There are not wanting men who
-would fain persuade us that science has gone far beyond the Bible.[6]
-Alas! for the science, and for all those who give heed to it. If it
-has gone beyond the Bible, whither has it gone? In the direction of
-God, of Christ, of heaven, of holiness, of peace? Nay; but quite in
-the opposite direction. And where must it all end? We tremble to
-think, and feel reluctant to pen the reply. Still, we must be
-faithful, and declare solemnly that the sure and certain end of that
-path along which human science is conducting its votaries is the
-blackness of darkness forever.
-
- [6] We must distinguish between all true science and "science falsely
- so called." And further, we must distinguish between the _facts_ of
- science, and the _conclusions_ of scientific men. The facts are what
- God has done and is doing; but when men set about drawing their
- conclusions from these facts, they make the most serious mistakes.
-
- However, it is a real relief to the heart to think that there are many
- philosophers and men of science who give God His right place, and who
- love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity.
-
-"The world by wisdom knew not God." What did the philosophy of Greece
-do for its disciples? It made them the ignorant worshipers of "AN
-UNKNOWN GOD." The very inscription on their altar published to the
-universe their ignorance and their shame.
-
-And may we not lawfully inquire if philosophy has done better for
-christendom than it did for Greece? Has it communicated the knowledge
-of the true God? Who could dare to say, Yes? There are millions of
-baptized professors throughout the length and breadth of christendom
-who know no more of the true God than those philosophers who
-encountered Paul in the city of Athens.
-
-The fact is this: every one who really knows God, is the privileged
-possessor of eternal life. So our Lord Jesus Christ declares, in the
-most distinct manner, in the seventeenth chapter of John.--"This is
-life eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus
-Christ, whom Thou hast sent." This is most precious to every soul
-that, through grace, has gotten this knowledge. To know God, is to
-have life--life eternal.
-
-But how can I know God? where can I find Him? Can science and
-philosophy tell me? Have they ever told any one? have they ever
-guided any poor wanderer into this way of life and peace? No; never.
-"The world by wisdom knew not God." The conflicting schools of ancient
-philosophy could only plunge the human mind into profound darkness and
-hopeless bewilderment; and the conflicting schools of modern
-philosophy are not a whit better. They can give no certainty, no safe
-anchorage, no solid ground of confidence, to the poor benighted soul.
-Barren speculation, torturing doubt, wild and baseless theory, is all
-that human philosophy, in any age or of any nation, has to offer to
-the earnest inquirer after truth.
-
-How, then, are we to know God? If such a stupendous result hangs on
-this knowledge, if to know God is life eternal--and Jesus says it
-is--then how is He to be known? "No man hath seen God at any time; the
-only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath
-declared Him." (John i. 18.)
-
-Here we have an answer divinely simple, divinely sure. Jesus reveals
-God to the soul--reveals the Father to the heart. Precious fact! We
-are not sent to creation to learn who God is, though we see His power,
-wisdom, and goodness there; we are not sent to the law, though we see
-His justice there; we are not sent to providence, though we see the
-profound mysteries of His government there. No; if we want to know who
-and what God is, we are to look in the face of Jesus Christ, the only
-begotten Son of God, who dwelt in His bosom before all worlds, who
-was His eternal delight, the object of His affections, the centre of
-His counsels. He it is who reveals God to the soul. We cannot have the
-slightest idea of what God is apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. "In
-Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead [+theotes+] bodily." "God
-who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
-hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God, in
-the face of Jesus Christ."
-
-Nothing can exceed the power and blessedness of all this. There is no
-darkness here, no uncertainty. "The darkness is past and the true
-light now shineth." Yes; it shineth in the face of Jesus Christ. We
-can gaze, by faith, on that blessed One; we can trace His marvelous
-path on the earth; see Him going about doing good, and healing all
-that were oppressed of the devil; mark His very looks, His words, His
-works, His ways; see Him healing the sick, cleansing the leper,
-opening the eyes of the blind, unstopping the ears of the deaf,
-causing the lame to walk, the maimed to be whole, raising the dead,
-drying the widow's tears, feeding the hungry, binding up broken
-hearts, meeting every form of human need, soothing human sorrow,
-hushing human fears; and doing all these things in such a style, with
-such touching grace and sweetness, as to make each one feel, in his
-very inmost soul, that it was the deep delight of that loving heart
-thus to minister to his need.
-
-Now, in all this He was revealing God to man; so that if we want to
-know what God is, we have simply to look at Jesus. When Philip said,
-"Lord, shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us," the prompt reply was,
-"Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known Me,
-Philip? he that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; and how sayest thou
-then, 'Shew us the Father?' Believest thou not that I am in the
-Father, and the Father in Me? the words that I speak unto you I speak
-not of Myself; but the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works.
-Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me: or else
-believe Me for the very works' sake."
-
-Here is true rest for the heart. We know the true God, and Jesus
-Christ, whom He hath sent; and this is life eternal. We know Him as
-our own very God and Father, and Christ as our own personal, loving
-Lord and Saviour; we can delight in Him, walk with Him, lean on Him,
-trust in Him, cling to Him, draw from Him, find all our living springs
-in Him, rejoice in Him all the day long, find our meat and our drink
-in doing His blessed will, furthering His cause, and promoting His
-glory.
-
-Reader, do you know all this for yourself? Say, is it a living,
-divinely real thing in your own soul this moment? This is true
-Christianity, and you should not be satisfied with any thing less. You
-will perhaps tell us we have wandered far from the third chapter of
-Deuteronomy. But whither have we wandered? To the Son of God and to
-the soul of the reader. If this be wandering, be it so; it most
-assuredly is not wandering from the object for which we are penning
-these "Notes," which is, to bring Christ and the soul together, or to
-bind them together, as the case may be. We would never, for one
-moment, lose sight of the fact that, both in writing and speaking, we
-have not merely to expound Scripture, but to seek the salvation and
-blessing of souls. Hence it is that we feel constrained, from time to
-time, to appeal to the heart and conscience of the reader, as to his
-practical state, and as to how far he has made his very own of these
-imperishable realities which pass in review before us. And we
-earnestly beseech the reader, whoever he may be, to seek a deeper
-acquaintance with God in Christ; and, as a sure consequence of this, a
-closer walk with Him and more thorough consecration of heart to Him.
-
-This, we are thoroughly persuaded, is what is needed in this day of
-unrest and unreality in the world, and of lukewarmness and
-indifference in the professing church. We want a very much higher
-standard of personal devotedness, more real purpose of heart to cleave
-to the Lord and follow Him. There is much--very much to discourage and
-hinder in the condition of things around us. The language of the men
-of Judah in the days of Nehemiah may, with some measure of
-appropriateness and force, be applied to our times,--"The strength of
-the bearers of burdens is decayed, and there is much rubbish." But,
-thank God, the remedy now, as then, is to be found in this
-soul-stirring sentence, "Remember the Lord."
-
- * * * * *
-
-We now return to our chapter, in the remainder of which the lawgiver
-rehearses in the ears of the congregation the story of their dealings
-with the two kings of the Amorites, together with the facts connected
-with the inheritance of the two tribes and a half on the wilderness
-side of Jordan. And with regard to the latter subject, it is
-interesting to notice that he raises no question as to the right or
-the wrong of their choosing their possession short of the land of
-promise. Indeed, from the narrative given here, it could not be known
-that the two tribes and a half had expressed any wish in the matter.
-So far is our book from being a mere repetition of its predecessors.
-
-Here are the words: "And this land, which we possessed at that time,
-from Aroer, which is by the river Arnon, and half Mount Gilead, and
-the cities thereof, _gave I unto the Reubenites and to the Gadites_.
-And the rest of Gilead, and all Bashan, being the kingdom of Og, _gave
-I unto the half tribe of Manasseh_; all the region of Argob, with all
-Bashan, which was called the land of giants.... And _I gave_ Gilead
-unto Machir. And unto the Reubenites and unto the Gadites _I gave_
-from Gilead even unto the river Arnon half the valley, and the border
-even unto the river Jabbok, which is the border of the children of
-Ammon.... And I commanded you at that time, saying, _The Lord your God
-hath given you this land to possess it_:"--not a word about their
-having asked it--"ye shall pass over armed before your brethren the
-children of Israel, all that are meet for the war. But your wives, and
-your little ones, and your cattle (for I know that ye have much
-cattle), shall abide in your cities _which I have given you_; until
-the Lord have given rest unto your brethren, as well as unto you, and
-until they also possess the land which the Lord your God hath given
-them beyond Jordan; and then shall ye return every man unto his
-possession, which I have given you."
-
-In our studies on the book of Numbers, we have dwelt upon certain
-facts connected with the settlement of the two tribes and a half,
-proving that they were below the mark of the Israel of God in choosing
-their inheritance any where short of the other side of Jordan; but in
-the passage we have just quoted, there is no allusion at all to this
-side of the question, because the object of Moses is to set before the
-whole congregation the exceeding goodness, loving-kindness, and
-faithfulness of God, not only in bringing them through all the
-difficulties and dangers of the wilderness, but also in giving them,
-even already, such signal victories over the Amorites, and putting
-them in possession of regions so attractive and so suited to them. In
-all this, he is laying down the solid basis of Jehovah's claim upon
-their hearty obedience to His commandments; and we can at once see and
-appreciate the moral beauty of overlooking entirely, in such a
-rehearsal, the question as to whether Reuben, Gad, and the half tribe
-of Manasseh were wrong in stopping short of the land of promise. It
-is, to every devout Christian, a striking proof, not only of the
-touching and exquisite grace of God, but also of the divine
-perfectness of Scripture.
-
-No doubt, every true believer enters upon the study of Scripture with
-the full and deeply wrought conviction of its absolute perfectness in
-every part. He reverently believes that there is not, from the opening
-of Genesis to the close of Revelation, a single flaw, a single hitch,
-a single discrepancy--not one; all is as perfect as its divine Author.
-
-But then the cordial belief of the divine perfectness of Scripture as
-a whole can never lessen our appreciation of the evidences which come
-out in detail; nay, it enhances it exceedingly. Thus, for example, in
-the passage now before us, is it not perfectly beautiful to mark the
-absence of all reference to the failure of the two tribes and a half
-in the matter of choosing their inheritance, seeing that any such
-reference would be entirely foreign to the object of the lawgiver and
-to the scope of the book? Is it not the joy of our hearts to trace
-such infinite perfections, such exquisite and inimitable touches?
-Assuredly it is; and not only so, but we are persuaded that the more
-the moral glories of the volume dawn upon our souls, and its living
-and exhaustless depths are unfolded to our hearts, the more we shall
-be convinced of the utter folly of infidel assaults upon it, and of
-the feebleness and gratuitousness of many well-meant efforts to prove
-that it does not contradict itself. Thank God, His Word stands in no
-need of human apologists. It speaks for itself, and carries with it
-its own powerful evidences; so that we can say of it what the apostle
-says of his gospel, that "if it be hid, it is hid to them that are
-lost; in whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them
-which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ,
-who is the image of God, should shine unto them." We are more and more
-convinced each day, that the most effective method of answering all
-infidel attacks upon the Bible is, to cherish a more profound faith in
-its divine power and authority, and to use it as those who are most
-thoroughly persuaded of its truth and preciousness. The Spirit of God
-alone can enable any one to believe in the plenary inspiration of the
-holy Scriptures. Human arguments may go for what they are worth; they
-may doubtless silence gainsayers, but they cannot reach the
-heart--they cannot bring the genial rays of divine revelation to bear
-down in living, saving power upon the soul. This is a work divine; and
-until it is done, all the evidences and arguments in the world must
-leave the soul in the moral darkness of unbelief; but when it is done,
-there is no need of human testimony in defense of the Bible. External
-evidences, however interesting and valuable (and they are both),
-cannot add a single jot or tittle to the glory of that peerless
-revelation, which bears on every page, every paragraph, every
-sentence, the clear impress of its divine Author. As with the sun in
-the heavens, its every ray tells of the Hand that made it, so of the
-Bible, its every sentence tells of the Heart that inspired it. But
-inasmuch as a blind man cannot see the sunlight, so neither can the
-unconverted soul see the force and beauty of holy Scripture. The eye
-must be anointed with heavenly eye-salve ere the infinite perfections
-of the divine volume can be discerned or appreciated.
-
-Now, we must own to the reader that it is the deep and ever-deepening
-sense of all this that has led us to the determination not to occupy
-his time or our own by reference to the attacks which have been made
-by rationalistic writers on that portion of the Word of God with which
-we are now engaged. We leave this to other and abler hands. What we
-desire for ourselves and our readers is, that we may feed in peace
-upon the green pastures which the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls has
-graciously thrown open to us; that we may help each other, as we pass
-along, to see more and more of the moral glory of that which lies
-before us, and thus to build each other up on our most holy faith.
-This will be far more grateful work to us, and we trust also to our
-readers, than replying to men who, in all their puny efforts to find
-out flaws in the holy volume, only prove, to those capable of judging,
-that they understand neither what they say nor whereof they affirm. If
-men _will_ abide in the dark vaults and tunnels of a dreary
-infidelity, and there find fault with the sun, or deny that it shines
-at all, let it be ours to bask in the light, and help others to do the
-same.
-
-We shall now dwell for a little on the remaining verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find much to interest, instruct, and profit
-us.
-
-And first, Moses rehearses in the ears of the people his charge to
-Joshua.--"And I commanded Joshua at that time, saying, 'Thine eyes
-have seen all that the Lord our God hath done unto these two kings; so
-shall the Lord do unto all the kingdoms whither thou passest. Ye shall
-not fear them; for the Lord your God He shall fight for you.'" (Ver.
-21, 22.)
-
-The remembrance of the Lord's dealings with us in the past should
-strengthen our confidence in going on. The One who had given His
-people such a victory over the Amorites, who had destroyed such a
-formidable foe as Og, king of Bashan, and given into their hands all
-the land of the giants, what could He not do for them? They could
-hardly expect to encounter in all the land of Canaan any enemy more
-powerful than Og, whose bedstead was of such enormous dimensions as to
-call for the special notice of Moses; but what was he in the presence
-of his almighty Creator? Dwarfs and giants are all alike to Him. The
-grand point is to keep God Himself ever before our eyes; then
-difficulties vanish. If He covers the eyes, we can see nothing else;
-and this is the true secret of peace, and the real power of progress.
-"Thine eyes have seen all that the Lord your God hath done." And as He
-has done, _so_ He will do. He _hath_ delivered, and He _doth_ deliver,
-and He _will_ deliver. Past, present, and future are all marked by
-divine deliverance.
-
-Reader, art thou in any difficulty? Is there any pressure upon thee?
-Art thou anticipating, with nervous apprehension, some formidable
-evil? Is thine heart trembling at the very thought of it? It may be
-thou art like one who has come to the far end, like the apostle Paul
-in Asia--"Pressed out of measure, above strength, insomuch that we
-despaired even of life." If so, beloved friend, accept a word of
-encouragement. It is our deep and earnest desire to strengthen your
-hands in God, and to encourage your heart to trust Him for all that is
-before you. "Fear not:" only believe. He never fails a trusting
-heart--no, never. Make use of the resources which are treasured up for
-you in Him. Just put yourself, your surroundings, your fears, your
-anxieties, all into His hands, _and leave them there_.
-
-Yes, leave them there. It is of little use your putting your
-difficulties, your necessities, into His hands and then, almost
-immediately, taking them into your own. We often do this. When in
-pressure, in need, in deep trial of some kind or other, we go to God
-in prayer, we cast our burden upon Him and seem to get relief; but,
-alas! no sooner have we risen from our knees than we begin again to
-look at the difficulty, ponder the trial, dwell upon all the sorrowful
-circumstances, until we are again at our very wits' end.
-
-Now, this will never do. It sadly dishonors God, and, of course,
-leaves us unrelieved and unhappy. He would have our minds as free from
-care as the conscience is free from guilt. His word to us is, "Be
-careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication
-with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God." And what
-then? "The peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep
-[or garrison--+phrouresei+] your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."
-
-Thus it was that Moses, that beloved man of God and honored servant of
-Christ, sought to encourage his fellow-laborer and successor, Joshua,
-in reference to all that was before him.--"Ye shall not fear them; for
-the Lord your God He shall fight for you." Thus, too, did the blessed
-apostle Paul encourage his beloved son and fellow-servant Timothy to
-trust in the living God; to be strong in the grace which is in Christ
-Jesus; to lean, with unshaken confidence, on God's sure foundation; to
-commit himself, with unquestioning assurance, to the authority,
-teaching, and guidance of the holy Scriptures; and thus armed and
-furnished, to give himself, with holy diligence and true spiritual
-courage, to that work to which he was called. And thus, too, the
-writer and the reader can encourage one another, in these days of
-increasing difficulty, to cling, in simple faith, to that Word which
-is settled forever in heaven; to have it hidden in the heart as a
-living power and authority in the soul--something that will sustain
-us, though heart and flesh should fail, and though we had not the
-countenance or support of a human being. "All flesh is as grass, and
-all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, and
-the flower thereof falleth away; but the Word of the Lord endureth
-forever. And this is the Word which by the gospel is preached unto
-you." (1 Pet. i. 24, 25.)
-
-How precious is this! What comfort and consolation! What stability and
-rest! What real strength, victory, and moral elevation! It is not
-within the compass of human language to set forth the preciousness of
-the Word of God, or to define, in adequate terms, the comfort of
-knowing that the self-same Word which is settled forever in heaven,
-and which shall endure throughout the countless ages of eternity, is
-that which has reached our hearts in the glad tidings of the gospel,
-imparting to us eternal life, and giving us peace and rest in the
-finished work of Christ, and a perfectly satisfying object in His
-adorable Person. Truly, as we think of all this, we cannot but own
-that every breath should be a halleluiah. Thus it shall be by and by,
-and that forever, all homage to His peerless name!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The closing verses of our chapter present a peculiarly touching
-passage between Moses and his Lord, the record of which, as given
-here, is in lovely keeping, as we might expect, with the character of
-the entire book of Deuteronomy.--"And I besought the Lord at that
-time, saying, 'O Lord God, Thou hast begun to show Thy servant Thy
-greatness, and Thy mighty hand; for what god is there in heaven or in
-earth that can do according to Thy works and according to Thy might? I
-pray Thee, let me go over, and see the good land that is beyond
-Jordan, that goodly mountain, and Lebanon.' But the Lord was wroth
-with me for your sakes, and would not hear me: and the Lord said unto
-me, 'Let it suffice thee; speak no more unto Me of this matter. Get
-thee up into the top of Pisgah, and lift up thine eyes westward, and
-northward, and southward, and eastward, and behold it with thine eyes:
-for thou shalt not go over this Jordan. But charge Joshua, and
-encourage him, and strengthen him; for he shall go over before this
-people, and he shall cause them to inherit the land which thou shalt
-see.'" (Ver. 23-28.)
-
-It is very affecting to find this eminent servant of God urging a
-request which could not be granted. He longed to see that good land
-beyond Jordan. The portion chosen by the two tribes and a half could
-not satisfy his heart; he desired to plant his foot upon the proper
-inheritance of the Israel of God. But it was not to be. He had spoken
-unadvisedly with his lips at the waters of Meribah; and, by the solemn
-and irreversible enactment of the divine government, he was prohibited
-from crossing the Jordan.
-
-All this, the beloved servant of Christ most meekly rehearses in the
-ears of the people. He does not hide from them the fact that the Lord
-had refused to grant his request. True, he had to remind them that it
-was on their account--that was morally needful for them to hear; still
-he tells them, in the most unreserved manner, that Jehovah was wroth
-with him, and that He refused to hear him--refused to allow him to
-cross the Jordan, and called upon him to resign his office and appoint
-his successor.
-
-Now, it is most edifying to hear all this from the lips of Moses
-himself. It teaches us a fine lesson, if only we are willing to learn
-it. Some of us find it very hard indeed to confess that we have done
-or said any thing wrong--very hard to own before our brethren that we
-have entirely missed the Lord's mind in any particular case. We are
-careful of our reputation; we are touchy and tenacious. And yet, with
-strange inconsistency, we admit, or seem to admit, in general terms,
-that we are poor, feeble, erring creatures; and that, if left to
-ourselves, there is nothing too bad for us to say or to do. But it is
-one thing to make a most humiliating general confession, and another
-thing altogether to own that, in some given case, we have made a gross
-mistake. This latter is a confession which very few have grace to
-make. Some can hardly ever admit that they have done wrong.
-
-Not so that honored servant whose words we have just quoted. He,
-notwithstanding his elevated position as the called, trusted, and
-beloved servant of Jehovah--the leader of the congregation, whose rod
-had made the land of Egypt to tremble, was not ashamed to stand before
-the whole assembly of his brethren and confess his mistake--own that
-he had said what he ought not, and that he had earnestly urged a
-request which Jehovah could not grant.
-
-Does this lower Moses in our estimation? The very reverse: it raises
-him immensely. It is morally lovely to hear his confession, to see how
-meekly he bows his head to the governmental dealings of God, to mark
-the unselfishness of his acting toward the man who was to succeed him
-in his high office. There was not a trace of jealousy or envy; no
-exhibition of mortified pride. With beautiful self-emptiness he steps
-down from his elevated position, throws his mantle over the shoulders
-of his successor, and encourages him to discharge, with holy fidelity,
-the duties of that high office which he himself had to resign.
-
-"He that humbleth himself shall be exalted." How true was this in
-Moses' case! He humbled himself under the mighty hand of God. He
-accepted the holy discipline imposed upon him by the divine
-government. He uttered not a murmuring word at the refusal of his
-request; he bows to it all, and hence he was exalted in due time. If
-government kept him out of Canaan, grace conducted him to Pisgah's
-top, from whence, in company with his Lord, he was permitted to see
-that good land, in all its fair proportions--see it, not as inherited
-by Israel, but as given of God.
-
-The reader will do well to ponder deeply the subject of grace and
-government. It is indeed a very weighty and practical theme, and one
-largely illustrated in Scripture, though but little understood
-amongst us. It may seem wonderful to us, hard to be understood, that
-one so beloved as Moses should be refused an entrance into the
-promised land; but in this we see the solemn action of the divine
-government, and we have to bow our heads and worship. It was not
-merely that Moses, in his official capacity, or as representing the
-legal system, could not bring Israel into the land. This is true; but
-it is not all. Moses spake unadvisedly with his lips. He and Aaron his
-brother failed to glorify God, in the presence of the congregation,
-and for this cause "the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron, 'Because ye
-believed Me not, to sanctify Me in the eyes of the children of Israel,
-therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which I
-have given them.'" And again, we read, "The Lord spake unto Moses and
-Aaron in Mount Hor, by the coast of the land of Edom, saying, 'Aaron
-shall be gathered unto his people; for he shall not enter into the
-land which I have given unto the children of Israel, because ye
-rebelled against My word at the water of Meribah. Take Aaron and
-Eleazar his son, and bring them up unto Mount Hor; and strip Aaron of
-his garments, and put them upon Eleazar his son; and Aaron shall be
-gathered unto his people, and shall die there.'"
-
-All this is most solemn. Here we have the two leading men in the
-congregation, the very men whom God had used to bring His people out
-of the land of Egypt, with mighty signs and wonders--"that Moses and
-Aaron"--men highly honored of God, and yet refused entrance into
-Canaan. And for what? Let us mark the reason.--"_Because ye rebelled
-against My word._"
-
-Let these words sink down into our hearts. It is a terrible thing to
-rebel against the Word of God; and the more elevated the position of
-those who so rebel, the more serious it is in every way, and the more
-solemn and speedy must be the divine judgment. "For rebellion is as
-the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry."
-
-These are weighty words, and we ought to ponder them deeply. They were
-uttered in the ears of Saul, when he had failed to obey the word of
-the Lord; and thus we have before us examples of a prophet, a priest,
-and a king, all judged, under the government of God, for an act of
-disobedience. The prophet and the priest were refused entrance into
-the land of Canaan, and the king was deprived of his throne, simply
-because they disobeyed the word of the Lord.
-
-Let us remember this. We, in our fancied wisdom, might deem all this
-very severe. Are we competent judges? This is a grand question in all
-such matters. Let us beware how we presume to sit in judgment on the
-enactments of divine government. Adam was driven out of paradise,
-Aaron was stripped of his priestly robes, Moses was sternly refused
-entrance into Canaan, and Saul was deprived of his kingdom--and for
-what? Was it for what men would call a grave moral offense--some
-scandalous sin. No; it was, in each case, for neglecting the word of
-the Lord. This is the serious thing for us to keep before us, in this
-day of human willfulness, in which men undertake to set up their own
-opinions, to think for themselves, and judge for themselves, and act
-for themselves. Men proudly put the question, "Has not every man a
-right to think for himself?" We reply, Most certainly not. We have a
-right to obey. To obey what? Not the commandments of men, not the
-authority of the so-called church, not the decrees of general
-councils--in a word, not any merely human authority, call it what you
-please, but simply the Word of the living God--the testimony of the
-Holy Ghost--the voice of holy Scripture. This it is that justly claims
-our implicit, unhesitating, unquestioning obedience. To this we are to
-bow down our whole moral being. We are not to reason, we are not to
-speculate, we are not to weigh consequences, we have nothing to do
-with results, we are not to say "Why?" or "Wherefore?" It is ours to
-obey, and leave all the rest in the hands of our Master. What has a
-servant to do with consequences? what business has he to reason as to
-results? It is of the very essence of a servant to do what he is told,
-regardless of all other considerations. Had Adam remembered this, he
-would not have been turned out of Eden; had Moses and Aaron remembered
-it, they might have crossed the Jordan; had Saul remembered it, he
-would not have been deprived of his throne. And so, as we pass down
-along the stream of human history, we see this weighty principle
-illustrated over and over again; and we may rest assured, it is a
-principle of abiding and universal importance.
-
-And be it remembered, we are not to attempt to weaken this great
-principle by any reasonings grounded upon God's foreknowledge of all
-that was to happen, and all that man would do, in the course of time.
-Men do reason in this way, but it is a fatal mistake. What has God's
-foreknowledge to do with man's responsibility? Is man responsible, or
-not? This is the question. If, as we most surely believe, he is, then
-nothing must be allowed to interfere with this responsibility. Man is
-called to obey the plain word of God; he is in no wise responsible to
-know aught about God's secret purposes and counsels. Man's
-responsibility rests upon what is revealed, not upon what is secret.
-What, for example, did Adam know about God's eternal plans and
-purposes when he was set in the garden of Eden and forbidden to eat of
-the tree of the knowledge of good and evil? Was his transgression in
-any wise modified by the stupendous fact that God took occasion from
-that very transgression to display, in the view of all created
-intelligences, His glorious scheme of redemption through the blood of
-the Lamb? Clearly not. He received a plain commandment, and by that
-commandment his conduct should have been absolutely governed. He
-disobeyed, and was driven out of paradise into a world which has, for
-well-nigh six thousand years, exhibited the terrible consequences of
-one single act of disobedience--the act of taking the forbidden
-fruit.
-
-True it is, blessed be God, that grace has come into this poor
-sin-stricken world and there reaped a harvest which could never have
-been reaped in the fields of an unfallen creation. But man was judged
-for his transgression; he was driven out by the hand of God in
-government, and by an enactment of that government, he has been
-compelled to eat bread in the sweat of his brow. "Whatsoever _a man_
-[no matter who] soweth, that shall he also reap."
-
-Here we have the condensed statement of the principle which runs all
-through the Word, and is illustrated on every page of the history of
-God's government. It demands our very gravest consideration. It is,
-alas! but little understood. We allow our minds to get under the
-influence of one-sided and therefore false ideas of grace, the effect
-of which is most pernicious. Grace is one thing, and government is
-another: they must never be confounded. We would earnestly impress
-upon the heart of the reader the weighty fact that the most
-magnificent display of God's sovereign grace can never interfere with
-the solemn enactments of His government.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-"Now therefore _hearken_, O Israel, unto the statutes and unto the
-judgments which I teach you, for to _do_ them, that ye may _live_, and
-go in and _possess_ the land which the Lord God of your fathers giveth
-you."
-
-Here we have very prominently before us the special characteristic of
-the entire book of Deuteronomy.--"Hearken" and "do," that ye may
-"live" and "possess." This is a universal and abiding principle. It
-was true for Israel, and it is true for us. The pathway of life and
-the true secret of possession is simple obedience to the holy
-commandments of God. We see this all through the inspired volume, from
-cover to cover. God has given us His Word, not to speculate upon it or
-discuss it, but, that we may obey it. And it is as we, through grace,
-yield a hearty and happy obedience to our Father's statutes and
-judgments, that we tread the bright pathway of life, and enter into
-the reality of all that God has treasured up for us in Christ. "He
-that hath My commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me;
-and he that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I will love
-him, and will manifest Myself to him."
-
-How precious is this! Indeed, it is unspeakable. It is something quite
-peculiar. It would be a very serious mistake to suppose that the
-privilege here spoken of is enjoyed by all believers. It is not. It is
-only enjoyed by such as yield a loving obedience to the commandments
-of our Lord Jesus Christ. It lies within the reach of all, but all do
-not enjoy it, because all are not obedient. It is one thing to be a
-child, and quite another to be an obedient child; it is one thing to
-be saved, and quite another thing to love the Saviour, and delight in
-all His most precious precepts.
-
-We may see this continually illustrated in our family circles. There,
-for example, are two sons, and one of them only thinks of pleasing
-himself, doing his will, gratifying his own desires. He takes no
-pleasure in his father's society, does not take any pains to carry out
-his father's wishes, knows hardly any thing of his mind, and what he
-does know he utterly neglects or despises. He is ready enough to avail
-himself of all the benefits which accrue to him from the relationship
-in which he stands to his father--ready enough to accept clothes,
-books, money--all, in short, that the father gives; but he never seeks
-to gratify the father's heart by a loving attention to his will, even
-in the smallest matters. The other son is the direct opposite to all
-this. He delights in being with his father; he loves his society,
-loves his ways, loves his words; he is constantly taking occasion to
-carry out his father's wishes, to get him something that he knows will
-be agreeable to him. He loves his father, not for his gifts, but for
-himself; and he finds his richest enjoyment in being in his father's
-company and in doing his will.
-
-Now, can we have any difficulty in seeing how very differently the
-father will feel towards those two sons? True, they are both his sons,
-and he loves them both, with a love grounded upon the relationship in
-which they stand to him; but beside the love of relationship common to
-both, there is the love of complacency peculiar to the obedient child.
-It is impossible that a father can find pleasure in the society of a
-willful, self-indulgent, careless son. Such a son may occupy much of
-his thoughts, he may spend many a sleepless night thinking about him
-and praying for him, he would gladly spend and be spent for him; but
-he is not agreeable to him, does not possess his confidence, cannot be
-the depositary of his thoughts.
-
-All this demands the serious consideration of those who really desire
-to be acceptable or agreeable to the heart of our heavenly Father and
-our Lord Jesus Christ. We may rest assured of this, that obedience is
-grateful to God; and "His commandments are not grievous"--nay, they
-are the sweet and precious expression of His love, and the fruit and
-evidence of the relationship in which He stands to us. And not only
-so, but He graciously rewards our obedience by a fuller manifestation
-of Himself to our souls, and His dwelling with us. This comes out in
-great fullness and beauty in our Lord's reply to Judas, not Iscariot,
-for whose question we may be thankful--"'Lord, how is it that Thou
-wilt manifest Thyself unto us, and not unto the world?' Jesus answered
-and said unto him, 'If a man love Me, he will keep My words; and My
-Father will love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our abode
-with him.'" (John xiv.)
-
-Here we are taught that it is not a question of the difference between
-"the world" and "us," inasmuch as the world knows nothing either of
-relationship or obedience, and is therefore in no wise contemplated in
-our Lord's words. The world hates Christ, because it does not know
-Him. Its language is, "Depart from us; for we desire not the
-knowledge of Thy ways." "We will not have this Man to reign over us."
-
-Such is the world, even when polished by civilization, and gilded with
-the profession of Christianity. There is, underneath all the gilding,
-all the polish, a deep-seated hatred of the Person and authority of
-Christ. His sacred, peerless name is tacked on to the world's
-religion, at least throughout baptized christendom; but behind the
-drapery of religious profession, there lurks a heart at enmity with
-God and His Christ.
-
-But our Lord is not speaking of the world in John xiv. He is shut in
-with "His own," and it is of them He is speaking. Were He to manifest
-Himself to the world, it could only be for judgment and eternal
-destruction. But, blessed be His name, He does manifest Himself to His
-own obedient children, to those who have His commandments and keep
-them, to those who love Him and keep His words.
-
-And, let the reader thoroughly understand that when our Lord speaks of
-His commandments, His words, and His sayings, He does not mean the ten
-commandments, or law of Moses. No doubt, those ten commandments form a
-part of the whole canon of Scripture--the inspired Word of God; but to
-confound the law of Moses with the commandments of Christ would be
-simply turning things upside down, it would be to confound Judaism
-with Christianity--law and grace. The two things are as distinct as
-any two things can be, and must be so maintained by all who would be
-found in the current of the mind of God.
-
-We are sometimes led astray by the mere sound of words; and hence,
-when we meet with the word "commandments," we instantly conclude that
-it must needs refer to the law of Moses. But this is a very great and
-mischievous mistake. If the reader is not clear and established as to
-this, let him close this volume and turn to the first eight chapters
-of the epistle to the Romans, and the whole of the epistle to the
-Galatians, and read them calmly and prayerfully, as in the very
-presence of God, with a mind freed from all theological bias and the
-influence of all previous religious training. There he will learn, in
-the fullest and clearest manner, that the Christian is not under law
-in any way, or for any object whatsoever, either for life, for
-righteousness, for holiness, for walk, or for any thing else. In
-short, the teaching of the entire New Testament goes to establish,
-beyond all question, that the Christian is not under law, not of the
-world, not in the flesh, not in his sins. The solid ground of all this
-is the accomplished redemption which we have in Christ Jesus, in
-virtue of which we are sealed by the Holy Ghost, and thus indissolubly
-united to, and inseparably identified with a risen and glorified
-Christ; so that the apostle John can say of all believers, all God's
-dear children, "_As_ He [Christ] _is, so are we_ in this world." This
-settles the whole question, for all who are content to be governed by
-holy Scripture. And as to all beside, discussion is worse than
-useless.
-
-We have digressed from our immediate subject, in order to meet any
-difficulty arising from a misunderstanding of the word "commandments."
-The reader cannot too carefully guard against the tendency to confound
-the commandments spoken of in John xiv. with the commandments of
-Moses, given in Exodus xx. And yet we reverently believe that Exodus
-xx. is as truly inspired as John xiv.
-
-And now, ere we finally turn from the subject which has been engaging
-us, we would ask the reader to refer, for a few moments, to a piece of
-inspired history which illustrates, in a very striking way, the
-difference between an obedient and disobedient child of God. He will
-find it in Genesis xviii, xix. It is a profoundly interesting study,
-presenting a contrast instructive, suggestive, and practical beyond
-expression. We are not going to dwell upon it, having in some measure
-done so in our "Notes on the Book of Genesis;" but we would merely
-remind the reader that he has before him, in these two chapters, the
-history of two saints of God. Lot was just as much a child of God as
-Abraham. We have no more doubt that Lot is amongst "the spirits of
-just men made perfect" than that Abraham is there. This, we think,
-cannot be called in question, inasmuch as the inspired apostle Peter
-tells us that Lot's "righteous soul was vexed with the filthy
-conversation of the wicked."
-
-But mark the grave difference between the two men. The Lord Himself
-visited Abraham, sat with him, and partook readily of his hospitality.
-This was a high honor indeed, a rare privilege--a privilege which Lot
-never knew, an honor to which he never attained. The Lord never
-visited him in Sodom; He merely sent His angels, His ministers of
-power, the agents of His government. And even they, at first, sternly
-refused to enter Lot's house or to partake of his proffered
-hospitality. Their withering reply was, "Nay, but we will abide in the
-street all night." And when they did enter his house, it was only to
-protect him from the lawless violence with which he was surrounded,
-and to drag him out of the wretched circumstances into which, for
-worldly gain and position, he had plunged himself. Could contrast be
-more vivid?
-
-But further, the Lord delighted in Abraham, manifested Himself to him,
-opened His mind to him, told him of His plans and purposes--what He
-was about to do with Sodom. "Shall I," said He, "hide from Abraham
-that thing which I do; seeing that Abraham shall surely become a great
-and mighty nation, and all the nations of the earth shall be blessed
-in him? For _I know him, that he will command his children and his
-household after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do
-justice and judgment_, that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which
-he hath spoken of him."
-
-We could hardly have a more telling illustration of John xiv. 21, 23,
-although the scene occurred two thousand years before the words were
-uttered. Have we aught like this in the history of Lot? Alas! no. It
-could not be. He had no nearness to God, no knowledge of His mind, no
-insight into His plans and purposes. How could he? Sunk, as he was, in
-the low moral depths of Sodom, how could he know the mind of God?
-Blinded by the murky atmosphere which inwrapped the guilty cities of
-the plain, how could he see into the future? Utterly impossible. If a
-man is mixed up with the world, he can only see things from the
-world's stand-point; he can only measure things by the world's
-standard, and think of them with the world's thoughts. Hence it is
-that the Church, in its Sardis condition, is _threatened_ with the
-coming of the Lord as a thief, instead of being _cheered_ with the
-hope of His coming as the bright and morning star. If the professing
-church has sunk to the world's level--as, alas! she has--she can only
-contemplate the future from the world's point of view. This accounts
-for the feeling of dread with which the great majority of professing
-Christians look at the subject of the Lord's coming. They are looking
-for Him as a thief, instead of the blessed Bridegroom of their hearts.
-How few there are, comparatively, who _love His appearing_! The great
-majority of professors (we grieve to have to pen the words) find their
-type in Lot rather than in Abraham. The Church has departed from her
-proper ground; she has gone down from her true moral elevation, and
-mingled herself with that world which hates and despises her absent
-Lord.
-
-Still, thank God, there are "a few names, even in Sardis, which have
-not defiled their garments"--a few living stones, amid the smouldering
-ashes of lifeless profession--a few lights twinkling amid the moral
-gloom of cold, nominal, heartless, worldly Christianity. And not only
-so, but in the Laodicean phase of the Church's history, which presents
-a still lower and more hopeless condition of things, when the whole
-professing body is about to be spued out of the mouth of "the faithful
-and true witness"--even at this advanced stage of failure and
-departure, those gracious words fall, with soul-stirring power, on the
-attentive ear, "Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: if _any man_
-hear My voice, and open the door, I will come in _to him_, and will
-sup with him, and he with Me."[7]
-
- [7] To apply the solemn address of Christ to the church of Laodicea,
- as we sometimes find it done in modern evangelical preaching, to the
- case of the sinner, is a great mistake. No doubt, what the preacher
- means is right enough, but it is not presented here. It is not Christ
- knocking at the door of a sinner's heart, but knocking at the door of
- the professing church. What a fact is this! How full of deep and awful
- solemnity as regards the church! What an end to come to!--Christ
- outside! But what grace, as regards Christ, for He is knocking! He
- wants to come in; He is still lingering, in patient grace and
- changeless love, ready to come in to any faithful individual heart
- that will only open to Him. "If any man"--even one! In Sardis, He
- could speak _positively_ of "_a few_;" in Laodicea, He can only speak
- _doubtfully_ as to finding _one_. But should there be even one, He
- will come in to him, and sup with him. Precious Saviour! Faithful
- Lover of our souls! "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, to-day, and
- forever."
-
- Reader, need we wonder that the enemy should seek to mutilate and
- misapply the solemn and searching address to the church of
- Laodicea--the professing body in the last dreary stage of its history?
- We have no hesitation in saying that to apply it _merely_ to the case
- of an unconverted soul is to deprive the professing church of one of
- the most pertinent, pungent, and powerful appeals within the covers of
- the New Testament.
-
-Thus, in the days of professing Christianity, as in the days of the
-patriarchs--in the times of the New Testament, as in those of the Old,
-we see the same value and importance attached to a hearing ear and an
-obedient heart. Abraham, in the plains of Mamre, the pilgrim and the
-stranger, the faithful and obedient child of God, tasted the rare
-privilege of entertaining the Lord of glory--a privilege which could
-not be known by one who had chosen his place and his portion in a
-sphere doomed to destruction. So, also, in the days of Laodicean
-indifference and boastful pretension, the truly obedient heart is
-cheered with the sweet promise of sitting down to sup with Him who is
-"the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the beginning of the
-creation of God." In a word, let the condition of things be what it
-may, there is no limit to the blessing of the individual soul who will
-only hearken to the voice of Christ, and keep His commandments.
-
-Let us remember this. Let it sink down into the very deepest depths of
-our moral being. Nothing can rob us of the blessings and privileges
-flowing from obedience. The truth of this shines out before our eyes
-in every section and on every page of the volume of God. At all times,
-in all places, and under all circumstances, the obedient soul was
-happy in God, and God was happy in him. It always holds good, whatever
-be the character of the dispensation, that, "To this man will I look,
-even to him who is of a contrite spirit, and trembles at My word."
-Nothing can ever alter or touch this. It meets us in the fourth
-chapter of our blessed book of Deuteronomy, in the words with which
-this section opens--"Now therefore _hearken_, O Israel, unto _the
-statutes_ and unto _the judgments which I teach you_, for _to do_,
-that ye may live, and go in and possess the land which the Lord God of
-your fathers giveth you." It meets us in those precious words of our
-Lord, in John xiv, on which we have been dwelling--"He that hath _My
-commandments_ and keepeth them, he it is that loveth Me," etc. And
-again, "If a man love Me, _he will keep My sayings_."[8] It shines
-with peculiar brightness in the words of the inspired apostle
-John--"Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence
-toward God. And whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, _because we keep
-His commandments_, and _do those things that are pleasing in His
-sight_. And this is His commandment, that we should believe on the
-name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us
-commandment. And he that keepeth His commandments dwelleth in Him, and
-He in him." (1 John iii. 21-24.)
-
- [8] There is an interesting difference between the Lord's
- "commandments" and "sayings." The former set forth, distinctly and
- definitely, what we ought to do; the latter are the expression of His
- mind. If I give my child a command, it is the statement of his duty;
- and if he loves me, he will delight to do it. But if he has heard me
- _say_ I like to see such a thing done, although I have not actually
- told him to do it, it will touch my heart much more deeply to see him
- go and do that thing in order to gratify me, than if I had given him a
- positive command. Now, ought we not to try and please the heart of
- Christ? Should we not "labor to be agreeable to Him"? He has made us
- accepted; surely we ought to seek, in every possible way, to be
- acceptable to Him. He delights in a loving obedience; it was what He
- Himself rendered to the Father.--"I delight to do Thy will; yea, _Thy
- law_ is within _My heart_." "If ye keep My commandments, ye shall
- abide in My love; even as I have kept My Father's commandments, and
- abide in His love." Oh, that we may drink more deeply into the spirit
- of Jesus, walk in His blessed footsteps, and render Him a more loving,
- devoted, and whole-hearted obedience in all things! Let us earnestly
- seek after these things, beloved Christian reader, that His heart may
- be gratified, and His name glorified in us, and in our entire
- practical career from day to day.
-
-Passages might easily be multiplied, but there is no need. Those which
-we have quoted set before us, in the clearest and fullest way
-possible, the very highest motive for obedience, namely, its being
-agreeable to the heart of our Lord Jesus Christ--well-pleasing to God.
-True, we owe a hearty obedience on every ground. "We are not our own;
-we are bought with a price." We owe our life, our peace, our
-righteousness, our salvation, our everlasting felicity and glory, all
-to Him; so that nothing can exceed the moral weight of His claims upon
-us for a life of whole-hearted obedience. But above and beyond His
-moral claims stands the marvelous fact that His heart is gratified,
-His spirit refreshed, by our keeping His commandments and doing those
-things that are pleasing in His sight.
-
-Beloved Christian reader, can any thing exceed the moral power of such
-a motive as this? Only think of our being privileged to give pleasure
-to the heart of our beloved Lord! What sweetness, what interest, what
-preciousness, what holy dignity, it imparts to every little act of
-obedience to know that it is grateful to the heart of our Father! How
-far beyond the legal system is this! It is a most perfect contrast, in
-its every phase and every feature. The difference between the legal
-system and Christianity is the difference between death and life,
-bondage and liberty, condemnation and righteousness, distance and
-nearness, doubt and certainty. How monstrous the attempt to amalgamate
-these two things--to work them up into one system, as though they were
-but two branches from the one stem! What hopeless confusion must be
-the result of any such effort! How terrible the effect of seeking to
-place souls under the influence of the two things! As well might we
-attempt to combine the sun's meridian beams with the profound darkness
-of midnight. Looked at from a divine and heavenly stand-point, judged
-in the light of the New Testament, measured by the standard of the
-heart of God, the mind of Christ, there could not be a more hideous
-anomaly than that which presents itself to our view in christendom's
-effort to combine law and grace. And as to the dishonor done to God,
-the wound inflicted on the heart of Christ, the grief and despite
-offered to the Holy Ghost, the damage done to the truth of God, the
-grievous wrong perpetrated upon the beloved lambs and sheep of the
-flock of Christ, the terrible stumbling-block thrown in the way of
-both Jew and Gentile, and, in short, the serious injury done to the
-entire testimony of God during the last eighteen centuries, the
-judgment-seat of Christ can alone declare it; and oh, what an awful
-declaration that will be! It is too tremendous to contemplate.
-
-But there are many pious souls throughout the length and breath of the
-professing church who conscientiously believe that the only possible
-way to produce obedience, to attain to practical holiness, to secure a
-godly walk, to keep our evil nature in order, is to put people under
-the law. They seem to fear that if souls are taken from under the
-school-master, with his rod and rudiments, there is an end to all
-moral order. In the absence of the authority of law, they look for
-nothing but hopeless confusion. To take away the ten commandments as a
-rule of life, is, in their judgment, to remove those grand moral
-embankments which the hand of God has erected to stem the tide of
-human lawlessness.
-
-We can fully understand their difficulty. Most of us have had to
-encounter it, in one shape or another. But we must seek to meet it in
-God's way. It is of no possible use to cling, with fond tenacity, to
-our own notions, in the face of the plainest and most direct teaching
-of holy Scripture. We must, sooner or later, give up all such notions.
-Nothing will, nothing can, stand but the Word of our God--the voice of
-the Holy Ghost--the authority of Scripture--the imperishable teachings
-of that peerless revelation which our Father has, in His infinite
-grace, put into our hands. To that we must listen, with profound and
-reverent attention; to it we must bow down, with unquestioning and
-unqualified obedience. We must not presume to hold a single opinion
-of our own: God's opinion must be ours. We must clear out all the
-rubbish, which, by the influence of mere human teaching, has
-accumulated in our minds, and have every chamber thoroughly cleansed
-by the action of the Word and Spirit of God, and thoroughly ventilated
-by the pure and bracing air of the new creation.
-
-Furthermore, we must learn to confide implicitly in every word that
-proceedeth out of the mouth of God. We must not reason, we must not
-judge, we must not discuss: we must simply believe. If man speaks, if
-it be a mere question of human authority, then indeed we must judge,
-because man has no right to command. We must judge what he says, not
-by our own opinions, or by any human standard, creed, or confession of
-faith, but by the Word of God. But when Scripture speaks, all
-discussion is closed.
-
-This is an unspeakable consolation. It is not within the compass of
-human language to set forth adequately the value or the moral
-importance of this great fact. It delivers the soul completely from
-the blinding power of self-will on the one hand, and of mere
-subjection to human authority on the other. It brings us into direct,
-personal, living contact with the authority of God; and this is life,
-peace, liberty, moral power, true elevation, divine certainty, and
-holy stability. It puts an end to doubts and fears, to all the
-fluctuations of mere human opinion, so perplexing to the mind, so
-torturing to the heart. We are no longer tossed about with every wind
-of doctrine, every wave of human thought. _God has spoken._ This is
-quite enough. Here the heart finds its deep and settled repose. It has
-made its escape from the stormy ocean of theological controversy, and
-cast anchor in the blessed haven of divine revelation.
-
-Hence, therefore, we would say to the pious reader of these lines, if
-you would know the mind of God on the subject before us--if you would
-know the ground, character, and object of Christian obedience, you
-must simply listen to the voice of holy Scripture. And what does it
-say? Does it send us back to Moses, to teach us how to live? Does it
-send us back "to the palpable mount," in order to secure holy living?
-Does it put us under the law, to keep the flesh in order? Hear what it
-says. Yes; hearken and ponder. Take the following words from Romans
-vi.--words of emancipating, holy power: "For sin shall not have
-dominion over you; for _ye are not under law_, but under grace."
-
-Now, we most earnestly entreat the reader to let these words enter
-into the very depths of his soul. The Holy Ghost declares, in the
-simplest and most emphatic manner, that Christians are not under law.
-If we were under law, sin would have dominion over us. Indeed, we
-invariably find, in Scripture, that "sin," "law," and "flesh" are
-linked together. A soul under law cannot possibly enjoy full
-deliverance from the dominion of sin; and in this we can see at a
-glance the fallacy of the whole legal system, and the utter delusion
-of seeking to produce holy living by putting souls under the law. It
-is simply putting them into the very place where sin can lord it over
-them, and rule them with absolute sway. How is it possible, then, to
-produce holiness by law? It is absolutely hopeless.
-
-But let us turn, for a moment, to Romans vii. "Wherefore, my brethren,
-ye also"--and all true believers, all God's people--"are become _dead
-to the law_ by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to
-another, even to Him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring
-forth fruit unto God." Now, it is perfectly plain that we cannot be
-"dead to the law" and "under the law" at the same time. It may perhaps
-be argued that the expression, "dead to the law" is merely a figure.
-Well, supposing it be so, we ask, A figure of what? Surely it cannot
-be a figure of persons under law. Nay, it is a figure of the very
-opposite.
-
-And let us mark particularly, the apostle does not say the law is
-dead. Nothing of the kind. The law is not dead, but we are dead to it.
-We have passed, by the death of Christ, out of the sphere to which the
-law belongs. Christ took our place; He was made under the law; and, on
-the cross, He was made sin for us. But He died for us, and we died in
-Him; and He has thus taken us clean out of the position in which we
-were under the dominion of sin, and under law, and introduced us into
-an entirely new position, in living association and union with
-Himself, so that it can be said. "As He is, so are we in this world."
-Is He under law? Assuredly not. Well, neither are we. Has sin any
-claim upon Him? None whatever. Neither has it any upon us. We are, as
-to our standing, as He is in the presence of God; and therefore to put
-us back under law would be a complete overturning of the entire
-Christian position, and a most positive and flagrant contradiction of
-the very plainest statements of holy Scripture.
-
-Now, we would, in all simplicity and godly sincerity, ask, How could
-holy living be promoted by removing the very foundation of
-Christianity? How could indwelling sin be subdued by putting us under
-the very system that gave sin power over us? How could true Christian
-obedience ever be produced by flying in the face of holy Scripture? We
-confess we cannot conceive any thing more thoroughly preposterous.
-Surely a divine end can only be gained by pursuing a divine way. Now,
-God's way of giving us deliverance from the dominion of sin is by
-delivering us from under law; and hence all those who teach that
-Christians are under law are plainly at issue with God. Tremendous
-consideration for all who desire to be teachers of the law!
-
-But let us hear further words from the seventh chapter of Romans. The
-apostle goes on to say, "For _when we were in the flesh_, the motions
-of sins, which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth
-fruit unto _death_. But now _we are delivered from the law_, being
-dead [or, having died] to that wherein we were held: _that we should
-serve_ in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the
-letter."[9]
-
- [9] The rendering of Romans vii. 6 in our authorized version is
- manifestly erroneous, inasmuch as it teaches that the law is dead,
- which is not true. "The law is good, if a man use it lawfully." (1
- Tim. i.) And again, "The law is holy." (Rom. vii.) Scripture never
- teaches that the law is dead, but it teaches that the believer is dead
- to the law--a totally different thing.
-
- But further, +apothanontes+ cannot possibly apply to the law,
- as any well-taught school-boy can see at a glance; it applies to
- us--believers. Were it the law, the word would be +apothanontos+.
-
-Here, again, all is as clear as a sunbeam. What means the expression,
-"When we _were_ in the flesh"? Does it--can it mean that we _are_
-still in that condition? Clearly not. If I were to say, When I _was_
-in London, would any one understand that I am in London still? The
-thought is absurd.
-
-But what does the apostle mean by the expression, "When we were in the
-flesh"? He simply refers to a thing of the past--to a condition that
-no longer obtains. Are believers, then, not in the flesh? So Scripture
-emphatically declares. But does this mean that they are not in the
-body? Assuredly not. They are in the body as to the fact of their
-existence, but not in the flesh as to the ground of their standing
-before God.
-
-In chapter viii. we have the most distinct statement of this
-point.--"So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God. _But ye
-are not in the flesh_, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of
-God dwell in you." Here we have the statement of a most solemn fact,
-and the setting forth of a most precious, glorious privilege. "They
-that are in the flesh _cannot please God_." They may be very moral,
-very amiable, very religious, very benevolent; but they cannot please
-God. Their entire position is false. The source whence all the streams
-flow is corrupt; the root and stem whence all the branches emanate are
-rotten--hopelessly bad. They cannot produce a single atom of good
-fruit--fruit that God can accept. "They cannot please God." They must
-get into an entirely new position; they must have a new life, new
-motives, new objects--in a word, they must be a new creation. How
-solemn is all this! Let us weigh it thoroughly, and see if we
-understand the apostle's words.
-
-But on the other hand, mark the glorious privilege of all true
-believers. "_Ye are not in the flesh._" Believers are no longer in a
-position in which they cannot please God. They have a new nature--a
-new life, every movement, every outflow, of which is agreeable to God.
-The very feeblest breathing of the divine life is precious to God. Of
-this life, the Holy Ghost is the power, Christ the object, glory the
-goal, heaven the home. All is divine, and therefore perfect. True, the
-believer is liable to err, prone in himself to wander, capable of
-sinning. In him (that is, in his flesh,) dwelleth no good thing. But
-his _standing_ is based on the eternal stability of the grace of God,
-and his _state_ is met by the divine provision which that grace has
-made for him in the precious atonement and all-prevailing advocacy of
-our Lord Jesus Christ. Thus he is forever delivered from that terrible
-system in which the prominent figures are, "Flesh," "Law," "Sin,"
-"Death"--melancholy group, most surely!--and he is brought into that
-glorious scene in which the prominent figures are, "Life," "Liberty,"
-"Grace," "Peace," "Righteousness," "Holiness," "Glory," "Christ." "For
-_ye are not come_ to the mount that might be touched"--that is, the
-palpable mount--"and that burned with fire, nor unto blackness, and
-darkness, and tempest, and the sound of a trumpet, and the voice of
-words; which voice they that heard, entreated that the word should not
-be spoken to them any more: (For they could not endure that which was
-commanded, 'And if so much as a beast touch the mountain, it shall be
-stoned, or thrust through with a dart:' and so terrible was the sight,
-that Moses said, 'I exceedingly fear and quake:') but _ye are come_
-unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly
-Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels, the general
-assembly, the church of the first-born [ones] which are written in
-heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men
-made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to
-the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than Abel." (Heb.
-xii.)
-
-Thus we have endeavored to meet the difficulty of any conscientious
-reader who up to the moment in which he opened this volume had
-cherished the conviction that it is only by putting believers under
-the law that practical holiness and true obedience can be attained. We
-trust he has followed us through the line of Scripture evidence which
-we have laid before him. If so, he will see that to place believers in
-such a position is to do away with the very foundations of
-Christianity--to abandon grace--to give up Christ--to go back to the
-flesh, in which we cannot please God, and to place ourselves under the
-curse. In short, the legal system of men is diametrically opposed to
-the teaching of the entire New Testament. It was against this system
-and its upholders that the blessed apostle Paul, during his whole
-life, ever testified. He absolutely abhorred it, and continually
-denounced it. The law-teachers were ever seeking to sap and undermine
-his blessed labors, and subvert the souls of his beloved children in
-the faith. It is impossible to read his burning sentences in the
-epistle to the Galatians, his withering references in his epistle to
-the Philippians, or his solemn warnings in the epistle to the Hebrews,
-and not see how intense was his abhorrence of the whole legal system
-of the law-teachers, and how bitterly he wept over the ruins of the
-testimony so dear to his large, loving, devoted heart.
-
-But it is possible that after all we have written, and notwithstanding
-the full tide of Scripture evidence to which we have called the
-reader's attention, he may still feel disposed to ask, Is there not a
-danger of unholy laxity and levity if the restraining power of the law
-be removed? To this we reply, God is wiser than we are. He knows best
-how to cure laxity and levity, and how to produce the right sort of
-obedience. He tried the law, and what did it do? It worked wrath; it
-caused the offense to abound; it developed "the motions of sins;" it
-brought in death; it was the strength of sin; it deprived the sinner
-of all power; it slew him; it was condemnation; it cursed all who had
-to do with it--"As many as are of the works of the law are under the
-curse;" and all this, not because of any defect in the law, but
-because of man's total inability to keep it.
-
-Is it not plain to the reader that neither life nor righteousness nor
-holiness nor true Christian obedience could ever be attained under
-law? Is it possible, after all that has passed in review before us,
-that he can have a single question, a single doubt, a single
-difficulty? We trust not. No one who is willing to bow down to the
-teaching and authority of the New Testament can adhere to the legal
-system for one hour.
-
-However, ere we turn from this weighty and all-important subject, we
-shall place before the reader a passage or two of Scripture in which
-the moral glories of Christianity shine forth with peculiar lustre, in
-vivid contrast to the entire Mosaic economy.
-
-First of all, let us take that familiar passage at the opening of the
-eighth of Romans, "There is therefore now _no condemnation_ to them
-which are _in Christ Jesus_. For the law of the spirit of life in
-Christ Jesus _hath made me free_ from the law of sin and death. For
-what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God
-sending His own Son _in the likeness_ of sinful flesh, and for sin,
-condemned sin in the flesh; that the righteousness [+dikaioma+]
-of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but
-after the Spirit." (Ver. 1-4.)
-
-Now, we must bear in mind that verse 1 sets forth the _standing_ of
-every Christian--his _position_ before God. He is "in Christ Jesus."
-This settles every thing. He is not in the flesh; he is not under law;
-he is absolutely and eternally "in Christ Jesus." Hence there is,
-there can be, no condemnation. The apostle is not speaking of or
-referring to our _walk_ or our _state_. If he were, he could not
-possibly speak of "no condemnation." The most perfect Christian walk
-that ever was exhibited, the most perfect Christian state that ever
-was attained, would afford some ground for judgment and condemnation.
-There is not a Christian on the face of the earth who has not daily to
-judge his state and his walk--his moral condition and his practical
-ways. How, then, could "no condemnation" ever stand connected with, or
-be based upon, Christian walk? Utterly impossible. In order to be free
-from all condemnation, we must have what is divinely perfect, and no
-Christian walk is or ever was that. Even a Paul had to withdraw his
-words (Acts xxiii. 5.). He repented of having written a letter (2 Cor.
-vii. 8.). A perfect walk and a perfect state were only found in One.
-In all beside--even the holiest and best, failure is found.
-
-Hence, therefore, the second clause of Romans viii. 1 must be
-rejected: it is not Scripture. This, we think, would be seen by any
-one really taught of God, apart from all question of mere criticism.
-Any spiritual mind would detect the incongruity between the words "no
-condemnation" and "walk." The two things cannot be made to harmonize.
-And here, we doubt not, is just where thousands of pious souls have
-been plunged into difficulty as to this really magnificent and
-emancipating passage. The joyful sound, "No condemnation," has been
-robbed of its deep, full, and blessed significance by a clause
-introduced by some scribe or copyist whose feeble vision was doubtless
-dazzled by the brightness of that free, absolute, sovereign grace
-which shines in the opening statement of the chapter. How often have
-we heard such words as these!--"Oh, yes; I know there is no
-condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus; but that is if they
-walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. Now, I cannot say that
-I walk thus. I long to do so, and I mourn over my failure. I would
-give worlds to be able to walk more perfectly; but, alas! alas! I have
-to judge myself--my state, my walk, my ways--each day, each hour. This
-being so, I dare not apply to myself the precious words, 'no
-condemnation.' I hope to be able to do so some day, when I have made
-more progress in personal holiness; but in my present state, I should
-deem it the very height of presumption to appropriate to myself the
-precious truth contained in the first clause of Romans viii."
-
-Such thoughts as these have passed through the minds of most of us, if
-they have not been clothed in words. But the simple and conclusive
-answer to all such legal reasonings is found in the fact that the
-second clause of Romans viii. 1 is not Scripture at all, but a very
-misleading interpolation, foreign to the spirit and genius of
-Christianity, opposed to the whole line of argument in the context
-where it occurs, and utterly subversive of the solid peace of the
-Christian. It is a fact well known to all who are conversant with
-biblical criticism, that all the leading authorities are agreed in
-rejecting the second clause of Romans viii. 1.[10] And in this, it is
-simply a matter of criticism confirming, as all sound criticism must
-do, the conclusion at which a really spiritual mind would arrive
-without any knowledge of criticism at all.
-
- [10] It may be that the reader feels a little jealous of any
- interference with our excellent English Bible. He may, like many
- others, feel disposed to say, "How is an uneducated man to know what
- is Scripture and what is not? Must he depend upon scholars and critics
- to give him certainty on so grave and important a question? If so, is
- it not the same old story of looking to human authority to confirm the
- Word of God?" By no means. It is a totally different thing. We all
- know that all copies and translations must be, in some points,
- imperfect, as being human; but we believe that the same grace which
- gave the Word in the original Hebrew and Greek languages, has most
- marvelously watched over our English translation, so that a poor man,
- at the back of a mountain, may rest assured that he possesses in his
- common English Bible the revelation of the mind of God. It is
- wonderful, after all the labors of scholars and critics, how few
- passages, comparatively, have had to be touched; and not one affecting
- any foundation-doctrine of Christianity. God, who graciously gave us
- the holy Scriptures at the first, has watched over them and preserved
- them to His Church in a most wonderful manner. Moreover, He has seen
- fit to make use of the labors of scholars and critics, from age to
- age, to clear the sacred text of errors which, through the infirmity
- attaching to all human agency, had crept into it. Should these
- corrections shake our confidence in the integrity of Scripture as a
- whole? or lead us to doubt that we possess, in very deed, the Word of
- God? Nay, rather should they lead us to bless God for His goodness in
- watching over His Word in order to preserve it in its integrity for
- His Church.
-
-But in addition to all that has been advanced in reference to this
-question, we cannot but think that the occurrence of the clause, "who
-walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit," in verse 4, affords
-abundant evidence of its misplacement in verse 1. We cannot, for a
-moment, admit the thought of redundancy in holy Scripture. Now, in
-verse 4 it _is_ a question of walk--a question of our fulfilling "the
-righteousness [mark the word--+dikaioma+] of the law," and
-hence the clause is in its right, because divinely fitted, place. A
-person who walks in the Spirit--as every Christian ought--fulfills the
-righteousness of the law. Love is the fulfilling of the law; and love
-will lead us to do what the ten commandments could never effect,
-namely, to love our enemies. No lover of holiness, no advocate of
-practical righteousness, need ever be the least afraid of losing aught
-by abandoning the legal ground, and taking his place on the elevated
-platform of true Christianity--by turning from Mount Sinai to Mount
-Zion--by passing from Moses to Christ. No; he only reaches a higher
-source, a deeper spring, a wider sphere of holiness, righteousness,
-and practical obedience.
-
-And then, if any one should feel disposed to ask, Does not the line of
-argument which we have been pursuing tend to rob the law of its
-characteristic glory? We reply, Most assuredly not. So far from this,
-the law was never so magnified, never so vindicated, never so
-established, never so glorified, as by that precious work which forms
-the imperishable foundation of all the privileges, the blessings, the
-dignities, and the glories of Christianity. The blessed apostle
-anticipates and answers this very question in the earlier part of his
-epistle to the Romans. "Do we then," he says, "make void the law
-through faith? Far be the thought; yea, we establish the law." How
-could the law be more gloriously vindicated, honored, and magnified
-than in the life and death of the Lord Jesus Christ? Will any one
-seek, for a moment, to maintain the extravagant notion that it is
-magnifying the law to put Christians under it? We fondly trust the
-reader will not. Ah! no; all this line of things must be completely
-abandoned by those whose privilege it is to walk in the light of the
-new creation; who know Christ as their life and Christ as their
-righteousness, Christ their sanctification, Christ their great
-exemplar, Christ their model, Christ their all and in all; who find
-their motive for obedience, not in the fear of the curses of a broken
-law, but in the love of Christ, according to those exquisitely beautiful
-words, "The love of Christ"--not the law of Moses--"constraineth
-us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all
-dead. And He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth
-live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them and rose
-again." (2 Cor. v.)
-
-Could the law ever produce aught like this? Impossible. But, blessed
-forever be the God of all grace, "what the law could not do," not
-because it was not holy, just, and good, but "in that it was weak
-through the flesh"--the workman was all right, but the material was
-rotten, and nothing could be made of it; but "God sending His own Son
-in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the
-flesh, that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us,
-who," as risen with Christ, linked with Him by the Holy Ghost, in the
-power of a new and everlasting life, "walk not after the flesh, but
-after the Spirit."
-
-This, and only this, is true, practical Christianity; and if the
-reader will turn to the second of Galatians, he will find another of
-those fine, glowing utterances of the blessed apostle, setting forth,
-with divine force and fullness, the special glory of Christian life
-and walk. It is in connection with his faithful rebuke of the apostle
-Peter at Antioch, when that beloved and honored servant of Christ,
-through his characteristic weakness, had been led to step down, for a
-moment, from the elevated moral ground on which the gospel of the
-grace of God places the soul. We cannot do better than quote the
-entire paragraph for the reader: every sentence of it is pregnant with
-spiritual power.
-
-"But when Peter was come to Antioch, I withstood him _to the face_."
-He did not go behind his back, to disparage and depreciate him in the
-view of others, even though "he was to be blamed. For before that
-certain came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles; but when they
-were come, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing them which were
-of the circumcision. And the other Jews dissembled likewise with him,
-insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation.
-But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth
-of the gospel, I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a
-Jew, livest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why
-compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews? We who are Jews
-by nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles, knowing that a man is not
-justified by works of law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we
-have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith
-of Christ, and not by works of law; for by works of law shall no flesh
-be justified. But if, while we seek to be justified by Christ, we
-ourselves also are found sinners, is therefore Christ the minister of
-sin? God forbid [or, Far be the thought--+me genoito+.]. For if
-I build again the things which I destroyed, I make myself a
-transgressor." For if the things were right, why destroy them? and if
-they were wrong, why build them again? "For I, through law, am _dead
-to law_, that I might live unto God. I am crucified with Christ:
-nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life
-which I now live in the flesh, I live [not by the law, as a rule of
-life, but] by the faith of the Son of God, _who loved me_, and gave
-_Himself for me_. I do not frustrate the grace of God; for if
-righteousness come by law, then Christ is dead in vain [or, has died
-for nothing--+dorean+.]." (Gal. ii. 11-21.)
-
-Here, then, we have one of the very finest statements of the truth as
-to practical Christianity any where to be found. But what specially
-claims our attention just now is, the very marked and beautiful way in
-which the gospel of God opens up the path of the true believer between
-the two fatal errors of legality on the one side and carnal laxity on
-the other. Verse 19, in the passage just quoted, contains the divine
-remedy for both these deadly evils. To all--whoever or wherever they
-are--who would seek to put the Christian under the law, in any shape
-or for any object whatsoever, our apostle exclaims, in the ears of
-dissembling Jews, with Peter at their head, and as an answer to all
-the law-teachers of every age, "_I am dead to law_."
-
-What can the law have to say to a dead man? Nothing. The law applies
-to a living man, to curse him and kill him because he has not kept it.
-It is a very grave mistake indeed to teach that the law is dead or
-abolished. It is nothing of the sort. It is alive in all its force, in
-all its stringency, in all its majesty, in all its unbending dignity.
-It would be a very serious mistake to say that the law of England
-against murder is dead; but if a man is dead, the law no longer
-applies to him, inasmuch as he has passed entirely out of its range.
-
-But how is the believer dead to law? The apostle replies, "I through
-law am dead to law." The law had brought the sentence of death into
-his conscience, as we read in Romans vii, "I was alive without the
-law once; but when the commandment came, sin revived and I died. And
-the commandment, which was ordained to life, I found to be into death.
-For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it
-slew me."
-
-But there is more than this. The apostle goes on to say, "I am
-crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ
-liveth in me." And here is the triumphant answer of the Christian to
-those who say that inasmuch as the Mosaic law is abrogated, there is
-no longer any demand for the legal restraint under which the Jews were
-called to live. To all who would seek liberty for self-indulgence, the
-answer is, "I am dead to law, [not that I might give a loose rein to
-the flesh, but] that I might live unto God."
-
-Thus nothing can be more complete, nothing more morally beautiful,
-than the answer of true Christianity to legality on the one hand and
-licentiousness on the other. Self crucified; sin condemned; new life
-in Christ; a life to be lived to God; a life of faith in the Son of
-God; the motive-spring of that life, the constraining love of
-Christ--what can exceed this? Will any one, in view of the moral
-glories of Christianity, contend for putting believers under the law,
-putting them back into the flesh--back into the old creation--back to
-the sentence of death in the conscience--back to bondage, darkness,
-distance, fear of death, condemnation?
-
-Is it possible that any one who has ever tasted, even in the very
-feeblest measure, the heavenly sweetness of God's most blessed gospel,
-can accept the wretched mongrel system, composed of half law and half
-grace, which christendom offers to the soul? How terrible to find the
-children of God--members of the body of Christ--temples of the Holy
-Ghost--robbed of their glorious privileges, and burdened with a heavy
-yoke, which, as Peter says, "neither our fathers nor we were able to
-bear." We earnestly entreat the Christian reader to consider what has
-been placed before him. Search the Scriptures; and if you find these
-things to be so, then fling aside forever the grave-clothes in which
-christendom inwraps its deluded votaries, and walk in the liberty
-wherewith Christ makes His people free; tear off the bandage with
-which it covers the eyes of men, and gaze on the moral glories which
-shine with such heavenly brilliancy in the gospel of the grace of God.
-
-And then let us prove, by a holy, happy, gracious walk and
-conversation, that grace can do what law never could. Let our
-practical ways from day to day, in the midst of the scenes,
-circumstances, relationships, and associations in which we are called
-to live, be the most convincing reply to all who contend for the law
-as a rule of life.
-
-Finally, let it be our earnest, loving desire and aim to seek, in so
-far as in us lies, to lead all the dear children of God into a clearer
-knowledge of their standing and privileges in a risen and glorified
-Christ. May the Lord send out His light and His truth, in the power
-of the Holy Ghost, and gather His beloved people around Himself, to
-walk in the joy of His salvation, in the purity and light of His
-presence, and to wait for His coming.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We do not attempt to offer any apology for what may perhaps appear to
-some of our readers to be a very lengthened digression from the fourth
-chapter of Deuteronomy. The fact is, we have been led into what we
-judge to be a very needed line of practical truth by the very first
-verse of the chapter, as quoted at the opening of this section. We
-felt it absolutely necessary, in speaking of the weighty question of
-obedience, to seek to place it on its true basis. If Israel was called
-to "hearken and do," how much more are we, who are so richly
-blessed--yea, "blessed with _all_ spiritual blessings in the
-heavenlies in Christ Jesus." We are called to obedience, even to the
-obedience of Jesus Christ, as we have it in 1 Peter i, "Elect
-according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through
-sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the
-blood of Jesus Christ." We are called to the very same character of
-obedience as that which marked the life of our blessed Lord Jesus
-Christ Himself. Of course, in Him there was no hindering influence as,
-alas! there is in us; but as to the character of the obedience, it is
-the same.
-
-This is an immense privilege. We are called to walk in the footsteps
-of Jesus. "He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so to
-walk even as He walked." Now, in pondering the path of our Lord, in
-considering His marvelous life, there is one point which demands our
-profound and reverent attention--a point which connects itself, in a
-very special manner, with the book of Deuteronomy--and that is, the
-way in which He ever used the Word of God--the place which He ever
-gave to the holy Scriptures. This we consider to be a subject of the
-last possible importance at the present moment. It holds a prominent
-place throughout the lovely book with which we are at present engaged.
-Indeed, as we have already remarked, it characterizes the book, and
-marks it off from the three books which precede it in the divine
-canon. We shall find proofs and illustrations of this in abundance as
-we pass along. Every where, the Word of God gets its own paramount
-place, as the only rule, the only standard, the only authority, for
-man. It meets him in every position, in every relationship, in every
-sphere of action, and in every stage of his moral and spiritual
-history. It tells him what he ought to do, and what he ought not. It
-furnishes him with ample guidance in every difficulty. It descends, as
-we shall see, to the most minute details--such details, indeed, as
-fill us with amazement to think that the High and Mighty One that
-inhabiteth eternity could occupy Himself with them--to think that the
-Omnipotent Creator and Sustainer of the vast universe could stoop to
-legislate about a bird's nest. (Chap. xxii. 6.)
-
-Such is the Word of God--that peerless revelation--that perfect and
-inimitable volume which stands alone in the history of literature. And
-we may say that one special charm of the book of Deuteronomy--one
-peculiar feature of interest is, the way in which it exalts the Word
-of God, and enforces upon us the holy and happy duty of unqualified
-and unhesitating obedience.
-
-Yes; we repeat and would fervently emphasize the words--unqualified
-and unhesitating obedience. We would have these wholesome words
-sounded in the ears of Christian professors throughout the length and
-breadth of the earth. We live in a day specially marked by the setting
-up of man's reason, man's judgment, man's will; in short, we live in
-what the inspired apostle calls "man's day." On all hands we are
-encountered by lofty and boastful words about human reason, and the
-right of every man to judge and reason and think for himself. The
-thought of being absolutely and completely governed by the authority
-of holy Scripture is treated with sovereign contempt by thousands of
-men who are the religious guides and teachers of the professing
-church. For any one to assert his reverent belief in the plenary
-inspiration, the all-sufficiency, and the absolute authority of
-Scripture, is quite sufficient to stamp him as an ignorant,
-narrow-minded man, if not a semi-lunatic, in the judgment of some who
-occupy the very highest position in the professing church. In our
-universities, our colleges, and our schools, the moral glory of the
-Divine Volume is fast fading away, and instead thereof our young
-people are led and taught to walk in the light of science--the light
-of human reason. The Word of God itself is impiously placed at the bar
-of man's judgment, and reduced to the level of the human
-understanding. Every thing is rejected which soars beyond man's feeble
-vision.
-
-Thus the Word of God is virtually set aside. For, clearly, if
-Scripture is to be submitted to human judgment, it ceases to be the
-Word of God. It is the very height of folly to think of submitting a
-divine and therefore perfect revelation to any tribunal whatsoever.
-Either God has given us a revelation or He has not. If He has, that
-revelation must be paramount, supreme, above and beyond all question,
-absolutely unquestionable, unerring, divine. To its authority all must
-bow down, without a single question. To suppose for a moment that man
-is competent to judge the Word of God, able to pronounce upon what is
-or what is not worthy of God to say or to write, is simply to put man
-in God's place. And this is precisely what the devil is aiming at,
-although many of his instruments are not aware that they are helping
-on his designs.
-
-But the question is continually cropping up before us, "How can we be
-sure that we have, in our English Bible, the _bona-fide_ revelation of
-God?" We reply, God can make us sure of it. If He does not, no one
-can: if He does, no one need. This is our ground, and we deem it
-unassailable. We should like to ask all those who start this infidel
-question (for such we must honestly call it), Supposing that God
-cannot give us the absolute certainty that, in our common English
-Bible, we do actually possess His own most precious, priceless
-revelation, then whither are we to turn? Of course, in such a weighty
-matter, on which momentous and eternal consequences hang, a single
-doubt is torture and misery. If I am not sure of possessing a
-revelation from God, I am left without a single ray of light for my
-path; I am plunged in darkness, gloom, and mental misery. What am I to
-do? Can man help me by his learning, his wisdom, or his reason? Can he
-satisfy my soul by his decision? Can he solve my difficulty, answer my
-question, remove my doubt, dissipate my fear? Is man better able than
-God to give me the assurance that God has spoken?
-
-The idea is absolutely monstrous--monstrous in the very highest
-degree. The plain fact is this, reader: If God cannot give us the
-certainty that He has spoken, we are left without His word altogether.
-If we must turn to human authority, call it what you please, in order
-to guarantee the Word of God to our souls, then that authority is
-higher and greater, safer and more trustworthy, than the Word which it
-guarantees. Blessed be God, it is not so. He has spoken to our hearts.
-He has given us His Word, and that Word carries its own credentials
-with it. It stands in no need of letters of commendation from a human
-hand. What! turn to man to accredit the Word of the living
-God!--apply to a worm to give us the assurance that our God has spoken
-to us in His Word! Away forever with the blasphemous notion, and let
-our whole moral being--all our ransomed powers adore the matchless
-grace, the sovereign mercy, that has not left us to grope in the
-darkness of our own minds, or to be bewildered by the conflicting
-opinions of men; but has given us His own perfect and most precious
-revelation, the divine light of His Word, to guide our feet into the
-path of certainty and peace, to enlighten our understandings and
-comfort our hearts, to preserve us from every form of doctrinal error
-and moral pravity, and finally, to conduct us into the rest,
-blessedness, and glory of His own heavenly kingdom. All praise to His
-name throughout the everlasting ages!
-
-But we must bear in mind that the marvelous privilege of which we have
-spoken--and truly it is most marvelous--is the basis of a most solemn
-responsibility. If it be true that God has, in His infinite goodness,
-given us a perfect revelation of His mind, then what should be our
-attitude in reference to it? Are we to sit in judgment upon it? Are we
-to discuss, argue, or reason? Alas! for all who do so. They will find
-themselves on terribly dangerous ground. The only true, the only
-proper, the only safe attitude for man in the presence of God's
-revelation is, obedience--simple, unqualified, hearty obedience. This
-is the only right thing for us, and this is the thing which is
-pleasing to God. The path of obedience is the path of sweetest
-privilege, rest, and blessing. This path can be trodden by the merest
-babe in Christ, as well as by the "young men" and the "fathers." There
-is the one straight and blessed path for all. Narrow it is, no doubt;
-but, oh! it is safe, bright, and elevated. The light of our Father's
-approving countenance ever shines upon it; and in this blessed light
-the obedient soul finds the most triumphant answer to all the
-reproaches of those who talk, in high-sounding words, about breadth of
-mind, liberality of thought, freedom of opinion, progress,
-development, and such like. The obedient child of God can afford to
-put up with all this, because he feels and knows, he believes and is
-sure, that he is treading a path indicated for him by the precious
-Word of God. He is not careful to explain or apologize, feeling
-assured that those who object, oppose, and reproach are utterly
-incapable of understanding or appreciating his explanation. And,
-moreover, he feels that it is no part of his duty to explain or
-defend. He has but to obey; and as for objectors and opposers, he has
-but to refer them to his Master.
-
-This makes it all so simple, so plain, so certain. It delivers the
-heart from a thousand difficulties and perplexities. If we were to set
-about replying to all who undertake to raise questions or start
-difficulties, our whole life would be spent in the profitless task. We
-may rest assured the best possible answer to all infidel objectors is,
-the steady, earnest, onward path of unqualified obedience. Let us
-leave infidels, skeptics, and rationalists to their own worthless
-theories, while we, with unswerving purpose and firm step, pursue that
-blessed path of childlike obedience which, like the shining light,
-shineth more and more unto the perfect day. Thus shall our minds be
-kept tranquil, for the peace of God, which passeth all understanding,
-shall garrison our hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. When the
-Word of God, which is settled forever in heaven, is hidden deep down
-in our hearts, there will be a calm certainty, a holy stability, and a
-marked progress in our Christian career, which will afford the best
-possible answer to the gainsayer, the most effectual testimony to the
-truth of God, and the most convincing evidence and solid confirmation
-to every wavering heart.
-
-The chapter before us abounds in the most solemn exhortation to
-Israel, grounded upon the fact of their having heard the word of God.
-Thus in the second verse we have a sentence or two which should be
-deeply engraved on the tablets of every Christian's heart.--"Ye shall
-not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish
-aught from it."
-
-These words involve two grand facts with regard to the Word of God. It
-is not to be added to, for the simplest of all reasons, because there
-is nothing lacking; it is not to be diminished, because there is
-nothing superfluous. Every thing we want is there, and nothing that is
-there can be done without. "Add thou not unto His words, lest He
-reprove thee, and thou be found a liar." To suppose that aught can be
-added to God's Word is, upon the very face of it, to deny that it is
-God's Word; and, on the other hand, if we admit that it is the Word of
-God, then it follows of necessity (blessed necessity!) that we could
-not afford to do without a single sentence of it. There would be a
-blank in the volume which no human hand could fill up, if a single
-clause were dropped from its place in the canon. We have all we want,
-and hence we must not add: we want it all, and hence we must not
-diminish.
-
-How deeply important is all this, in this day of human tampering with
-the Word of God! How blessed to know that we have in our possession a
-book so divinely perfect that not a sentence, not a clause, not a
-word, can be added to it. We speak not, of course, of translations or
-versions, but of the Scriptures as originally given of God--His own
-perfect revelation. To this, not a touch can be given. As well might a
-human finger have dared to touch the creation of God, on the morning
-when all the sons of God sang together, as to add a jot or a tittle to
-the inspired Word of God. And on the other hand, to take away a jot or
-a tittle from it, is to say that the Holy Ghost has penned what was
-unnecessary. Thus the holy volume is divinely guarded at both ends. It
-is securely fenced round about, so that no rude hand should touch its
-sacred contents.
-
-What! it may be said in reply, do you mean to say that every sentence,
-from the opening lines of Genesis to the close of Revelation, is
-divinely inspired? Yes; that is precisely the ground we take. We
-claim for every line between the covers of the volume a divine origin.
-To question this is to attack the very pillars of the Christian faith.
-A single flaw in the canon would be sufficient to prove it not of God.
-To touch a single stone in the arch is to bring down the whole fabric
-in ruins around us. "All Scripture is divinely inspired, and" being
-so, must be "profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
-instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect
-[+artios+], throughly furnished unto all good works." (2 Tim.
-iii.)
-
-This stronghold must on no account be surrendered; nay, it must be
-tenaciously held, in the face of every infidel assault. If it be given
-up, all is hopelessly lost--we have nothing to lean upon. Either the
-Word of God is perfect, or we are left without any divine foundation
-for our faith. If there be a word too much or a word too little in the
-revelation which God has given us, then verily we are left, like a
-ship without compass, rudder, or chart, to be drifted about on the
-wild, tumultuous ocean of infidel thought; in short, if we have not an
-absolutely perfect revelation, we are of all men most miserable.
-
-But we may still be challenged with such a question as this: Do you
-believe that the long string of names in the opening chapters of 1
-Chronicles--those genealogical tables are divinely inspired? were they
-written for our learning? and if so, what are we to learn from them?
-We unhesitatingly declare our reverent belief in the divine
-inspiration of all these; and we have no doubt whatever but that
-their value, interest, and importance will be fully proved by and by
-in the history of that people to whom they specially apply.
-
-And then, as to what we are to learn from those genealogical records,
-we believe they teach us a most precious lesson as to Jehovah's
-faithful care of His people Israel, and His loving interest in them
-and in all that concerns them. He watches over them from generation to
-generation, even though they are scattered and lost to human view. He
-knows all about "the twelve tribes," and He will manifest them in due
-time, and plant them in their destined inheritance, in the land of
-Canaan, according to His promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
-
-Now, is not all this full of blessed instruction for us? Is it not
-full of comfort for our souls? Is it not most confirmatory of our
-faith to mark the gracious pains-taking of our God, His minute care
-and vigilance in reference to His earthly people? Most assuredly it
-is. And ought not our hearts to be interested in all that interests
-the heart of our Father? Are we not to take an interest in any thing
-save what directly concerns ourselves? Where is there a loving child
-who would not take an interest in all his father's concerns, and
-delight to read every line that drops from his father's pen?
-
-Let us not be misunderstood. We do not, by any means, attempt to imply
-that all portions of the Word of God are of like interest and
-importance to us. We do not presume to assert that we are to hang
-with equal interest over the first chapter of 1 Chronicles and the
-seventeenth chapter of John or the eighth chapter of Romans. It seems
-hardly necessary to make such a statement, inasmuch as no such
-question is raised. But what we assert is that each of the above
-scriptures is divinely inspired, one just as much as another; and not
-only so, but we further assert that 1 Chronicles i. and such like
-passages fill a niche which John xvii. cannot fill, and do a work
-which Romans viii. cannot do.
-
-And finally, above and beyond all, we must remember that we are not
-competent to judge what is and what is not worthy of a place in the
-inspired canon. We are ignorant and short-sighted; and the very
-portion which we might deem beneath the dignity of inspiration may
-have some very important bearing upon the history of God's ways with
-the world at large or with His people in particular.
-
-In short, it simply resolves itself into this with every truly pious
-soul--every really spiritual mind: We reverently believe in the divine
-inspiration of every line of our precious Bible, from beginning to
-end; and we believe this not on the ground of any human authority
-whatsoever. To believe in holy Scripture because it comes to us
-accredited by any authority upon earth, would be to set that authority
-above holy Scripture, inasmuch as that which guarantees has more
-weight--more value than the thing guaranteed. Hence, we should no more
-think of looking to human authority to confirm the Word of God than
-we should of bringing out a rush-light to prove that the sun was
-shining.
-
-No, reader; we must be clear and decided as to this. It must be, in
-the judgment of our souls, a great cardinal truth which we hold dearer
-than life itself--the plenary inspiration of holy Scripture. Thus
-shall we have wherewithal to answer the cool audacity of modern
-skepticism, rationalism, and infidelity. We do not mean to say that we
-shall be able to convince infidels. God will deal with them in His own
-way, and convince them with His own unanswerable arguments in His own
-time. It is labor and time lost to argue with such men. But we feel
-persuaded that the most dignified and effective answer to infidelity,
-in its every phase, will be found in the calm repose of the heart that
-rests in the blessed assurance that "all Scripture is given by
-inspiration of God;" and again, "Whatsoever things were written
-aforetime were written for our learning; that we through patience and
-comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." The former of these
-precious quotations proves that Scripture has come from God; the
-latter, that it has come to us. Both together go to prove that we must
-neither add to nor take from the Word of God. There is nothing
-lacking, and nothing superfluous. The Lord be praised for this solid
-foundation-truth, and for all the comfort and consolation that flows
-from it to every true believer!
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now proceed to quote for the reader a few of the passages in
-this fourth chapter of Deuteronomy which so emphatically set forth the
-value, importance, and authority of the Word of God. In them, as in
-the whole of this book, we shall see that it is not so much a question
-of any particular ordinance, rite, or ceremony, but of the weight,
-solemnity, and dignity of the Word of God itself, whatever that Word
-may set before us.
-
-"Behold, I have taught you statutes and judgments, even as the Lord my
-God commanded me, that ye should do so in the land whither ye go to
-possess it." Their conduct was to be ruled and formed, in all things,
-by the divine commandments. Immense principle for them, for us, for
-all! "Keep, therefore, and do them; for _this is your wisdom_ and
-_your understanding_ in the sight of the nations, which shall hear all
-these statutes, and say, Surely this great nation is a wise and
-understanding people."
-
-Let us specially weigh these words. Their wisdom and their
-understanding were to consist in their simply keeping and doing the
-divine statutes and judgments. It was not by learned discussion or
-arguments that their wisdom was to be displayed, but by childlike,
-unquestioning obedience. All the wisdom was in the statutes and
-judgments, not in their thoughts and reasonings respecting them. The
-profound and marvelous wisdom of God was seen in His Word, and this
-was what the nations were to see and admire. The light of the divine
-judgments shining in the conduct and character of the people of God
-was to draw forth the admiring testimony of the nations around.
-
-Alas! alas! how differently it turned out! How little did the nations
-of the earth learn, from the actings of Israel, about God and His
-Word! Yea, His name was blasphemed continually through their ways.
-Instead of occupying the high and holy and happy ground of loving
-obedience to the divine commandments, they descended to the level of
-the nations around them--adopted their habits, worshiped their gods,
-and walked in their ways; so that those nations, instead of seeing the
-lofty wisdom, purity, and moral glory of the divine statutes, saw only
-the weakness, folly, and moral degradation of a people who made their
-boast in being the depositary of those oracles which condemned
-themselves. (Rom. ii, iii.)
-
-Still, blessed be God, His Word must stand forever, however His people
-may fail to carry it out. His standard is perfect, and therefore must
-never be lowered; and if the power of His Word be not seen in the ways
-of His people, it will shine in the condemnation of those ways, and
-ever abide for the guidance, comfort, strength, and blessing of any
-who desire, however feebly or falteringly, to tread the path of
-obedience.
-
-However, in the chapter with which we are at present occupied, the
-lawgiver seeks to set the divine standard faithfully before the
-people, in all its dignity and moral glory. He fails not to unfold to
-them the true effect of obedience, while he solemnly warns them
-against the danger of turning away from the holy commandments of God.
-Hear his powerful pleadings with their hearts. "What nation is there
-so great," he says, "who hath God so nigh unto them, as the Lord our
-God is in all things that we call upon Him for? And what nation is
-there so great, that hath statutes and judgments so righteous as all
-this law, which I set before you this day?"
-
-Here is true moral greatness, at all times and in all places, for a
-nation, for a people, for a household, or for an individual. To have
-the living God nigh unto us; to have the sweet privilege of calling
-upon Him, in all things; to have His power and His mercy ever
-exercised toward us; to have the light of His blessed countenance
-shining approvingly upon us, in all our ways; to have the moral effect
-of His righteous statutes and holy commandments seen in our practical
-career, from day to day; to have Him manifesting Himself to us, and
-making His abode with us.
-
-What human language can adequately set forth the deep blessedness of
-such privileges as these? and yet they are placed, by infinite grace,
-within the reach of every child of God on the face of the earth. We do
-not mean to assert that every child of God enjoys them. Far from it.
-They are reserved, as we have already seen, for those who, through
-grace, are enabled to render a loving, hearty, reverent obedience to
-the divine word. Here lies the precious secret of the whole matter. It
-was true for Israel of old, and it is true for the Church now--it was
-true for the individual soul then, and it is true for the individual
-soul now, that divine complacency is the priceless reward of human
-obedience. And we may further add that obedience is the bounden duty
-and high privilege of all God's people, and of each in particular.
-Come what may, implicit obedience is our privilege and our duty,
-divine complacency our present sweet reward.
-
-But the poor human heart is prone to wander, and manifold influences
-are at work around us to draw us off from the narrow path of
-obedience. We need not marvel, therefore, at the solemn and
-oft-repeated admonitions addressed by Moses to the hearts and
-consciences of his hearers. He pours his large, loving heart out to
-the congregation so dear to him, in glowing, earnest, soul-stirring
-accents. "Only take heed to thyself," he says, "and keep thy soul
-diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen,
-and lest they depart from thy heart all the days of thy life; but
-teach them thy sons, and thy sons' sons."
-
-These are weighty words for all of us. They set before us two things
-of unspeakable importance, namely, individual and domestic
-responsibility--personal and household testimony. God's people of old
-were responsible to keep the heart with all diligence, lest it should
-let slip the precious Word of God. And not only so, but they were
-solemnly responsible to instruct their children and their
-grandchildren in the same. Are we, with all our light and privilege,
-less responsible than Israel of old? Surely not. We are imperatively
-called upon to give ourselves to the careful study of the Word of
-God--to apply our hearts to it. It is not enough that we hurry over a
-few verses or a chapter, as a piece of daily religious routine. This
-will not meet the case at all. We want to make the Bible our supreme
-and absorbing study,--that in which we delight--in which we find our
-refreshment and recreation.
-
-It is to be feared that some of us read the Bible as a matter of duty,
-while we find our delight and refreshment in the newspaper and light
-literature. Need we wonder at our shallow knowledge of Scripture? How
-could we know aught of the living depths or the moral glories of a
-volume which we merely take up as a cold matter of duty, and read a
-few verses with a yawning indifference, while, at the same time, the
-newspaper or the sensational novel is literally devoured?
-
-It will perhaps be said, in reply, We cannot be always reading the
-Bible. Would those who thus speak say, We cannot be always reading the
-newspaper or the novel? And, we would further inquire, what must be
-the actual state of a person who can say, "We cannot be always reading
-the Bible"? Can he be in a healthy condition of soul? Can he really
-love the Word of God? Can he have any just sense of its preciousness,
-its excellence, its moral glories? Impossible.
-
-What mean the following words to Israel: "Therefore shall ye lay up
-these My words _in your heart_, and _in your soul_, and bind them for
-a sign upon _your hand_, that they may be as frontlets between _your
-eyes_"? The "heart," the "soul," the "hand" the "eyes"--all engaged
-about the precious Word of God. This was real work. It was to be no
-empty formality, no barren routine. The whole man was to be given up,
-in holy devotion, to the statutes and judgments of God.
-
-"And ye shall teach them your children, speaking of them when thou
-sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, when thou
-liest down, and when thou risest up. And thou shalt write them upon
-the door-posts of thine house, and upon thy gates." Do we, Christians,
-enter into such words as these? Has the Word of God such a place in
-our hearts, in our homes, and in our habits? Do those who enter our
-houses, or come in contact with us in daily life, see that the Word of
-God is paramount with us? Do those with whom we do business see that
-we are governed by the precepts of holy Scripture? Do our servants and
-our children see that we live in the very atmosphere of Scripture, and
-that our whole character is formed and our conduct governed by it?
-
-These are searching questions for our hearts, beloved Christian
-reader. Let us not put them away from us. We may rest assured there is
-no more correct indicator of our moral and spiritual condition than
-that afforded by our treatment of the Word of God. If we do not love
-it--love to study it--thirst after it--delight in it--long for the
-quiet hour in the which we can hang over its sacred page and drink in
-its most precious teaching--meditate upon it, in the closet, in the
-family, in the street; in short, if we do not breathe its holy
-atmosphere--if we could ever give utterance to such a sentiment as
-that given above, that "we cannot be always reading the Bible," then,
-verily, we have urgent need to look well to our spiritual state, for
-we are sadly out of health. The new nature loves the Word of
-God--earnestly desires it, as we read in 1 Peter ii.--"As new-born
-babes, desire the sincere milk of the Word, that ye may grow thereby."
-
-This is the true idea. If the sincere milk of the Word be not sought
-after, diligently used and eagerly fed upon, we must be in a low,
-unhealthy, dangerous condition of soul. There may not be any thing
-outwardly wrong in our conduct, we may not be publicly dishonoring the
-Lord in our ways, but we are grieving His loving heart by our gross
-neglect of His Word, which is but another term for the neglect of
-Himself. It is the very height of folly to talk of loving Christ if we
-do not love and live upon His Word. It is a delusion to imagine that
-the new life can be in a healthy, prosperous condition where the Word
-of God is habitually neglected in the closet and the family.
-
-We do not, of course, mean that no other book but the Bible should be
-read, or we should not pen these "Notes;" but nothing demands greater
-watchfulness than the matter of reading. All things are to be done in
-the name of Jesus, and to the glory of God, and this is amongst the
-"all things." We should read no book that we cannot read to the glory
-of God, and on which we cannot ask God's blessing.
-
-We feel that this entire subject demands the most serious
-consideration of all God's people, and we trust that the Spirit of God
-may use our meditation on the chapter before us to stir up our hearts
-and consciences in reference to what is due to the Word of God, both
-in our hearts and in our houses.
-
-No doubt, if it has its right place in the heart, it will have its
-right place also in the house; but if there be no acknowledgment of
-the Word of God in the bosom of the family, it is hard to believe that
-it has its right place in the heart. Heads of houses should ponder
-this matter seriously. We are most fully persuaded that there ought to
-be, in every Christian household, a daily acknowledgment of God and
-His Word. Some may perhaps look upon it as bondage, as legality, as
-religious routine, to have regular family worship. We would ask such
-objectors, Is it bondage for the family to assemble at meals? Are the
-family reunions around the social board ever regarded as a wearisome
-duty--a piece of dull routine? Certainly not, if the family be a
-well-ordered and happy one. Why, then, should it be regarded as a
-burdensome thing for the head of a Christian household to gather his
-children and his servants around him and read a few verses of the
-precious Word of God, and breathe a few words of prayer before the
-throne of grace? We believe it to be a habit in perfect accordance
-with the teaching of both the Old and the New Testaments--a habit
-grateful to the heart of God--a holy, blessed, edifying habit.
-
-What should we think of a professing Christian who never prayed, never
-read the Word of God, in private? Could we possibly regard him as a
-happy, healthy, true Christian? Assuredly not. Indeed we should
-seriously question the existence of divine life in such a soul. Prayer
-and the Word of God are absolutely essential to healthy, vigorous
-Christian life; so that a man who habitually neglects these must be in
-an utterly dead state.
-
-Now, if it be thus in reference to an individual, how can a family be
-regarded as in a right state where there is no family reading, no
-family prayer, no family acknowledgment of God or His Word? Can we
-conceive a God-fearing household going on from Lord's day morning to
-Saturday night without any collective recognition of the One to whom
-they owe every thing? Day after day rolls on, domestic duties are
-attended to, the family assemble regularly at meals, but there is no
-thought of summoning the household around the Word of God, or around
-the mercy-seat. We ask, Where is the difference between such a family
-and any poor heathen household? Is it not most sad--most deplorable to
-find those who make the very highest profession, and who take their
-places at the Lord's table, yet living in the gross neglect of family
-reading--family worship?
-
-Reader, are you the head of a household? If so, what are your
-thoughts on the subject? and what is your line of action? Have you
-family reading and family prayer, daily in your house? If not, (bear
-with us when we ask you,) why not? Search and see what is the real
-root of the matter. Has your heart declined from God, from His Word
-and His ways? Do you read and pray in private? Do you love the Word
-and prayer? do you find delight in them? If so, how is it you neglect
-them in your household? Perhaps you seek to excuse yourself on the
-ground of nervousness and timidity; if so, look to the Lord to enable
-you to overcome the weakness. Just cast yourself on His unfailing
-grace, and gather your household around you at a certain hour each
-day, read a few verses of Scripture and breathe half a dozen words of
-prayer; or, if you cannot do this at first, just let the family kneel
-for a few moments in silence before the throne.
-
-Any thing, in short, like a family acknowledgment, a family testimony:
-any thing but a godless, careless, prayerless life in your household.
-Do, dear friend, suffer the word of exhortation in this matter. Let us
-entreat you to begin at once, looking to God to help you, as He most
-assuredly will, for He never fails a really trusting, dependent heart.
-Do not any longer go on neglecting God and His Word in your family
-circle. It is really terrible. Let no arguments about bondage,
-legality, or formalism weigh with you for a moment. We almost feel
-disposed to exclaim, Blessed bondage! If indeed it be bondage to read
-the Word, we cordially welcome it, and fearlessly glory in it.
-
-But, no; we cannot for a moment regard it in any such light. We
-believe it to be a most delightful privilege for every one whom God
-has set at the head of a household to gather all the members of that
-household around him and read a portion of the blessed book, and pour
-out his heart in prayer to God. We believe it is _specially_ the duty
-of the head so to do. It is by no means necessary to make it a long,
-wearisome service. As a rule, both in our houses and in our public
-assemblies, short, fresh, fervent exercises are by far the most
-edifying.
-
-But this, of course, is an open question, as to which we merely give
-our judgment, which must go for what it is worth. The length and
-character of the service must, in every case, be left to the person
-who conducts it. But we do most earnestly trust that if these lines
-should be scanned by any one who is the head of a household, and if he
-has hitherto neglected the holy privilege of family worship--family
-reading, he will, henceforth, do so no more. May he be enabled to say,
-with Joshua, "Let others do as they will, as for me and my house, we
-will serve the Lord."
-
-It is not, surely, that we would lead any to imagine that the mere act
-of family reading takes in all that is comprehended in that weighty
-sentence, "We will serve the Lord." Far from it. That blessed service
-takes in every thing belonging to our private and domestic history: it
-takes in the most minute details of practical daily life. All this is
-most true and invaluable. But we are most thoroughly persuaded that
-nothing can go right in any household in which family reading and
-family prayer are habitually neglected.
-
-It may be said that there are many families who seem very particular
-about their morning and evening reading and prayer, and yet their
-whole domestic history, from morning till night, is a flagrant
-contradiction of their so-called religious service. It may be that the
-head of the house, instead of shedding sunlight upon the family
-circle, is morose in his temper, rude and coarse in his manners, rough
-and contradictory to his wife, arbitrary and severe to his children,
-unreasonable and exacting to his servants, finding fault with what is
-laid on the table, after having asked God's blessing upon it; and, in
-short, in every way giving the lie to his reading and his prayer in
-the family. So also as to the wife and the mother, and the children
-and the servants. The whole domestic economy is out of order. There is
-disorder and confusion; meals are unpunctual; there is a want of
-kindly consideration one of another; the children are rude, selfish,
-and willful; the servants are thoughtless, wasteful, and disobedient,
-if not much worse; the tone, atmosphere, and style of the entire
-establishment are unchristian, ungodly, utterly unbecoming.
-
-And then, when you travel outside the domestic circle, and mark the
-conduct of the heads and members of the family toward those
-outside--mark their business, if they be in business, hear the
-testimony of those who deal with them, as to the quality of their
-goods, the style and character of their work; the spirit and temper in
-which they carry on their business; such grasping and griping, such
-covetousness, such commercial trickery; nothing of God, nothing of
-Christ, nothing to distinguish them from the most thorough worldlings
-around; yea, the conduct of those very worldlings, of those who would
-never think of such a thing as family worship, would put them to
-shame.
-
-Under such painful and humiliating circumstances, what of the family
-worship--the family reading--the family altar? Alas! it is an empty
-formality--a powerless, worthless, unseemly proceeding; in place of
-being a morning and evening sacrifice, it is a morning and evening
-lie--a solemn mockery--an insult to God.
-
-All this is sadly true. There is a terrible lack of household
-testimony--of common, practical righteousness in our families and in
-the entire economy of our houses. There is but little of the white
-raiment--the fine linen, which is the righteousness of saints. We seem
-to forget those weighty words of the inspired apostle in Romans
-xiv.--"The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but _righteousness_,
-and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost." Some of us seem to think that
-whenever we meet with the word "righteousness," it must needs mean the
-righteousness of God in which we stand, or righteousness imputed to
-us. This is a very great mistake indeed. We must remember there is a
-practical and human side of this question; there is the subjective as
-well as the objective--the walk as well as the standing--the condition
-as well as the position.
-
-These things must never be separated. It is of little use to set up or
-seek to maintain a family altar amid the ruins of family testimony. It
-is nothing short of a hideous caricature to begin and end with
-so-called family worship a day characterized throughout by ungodliness
-and unrighteousness, levity, folly, and vanity. Can aught be more
-unsightly or more miserably inconsistent than an evening spent in
-song-singing, charades, and other light games, closed up with a
-contemptible bit of religion in the shape of reading and prayer?
-
-All this line of things is most deplorable. It ought not to be found
-in connection with the holy name of Christ, with His assembly, or the
-holy exercises of His table. We must measure every thing in our
-private life, in our domestic economy, in our daily history, in all
-our intercourse, and in all our business transactions, with that one
-standard, namely, the glory of Christ. Our one grand question, in
-reference to every thing that comes before us or solicits our
-attention, must be, Is this worthy of the holy name which is called
-upon me? If not, let us not touch it; yea, let us turn our back upon
-it with stern decision, and flee from it with holy energy. Let us not
-listen for a moment to the contemptible question, "What harm is there
-in it?" Nothing but harm if Christ be not in it. No truly devoted
-heart would ever entertain, much less put, such a question. Whenever
-you hear any one speaking thus, you may at once conclude that Christ
-is not the governing object of the heart.
-
-We trust the reader is not weary of all this homely, practical truth.
-We believe it is loudly called for in this day of high profession. We
-have all of us much need to consider our ways, to look well to the
-real state of our hearts as to Christ; for here lies the true secret
-of the whole matter. If the heart be not true to Him, nothing can be
-right--nothing in the private life, nothing in the family, nothing in
-the business, nothing in the assembly, nothing any where; but if the
-heart be true to Him, _all_ will be--must be right.
-
-No marvel, therefore, if the blessed apostle, when he reaches the
-close of that wonderful epistle to the Corinthians, sums all up with
-this solemn declaration: "If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ,
-let him be Anathema Maran-atha." In the course of his letter, he deals
-with various forms of doctrinal error and moral pravity; but when he
-comes to the close, instead of pronouncing his solemn sentence upon
-any particular error or evil, he hurls it with holy indignation
-against any one, no matter who or what, who does not love the Lord
-Jesus Christ. Love to Christ is the grand safeguard against every form
-of error and evil. A heart filled with Christ has no room for aught
-beside; but if there be no love to Him, there is no security against
-the wildest error or the worst form of moral evil.
-
-We must now return to our chapter.
-
-The attention of the people is specially called to the solemn scenes
-at Mount Horeb--scenes which should surely have deeply and abidingly
-impressed their hearts. "Specially the day that thou stoodest before
-the Lord thy God in Horeb, when the Lord said unto me, Gather Me the
-people together, and _I will make them hear My words_." The grand and
-all-important point for Israel of old, for the Church now, for each,
-for all, at all times and in all places, is, to be brought into
-direct, living contact with the eternal Word of the living God, to the
-end "that they may learn to fear Me all the days that they shall live
-upon the earth, and _that they may teach their children_."
-
-It is very beautiful to note the intimate connection between hearing
-God's Word and fearing His name. It is one of those great
-root-principles which never change, never lose their power or their
-intrinsic value. The Word and the name go together; and the heart that
-loves the one will reverence the other, and bow down to its holy
-authority in all things. "He that loveth Me not keepeth not My
-sayings." "He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His
-commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoso
-keepeth His word, in him verily is the love of God perfected." (John
-xiv; 1 John ii.) Every true lover of God will treasure up His Word in
-the heart, and where the Word is thus lovingly treasured in the
-heart, its hallowed influence will be seen in the whole life,
-character, and conduct. God's object in giving His Word is that it may
-govern our conduct, form our character, and shape our ways; and if His
-Word has not this practical effect upon us, it is utterly vain for us
-to speak of loving Him--yea, it is nothing short of positive mockery,
-which He must sooner or later resent.
-
-And let us note particularly the solemn responsibility of Israel as to
-their children. They were not only to "hear" and "learn" for
-themselves, but they were also to teach their children. This is a
-universal and abiding duty, which cannot be neglected with impunity.
-God attaches very great importance to this matter. We hear Him saying
-as to Abraham, "I know him, that he will _command his children and his
-household_ after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do
-justice and judgment; that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which
-He hath spoken of him." (Gen. xviii.)
-
-These words are most important, as setting before us the divine
-estimate of domestic training and family piety. In all ages, and under
-all dispensations, God has been pleased to give expression to His
-approbation of the proper education of the children of His
-people--their faithful training according to His holy Word. We find no
-such thing sanctioned in Scripture as children being allowed to grow
-up in ignorance and carelessness and willfulness. Some professing
-Christians, under the baneful influence of a certain school of
-theology, seem to think that it is, in some way, an interference with
-the sovereignty of God, with His purposes and counsels, to instruct
-their children in the truth of the gospel and the letter of holy
-Scripture. They consider that the children ought to be left to the
-action of the Holy Ghost, which they are sure to experience in God's
-own time if indeed they are of God's elect, and if not, all human
-effort is perfectly useless.
-
-Now, we must, in all faithfulness to the truth of God and to the souls
-of our readers, bear the clearest and strongest testimony against this
-one-sided view of the great practical subject before us. There is
-nothing more mischievous, nothing more pernicious in its effect upon
-the conscience, the heart, the life, the whole practical career and
-moral character, than one-sided theology. It does not matter what side
-you take, so long as you only take one. It is sure to produce what we
-must term a spiritual malformation. We feel we cannot too strongly and
-earnestly warn the reader against this sore evil. It can only lead to
-the most disastrous results; and as to its effect in reference to the
-training of our children and the management of our households--the
-subject now before us--it is mischievous in the extreme. Indeed we
-have seen the most deplorable consequences follow the carrying out of
-this line of thought. We have known the children of Christian parents
-to grow up in utter ignorance of divine things, in carelessness,
-recklessness, and open infidelity; and if a word of admonition were
-offered, it has been met by arguments based upon the dogmas of a
-one-sided divinity--and the one side turned the wrong way. It has been
-said, "We cannot make Christians of our children, and we must not make
-them formalists or hypocrites. It must be a divine work or nothing.
-When God's time comes, He will effectually call them, if indeed they
-are among the number of His elect; if not, all our efforts are
-perfectly useless."
-
-To all this we reply, that this line of argument, if carried to its
-fullest extent, would prevent the farmer from plowing his ground or
-sowing his seed. It is very plain that he cannot make the seed to
-germinate or fructify. He could no more cause a solitary grain of
-wheat to grow than he could create the universe. Does this prevent his
-plowing and sowing? does it cause him to fold his arms and say, I can
-do nothing. I cannot, by any effort of mine, make corn grow. It is a
-divine operation, and therefore I must wait God's time. Does any
-farmer reason and act like this? Surely not, unless he be a lunatic.
-Every sound-minded person knows that plowing and sowing must go before
-the reaping; and if the former be neglected, it is the height of
-extravagant folly to look for the latter.
-
-Nor is it otherwise in the matter of training our children. We know
-God is sovereign; we believe in His eternal counsels and purposes; we
-fully recognize the grand doctrines of election and predestination--yea,
-we are as thoroughly persuaded of them as of the truth that God is, or
-that Christ died and rose again. Moreover, we believe that the new
-birth must take place in every instance--in the case of our children
-as of all beside; we are convinced that this new birth is entirely a
-divine operation, effected by the Holy Ghost, through the Word, as we
-are distinctly taught in our Lord's discourse with Nicodemus in John
-iii, and also in James i. 18 and 1 Peter i. 23.
-
-But does all this touch, in the most remote way, the solemn
-responsibility of Christian parents to teach and train their children,
-diligently and faithfully, from their earliest moments? Most certainly
-not. Woe be to the parents who, on any plea or on any ground
-whatsoever, be it one-sided theology, misapplied Scripture, or aught
-else, deny their responsibility, or neglect their plain, bounden duty,
-in this holy business. True, we cannot make our children Christians,
-and we ought not to make them formalists or hypocrites; but we are not
-called to _make_ them any thing. We are simply called to do our duty
-by them, and leave results to God. We are instructed and commanded to
-bring up our children "in the nurture and admonition of the Lord."
-When is this "bringing up" to commence? when are we to begin the
-sacred work of training our little ones? Surely, at the beginning. The
-very moment we enter upon a relationship, we enter also upon the
-responsibility which that relationship entails. We cannot deny this;
-we cannot shake it off. We may neglect it, and have to reap the sad
-consequences of our neglect, in various ways. It is a very serious
-thing to stand in the sacred relationship of a parent--very
-interesting and very delightful, no doubt; but most serious, because
-of the responsibility involved. True it is, blessed be God, His grace
-is sufficient for us in this as in all beside, and "if any man lack
-wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all liberally, and
-upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." "We are not sufficient of
-ourselves," in this weighty matter, to think or to do any thing as
-ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God, and He will meet our every
-need. We have simply to draw upon Him, for exigence of every hour.
-
-But we must do our duty. Some do not like the homely word "duty." They
-think it has a legal ring about it. We trust the reader does not think
-so, for it is a very great mistake indeed. We look upon the word as a
-very sound and morally wholesome one, and we believe that every true
-Christian loves it. One thing is certain, it is only in the path of
-duty we can count on God. To talk of trusting God, when out of the
-path of duty, is a miserable conceit, and a delusion; and in the
-matter of our relationship as parents, to neglect our duty is to bring
-down upon us the most disastrous consequences.
-
-We believe the whole business of Christian education is summed up in
-two brief sentences, namely, Count on God for your children, and,
-Train your children for God. To take the first without the second is
-antinomianism; to take the second without the first is legality; to
-take both together is sound, practical Christianity--true religion in
-the sight of God and man.
-
-It is the sweet privilege of every Christian parent to count, with all
-possible confidence, upon God for his children. But then we must
-remember that there is, in the government of God, an inseparable link
-connecting this privilege with the most solemn responsibility as to
-training. For a Christian parent to speak of counting on God for the
-salvation of his children, and for the moral integrity of their future
-career in this world, while the duty of training is neglected, is
-simply a miserable delusion.
-
-We press this most solemnly upon all Christian parents, but especially
-upon those who have just entered upon the relationship. There is great
-danger of shirking our duty to our children, of shifting it over upon
-others, or neglecting it altogether. We do not like the trouble of it;
-we shrink from the constant worry as it seems to us. But we shall find
-that the trouble and the worry and the sorrow and the heart-scalding
-arising from the neglect of our duty will be a thousand times worse
-than all that can be involved in the discharge of it. To every true
-lover of God there is deep delight in treading the path of duty. Every
-step taken in that path strengthens our confidence to go on. And then
-we can always count upon the infinite resources that we have in God
-when we are keeping His commandments. We have simply to betake
-ourselves, morning by morning, yea, hour by hour, to our Father's
-exhaustless treasury, and there get all we want, in the way of grace
-and wisdom and moral power, to enable us to discharge aright the holy
-functions of our relationship. "He giveth more grace." This always
-holds good. But if we, instead of seeking grace to discharge our duty,
-seek ease in neglecting it, we are simply laying up a store of sorrow
-which will accumulate rapidly and fall upon us heavily at a future
-day. "Be not deceived; God is not mocked; for whatsoever a man soweth,
-that shall he also reap. For he that soweth to his flesh, shall of the
-flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the Spirit, shall of the
-Spirit reap life everlasting." (Gal. vi.)
-
-This is the condensed statement of a great principle of God's moral
-government--a principle of universal application, and one which
-applies, with singular force, to the subject before us. _As_ we sow,
-in the matter of the education of our children, _so_ we shall, most
-assuredly, reap. There is no getting out of this.
-
-But let not any dear Christian parent, whose eye may scan these lines,
-be at all discouraged or faint-hearted. There is no reason whatever
-for this, but, on the contrary, every reason for the most joyful
-confidence in God. "The name of the Lord is a strong tower; the
-righteous runneth into it, and is safe." Let us tread, with firm step,
-the path of duty; and then we can count, with unwavering confidence,
-upon our ever-faithful and gracious God for the need of each day as it
-rolls along. And in due time we shall reap the precious fruit of our
-labor, according to the appointment of God, and in pursuance of the
-enactments of His moral government.
-
-We do not attempt to lay down any rules or regulations for the
-training. We do not believe in such. Children cannot be trained by dry
-rules. Who could attempt to embody in rules all that is wrapped up in
-that one sentence, "Bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the
-Lord"?
-
-Here we have, indeed, a golden rule which takes in every thing from
-the cradle to matured manhood. Yes, we repeat, "from the cradle;" for
-we are most fully persuaded that all true Christian training begins at
-the very beginning. Some of us have little idea of how soon and how
-sharply children begin to observe, and how much they take in as they
-gaze at us through their dear expressive eyes.
-
-And then how marvelously susceptible they are of the moral atmosphere
-which surrounds them! Yes; and it is this very moral atmosphere that
-constitutes the grand secret of training our families. Our children
-should be permitted to breathe, from day to day, the atmosphere of
-love and peace, purity, holiness, and true practical righteousness.
-This has an amazing effect in forming the character. It is a great
-thing for our children to see their parents walking in love, in
-harmony, in tender care one for the other, in kind consideration for
-the servants, in love and sympathy for the poor. Who can measure the
-moral effect upon a child of the very first angry look, or unkind
-word, between father and mother? And in cases where the daily history
-is one of unsightly strife and contention--the father contradicting
-the mother, and the mother disparaging the father--how are children to
-grow in such an atmosphere as this?
-
-The fact is, it is not within the compass of human language to set
-forth all that is involved in the moral tone of the entire family
-circle--the spirit, style, and atmosphere of the whole household, the
-drawing-room, the dining-room, the nursery, the kitchen; where
-circumstances admit of such distinctions, or where the family have to
-confine themselves to two rooms. It is not a question of rank,
-position, or wealth, but of the beauteous grace of God shining out in
-all. There may be the stalled ox or the dinner of herbs--these are
-not, at present, in question. But what we press on all fathers and
-mothers--all heads of households, high and low, rich and poor, learned
-and ignorant, is the necessity of training their children in an
-atmosphere of love and peace, truth and holiness, purity and kindness.
-Thus will our households be the practical exhibition of the character
-of God; and all who come in contact with them will, at least, have
-before their eyes a practical witness to the truth of Christianity.
-
-But, ere we turn from the subject of domestic government, there is one
-special point to which we desire to call the attention of Christian
-parents--a point of the utmost possible moment, yet too much neglected
-amongst us, and that is, the need of inculcating upon our children
-the duty of implicit obedience. This cannot be too strongly insisted
-upon, inasmuch as it not only affects the order and comfort of our
-households, but, what is infinitely more important, it concerns the
-glory of God and the practical carrying out of His truth. "Children,
-obey your parents in the Lord; for this is right." And again,
-"Children, obey your parents _in all things_; for this is well
-pleasing unto the Lord." (Eph. vi.; Col. iii.)
-
-This is absolutely essential, and must be firmly insisted upon from
-the very outset. The child must be taught to obey from his earliest
-moments. He must be trained to submit himself to divinely appointed
-authority, and that, as the apostle puts it, "in all things." If this
-be not attended to from the very first, it will be found almost
-impossible to attend to it afterwards. If the will be allowed to act,
-it grows, with terrible rapidity, and each day's growth increases the
-difficulty of bringing it under control. Hence, the parent should
-begin at once to establish his authority on a basis of moral strength
-and firmness; and when this is done, he may be as gentle and tender as
-the most loving heart could desire. We do not believe in sternness,
-harshness, or severity. They are by no means necessary, and are
-generally the accompaniments of bad training and the proofs of bad
-temper. God has put into the parent's hand the reins of government and
-the rod of authority, but it is not needful--if we may so express
-it--to be continually chucking the reins and brandishing the rod,
-which are the sure proofs of moral weakness. Whenever you hear a man
-continually talking about his authority, you may be sure his authority
-is not properly established. There is a quiet dignity about true moral
-power which is perfectly unmistakable.
-
-Furthermore, we judge it to be a mistake for a parent to be
-perpetually crossing a child's will in matters of no moment. Such a
-line of action tends to break the child's spirit, whereas the object
-of all sound training is to break the will. The child should ever be
-impressed with the idea that the parent seeks _only_ his real good,
-and that if he has to refuse or prohibit any thing, it is not for the
-purpose of curtailing the child's enjoyment, but simply for the
-promotion of his true interests.
-
-One grand object of domestic government is to protect each member of
-the household in the enjoyment of his privileges, and in the proper
-discharge of his relative duties. Now, inasmuch as it is the divinely
-appointed duty of a child to obey, the parent is responsible to see
-this duty discharged, for if it be neglected, some other members of
-the domestic circle must suffer.
-
-There can be no greater nuisance in a house than a naughty, willful
-child; and, as a general rule, wherever you find such, it is to be
-traced to bad training. We are aware, of course, that children differ
-in temper and disposition--that some children have peculiarly strong
-wills and sturdy tempers, and are therefore specially hard to manage.
-
-All this we quite understand; but it leaves wholly untouched the
-question of the parent's responsibility to insist upon implicit
-obedience. He can always count on God for the needed grace and power
-to carry out this point. Even in the case of a widowed mother, we
-believe, most assuredly, she can look to God to enable her to command
-her children and her household. In no case, therefore, should parental
-authority be surrendered for a moment.
-
-It sometimes happens that, through injudicious fondness, the parent is
-tempted to pamper the will of the child; but it is sowing to the
-flesh, and must yield corruption. It is not true love at all to
-indulge a child's will, neither can it possibly minister to his true
-happiness or legitimate enjoyment. An over-indulged, self-willed child
-is miserable himself and a grievous infliction on all who have to do
-with him. Children should be taught to think of others, and to seek to
-promote their comfort and happiness in every way. How very unseemly it
-is, for example, for a child to enter the house and ascend the stairs
-whistling, singing, and shouting, in total disregard of other members
-of the household who may be seriously disturbed and annoyed by such
-conduct! No properly trained child would think of acting in such a
-way; and where such unsubdued, unruly, inconsiderate conduct is
-allowed, there is a serious defect in the domestic government.
-
-It is essential to family peace, harmony, and comfort, that all the
-members should "consider one another." We are responsible to seek the
-good and the happiness of those around us, and not our own. If all
-would but remember this, what different households we should have! and
-what a different tale would families have to tell! Every Christian
-household should be the reflection of the divine character. The
-atmosphere should just be the very atmosphere of heaven. How is this
-to be? Simply by each one--parent, child, master, and servant--seeking
-to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, and manifest His spirit. He never
-pleased Himself, never sought His own interest in any thing; He did
-always the thing that pleased the Father; He came to serve and to
-give; He went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of
-the devil. Thus it was ever with that most blessed One--the gracious,
-loving, sympathizing Friend of all the sons and daughters of want,
-weakness, and sorrow; and if only the various members of each
-Christian family were formed on this perfect model, we should, at
-least, realize something of the power and efficacy of personal and
-domestic Christianity, which, blessed be God, can ever be maintained
-and exhibited notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the professing
-church. "Thou and thy house" suggests a great golden principle which
-runs through the volume of God, from beginning to end. In every age,
-under every dispensation, in the days of the patriarchs, in the days
-of the law, and in the days of Christianity, we find, to our exceeding
-comfort and encouragement, that personal and domestic godliness has
-its place as something grateful to the heart of God and to the glory
-of His holy name.
-
-This we consider to be most consolatory at all times, but more
-particularly at a time like the present, when the professing church
-seems so rapidly sinking into gross worldliness and open infidelity;
-and not this only, but when those who most earnestly desire to walk in
-obedience to the Word of God, and to act on the grand foundation-truth
-of the unity of the body, find it so difficult to maintain a a
-corporate testimony. In view of all this, we may well bless God, with
-overflowing hearts, that personal and family piety can always be
-maintained, and that from the heart and the home of every Christian a
-constant stream of praise may ascend to the throne of God, and a
-stream of active benevolence flow out to a needy, sorrowful,
-sin-stricken world. May it be so more and more, through the mighty
-ministry of God the Holy Ghost, that God, in all things, may be
-glorified in the hearts and homes of His beloved people.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now to consider the very solemn warning addressed to the
-congregation of Israel against the terrible sin of idolatry--a sin to
-which, alas! the poor human heart is ever prone, in one way or
-another. It is quite possible to be guilty of the sin of idolatry
-without bowing down before a graven image; wherefore it behooves us to
-weigh well the words of warning which fell from the lips of Israel's
-venerable lawgiver. They are most assuredly written for our learning.
-
-"And ye came near and stood under the mountain; and the mountain
-burned with fire unto the midst of heaven, with darkness, clouds, and
-thick darkness." Solemn and suited accompaniments of the occasion!
-"And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire." Oh, how
-differently He speaks in the gospel of His grace! "Ye heard the voice
-of the words, but saw no similitude." Important fact for them to
-ponder! "_Only a voice._" And "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
-the Word of God." "And He declared unto you His covenant, which He
-commanded you to perform--ten commandments; and He wrote them upon two
-tables of stone. And the Lord commanded me at that time to teach you
-statutes and judgments," not that they might discuss them, sit in
-judgment upon them, or argue about them, but "that _ye might do
-them_"--the grand old story, the Deuteronomic theme of _obedience_,
-most precious! whether out of or "in the land whither ye go over to
-possess it."
-
-Here lies the solid ground of the appeal against idolatry. They _saw_
-nothing. God did not show Himself to them. He did not assume any
-bodily shape, of which they might form an image. He gave them His
-word--His holy commandments, so plain that a child could understand
-them, and the wayfaring men though fools need not err therein. There
-was no need for them, therefore, to set about imagining what God was
-like; nay, this was _the_ very sin against which they were so
-faithfully warned. They were called to hear God's voice, not to see
-His shape--to obey His commandment, not to make an image of Him.
-Superstition vainly seeks to do honor to God by forming and worshiping
-an image; Faith, on the contrary, lovingly receives and reverently
-obeys His holy commandments. "If a man love Me," says our blessed
-Lord, "he will"--what? make an image of Me, and worship it? Nay, but
-"he will keep My words." This makes it so simple, so safe, so certain.
-We are not called to work up our minds to form any conception of God;
-we have simply to hear His word and keep His commandments. We can have
-no idea whatever of God but as He has been pleased to reveal
-Himself.--"No man hath seen God at any time; the only begotten Son,
-which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him."--"God, who
-commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
-hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the
-face of Jesus Christ."
-
-Jesus is declared to be the brightness of God's glory and the exact
-impression of His substance. He could say, "He that hath seen Me hath
-seen the Father." Thus the Son reveals the Father; and it is by the
-Word, through the power of the Holy Ghost, that we know any thing of
-the Son; and therefore for any one to attempt, by any efforts of his
-mind or workings of his imagination, to conceive an image of God, or
-of Christ, is simply idolatry. To endeavor to arrive at any knowledge
-of God or of Christ save by Scripture, is simply mysticism and
-confusion; nay, more, it is to put ourselves directly into the hands
-of the devil, to be led by him into the wildest, darkest, and
-deadliest delusion.
-
-Hence, therefore, as Israel, at Mount Horeb, was shut up to the
-"_voice_" of God and warned against any similitude, so we are shut up
-to holy Scripture and warned against every thing which would draw us
-away, the breadth of a hair, from that holy and all-sufficient
-standard. We must not listen to the suggestions of our own minds, nor
-to those of any other human mind: we must absolutely and sternly
-refuse to listen to any thing but the voice of God--the voice of holy
-Scripture. Here is true security, true rest; here we have absolute
-certainty, so that we can say, "I know _whom_"--not merely _what_--"I
-have believed; and am persuaded that _He_," etc.
-
-"Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, (for ye saw no manner of
-similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the
-midst of the fire,) lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven
-image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female,
-the likeness of any beast that is on the earth, the likeness of any
-winged fowl that flieth in the air, the likeness of any thing that
-creepeth on the ground, the likeness of any fish that is in the waters
-beneath the earth; and lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and
-when thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the
-host of heaven, shouldest be driven to worship them, and serve them,
-which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole
-heaven. But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you forth out of the
-iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a people of
-inheritance, as ye are this day."
-
-There is a very weighty truth set before us here. The people are
-expressly taught that in making any image and bowing down thereto,
-they, in reality, lowered and corrupted themselves. Hence, when they
-made the golden calf, the Lord said unto Moses, "Go, get thee down;
-for thy people, which thou broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have
-corrupted themselves." It could not be otherwise. The worshiper must
-be inferior to the object of his worship; and therefore, in worshiping
-a calf, they actually put themselves below the level of the beasts
-that perish. Well, therefore, might He say, They "have corrupted
-themselves; they have turned aside quickly out of the way which I
-commanded them; they have made them a molten calf, and have worshiped
-it, and have sacrificed thereunto, and said, 'These be thy gods, O
-Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.'"
-
-What a spectacle! A whole congregation, led by Aaron the high-priest,
-bowing in worship before a thing formed by a graving tool out of the
-earrings which had just been taken from the ears of their wives and
-daughters! Only conceive a number of intelligent beings--people
-endowed with reason, understanding, and conscience--saying of a molten
-calf, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of
-the land of Egypt"! They actually displaced Jehovah by an image
-graven by art and man's device! And these were the people who had seen
-the mighty works of Jehovah in the land of Egypt. They had seen plague
-after plague falling upon Egypt and its obdurate king; they had seen
-the land, as it were, shaken to its very centre by the successive
-strokes of Jehovah's governmental rod; they had seen Egypt's
-first-born laid in death by the sword of the destroying angel; they
-had seen the Red Sea divided by one stroke of Jehovah's rod, and they
-had passed through upon dry ground between those crystal walls which
-afterwards fell, in crushing power, upon their enemies--all these
-things had passed before their eyes, and yet they could so soon forget
-all and say of a molten calf, "These be thy gods, O Israel, which have
-brought thee up out of the land of Egypt." Did they really believe
-that a molten image had made the land of Egypt to tremble, humbled its
-proud monarch, and brought them forth victoriously? Had a calf divided
-the sea for them, and led them majestically through its depths? So, at
-least, they said; for what will people not say when the eye and the
-heart are turned away from God and His Word?
-
-But we may perhaps be asked, Has all this a voice for us? Are
-Christians to learn any thing from Israel's molten calf? and do the
-warnings addressed to Israel against idolatry convey any voice to the
-ear of the Church? Are we in danger of bowing down to a graven image?
-Is it possible that we, whose high privilege it is to walk in the
-full-orbed light of New-Testament Christianity, could ever worship a
-molten calf?
-
-To all this we reply, first of all, in the language of Romans xv. 4,
-"_Whatsoever things_ were written aforetime"--Exodus xxxii. and
-Deuteronomy iv. included--"were written for our learning, that we
-through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." This
-brief passage contains our chartered right to range through the wide
-field of Old-Testament scripture and gather up and appropriate its
-golden lessons, to feed upon its "exceeding great and precious
-promises," to drink in its deep and varied consolation, and to profit
-by its solemn warnings and wholesome admonitions.
-
-And then, as to our being capable of or liable to the gross sin of
-idolatry, we have a striking answer in 1 Corinthians x, where the
-inspired apostle uses the very scene at Mount Horeb as a warning to
-the Church of God. We cannot do better than quote the entire passage
-for the reader. There is nothing like the Word of God; may we love,
-prize, and reverence it more and more each day.
-
-"Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that
-_all_ our fathers were under the cloud"--those whose carcasses fell in
-the wilderness, as well as those who reached the land of
-promise,--"and all passed through the sea; and were all baptized unto
-Moses in the cloud and in the sea; and did all eat the same spiritual
-meat; and did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of
-that spiritual Rock that followed them; and that Rock was Christ."
-How strong, how solemn, and how searching is this for all professors!
-"But with many of them God was not well pleased; for they were
-overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were _our examples_"
-(let us carefully mark this), "to the intent we should not lust after
-_evil things_"--things in any way contrary to the mind of Christ, "as
-they also lusted. Neither _be ye idolaters_" (so that professing
-Christians may be idolaters) "as were some of them; as it is written,
-'The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play.' Neither
-let us commit fornication, as some of them committed, and fell in one
-day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ, as some of
-them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. Neither murmur ye,
-as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer.
-Now _all these things_ happened unto them for ensamples; and _they are
-written for our admonition_, upon whom the ends of the ages are come.
-Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
-
-Here we learn, in the plainest manner, that there is no depth of sin
-and folly, no form of moral pravity, into which we are not capable of
-plunging, at any moment, if not kept by the mighty power of God. There
-is no security for us save in the moral shelter of the divine
-presence. We know that the Spirit of God does not warn us against
-things to which we are not liable. He would not say to us, "Neither be
-ye idolaters," if we were not capable of being such. Idolatry takes
-various shapes. It is not, therefore, a question of the shape of the
-thing, but the thing itself--not the outward form, but the root or
-principle of the thing. We read that "covetousness is idolatry," and
-that a covetous man is an idolater; that is, a man desiring to possess
-himself of more than God has given him is an idolater--is actually
-guilty of the sin of Israel when they made the golden calf and
-worshiped it. Well might the blessed apostle say to the
-Corinthians--say to us, "Wherefore, my dearly beloved, flee from
-idolatry." Why be warned to _flee_ from a thing to which we are not
-liable? Are there any idle words in the volume of God? What mean those
-closing words of the first epistle of John--"Little children, keep
-yourselves from idols"? Do they not tell us that we are in danger of
-worshiping idols? Assuredly they do. Our treacherous hearts are
-capable of departing from the living God, and setting up some other
-object beside Him; and what is this but idolatry? Whatever commands
-the heart is the heart's idol, be it what it may--money, pleasure,
-power, or aught else,--so that we may well see the urgent need for the
-many warnings given us by the Holy Ghost against the sin of idolatry.
-
-But we have in the fourth chapter of Galatians a very remarkable
-passage, and one which speaks in most impressive accents to the
-professing church. The Galatians had, like all other Gentiles,
-worshiped idols; but, on the reception of the gospel, had turned from
-idols to serve the living and true God. The Judaizing teachers,
-however, had come among them and taught them that unless they were
-circumcised and kept the law, they could not be saved.
-
-Now this, the blessed apostle unhesitatingly pronounces to be
-idolatry--a going back to the grossness and moral degradation of their
-former days, and all this after having professed to receive the
-glorious gospel of Christ. Hence the moral force of the apostle's
-inquiry, "Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them
-which by nature are no gods. _But now_, after that ye have known God,
-or rather are known of God, how _turn ye again_ to the weak and
-beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire _again_ to be in bondage? Ye
-observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you,
-lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain."
-
-This is peculiarly striking. The Galatians were not outwardly going
-back to the worship of idols. It is not improbable that they would
-have indignantly repudiated any such idea. But, for all that, the
-inspired apostle asks them, "How turn ye again?" What does this
-inquiry mean if they were not going back to idolatry? and what are we
-now to learn from the whole passage? Simply this, that circumcision,
-and getting under the law, and observing days, and months, and times,
-and years--that all this, though apparently so different, was nothing
-more or less than going back to their old idolatry. The observance of
-days and the worship of false gods were both a turning away from the
-living and true God, from His Son Jesus Christ, from the Holy Ghost,
-from that brilliant cluster of dignities and glories which belong to
-Christianity.
-
-All this is peculiarly solemn for professing Christians. We question
-if the full import of Galatians iv. 8-10 is really apprehended by the
-great majority of those who profess to believe the Bible. We solemnly
-press this whole subject upon the attention of all whom it may
-concern. We pray God to use it for the purpose of stirring up the
-hearts and consciences of His people every where to consider their
-position, their habits, ways, and associations; and to inquire how far
-they are really following the example of the assemblies of Galatia, in
-the observance of saints' days and such like, which can only lead away
-from Christ and His glorious salvation. There is a day coming which
-will open the eyes of thousands to the reality of these things, and
-then they will see what they now refuse to see, that the very darkest
-and grossest forms of paganism may be reproduced under the name of
-Christianity, and in connection with the very highest truths that ever
-shone on the human understanding.
-
-But however slow we may be to admit our tendency to fall into the sin
-of idolatry, it is very plain, in Israel's case, that Moses, as taught
-and inspired of God, felt the deep need of warning them against it, in
-the most solemn and affecting terms. He appeals to them on every
-possible ground, and reiterates his counsels and admonitions in a
-manner so impressive as to leave them, assuredly, without any excuse.
-They never could say that they fell into idolatry from the want of
-warning, or of the most gracious and affectionate entreaty. Take such
-words as the following: "But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you
-forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a
-people of inheritance, as ye are this day." (Ver. 20.)
-
-Could any thing be more affecting than this? Jehovah, in His rich and
-sovereign grace, and by His mighty hand, brought them forth from the
-land of death and darkness, a redeemed and delivered people. He had
-brought them to Himself, that they might be to Him a peculiar
-treasure, above all the people upon earth. How, then, could they turn
-away from Him, from His holy covenant, and from His precious
-commandments?
-
-Alas! alas! they could and did. "They _made_ a calf, and said, 'These
-be thy gods, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of
-Egypt.'" Think of this! A calf, made by their own hands--an image,
-graven by art and man's device, had brought them up out of Egypt! A
-thing made out of the women's earrings had redeemed and delivered
-them! And this has been written for our admonition. But why should it
-be written for us if we are not capable of and liable to the very same
-sin? We must either admit that God the Holy Ghost has penned an
-unnecessary sentence, or admit our need of an admonition against the
-sin of idolatry; and assuredly, our needing the admonition proves our
-tendency to the sin.
-
-Are we better than Israel? In no wise. We have brighter light and
-higher privileges, but, so far as we are concerned, we are made of the
-same material, have the same capabilities and the same tendencies, as
-they. Our idolatry may take a different shape from theirs; but
-idolatry is idolatry, be the shape what it may; and the higher our
-privileges, the the greater our sin. We may perhaps feel disposed to
-wonder how a rational people could be guilty of such egregious folly
-as to make a calf and bow down to it, and this, too, after having had
-such a display of the majesty, power, and glory of God. Let us
-remember that their folly is recorded for our admonition; and that we,
-with all our light, all our knowledge, all our privileges, are warned
-to "flee from idolatry."
-
-Let us deeply ponder all this and seek to profit by it. May every
-chamber of our hearts be filled with Christ, and then we shall have no
-room for idols. This is our only safeguard. If we slip away the
-breadth of a hair from our precious Saviour and Shepherd, we are
-capable of plunging into the darkest forms of error and moral evil.
-Light, knowledge, spiritual privileges, church position, sacramental
-benefits, are no security for the soul. They are very good in their
-right place and if rightly used, but in themselves they only increase
-our moral danger.
-
-Nothing can keep us safe, right, and happy but having Christ dwelling
-in our hearts by faith. Abiding in Him and He in us, that wicked one
-toucheth us not. But if personal communion be not diligently
-maintained, the higher our position, the greater our danger and the
-more disastrous our fall. There was not a nation beneath the canopy of
-heaven more favored and exalted than Israel when they gathered around
-Mount Horeb to hear the word of God: there was not a nation on the
-face of the earth more degraded or more guilty than they when they
-bowed before the golden calf--an image of their own formation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now give our attention to a fact of very deep interest,
-presented at verse 21 of our chapter, and that is, that Moses, for the
-third time, reminds the congregation of God's judicial dealing with
-himself. He had spoken of it, as we have seen, in chapter i. 37, and
-again at chapter iii. 26, and here, again, he says to them,
-"Furthermore _the Lord was angry with me for your sakes_, and sware
-that I should not go over Jordan, and that I should not go in unto
-that good land which the Lord thy God giveth thee for an inheritance;
-but I must die in this land, I must not go over Jordan; but ye shall
-go over and possess that good land."
-
-Now, we may ask, Why this threefold reference to the same fact? and
-why the special mention, in each instance, of the circumstance that
-Jehovah was angry with him on their account? One thing is certain, it
-was not for the purpose of throwing the blame over upon the people, or
-of exculpating himself. No one but an infidel could think this. We
-believe the simple object was, to give increased moral force to his
-appeal, more solemnity to his warning voice. If Jehovah was angry with
-such an one as Moses--if he, for his unadvised speaking at the waters
-of Meribah, was forbidden to enter the promised land (much as he
-desired it), how needful for them to take heed! It is a serious thing
-to have to do with God--blessed, no doubt, beyond all human expression
-or thought, but most serious, as the lawgiver himself was called to
-prove in his own person.
-
-That this is the correct view of this interesting question seems
-evident from the following words: "_Take heed unto yourselves_, lest
-ye forget the covenant of the Lord your God, which He made with you,
-and make you a graven image, or the likeness of any thing which the
-Lord thy God hath forbidden thee. For the Lord thy God is a consuming
-fire, even a jealous God."
-
-This is peculiarly solemn. We must allow this statement to have its
-full, moral weight with our souls. We must not attempt to turn aside
-its sharp edge by any false notions about grace. We sometimes hear it
-said that "God is a consuming fire to the world." By and by He will be
-so, no doubt; but now He is dealing in grace, patience, and
-long-suffering mercy with the world. He is not dealing in judgment
-with the world now; but, as the apostle Peter tells us, "the time is
-come that judgment must begin at the house of God; and if it first
-begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel
-of God?" So also, in Hebrews xii, we read, "For _our_ God _is_ a
-consuming fire." He is not speaking of what God will be to the world,
-but of what He is to us. Neither is it, as some put it, "God is a
-consuming fire out of Christ." We know nothing of God out of Christ.
-He could not be "_our_ God" out of Christ.
-
-No, reader; Scripture does not need such twistings and turnings: it
-must be taken as it stands. It is clear and distinct, and all we have
-to do is to hearken and obey. "Our God is a consuming fire," "a
-jealous God," not to consume us, blessed be His holy name, but to
-consume the evil in us and in our ways. He is intolerant of every
-thing in us that is contrary to Himself--contrary to His holiness, and
-therefore contrary to our true happiness, our real, solid blessing. As
-the "Holy Father," He keeps us in a way worthy of Himself, and He
-chastens us in order to make us partakers of His holiness. He allows
-the world to go on its way for the present, not interfering publicly
-with it; but He judges His house, and He chastens His children, in
-order that they may more fully answer to His mind and be the
-expression of His moral image.
-
-And is not this an immense privilege? Yes, verily; it is a privilege
-of the very highest order--a privilege flowing from the infinite grace
-of our God, who condescends to interest Himself in us, and occupy
-Himself even with our infirmities, our failures, and our sins, in
-order to deliver us from them, and make us partakers of His holiness.
-
-There is a very fine passage bearing upon this subject in the opening
-of Hebrews xii, which, because of its immense practical importance, we
-must quote for the reader.--"My son, despise not thou the chastening
-of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him; for _whom the
-Lord loveth He chasteneth_, and _scourgeth every son_ whom He
-receiveth. If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons;
-for _what son_ is he whom the Father chasteneth not? But if ye be
-_without chastisement_, whereof all are partakers, then are ye
-_bastards_ and _not sons_. Furthermore, we have had fathers of our
-flesh which corrected us, and we gave them reverence; shall we not
-much rather be in subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live? For
-they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure; _but
-He for our profit, that we might be partakers of His holiness_. Now no
-chastening for the present _seemeth_ to be joyous, but grievous;
-nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of
-righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby. Wherefore lift up
-the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees."
-
-There are three ways of meeting divine chastening: We may "_despise_"
-it, as something commonplace--something that may happen to any one; we
-do not see _the hand of God_ in it. Again, we may "_faint_" under it,
-as something too heavy for us to bear--something entirely beyond
-endurance; we do not see _the Father's heart_ in it, or recognize His
-gracious object in it, namely, to make us partakers of His holiness.
-Lastly, we may be "_exercised_" by it. This is the way to reap "the
-peaceable fruit of righteousness afterward." We dare not "_despise_" a
-thing in which we trace the hand of God: we need not "_faint_" under a
-trial in which we plainly discern the heart of a loving Father, who
-will not suffer us to be tried above what we are able, but will with
-the trial make an issue, that we may be able to bear it, and who also
-graciously explains to us His object in the discipline, and assures us
-that every stroke of His rod is a proof of His love, and a direct
-response to the prayer of Christ in John xvii. 11, wherein He commends
-us to the care of the "Holy Father," to be kept according to that name
-and all that name involves.
-
-Furthermore, there are three distinct attitudes of heart in reference
-to divine chastening, namely, subjection, acquiescence, and rejoicing.
-When the will is broken, there is subjection; when the understanding
-is enlightened as to the object of the chastening, there is calm
-acquiescence; and when the affections are engaged with the Father's
-heart, there is rejoicing, and we can go forth with glad hearts to
-reap a golden harvest of the peaceable fruit of righteousness, to the
-praise of Him who, in His painstaking love, undertakes to care for us
-and to deal with us in holy government, and concentrate His care upon
-each one as though there were but that one to attend to.
-
-How wonderful is all this! and how the thought of it should help us in
-all our trials and exercises! We are in the hands of One whose love
-is infinite, whose wisdom is unerring, whose power is omnipotent,
-whose resources are inexhaustible. Why, then, should we ever be cast
-down? If He chastens us, it is because He loves us and seeks our real
-good. We may think the chastening grievous--we may feel disposed to
-wonder, at times, how love can inflict pain and sickness upon us; but
-we must remember that divine love is wise and faithful, and only
-inflicts the pain, the sickness, or the sorrow for our profit and
-blessing. We must not always judge of love by the form in which it
-clothes itself. Look at that fond and tender mother applying a blister
-to her child whom she loves as her own soul. She knows full well that
-the blister will cause her child real pain and suffering, and yet she
-unhesitatingly applies it, though her heart feels keenly at having to
-do it. But she knows it is absolutely necessary; she believes that,
-humanly and medically speaking, the child's life depends upon it; she
-feels that a few moments' pain may, with the blessing of God, restore
-the health of her precious child. Thus, while the child is only
-occupied with the transient suffering, the mother is thinking of the
-permanent good; and if the child could but think with the mother, the
-blister would not seem so hard to bear.
-
-Now, it is just thus in the matter of our Father's disciplinary
-dealings with us; and the remembrance of this would greatly help us to
-endure whatever His chastening hand may lay upon us. It may perhaps be
-said that there is a very wide difference between a blister laid on
-for a few minutes, and years of intense bodily suffering. No doubt
-there is; but there is also a very wide difference between the result
-reached in each case. It is only with the principle of the thing we
-have to do. When we see a beloved child of God, or servant of Christ,
-called to pass through years of intense suffering, we may feel
-disposed to wonder why it is; and perhaps the beloved sufferer may
-also feel disposed to wonder, and at times be ready to faint under the
-weight of his long-protracted affliction. He may feel led to cry out,
-Why am I thus? Can this be love? can this be the expression of a
-Father's tender care? "Yes, verily," is Faith's bright and decided
-reply. "It is all love--all divinely right. I would not have it
-otherwise for worlds. I know this transient suffering is working out
-eternal blessing. I know my loving Father has put me into this furnace
-to purge away my dross and bring out in me the expression of His own
-image. I know that divine love will always do the very best for its
-object, and therefore this intense suffering is the very best thing
-for me. Of course, I feel it, for I am not a stick or a stone. My
-Father means me to feel it, just as the mother means the blister to
-rise, for it would do no good otherwise. But I bless Him, with my
-whole heart, for the grace that shines in the wondrous fact of His
-occupying Himself with me, in this way, to correct what He sees to be
-wrong in me. I praise Him for putting me into the furnace; and how can
-I but praise Him, when I see Himself, in infinite grace and patience,
-sitting over the furnace to watch the process, and lift me out the
-moment the work is done?"
-
-This, beloved Christian reader, is the true way, and this the right
-spirit in which to pass through chastening of any kind, be it bodily
-affliction, sore bereavement, loss of property, or pressure of
-circumstances. We have to trace the hand of God, to read a Father's
-heart, to recognize the divine object in it all. This will enable us
-to vindicate, justify, and glorify God in the furnace of affliction.
-It will correct every murmuring thought, and hush every fretful
-utterance; it will fill our hearts with sweetest peace and our mouths
-with praise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now turn, for a few moments, to the remaining verses of our
-chapter, in which we shall find some most touching and powerful
-appeals to the heart and conscience of the congregation. The lawgiver,
-in the deep, true, and fervent love of his heart, makes use of the
-most solemn warnings, the most earnest admonition, and the most tender
-entreaties, in order to move the people to the one grand and
-all-important point of obedience. If he speaks to them of the iron
-furnace of Egypt, out of which Jehovah, in His sovereign grace, had
-delivered them; if he dwells upon the mighty signs and wonders wrought
-on their behalf; if he holds up to their view the glories of that land
-on which they were about to plant their foot; or if he recounts the
-marvelous dealings of God with them in the wilderness, it is all for
-the purpose of strengthening the moral basis of Jehovah's claim upon
-their loving and reverent obedience. The past, the present, and the
-future are all brought to bear upon them--all made to furnish powerful
-arguments in favor of their whole-hearted consecration of themselves
-to the service of their gracious and almighty Deliverer. In short,
-there was every reason why they should obey, and no possible excuse
-for disobedience. All the facts of their history, from first to last,
-were eminently calculated to give moral force to the exhortation and
-warning of the following passage:--
-
-"Take heed unto yourselves, lest ye forget the covenant of the Lord
-your God, which He made with you, and make you a graven image, or the
-likeness of any thing, which the Lord thy God hath forbidden thee. For
-the Lord thy God is a consuming fire, even a jealous God. When thou
-shalt beget children, and children's children, and ye shall have
-remained long in the land, and shall corrupt yourselves, and make a
-graven image, or the likeness of any thing, and shall do evil in the
-sight of the Lord thy God, to provoke Him to anger; I call heaven and
-earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon utterly
-perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to possess it; ye
-shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly be destroyed.
-And the Lord shall scatter you among the nations, and ye shall be left
-few in number among the heathen, whither the Lord shall lead you. And
-there ye shall serve gods, the work of men's hands, wood and stone,
-which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell."
-
-How solemn is all this! What faithful warnings are here! Heaven and
-earth are summoned to witness. Alas! how soon and how completely all
-this was forgotten! and how literally all those heavy denunciations
-have been fulfilled in the history of the nation!
-
-But, thank God, there is a bright side of the picture--there is mercy
-as well as judgment, and our God (blessed forever be His holy name) is
-something more than "a consuming fire and a jealous God." True, He is
-a consuming fire, because He is holy; He is intolerant of evil, and
-must consume our dross. Moreover, He is jealous, because He cannot
-suffer any rival to have a place in the hearts of those He loves. He
-must have the whole heart, because He alone is worthy of it, as He
-alone can fill and satisfy it forever. And if His people turn away
-from Him and go after idols of their own making, they must be left to
-reap the bitter fruit of their own doings, and to prove, by sad and
-terrible experience, the truth of these words: "Their sorrows shall be
-multiplied that hasten after another."
-
-But mark how touchingly Moses presents to the people the bright side
-of things--a brightness springing from the eternal stability of the
-grace of God, and the perfect provision which that grace has made for
-all His people's need, from first to last. "_But_," he says--and oh,
-how lovely are some of the "buts" of holy Scripture!--"if from thence
-thou shalt seek the Lord thy God, thou shalt find Him, if thou seek
-Him with all thy heart and with all thy soul." Exquisite grace! "When
-thou art in tribulation"--that is the time to find what our God
-is,--"and all these things are come upon thee, even in the latter
-days, if thou turn to the Lord thy God, and shalt be obedient unto His
-voice;"--what then? "A consuming fire"? Nay; but "the Lord _thy God_
-is a merciful God; He will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee, nor
-forget the covenant of thy fathers which He sware unto them."
-
-Here we have a remarkable onlook into Israel's future, their departure
-from God and consequent dispersion among the nations, the complete
-breaking up of their polity, and the passing away of their national
-glory. But, blessed forever be the God of all grace, there is
-something beyond all this failure and sin and ruin and judgment. When
-we get to the far end of Israel's melancholy history--a history which
-may truly be summed up in that one brief but comprehensive sentence,
-"O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself," we are met by the magnificent
-display of the grace, mercy, and faithfulness of Jehovah, the God of
-their fathers, whose heart of love tells itself out in that added
-sentence, "In Me is thy help." Yes; the whole matter is wrapped up in
-these two vigorous sentences, "Thou hast destroyed thyself," "But in
-Me is thy help." In the former, we have the sharp arrow for Israel's
-conscience; in the latter, the soothing balm for Israel's broken
-heart.
-
-In thinking of the nation of Israel, there are two pages which we have
-to study, namely, the historic and the prophetic. The page of history
-records, with unerring faithfulness, their utter ruin: the page of
-prophecy unfolds, in accents of matchless grace, God's remedy.
-Israel's past has been dark and gloomy: Israel's future will be bright
-and glorious. In the former, we see the miserable actings of man; in
-the latter, the blessed ways of God. That gives the forcible
-illustration of what man is; this, the bright display of what God is.
-We must look at both if we would understand aright the history of this
-remarkable people--"a people terrible from their beginning hitherto,"
-and, we may truly add, a people wonderful to the end of time.
-
-We do not, of course, attempt to adduce, in this place, proofs of our
-statement as to Israel's past and Israel's future. To do so would, we
-may say, without any exaggeration, demand a volume, inasmuch as it
-would simply be to quote a very large portion of the historical books
-of the Bible on the one hand, and of the prophetic books on the other.
-This, we need hardly say, is out of the question; but we feel bound to
-press upon the reader's attention the precious teaching contained in
-the quotation given above. It embodies, in its brief compass, the
-whole truth as to Israel's past, present, and future. Mark how their
-past is vividly portrayed in these few words: "When thou shalt beget
-children, and children's children, and ye shall have remained long in
-the land, and shall corrupt yourselves, and make a graven image, or
-the likeness of any thing, and shall do evil in the sight of the Lord
-thy God, to provoke Him to anger."
-
-Is not this precisely what they have done? Is it not here, as it were,
-in a nutshell? They have done evil in the sight of Jehovah their God,
-to provoke Him to anger. That one word, "_evil_" takes all in, from
-the calf at Horeb to the cross at Calvary. Such is Israel's past.
-
-And now, what of their present? Are they not a standing monument of
-the imperishable truth of God? Has a single jot or tittle failed of
-all that God has spoken? Hearken to these glowing words: "I call
-heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that ye shall soon
-utterly perish from off the land whereunto ye go over Jordan to
-possess it; ye shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall utterly
-be destroyed. And the Lord shall scatter you among the nations, and ye
-shall be left few in number among the heathen, whither the Lord shall
-lead you."
-
-Has not all this been fulfilled to the letter? Who can question it?
-Israel's past and Israel's present alike attest the truth of God's
-Word. And are we not justified in declaring that inasmuch as the past
-and the present are a literal accomplishment of the truth of God, so
-shall the future? Assuredly. The page of history and the page of
-prophecy were both indited by the same Spirit, and therefore they are
-both alike true; and as the history records Israel's sin and Israel's
-dispersion, so doth the prophecy predict Israel's repentance and
-Israel's restoration. The one is as true to faith as the other. As
-surely as Israel sinned in the past and are scattered at the present,
-so surely shall they repent and be restored in the future.
-
-This, we conceive, is beyond all question; and we rejoice to think of
-it. There is not one of the prophets, from Isaiah to Malachi, that
-does not most distinctly set forth, in accents of sweetest grace and
-most tender mercy, the future blessings, pre-eminence, and glory of
-the seed of Abraham.[11] It would be simply delightful to quote some
-of the sublime passages bearing upon this most interesting subject;
-but we must leave the reader to search them out for himself,
-especially commending to his notice the precious passages contained in
-the closing chapters of Isaiah, in which he will find a perfect feast,
-as well as the fullest confirmation of the apostle's statement that
-"all Israel shall be saved." All the prophets, "from Samuel and those
-that follow after," agree as to this. The teachings of the New
-Testament harmonize with the voices of the prophets, and hence to call
-in question the truth of Israel's restoration to their own land, and
-final blessing there, under the rule of their own Messiah, is simply
-to ignore or deny the testimony of prophets and apostles, speaking and
-writing by the direct inspiration of God the Holy Ghost; it is to set
-aside a body of Scripture evidence perfectly overwhelming.
-
- [11] Jonah, of course, is an exception; his mission was to Nineveh. He
- is the only prophet whose commission had exclusive reference to the
- Gentiles.
-
-It seems passing strange that any true lover of Christ should seek to
-do this; yet so it is, and so it has been, through religious
-prejudice, theological bias, and various other causes. But,
-notwithstanding all this, the glorious truth of Israel's restoration
-and pre-eminence in the earth shines with undimmed lustre on the
-prophetic page, and all who seek to set it aside, or interfere with it in
-any way, are not only flying in the face of holy Scripture--contradicting
-the unanimous voice of apostles and prophets, but also seeking to
-tamper (ignorantly and unwittingly, no doubt) with the counsel,
-purpose, and promise of the Lord God of Israel, and to nullify His
-covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
-
-This is serious work for any one to engage in, and we believe many are
-doing it without being aware of it; for we must understand that any
-one who applies the promises made to the Old-Testament fathers to the
-New-Testament Church is, in reality, doing the serious work of which
-we speak. We maintain that no one has the slightest warrant to
-alienate the promises made to the fathers. We may learn from those
-promises, delight in them, draw comfort and encouragement from their
-eternal stability and direct literal application--all this is
-blessedly true; but it is another thing altogether for men, under the
-influence of a system of interpretation falsely called spiritual, to
-apply to the Church, or to believers of the New-Testament times,
-prophecies which, as simply and plainly as words can indicate, apply
-to Israel--to the literal seed of Abraham.
-
-This is what we consider so very serious. We believe we have very
-little idea of how thoroughly opposed all this is to the mind and
-heart of God. He loves Israel--loves them for the fathers' sake, and
-we may rest assured He will not sanction our interference with their
-place, their portion, or their prospect. We are all familiar with the
-words of the inspired apostle in Romans xi, however we may have missed
-or forgotten their true import and moral force.
-
-Speaking of Israel, in connection with the olive-tree of promise, he
-says, "And they also, if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be
-graffed in; for" the most simple, solid, and blessed of all
-reasons--"_God is able_," as He is most surely willing, "to graff them
-in again. For if thou wert cut out of the olive-tree which is wild by
-nature, and wert graffed contrary to nature into a good olive-tree;
-how much more shall these, which be the natural branches, be graffed
-into their own olive-tree? For I would not, brethren, that ye should
-be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own
-conceits; that blindness _in part_ is happened to Israel, until the
-fullness of the Gentiles be come in.[12] And so all Israel shall be
-saved: as it is written, 'There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer,
-and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: _for this is My covenant
-unto them_, when I shall take away their sins.' As concerning the
-gospel, they are enemies for your sakes; but as touching the election,
-they are beloved for the fathers' sakes. For the gifts and calling of
-God are without repentance. For as ye in times past have not believed
-God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief; even so have
-these also now not believed in your mercy [or, mercy to you. _See
-Greek._] that they also may obtain mercy." That is, that instead of
-coming in on the ground of law, or fleshly descent, they should come
-in simply on the ground of sovereign mercy, just as the Gentiles. "For
-God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that He might have _mercy
-upon all_."
-
- [12] The reader must seize the difference between "the fullness of the
- Gentiles" in Romans xi, and "the times of the Gentiles" in Luke xxi.
- The former refers to those who are now being gathered into the Church:
- the latter, on the contrary, refers to the times of Gentile supremacy
- which began with Nebuchadnezzar, and runs on to the time when "the
- stone cut out without hands" shall fall, in crushing power, upon the
- great image of Daniel ii.
-
-Here ends the section bearing upon our immediate subject, but we
-cannot refrain from quoting the splendid doxology which bursts forth
-from the overflowing heart of the inspired apostle as he closes the
-grand dispensational division of his epistle--"O the depth of the
-riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are
-His judgments, and His ways past finding out! For who hath known the
-mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counselor? or who hath first
-given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? For _of_
-Him," as the source, "and _through_ Him," as the channel, "and _to_
-Him," as the object, "are all things: to whom be glory forever.
-Amen."
-
-The foregoing splendid passage, as indeed all Scripture, is in perfect
-keeping with the teaching of the fourth chapter of our book. Israel's
-present condition is the fruit of their dark unbelief: Israel's future
-glory will be the fruit of God's rich sovereign mercy.--"The Lord thy
-God is a merciful God, He will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee,
-nor forget the covenant of thy fathers which He sware unto them. For
-ask now of the days that are past, which were before thee, since the
-day that God created man upon the earth, and ask from the one side of
-heaven unto the other"--The utmost bounds of time and space were to be
-appealed to, to see--"whether there hath been any such thing as this
-great thing is, or hath been heard like it? Did ever people hear the
-voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire, as thou hast
-heard, and live? Or hath God assayed to go and take Him a nation from
-the midst of another nation, by temptations, by signs, and by wonders,
-and by war, and by a mighty hand, and by a stretched-out arm, and by
-great terrors, according to all that the Lord your God did for you in
-Egypt before your eyes? Unto thee it was showed, that thou mightest
-know that the Lord He is God; there is none else beside Him. Out of
-heaven He made thee to hear His voice, that He might instruct thee,
-and upon earth He showed thee His great fire; and thou heardest His
-words out of the midst of the fire."
-
-Here we have set forth, with singular moral power, the grand object of
-all the divine actings on Israel's behalf. It was that they might
-know that Jehovah was the one true and living God, and that there was
-and could be none beside Him. In a word, it was the purpose of God
-that Israel should be a witness for Him on the earth; and so they most
-assuredly shall, though hitherto they have signally failed and caused
-His great and holy name to be blasphemed among the nations. Nothing
-can hinder the purpose of God. His covenant shall stand forever.
-Israel shall yet be a blessed and effective witness for God on the
-earth, and a channel of rich and everlasting blessing to all nations.
-Jehovah has pledged His word as to this, and not all the powers of
-earth and hell--men and devils combined can hinder the full
-accomplishment of all that He has spoken. His glory is involved in
-Israel's future, and if a single jot or tittle of His word were to
-fail, it would be a dishonor cast upon His great name, and an occasion
-for the enemy, which is utterly impossible. Israel's future blessing
-and Jehovah's glory are bound together by a link which can never be
-snapped. If this be not clearly seen, we can neither understand
-Israel's past nor Israel's future. Nay, more; we may assert, with all
-possible confidence, that unless this blessed fact be fully grasped,
-our system of prophetic interpretation must be utterly false.
-
-But there is another truth set forth in our chapter--a truth of
-peculiar interest and preciousness. It is not merely that the glory of
-Jehovah is involved in Israel's future restoration and blessedness;
-the love of His heart is also engaged. This comes out with touching
-sweetness in the following words: "And because He loved thy fathers,
-therefore He chose their seed after them, and brought thee out in His
-sight with His mighty power out of Egypt; to drive out nations from
-before thee greater and mightier than thou art, to bring thee in, to
-give thee their land for an inheritance, as it is this day."
-
-Thus the truth of God's word, the glory of His great name, and the
-love of His heart are all involved in His dealings with the seed of
-Abraham His friend; and albeit they have broken the law, dishonored
-His name, despised His mercy, rejected His prophets, crucified His
-Son, and resisted His Spirit--although they have done all this, and,
-in consequence thereof, are scattered and peeled and broken, and shall
-yet pass through unexampled tribulation, yet will the God of Abraham,
-Isaac, and Jacob glorify His name, make good His word, and manifest
-the changeless love of His heart in the future history of His earthly
-people. "Nothing changeth God's affection." Whom He loves and as He
-loves He loves unto the end.
-
-If we deny this in reference to Israel, we have not so much as a
-single inch of solid standing-ground for ourselves: if we touch the
-truth of God in one department, we have no security as to any thing.
-"Scripture cannot be broken." "All the promises of God in Him are yea,
-and in Him Amen, unto the glory of God." God has pledged Himself to
-the seed of Abraham; He has promised to give them the land of Canaan,
-_forever_. "His gifts and calling are without repentance." He never
-repents of His gift or His call; and therefore for any one to attempt
-to alienate His promises and His gifts, or to interfere in any way
-with their application to their true and proper object, must be a
-grievous offense to Him. It mars the integrity of divine truth,
-deprives us of all certainty in the interpretation of holy Scripture,
-and plunges the soul in darkness, doubt, and perplexity.
-
-The teaching of Scripture is clear, definite, and distinct. The Holy
-Ghost, who indited the sacred Volume, means what He says and says what
-He means. If He speaks of Israel, He means Israel--of Zion, He means
-Zion--of Jerusalem, He means Jerusalem. To apply any one of these
-names to the New-Testament Church is to confound things that differ,
-and introduce a method of interpreting Scripture which, from its
-vagueness and looseness, can only lead to the most disastrous
-consequences. If we handle the Word of God in such a loose and
-careless manner, it is utterly impossible to realize its divine
-authority over our conscience, or exhibit its formative power in our
-course, conduct, and character.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now look, for a moment, at the powerful appeal with which
-Moses sums up his address in our chapter: it demands our profound and
-reverent attention.--"Know _therefore_ this day, and _consider it in
-thine heart_, that the Lord He is God in heaven above, and upon the
-earth beneath; there is none else. Thou shalt keep _therefore_ His
-statutes, and His commandments, which I command thee this day, that it
-may go well with thee, and with thy children after thee, and that thou
-mayest prolong thy days upon the earth, which the Lord thy God giveth
-thee, forever." (Ver. 39, 40.)
-
-Here we see that the moral claim upon their hearty obedience is
-grounded upon the revealed character of God, and His marvelous actings
-on their behalf. In a word, they were bound to obey--bound by every
-argument that could possibly act on the heart, the conscience, and the
-understanding. The One who had brought them out of the land of Egypt,
-with a mighty hand and outstretched arm; who had made that land to
-tremble to its very centre, by stroke after stroke of His judicial
-rod; who had opened up a pathway for them through the sea; who had
-sent them bread from heaven, and brought forth water for them out of
-the flinty rock; and all this for the glory of His great name, and
-because He loved their fathers--surely He was entitled to their
-whole-hearted obedience.
-
-This is the grand argument, so eminently characteristic of this
-blessed book of Deuteronomy. And surely this is full of instruction
-for Christians now. If Israel were morally bound to obey, how much
-more are we! If their motives and objects were powerful, how much more
-so are ours! Do we feel their power? do we consider them in our
-hearts? Do we ponder the claims of Christ upon us? Do we remember
-that we are not our own, but bought with a price, even the infinitely
-precious price of the blood of Christ? Do we realize this? Are we
-seeking to live for Him? Is His glory our ruling object?--His love our
-constraining motive? or are we living for ourselves? Are we seeking to
-get on in the world--that world that crucified our blessed Lord and
-Saviour? Are we seeking to make money? do we love it in our hearts,
-either for its own sake or for the sake of what it can procure? does
-money _govern_ us? Are we seeking a place in the world, either for
-ourselves or for our children? Let us honestly challenge our hearts,
-as in the divine presence, in the light of God's truth, what is our
-object--our real, governing, cherished, heart-sought object?
-
-Reader, these are searching questions. Let us not put them aside: let
-us really weigh them in the very light of the judgment-seat of Christ.
-We believe they are wholesome, much-needed questions. We live in very
-solemn times. There is a fearful amount of sham on every side, and in
-nothing is this sham so awfully apparent as in so-called religion.
-
-The very days in which our lot is cast have been sketched by a pen
-that never colors--never exaggerates, but always presents men and
-things precisely as they are.--"This know also, that in _the last
-days_"--quite distinct from "_the latter times_" of 1 Timothy iv.--far
-in advance, more pronounced, more closely defined, more strongly
-marked, these last days in which "perilous [or difficult] times shall
-come. For men shall be _lovers of their own selves_, covetous,
-_boasters_, proud, blasphemers, _disobedient to parents_, unthankful,
-unholy, _without natural affection_, truce-breakers, _false accusers_,
-incontinent, fierce, despisers of those that are good, traitors,
-heady, high-minded, _lovers of pleasures more_ [or rather] _than
-lovers of God_." And then mark the crown which the inspired apostle
-puts upon this appalling superstructure!--"Having a form of godliness,
-but denying the power thereof." (2 Tim. iii. 1-5.)
-
-What a terrible picture! We have here, in a few glowing, weighty
-sentences, _infidel_ christendom, just as in 1 Timothy iv. we have
-_superstitious_ christendom. In the latter, we see popery; in the
-former, infidelity. Both elements are at work around us, but the
-latter will yet rise into prominence--indeed, even now it is advancing
-with rapid strides. The very leaders and teachers of christendom are
-not ashamed or afraid to attack the foundations of Christianity. A
-so-called Christian bishop is not ashamed or afraid to call in
-question the integrity of the five books of Moses, and, with them, of
-the whole Bible; for, most assuredly, if Moses was not the inspired
-writer of the Pentateuch, the entire edifice of holy Scripture is
-swept from beneath our feet. The writings of Moses are so intimately
-bound up with all the other grand divisions of the divine Volume, that
-if they are touched, all is gone. We boldly affirm that if the Holy
-Ghost did not inspire Moses, the servant of God, to write the first
-five books of our English Bible, we have not an inch of solid ground
-to stand upon; we are positively left without a single atom of divine
-authority on which to rest our souls; the very pillars of our glorious
-Christianity are swept away, and we are left to grope our way, in
-hopeless perplexity, amid the conflicting opinions and theories of
-infidel doctors, without so much as a single ray from Inspiration's
-heavenly lamp.
-
-Does this appear too strong for the reader? Does he believe that we
-can listen, for a moment, to the infidel denier of Moses, and yet
-believe in the inspiration of the psalms, the prophets, and the New
-Testament? If he does, let him be well assured he is under the power
-of a fatal delusion. Let him take such passages as the following, and
-ask himself, What do they mean, and what is wrapped up in them? Our
-Lord, in speaking to the Jews--who, by the way, would not have agreed
-with a Christian bishop in denying the authenticity of Moses--says,
-"Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father; there is one that
-accuseth you, even Moses, in whom ye trust. For had ye believed Moses,
-ye would have believed Me; for he wrote of Me. But if ye believe not
-his writings, how shall ye believe My words?" (John v. 45-47.)
-
-Think of this: The man that does not believe in the writings of
-Moses--does not receive every line of his as divinely inspired, does
-not believe in Christ's words, and therefore cannot have any divinely
-wrought faith in Christ Himself--cannot be a Christian at all. This
-makes it a very serious matter for any one to deny the divine
-inspiration of the Pentateuch, and equally serious for any one to
-listen to him or sympathize with him. It is all very well to talk of
-Christian charity and liberality of spirit; but we have yet to learn
-that it is charity or liberality to sanction, in any way, a man who
-has the audacity to sweep from beneath our feet the very foundations
-of our faith. To speak of him as a Christian bishop, or a Christian
-minister of any kind, is only to make the matter a thousand times
-worse. We can understand a Voltaire or a Paine attacking the Bible--we
-do not look for any thing else from them; but when those who assume to
-be the recognized and ordained ministers of religion, and the
-guardians of the faith of God's elect--those who consider themselves
-alone entitled to teach and preach Jesus Christ, and feed and tend the
-Church of God--when they actually call in question the inspiration of
-the five books of Moses, may we not well ask, Where are we? What has
-the professing church come to?
-
-But let us take another passage. It is the powerful appeal of the
-risen Saviour to the two bewildered disciples on their way to
-Emmaus--"'O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets
-have spoken; ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to
-enter into His glory?' And _beginning at Moses_ and all the prophets,
-He expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning
-Himself." And again, to the eleven and others with them, He says,
-"These are the words which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you,
-that all things must be fulfilled, which were written _in the law of_
-_Moses_, and in the prophets, and in the psalms, concerning Me." (Luke
-xxiv. 25-27, 44.)
-
-Here we find that our Lord, in the most distinct and positive manner,
-recognizes the law of Moses as an integral part of the canon of
-inspiration, and binds it up with all the other grand divisions of the
-divine Volume in such a way that it is utterly impossible to touch one
-without destroying the integrity of the whole. If Moses is not to be
-trusted, neither are the prophets, nor the psalms. They stand or fall
-together. And not only so, but we must either admit the divine
-authenticity of the Pentateuch or draw the blasphemous inference that
-our adorable Lord and Saviour gave the sanction of His authority to a
-set of spurious documents, by quoting as the writings of Moses what
-Moses never wrote at all! There is positively not a single inch of
-consistent standing-ground between these two conclusions.
-
-Again, take the following most weighty and important passage at the
-close of the parable of the rich man and Lazarus: "Abraham saith unto
-him, 'They have _Moses and the prophets; let them hear them_.' And he
-said, 'Nay, father Abraham; but if one went unto them from the dead,
-they will repent.' And he said unto him, 'If they hear not Moses and
-the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the
-dead.'" (Luke xvi. 29-31.)
-
-Finally, if we add to all this the fact that our Lord, in His conflict
-with Satan in the wilderness, quotes only from the writings of Moses,
-we have a body of evidence quite sufficient, not only to establish,
-beyond all question, the divine inspiration of Moses, but also to
-prove that the man who calls in question the authenticity of the first
-five books of the Bible, can really have no Bible, no divine
-revelation, no authority, no solid foundation for his faith. He may
-call himself, or be called by others, a Christian bishop or a
-Christian minister; but, in solemn fact, he is a skeptic, and should
-be treated as such by all who believe and know the truth. We cannot
-understand how any one with a spark of divine life in his soul could
-be guilty of the awful sin of denying the inspiration of a large
-portion of the Word of God, or asserting that our Lord Christ could
-quote from spurious documents.
-
-We may be deemed severe in thus writing. It seems the fashion nowadays
-to own as Christians those who deny the very foundations of
-Christianity. It is a very popular notion that, provided people are
-moral, amiable, benevolent, charitable, and philanthropic, it is of
-very small consequence what they believe. Life is better than creed or
-dogma, we are told. All this sounds very plausible: but the reader may
-rest assured that the direct tendency of all this manner of speech and
-line of argument is to get rid of the Bible--rid of the Holy
-Ghost--rid of Christ--rid of God--rid of all that the Bible reveals to
-our souls. Let him bear this in mind, and seek to keep close to the
-precious Word of God; let him treasure that Word in his heart, and
-give himself more and more to the prayerful study of it. Thus he will
-be preserved from the withering influence of skepticism and
-infidelity, in every shape and form; his soul will be fed and
-nourished by the sincere milk of the Word, and his whole moral being
-be kept in the shelter of the divine presence continually. This is
-what is needed: nothing else will do.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now close our meditations on this marvelous chapter which has
-been engaging our attention; but ere doing so, we would glance for a
-moment at the remarkable notice of the three cities of refuge. It
-might, to a cursory reader, seem abrupt; but, so far from that, it is,
-as we might expect, in perfect and beautiful moral order. Scripture is
-always divinely perfect, and if we do not see and appreciate its
-beauties and moral glories, it is simply owing to our blindness and
-insensibility.
-
-"Then Moses severed three cities on this side Jordan toward the
-sunrising; that the slayer might flee thither, which should kill his
-neighbor unawares, and hated him not in times past; and that fleeing
-unto one of those cities he might live; namely, Bezer in the
-wilderness, in the plain country, of the Reubenites; and Ramoth in
-Gilead, of the Gadites; and Golan in Bashan, of the Manassites."
-
-Here we have a lovely display of the grace of God rising, as it ever
-does, above human weakness and failure. The two tribes and a half, in
-choosing their inheritance on this side Jordan, were manifestly
-stopping short of the proper portion of the Israel of God, which lay
-on the other side of the river of death; but, notwithstanding this
-failure, God, in His abounding grace, would not leave the poor slayer
-without a refuge in the day of his distress. If man cannot come up to
-the height of God's thoughts, God can come down to the depths of man's
-need; and so blessedly does He do so in this case, that the two tribes
-and a half were to have as many cities of refuge on this side Jordan
-as the nine tribes and a half had in the land of Canaan.
-
-This, truly, was grace abounding. How unlike the manner of man! How
-far above mere law or legal righteousness! It might, in a legal way,
-have been said to the two tribes and a half, If you are going to
-choose your inheritance short of the divine mark--if you are content
-with less than Canaan, the land of promise, you must not expect to
-enjoy the privileges and blessings of that land. The institutions of
-Canaan must be confined to Canaan, and hence your manslayer must try
-and make his way across the Jordan and find refuge there.
-
-Law might speak thus, but Grace spoke differently. God's thoughts are
-not ours, nor His ways as ours. We might deem it marvelous grace to
-provide even one city for the two and a half tribes; but our God does
-exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, and hence the
-comparatively small district on this side Jordan was furnished with as
-full a provision of grace as the entire land of Canaan.
-
-Does this prove that the two and a half tribes were right? Nay; but it
-proves that God was good, and that He must ever act like Himself,
-spite of all our weakness and folly. Could He leave a poor slayer
-without a place of refuge in the land of Gilead, though Gilead was not
-Canaan? Surely not. This would not be worthy of the One who says, "_I
-bring near_ My righteousness." He took care to bring the city of
-refuge "near" to the slayer. He would cause His rich and precious
-grace to flow over and meet the needy one just where he was. Such is
-the way of our God, blessed be His holy name for evermore!
-
-"And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel:
-these are the testimonies, and the statutes, and the judgments, which
-Moses spake unto the children of Israel, after they came forth out of
-Egypt, on this side Jordan, in the valley over against Beth-peor, in
-the land of Sihon king of the Amorites, who dwelt at Heshbon, whom
-Moses and the children of Israel smote, after they were come forth out
-of Egypt: and they possessed his land, and the land of Og king of
-Bashan, two kings of the Amorites, which were on this side Jordan
-toward the sunrising; from Aroer, which is by the bank of the river
-Arnon, even unto Mount Sion, which is Hermon, and all the plain on
-this side Jordan eastward, even unto the sea of the plain, under the
-springs of Pisgah."
-
-Here closes this marvelous discourse. The Spirit of God delights to
-trace the boundaries of the people, and dwell on the most minute
-details connected with their history. He takes a lively and loving
-interest in all that concerns them--their conflicts, their victories,
-their possessions, all their landmarks; every thing about them is
-dwelt upon with a minuteness which, by its touching grace and
-condescension, fill the heart with wonder, love, and praise. Man, in
-his contemptible self-importance, thinks it beneath his dignity to
-enter upon minute details; but _our_ God counts the hairs of our
-heads, puts our tears into His bottle, takes knowledge of our every
-care, our every sorrow, our every need. There is nothing too small for
-His love, as there is nothing too great for His power. He concentrates
-His loving care upon each one of His people as though He had only that
-one to attend to; and there is not a single circumstance in our
-private history, from day to day, however trivial, in which He does
-not take a loving interest.
-
-Let us ever remember this, for our comfort; and may we learn to trust
-Him better, and use, with a more artless faith, His fatherly love and
-care. He tells us to cast _all_ our care upon Him, in the assurance
-that He careth for us. He would have our hearts as free from care as
-our conscience is free from guilt. "Be careful for _nothing_; but in
-every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your
-requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth
-_all_ understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ
-Jesus." (Phil. iv. 6, 7.)
-
-It is to be feared that the great majority of us know but little of
-the real depth, meaning, and power of such words as these. We read
-them and hear them, but we do not take them in and make our own of
-them--we do not digest them and reduce them to practice. How little do
-we really enter into the blessed truth that our Father is interested
-in all our little cares and sorrows, and that we may go to Him with
-all our little wants and difficulties. We imagine that such things are
-beneath the notice of the high and mighty One who inhabiteth eternity
-and sitteth upon the circle of the earth. This is a serious mistake,
-and one that robs us of incalculable blessing in our daily history. We
-should ever remember that there is nothing great or small with our
-God: all things are alike to Him who sustains the vast universe by the
-word of His power, and takes notice of a falling sparrow. It is quite
-as easy to Him to create a world as to provide a breakfast for some
-poor widow. The greatness of His power, the moral grandeur of His
-government, and the minuteness of His tender care, do all alike
-command the wonder and the worship of our hearts.
-
-Christian reader, see that you make your own of all these things. Seek
-to live nearer to God in your daily walk. Lean more upon Him. Use Him
-more. Go to Him in all your need, and you will never have to tell your
-need to a poor fellow-mortal. "My God shall supply _all_ your need,
-according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus." What a
-source--"God"! What a standard--"His riches in glory"! What a
-channel--"Christ Jesus"! It is your sweet privilege to place all _your
-need_ over against _His riches_, and lose sight of the former in the
-presence of the latter. His exhaustless treasury is thrown open to
-you, in all the love of His heart; go and draw upon it, in the
-artless simplicity of faith, and you will never have occasion to look
-to a creature-stream or lean on a creature-prop.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-"And Moses called all Israel, and said unto them, 'Hear, O Israel, the
-statutes and judgments which I speak in your ears this day, that ye
-may learn them, and keep and do them.'"
-
-Let us carefully note these four words, so specially characteristic of
-the book of Deuteronomy, and so seasonable for the Lord's people at
-all times and in all places: "_Hear_," "_Learn_," "_Keep_," "_Do_."
-These are words of unspeakable preciousness to every truly pious
-soul--to every one who honestly desires to walk in that narrow path of
-practical righteousness so pleasing to God, and so safe and so happy
-for us.
-
-The first of these words places the soul in the most blessed attitude
-in which any one can be found, namely, that of _hearing_. "Faith
-cometh by _hearing_, and hearing by the Word of God." "I will _hear_
-what God the Lord will speak." "_Hear_, and your soul shall live." The
-hearing ear lies at the very foundation of all true, practical
-Christian life. It places the soul in the only true and proper
-attitude for the creature. It is the real secret of all peace and
-blessedness.
-
-It can scarcely be needful to remind the reader that when we speak of
-the soul in the attitude of hearing, it is assumed that what is heard
-is simply the Word of God. Israel had to hearken to "the statutes and
-judgments" of Jehovah, and to nothing else. It was not to the
-commandments, traditions, and doctrines of men they were to give ear,
-but to the very words of the living God, who had redeemed and
-delivered them from the land of Egypt--the place of bondage, darkness,
-and death.
-
-It is well to bear this in mind. It will preserve the soul from many a
-snare, many a difficulty. We hear a good deal, in certain quarters,
-about obedience, and about the moral fitness of surrendering our own
-will and submitting ourselves to authority. All this sounds very well,
-and has great weight with a large class of very religious and morally
-excellent people; but when men speak to us about obedience, we must
-ask the question, Obedience to what? when they speak to us about
-surrendering our own will, we must inquire of them, To whom are we to
-surrender it? when they speak to us about submitting to authority, we
-must insist upon their telling us the source or foundation of the
-authority.
-
-This is of the deepest possible moment to every member of the
-household of faith. There are many very sincere and very earnest
-people who deem it very delightful to be saved the trouble of thinking
-for themselves, and to have their sphere of action and line of service
-laid out for them by wiser heads than their own. It seems a very
-restful and very pleasing thing to have each day's work laid out for
-us by some master-hand. It relieves the heart of a great load of
-responsibility, and it looks like humility and self-distrust to submit
-ourselves to some authority.
-
-But we are bound, before God, to look well to the basis of the
-authority to which we surrender ourselves, else we may find ourselves
-in an utterly false position. Take, for example, a monk, or a nun, or
-a member of a sisterhood. A monk obeys his abbot, a nun obeys her
-mother-abbess, "a sister" obeys her "lady-superior;" but the position
-and relationship of each is utterly false. There is not a shadow of
-authority in the New Testament for monasteries, convents, or
-sisterhoods; on the contrary, the teaching of holy Scripture, as well
-as the voice of nature, is utterly opposed to every one of them,
-inasmuch as they take men and women out of the place and out of the
-relationship in which God has set them, and in which they are designed
-and fitted to move, and form them into societies which are utterly
-destructive of natural affection, and subversive of all true Christian
-obedience.
-
-We feel it right to call the attention of the Christian reader to this
-subject just now, seeing that the enemy is making a vigorous effort to
-revive the monastic system in our midst under various forms. Indeed
-some have had the temerity to tell us that monastic life is the only
-true form of Christianity. Surely, when such monstrous statements are
-made and listened to, it becomes us to look at the whole subject in
-the light of Scripture, and to call upon the advocates and adherents
-of monasticism to show us the foundations of the system in the Word of
-God. Where, within the covers of the New Testament, is there any
-thing, in the most remote degree, like a monastery, a convent, or a
-sisterhood? Where can we find an authority for any such office as that
-of an abbot, an abbess, or a lady-superior? There is absolutely no
-such thing, nor the shadow of it; and hence we have no hesitation in
-pronouncing the whole system, from foundation to top-stone, a fabric
-of superstition, alike opposed to the voice of nature and the voice of
-God: nor can we understand how any one, in his sober senses, could
-presume to tell us that a monk or a nun is the only true exponent of
-Christian life. Yet there are those who thus speak, and there are
-those who listen to them, and that, too, in this day when the full,
-clear light of our glorious Christianity is shining upon us from the
-pages of the New Testament.[13]
-
- [13] We must accurately distinguish between "_nature_" and "_flesh_."
- The former is recognized in Scripture; the latter is condemned and set
- aside. "Doth not even nature itself teach you?" says the apostle. (1
- Cor. xi. 14.) Jesus beholding the young ruler in Mark x, "loved him"
- although there was nothing but nature. To be without natural affection
- is one of the marks of the apostasy. Scripture teaches that we are
- dead to sin, not to nature, else what becomes of our natural
- relationships?
-
-But, blessed be God, we are called to obedience. We are called to
-"hear"--called to bow down, in holy and reverent submission, to
-authority. And here we join issue with infidelity and its lofty
-pretensions. The path of the devout and lowly Christian is alike
-removed from superstition on the one hand and from infidelity on the
-other. Peter's noble reply to the council, in Acts v, embodies, in its
-brief compass, a complete answer to both.--"We ought to obey God
-rather than men." We meet infidelity, in all its phases, in all its
-stages, and in its very deepest roots, with this one weighty sentence,
-"We ought to _obey_;" and we meet superstition, in every garb in which
-it clothes itself, with the all-important clause, "We ought to _obey
-God_."
-
-Here we have set forth, in the most simple form, the duty of every
-true Christian. He is to obey God. The infidel may smile
-contemptuously at a monk or a nun, and marvel how any rational being
-can so completely surrender his reason and his understanding to the
-authority of a fellow-mortal, or submit himself to rules and practices
-so absurd, so degrading, and so contrary to nature. The infidel
-glories in his fancied intellectual freedom, and imagines that his own
-reason is quite a sufficient guide for him. He does not see that he is
-further from God than the poor monk or nun whom he so despises. He
-does not know that, while priding himself in his self-will, he is
-really led captive by Satan--the prince and god of this world. Man is
-formed to obey--formed to look up to some one above him. The Christian
-is sanctified unto the obedience of Jesus Christ, that is, to the very
-same character of obedience as that which was rendered by our adorable
-Lord and Saviour Himself.
-
-This is of the deepest possible moment to every one who really desires
-to know what true Christian obedience is. To understand this is the
-real secret of deliverance from the self-will of the infidel and the
-false obedience of superstition. It can never be right to do our own
-will: it may be quite wrong to do the will of our fellow: it must
-always be right to do the will of God. This was what Jesus came to do,
-and what He always did.--"Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God."--"I
-delight to do Thy will, O My God; yea, Thy law is within My heart."
-
-Now, we are called and set apart to this blessed character of
-obedience, as we learn from the inspired apostle Peter, in the opening
-of his first epistle, where he speaks of believers as "elect according
-to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the
-Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ."
-
-This is an immense privilege, and at the same time a most holy and
-solemn responsibility. We must never forget for a moment that God has
-elected us, and the Holy Spirit has set us apart, not only to the
-sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ, but also to His obedience.
-Such is the obvious meaning and moral force of the words just
-quoted--words of unspeakable preciousness to every lover of
-holiness--words which effectually deliver us from self-will, from
-legality, and from superstition. Blessed deliverance!
-
-But it may be that the pious reader feels disposed to call our
-attention to the exhortation in Hebrews xiii.--"Obey them that have
-the rule over you, and submit yourselves; for they watch for your
-souls, as they that must give account; that they may do it with joy
-and not with grief; for that is unprofitable for you."
-
-A deeply important word, most surely, with which we should also
-connect a passage in 1 Thessalonians--"And we beseech you, brethren,
-to know them that labor among you, and are over you in the Lord, and
-admonish you, and to esteem them very highly in love for their work's
-sakes." (Chap. v. 12, 13.) And again, in 1 Corinthians xvi. 15, 16--"I
-beseech you, brethren, (ye know the house of Stephanas, that it is the
-first-fruits of Achaia, and that they have addicted themselves to the
-ministry [or service] of the saints,) that ye submit yourselves unto
-such, and to every one that helpeth with us and laboreth." To all
-these we must add another very lovely passage from the first epistle
-of Peter--"The elders which are among you I exhort, who am also an
-elder, and a witness of the sufferings of Christ, and also a partaker
-of the glory that shall be revealed: feed the flock of God which is
-among you, taking the oversight thereof, not by constraint, but
-willingly; not for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind; neither as being
-lords over God's heritage, but being ensamples to the flock. And when
-the chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of glory
-that fadeth not away." (Chap. v. 1-4.)
-
-We may be asked, Do not the above passages set forth the principle of
-obedience to certain men? and if so, why object to human authority?
-The answer is very simple. Wherever Christ imparts a spiritual gift,
-whether it be the gift of teaching, the gift of rule, or the gift of
-pastorship, it is the bounden duty and privilege of Christians to
-recognize and appreciate such gifts. Not to do so would be to forsake
-our own mercies. But then we must bear in mind that in all such cases
-the gift must be a reality--a plain, palpable, _bona-fide_, divinely
-given thing. It is not a man assuming a certain office or position, or
-being appointed by his fellow to any so-called ministry. All this is
-perfectly worthless, and worse than worthless; it is a daring
-intrusion upon a sacred domain which must, sooner or later, bring down
-the judgment of God.
-
-All true ministry is of God, and based upon the possession of a
-positive gift from the Head of the Church; so that we may truly say,
-No gift, no ministry. In all the passages quoted above, we see
-positive gift possessed, and actual work done. Moreover, we see a true
-heart for the lambs and sheep of the flock of Christ; we see divine
-grace and power. The word in Hebrews xiii. is, "Obey them that guide
-you [+hegoumenois+]." Now, it is essential to a true guide that
-he should go before you in the way. It would be the height of folly
-for any one to assume the title of guide if he were ignorant of the
-way, and neither able nor willing to go in it. Who would think of
-obeying such?
-
-So also when the apostle exhorts the Thessalonians to "know" and
-"esteem" certain persons, on what does he found his exhortation? Is it
-upon the mere assumption of a title, an office, or a position?
-Nothing of the kind. He grounds his appeal upon the actual, well-known
-fact that these persons were "over them, _in the Lord_," and that they
-admonished them. And why were they to "esteem them very highly in
-love"? Was it for their office or their title? No; but "for their
-work's sake." And why were the Corinthians exhorted to submit
-themselves to the household of Stephanas? Was it because of an empty
-title or assumed office? By no means; but because "they addicted
-themselves to the ministry of the saints." They were actually in the
-work. They had received gift and grace from Christ, and they had a
-heart for His people. They were not boasting of their office or
-insisting upon their title, but giving themselves devotedly to the
-service of Christ, in the persons of His dear people.
-
-Now this is the true principle of ministry. It is not human authority
-at all, but divine gift and spiritual power communicated by Christ to
-His servants, exercised by them, in responsibility to Him, and
-thankfully recognized by His saints. A man may set up to be a teacher
-or a pastor, or he may be appointed by his fellows to the office or
-title of a pastor; but unless he possesses a positive gift from the
-Head of the Church, it is all the merest sham, a hollow assumption, an
-empty conceit; and his voice will be the voice of a stranger, which
-the true sheep of Christ do not know and ought not to recognize.[14]
-
- [14] The reader will do well to ponder the fact that there is no such
- thing in the New Testament as human appointment to preach the gospel,
- teach in the assembly of God, or feed the flock of Christ. Elders and
- deacons were ordained by the apostles or their delegates, Timothy and
- Titus; but evangelists, pastors, and teachers were never so ordained.
- We must distinguish between gift and local charge. Elders and deacons
- might possess a special gift or not; it had nothing to do with their
- local charge. If the reader would understand the subject of ministry,
- let him study 1 Corinthians xii.-xiv. and Ephesians iv. 8-13. In the
- former we have, first, the _basis_ of all true ministry in the Church
- of God, namely, _divine appointment_--"God hath set the members,"
- etc.; secondly, _the motive-spring_--"love;" thirdly, _the
- object_--"that the Church may receive edifying." In Ephesians iv. we
- have the _source_ of all ministry--a risen and ascended Lord; the
- _design_--"to perfect the saints for the work of the ministry;" the
- _duration_--"till we all come unto a perfect man, unto the measure of
- the stature of the fullness of Christ."
-
- In a word, ministry, in all its departments, is _entirely_ a divine
- institution. It is not of man or by man, but of God. The Master must,
- in every case, fit, fill, and appoint the vessel. There is no
- authority in Scripture for the notion that every man has a right to
- minister in the Church of God. Liberty for men is radicalism and not
- Scripture. Liberty for the Holy Ghost to minister by whom He will is
- what we are taught in the New Testament. May we learn it.
-
-But, on the other hand, where there is the divinely gifted teacher,
-the true, loving, wise, faithful, laborious pastor, watching for
-souls, weeping over them, waiting upon them, like a gentle, tender
-nurse, able to say to them, "Now we live, if ye stand fast in the
-Lord"--where these things are found, there will not be much difficulty
-in recognizing and appreciating them. How do we know a good dentist?
-Is it by seeing his name on a brass plate? No; but by his work. A man
-may call himself a dentist ten thousand times over, but if he be only
-an unskillful operator, who would think of employing him?
-
-Thus it is in all human affairs, and thus it is in the matter of
-ministry. If a man has a gift, he is a minister; if he has not, all
-the appointment, authority, and ordination in the world could not make
-him a minister of Christ. It may make him a minister of religion; but
-a minister of religion and a minister of Christ--a minister in
-christendom and a minister in the Church of God, are two totally
-different things. All true ministry has its source in God; it rests on
-divine authority, and its object is to bring the soul into His
-presence, and link it on to Him. False ministry, on the contrary, has
-its source in man; it rests on human authority, and its object is to
-link the soul on to itself. This marks the immense difference between
-the two. The former leads to God; the latter leads away from Him: that
-feeds, nourishes, and strengthens the new life; this hinders its
-progress, in every way, and plunges it in doubt and darkness. In a
-word, we may say, true ministry is of God, through Him, and to Him:
-false ministry is of man, through him, and to him. The former we prize
-more than we can say; the latter we reject with all the energy of our
-moral being.
-
-We trust sufficient has been said to satisfy the mind of the reader in
-reference to the matter of obedience to those whom the Lord may see
-fit to call to the work of the ministry. We are bound, in every case,
-to judge by the Word of God, and to be assured that it is a divine
-reality and not a human sham--a positive gift from the Head of the
-Church, and not an empty title conferred by men. In all cases where
-there is real gift and grace, it is a sweet privilege to obey and
-submit ourselves, inasmuch as we discern Christ in the person and
-ministry of His beloved servants.
-
-There is no difficulty, to a spiritual mind, in owning real grace and
-power. We can easily tell whether a man is seeking, in true love, to
-feed our souls with the bread of life, and lead us on in the ways of
-God, or whether he is seeking to exalt himself, and promote his own
-interests. Those who are living near the Lord can readily discern
-between true power and hollow assumption. Moreover, we never find
-Christ's true ministers parading their authority, or vaunting
-themselves of their office; they do the work and leave it to speak for
-itself. In the case of the blessed apostle Paul, we find him referring
-again and again to the plain proofs of his ministry--the
-unquestionable evidence afforded in the conversion and blessing of
-souls. He could say to the poor misguided Corinthians, when, under the
-influence of some self-exalting pretender, they foolishly called in
-question his apostleship, "Since ye seek a proof of Christ speaking in
-me ... examine yourselves."
-
-This was close, pointed dealing with them. They themselves were the
-living proofs of his ministry. If his ministry was not of God, what
-and where were they? But it was of God, and this was his joy, his
-comfort, and his strength. He was "an apostle, not of men, neither by
-man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised Him from the
-dead." He gloried in the source of his ministry; and as to its
-character, he had but to appeal to a body of evidence quite sufficient
-to carry conviction to any right mind. In his case, it could be truly
-said, it was not the speech, but the power.
-
-Thus it must be, in measure, in every case. We must look for the
-power: we must have reality. Mere titles are nothing. Men may
-undertake to confer titles and appoint to offices, but they have no
-more authority to do so than they have to appoint admirals in her
-majesty's fleet or generals in her army. If we were to see a man
-assuming the style and title of an admiral or a general, without her
-majesty's commission, we should pronounce him an idiot or a lunatic.
-This is but a feeble illustration to set forth the folly of men taking
-upon them the title of ministers of Christ without one atom of
-spiritual gift or divine authority.
-
-Shall we be told, We must not judge? We are bound to judge. "Beware of
-false prophets." How can we beware if we are not to judge? But how are
-we to judge? "By their fruits ye shall know them." Can the Lord's
-people not tell the difference between a man who comes to them in the
-power of the Spirit, gifted by the Head of the Church, full of love to
-their souls, earnestly desiring their true blessing, seeking not
-theirs but them--a holy, gracious, humble, self-emptied servant of
-Christ; and a man who comes with a self-assumed or a humanly conferred
-title, without a single trace of any thing divine or heavenly either
-in his ministry or in his life? Of course they can; no one in his
-senses would think of calling in question a fact so obvious.
-
-But further, we may ask, What mean those words of the venerable
-apostle John--"Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits
-whether they are of God; because many false prophets are gone out into
-the world"? How are we to try the spirits, or how are we to discern
-between the true and the false, if we are not to judge? Again, the
-same apostle, writing to "the elect lady," gives her the following
-most solemn admonition: "If there come any unto you, and bring not
-this doctrine, receive him not into your house, neither bid him
-Godspeed; for he that biddeth him Godspeed is partaker of his evil
-deeds." Was she not responsible to act on this admonition? Assuredly.
-But how could she if we are not to judge? And what had she to judge?
-Was it as to whether those who came to her house were ordained,
-authorized, or licensed by any man or body of men? Nothing of the
-kind. The one great and all-important question for her was as to the
-doctrine. If they brought the true, the divine doctrine of Christ--the
-doctrine of Jesus Christ come in the flesh, she was to receive them;
-if not, she was to shut her door, with a firm hand, against them, no
-matter who they were or where they came from. If they had all the
-credentials that man could bestow upon them, yet if they brought not
-_the truth_, she was to reject them with stern decision. This might
-seem very harsh, very narrow-minded, very bigoted; but with this she
-had nothing whatever to do. She had just to be as broad and as narrow
-as the truth. Her door and her heart were to be wide enough to admit
-all who brought Christ, and no wider. Was she to pay compliments at
-the expense of her Lord? was she to seek a name for largeness of heart
-or breadth of mind by receiving to her house and to her table the
-teachers of a false Christ? The very thought is absolutely horrible.
-
-But finally, in the second chapter of Revelation, we find the church
-at Ephesus commended for having tried those who said they were
-apostles and were not. How could this be if we are not to judge? Is it
-not most evident to the reader that an utterly false use is made of
-our Lord's words in Matthew vii. 1--"Judge not, that ye be not
-judged," and also of the apostle's words in 1 Corinthians iv.
-5--"Therefore judge nothing before the time"? It is impossible that
-Scripture can contradict itself; and hence, whatever be the true
-meaning of our Lord's "Judge not," or the apostle's "Judge nothing,"
-it is perfectly certain that they do not, in the most remote way,
-interfere with the solemn responsibility of all Christians to judge
-the gift, the doctrine, and the life of all who take the place of
-preachers, teachers, and pastors in the Church of God.
-
-And then, if we be asked as to the meaning of "Judge not" and "Judge
-nothing," we believe the words simply forbid our judging motives, or
-hidden springs of action. With these we have nothing whatever to do.
-We cannot penetrate below the surface, and, thanks be to God, we are
-not asked to do so--yea, we are positively forbidden. We cannot read
-the counsels of the heart; it is the province and prerogative of God
-alone to do this: but to say that we are not to judge the doctrine,
-the gift, or the manner of life of those who take the place of
-preachers, teachers, and pastors in the Church of God, is simply to
-fly in the face of holy Scripture, and to ignore the very instincts of
-the divine nature implanted in us by the Holy Ghost.
-
-Hence, therefore, we can return, with increased clearness and
-decision, to our thesis of Christian obedience. It seems perfectly
-plain that the fullest recognition of all true ministry in the Church,
-and the most gracious submission of ourselves to all those whom our
-Lord Christ may see fit to raise up as pastors, teachers, and guides
-in our midst, can never, in the smallest degree, interfere with the
-grand fundamental principle set forth in Peter's magnificent reply to
-the council--"We ought to obey God rather than men."
-
-It will ever be the aim and object of all true ministers of Christ to
-lead those to whom they minister in the true path of obedience to the
-Word of God. The chapter which lies open before us, as indeed the
-entire book of Deuteronomy, shows us very plainly how Moses, that
-eminent servant of God, ever sought and diligently labored to press
-upon the congregation of Israel the urgent necessity of the most
-implicit obedience to all the statutes and judgments of God. He did
-not seek any place of authority for himself: he never lorded it over
-God's heritage. His one grand theme, from first to last, was
-obedience. This was the burden of all his discourses--obedience, not
-to him, but to his and their Lord. He rightly judged that this was the
-true secret of their happiness, their moral security, their dignity,
-and their strength. He knew that an obedient people must also, of
-necessity, be an invincible and invulnerable people. No weapon formed
-against them could prosper so long as they were governed by the word
-of God. In a word, he knew and believed that Israel's province was to
-obey Jehovah, as it was Jehovah's province to bless Israel. It was
-their one simple business to "hear," "learn," "keep," and "do" the
-revealed will of God; and so doing, they might count on Him, with all
-possible confidence, to be their shield, their strength, their
-safeguard, their refuge, their resource, their all in all. The only
-true and proper path for the Israel of God is that narrow path of
-obedience on which the light of God's approving countenance ever
-shines, and all who, through grace, tread that path will find Him "a
-guide, a glory, a defense, to save from every fear."
-
-This, surely, is quite enough. We have nothing to do with
-consequences: these we may, in simple confidence, leave to Him whose
-we are and whom we are responsible to serve. "The name of the Lord is
-a strong tower; the righteous runneth into it and is safe." If we are
-doing His will, we shall ever find His name a strong tower; but, on
-the other hand, if we are not walking in a path of practical
-righteousness--if we are doing our own will--if we are living in the
-habitual neglect of the plain Word of God, then, verily, it is utterly
-vain for us to think that the name of the Lord will be a strong tower
-to us; rather would His name be a reproof to us, leading us to judge
-our ways and to return to the path of righteousness from which we have
-wandered.
-
-Blessed be His name, His grace will ever meet us, in all its precious
-fullness and freeness, in the place of self-judgment and confession,
-however we may have failed and wandered; but this is a totally
-different thing. We may have to say, with the Psalmist, "Out of the
-depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice; let Thine
-ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications. If Thou, Lord,
-shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? But there is
-forgiveness with Thee, that Thou mayest be feared." But then, a soul
-crying to God from the depths, and getting forgiveness, is one thing;
-and a soul looking to Him in the path of practical righteousness is
-quite another. We must carefully distinguish between these two things.
-Confessing our sins and finding pardon must never be confounded with
-walking uprightly and counting on God. Both are blessedly true, but
-they are not the same thing.
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-At the second verse, Moses reminds the people of their
-covenant-relationship with Jehovah. He says, "The Lord _our_ God made
-a covenant with us in Horeb. The Lord made not this covenant with our
-fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day.
-The Lord talked with you face to face, in the mount, out of the midst
-of the fire, (I stood between the Lord and you at that time, to show
-you the word of the Lord; for ye were afraid by reason of the fire,
-and went not up into the mount) saying," etc.
-
-The reader must distinguish and thoroughly understand the difference
-between the covenant made at Horeb and the covenant made with Abraham,
-Isaac, and Jacob. They are essentially different. The former was a
-covenant of works, in which the people undertook to do all that the
-Lord had spoken: the latter was a covenant of pure grace, in which God
-pledged Himself with an oath to do all which He promised.
-
-Human language would utterly fail us to set forth the immense
-difference, in every respect, between these two covenants. In their
-basis, in their character, in their accompaniments, and in their
-practical result, they are as different as any two things could
-possibly be. The Horeb covenant rested upon human competency for the
-fulfillment of its terms, and this one fact is quite sufficient to
-account for the total failure of the whole thing. The Abrahamic
-covenant rested upon divine competency for the fulfillment of its
-terms, and hence the utter impossibility of its failure in a single
-jot or tittle.
-
-Having in our "Notes on the Book of Exodus" gone somewhat fully into
-the subject of the law, and endeavored to set forth the divine object
-in giving it, and, further, the utter impossibility of any one
-getting life or righteousness by keeping it, we must refer the reader
-to what we have there advanced on this profoundly interesting subject.
-
-It seems strange, to one taught exclusively by Scripture, that such
-confusion of thought should prevail amongst professing Christians in
-reference to a question so distinctly and definitively settled by the
-Holy Ghost. Were it merely a question of the divine authority of
-Exodus xx. or Deuteronomy v. as inspired portions of the Bible, we
-should not have a word to say. We most fully believe that these
-chapters are as much inspired as the seventeenth of John or the eighth
-of Romans.
-
-But this is not the point. All true Christians receive, with devout
-thankfulness, the precious statement that "all Scripture is given by
-inspiration of God;" and, further, they rejoice in the assurance that
-"whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our
-learning; that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might
-have hope;" and, finally, they believe that the morality of the law is
-of abiding and universal application. Murder, adultery, theft, false
-witness, covetousness, are wrong--always wrong--every-where wrong: to
-honor our parents is right--always and every-where right. We read, in
-the fourth chapter of Ephesians, "Let him that stole steal no more;"
-and again, in chapter vi, we read, "Honor thy father and mother; which
-is the first commandment with promise; that it may be well with thee,
-and thou mayest live long on the earth."
-
-All this is so divinely plain and settled that discussion is
-definitively closed; but when we come to look at the law as a ground
-of relationship with God, we get into an entirely different region of
-thought. Scripture, in manifold places, and in the clearest possible
-manner, teaches us that, as Christians, as children of God, we are not
-on that ground at all. The Jew was on that ground, but he could not
-stand there with God. It was death and condemnation. "They could not
-endure that which was commanded, 'And if so much as a beast touch the
-mountain, it shall be stoned, or thrust through with a dart;' and so
-terrible was the sight, that Moses said, 'I exceedingly fear and
-quake.'" The Jew found the law to be a bed on which he could not
-stretch himself, and a covering in which he could not wrap himself.
-
-As to the Gentile, he was never, by any one branch of the divine
-economy, placed under law. His condition is expressly declared, in the
-opening of the epistle to the Romans, to be "without law [+anomos+]."--"For
-when the Gentiles, which have not the law," etc., and, "As many as have
-sinned without law shall perish without law; and as many as have sinned
-in the law shall be judged by the law."
-
-Here the two classes are brought into sharp and vivid contrast, in the
-matter of their dispensational position. The Jew, under law; the
-Gentile, without law,--nothing can be more distinct. The Gentile was
-placed under government, in the person of Noah; but never under law.
-Should any one feel disposed to call this in question, let him produce
-a single line of Scripture to prove that God ever placed the Gentiles
-under the law. Let him search and see. It is of no possible use to
-argue and reason and object,--it is utterly vain to say, "_We think_"
-this or that: the question is, "What saith the Scripture?" If it says
-that the Gentiles were put under the law, let the passage be produced.
-We solemnly declare it says nothing of the kind, but the very reverse.
-It describes the condition and the position of the Gentile as "without
-law"--"having not the law."
-
-In Acts x, we see God opening the kingdom of heaven to the Gentile; in
-Acts xiv. 27, we see Him opening "the door of faith" to the Gentile;
-in Acts xxviii. 28, we see Him sending His salvation to the Gentile:
-but we search in vain, from cover to cover of the blessed Book, for a
-passage in which He places the Gentile under the law.
-
-We would very earnestly entreat the Christian reader to give this
-deeply interesting and important question his calm attention. Let him
-lay aside all his preconceived thoughts, and examine the matter simply
-in the light of holy Scripture. We are quite aware that our statements
-on this subject will be regarded by thousands as novel, if not
-actually heretical; but this does not move us, in the smallest degree.
-It is our one grand desire to be taught absolutely and exclusively by
-Scripture. The opinions, commandments, and doctrines of men have no
-weight whatever with us. The dogmas of the various schools of divinity
-must just go for what they are worth. We demand Scripture. A single
-line of inspiration is amply sufficient to settle this question, and
-close all discussion, forever. Let us be shown from the Word of God
-that the Gentiles were ever put under the law, and we shall at once
-bow; but inasmuch as we cannot find it there, we reject the notion
-altogether, and we would have the reader to do the same. The
-invariable language of Scripture, in describing the position of the
-Jew, is, "under law;" and, in describing the position of the Gentile,
-is, "without law." This is so obvious that we cannot but marvel how
-any reader of the Bible can fail to see it.[15]
-
- [15] The reader may perhaps feel disposed to inquire, On what ground
- will the Gentile be judged if he is not under the law? Romans i. 20
- teaches us distinctly that the testimony of _creation_ leaves him
- without excuse. Then, in chapter ii. 15, he is taken up on the ground
- of _conscience_.--"For _when the Gentiles, which have not the law_, do
- by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law,
- are a law unto themselves; which show the work of the law written in
- their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness," etc. Finally, as
- regards those nations that have become professedly Christian, they
- will be judged on the ground of their profession.
-
-If the reader will turn, for a few moments, to the fifteenth chapter
-of the Acts of the Apostles, he will see how the first attempt to put
-Gentile converts under the law was met by the apostles and the whole
-church at Jerusalem. The question was raised at Antioch; and God, in
-His infinite goodness and wisdom, so ordered that it should not be
-settled there, but that Paul and Barnabas should go up to Jerusalem
-and have the matter fully and freely discussed, and definitively
-settled by the unanimous voice of the twelve apostles and the whole
-church.
-
-How we can bless our God for this! We can at once see that the
-decision of a local assembly, such as Antioch, even though approved by
-Paul and Barnabas, would not carry the same weight as that of the
-twelve apostles assembled in council at Jerusalem. But the Lord,
-blessed be His name, took care that the enemy should be completely
-confounded, and that the law-teachers of that day, and of every other
-day, should be distinctly and authoritatively taught that it was not
-according to His mind that Christians should be put under law, for any
-object whatsoever.
-
-The subject is so deeply important that we cannot forbear quoting a
-few passages for the reader. We believe it will refresh both the
-reader and the writer to refer to the soul-stirring addresses
-delivered at the most remarkable and interesting council that ever
-sat.
-
-"And certain men which came down from Judaea taught the brethren,
-'Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be
-saved.'" How awful! How terribly chilling! What a death-knell to ring
-in the ears of those who had been converted under Paul's splendid
-address in the synagogue at Antioch!--"Be it known unto you therefore,
-men and brethren, that _through this Man_"--without circumcision or
-works of law of any kind whatsoever--"is preached unto you the
-forgiveness of sins; and _by Him_ all that believe"--irrespective
-altogether of circumcision--"_are_ justified _from all things_, from
-which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses.... And when the
-Jews were gone out of the synagogue, the Gentiles besought that these
-words might be preached to them the next Sabbath."
-
-Such was the glorious message sent to the Gentiles by the lips of the
-apostle Paul--a message of free, full, immediate, and perfect
-salvation--full remission of sins and perfect justification, through faith
-in our Lord Jesus Christ. But according to the teaching of the "certain
-men which came down from Judaea," all this was insufficient--Christ was
-not enough, without circumcision and the law of Moses. Poor Gentiles,
-who had never heard of circumcision or the law of Moses, must add to
-Christ and His glorious salvation the keeping of the whole law.
-
-How must Paul's heart have burned within him to have the beloved
-Gentile converts brought under such monstrous teaching as this! He saw
-in it nothing short of the complete surrender of Christianity. If
-circumcision must be added to the cross of Christ--if the law of Moses
-must supplement the grace of God, then verily all was gone.
-
-But, blessed forever be the God of all grace, He caused a noble stand
-to be made against such deadly teaching. When the enemy came in like a
-flood, the Spirit of the Lord raised up a standard against him. "When
-therefore Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and disputation
-with them, they determined that Paul and Barnabas, and certain other
-of them, should go up to Jerusalem, unto the apostles and elders
-about this question. And being brought on their way by the church,
-they passed through Phenice and Samaria, declaring," not the
-circumcision, but "the conversion of the Gentiles; and they caused
-great joy unto all the brethren."
-
-The brethren were in the current of the mind of Christ, and in sweet
-communion with the heart of God; and hence they rejoiced to hear of
-the conversion and salvation of the Gentiles. We may rest assured it
-would have afforded them no joy to hear of the heavy yoke of
-circumcision and the law of Moses being put upon the necks of those
-beloved disciples who had just been brought into the glorious liberty
-of the gospel. But to hear of their conversion to God, their salvation
-by Christ, their being sealed by the Holy Ghost, filled their hearts
-with a joy which was in lovely harmony with the mind of heaven.
-
-"And when they were come to Jerusalem, they were received of the
-church, and of the apostles and elders, and they declared all things
-that God had done with them. But there rose up certain of the sect of
-the Pharisees which believed, saying that it was needful to circumcise
-them, and to command them to keep the law of Moses."
-
-Who made it "needful"? Not God, surely; inasmuch as He had, in His
-infinite grace, opened the door of faith to them without circumcision
-or any command to keep the law of Moses. No; it was "certain men" who
-presumed to speak of such things as needful--men who have troubled
-the Church of God from that day to the present--men "desiring to be
-teachers of the law, knowing neither what they say nor whereof they
-affirm." Law-teachers never know what is involved in their dark and
-dismal teaching. They have not the most distant idea of how thoroughly
-hateful their teaching is to the God of all grace, the Father of
-mercies.
-
-But, thanks be to God, the chapter from which We are now quoting
-affords the very clearest and most forcible evidence that could be
-given as to the divine mind on the subject. It proves, beyond all
-question, that it was not of God to put Gentile believers under the
-law.
-
-"And the apostles and elders came together for to consider of this
-matter. And when there had been much disputing" (alas! how soon it
-began!) "Peter rose up and said unto them, Men and brethren, ye know
-how that a good while ago God made choice among us, that the Gentiles
-by my mouth should hear," not the law of Moses or circumcision, but
-"the word of the gospel, and believe. And God which knoweth the
-hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as unto
-us. _And put no difference between us and them_, purifying their
-hearts by faith. Now therefore _why tempt ye God_, to put a yoke upon
-the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able
-to bear?"
-
-Mark this, reader. The law had proved an intolerable yoke to those who
-were under it, that is, the Jews; and, further, it was nothing short
-of tempting God to put that yoke upon the neck of Gentile Christians.
-Would that all the law-teachers throughout the length and breadth of
-christendom would but open their eyes to this grand fact! and not only
-so, but that all the Lord's beloved people every where were given to
-see that it is in positive opposition to the will of God that they
-should be put under the law for any object whatsoever. "But," adds the
-blessed apostle of the circumcision, "we believe that through the
-grace of the Lord Jesus Christ," and not by law in any shape or form,
-"_we shall be saved even as they_."
-
-This is uncommonly fine, coming from the lips of the apostle of the
-circumcision. He does not say, They shall be saved even as we; but,
-"We shall be saved even as they." The Jew is well content to come down
-from his lofty dispensational position, and be saved after the pattern
-of the poor uncircumcised Gentile. Surely, those noble utterances must
-have fallen in stunning force upon the ears of the law-party. They
-left them, as we say, not a leg to stand upon.
-
-"Then all the multitude kept silence, and gave audience to Barnabas
-and Paul, declaring what miracles and wonders God had wrought among
-the Gentiles by them." The inspiring Spirit has not thought good to
-tell us what Paul and Barnabas said on this memorable occasion, and we
-can see His wisdom in this. It is evidently His object to give
-prominence to Peter and James, as men whose words would, of necessity,
-have more weight with the law-teachers than those of the apostle to
-the Gentiles and his companion.
-
-"And after they had held their peace, James answered, saying, Men and
-brethren, hearken unto me: Simeon hath declared how God at the first
-did visit the Gentiles," not to convert them all, but "to take out of
-them a people for His name. And to this agree the words of the
-prophets;" (here he brings an overwhelming tide of evidence from the
-Old Testament to bear down upon the Judaizers,) "as it is written,
-After this I will return, and will build again the tabernacle of
-David, which is fallen down; and I will build again the ruins thereof,
-and I will set it up: that the residue of men might seek after the
-Lord, and _all the Gentiles_," without the slightest reference to
-circumcision or the law of Moses, but "upon whom My name is called,
-saith the Lord, who doeth all these things. Known unto God are all His
-works from the beginning of the world. Wherefore my sentence is, that
-we trouble not them, which from among the Gentiles are turned to God."
-
-Here, then, we have this great question definitively settled by the
-Holy Ghost, the twelve apostles, and the whole Church; and we cannot
-but be struck with the fact that, at this most important council, none
-spoke more emphatically, more distinctly, or more decidedly than Peter
-and James; the former, the apostle of the circumcision, and the
-latter, the one who specially addressed the twelve tribes, and whose
-position and ministry were calculated to give great weight to his
-words, in the judgment of all who were still, in any measure,
-occupying Jewish or legal ground. Both these eminent apostles were
-clear and decided in their judgment that the Gentile converts were not
-to be "troubled" or burdened with the law. They proved, in their
-powerful addresses, that to place the Gentile Christians under the law
-was directly contrary to the Word, the will, and the ways of God.
-
-Who can fail to see the marvelous wisdom of God in this? The words of
-Paul and Barnabas are not recorded. We are simply told that they
-rehearsed what things God had wrought among the Gentiles. That they
-should be utterly opposed to putting the Gentiles under the law was
-only what might be expected; but to find Peter and James so decided
-would carry great weight with all parties.
-
-But if the reader would have a clear view of Paul's thoughts on the
-question of the law, he should study the epistle to the Galatians.
-There this blessed apostle, under the direct inspiration of the Holy
-Ghost, pours out his heart to the Gentile converts in words of glowing
-earnestness and commanding power. It is perfectly amazing how any one
-can read this wonderful epistle and yet maintain that Christians are
-under the law, in any way or for any purpose. Hardly has the apostle
-got through his brief opening address when he plunges, with his
-characteristic energy, into the subject with which his large, loving,
-though grieved and troubled heart is full to overflowing. "I marvel,"
-he says--and well he might--"that ye are so soon removed from Him that
-called you into"--what? The law of Moses? Nay, but "the grace of
-Christ into a different gospel which is not another [+heteron
-euangelion ho ouk estin allo+]; but there be some that trouble you,
-and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we or an angel from
-heaven preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have
-preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so say I
-now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye
-have received, let him be accursed."
-
-Let all law-teachers ponder these burning words. Do they seem strong
-and severe? Let us remember that they are the very words of God the
-Holy Ghost. Yes, reader, God the Holy Ghost hurls His awful anathema
-at any one who presumes to add the law of Moses to the gospel of
-Christ--any one who attempts to place Christians under the law. How is
-it that men are not afraid, in the face of such words, to contend for
-the law? Are they not afraid of coming under the solemn curse of God
-the Holy Ghost?
-
-Some, however, seek to meet this question by telling us that they do
-not take the law for justification, but as a rule of life; but this is
-neither reasonable nor intelligent, inasmuch as we may very lawfully
-inquire, Who gave us authority to decide as to the use we are to make
-of the law? We are either under the law or we are not. If we are under
-it at all, it is not a question of how we take it, but how it takes
-us.
-
-This makes all the difference. The law knows no such distinctions as
-those which some theologians contend for. If we are under it for any
-object whatsoever, we are under the curse; for it is written, "Cursed
-is every one that continueth not in _all_ things which are written in
-the book of the law to do them." To say that I am born again, I am a
-Christian, will not meet the case at all; for what has the law to do
-with the question of new birth, or of Christianity? Nothing whatever.
-The law is addressed to man, as a responsible being. It demands
-perfect obedience, and pronounces its curse upon every one who fails
-to render it.
-
-Moreover, it will not do to say that though we have failed to keep the
-law, yet Christ has fulfilled it in our room and stead. The law knows
-nothing of obedience by proxy. Its language is, "The man that doeth
-them shall live in them."
-
-Nor is it merely on the man who fails to keep the law that the curse
-is pronounced, but, as if to put the principle in the clearest
-possible light before us, we read that "as many as are of works of law
-are under the curse." (See Greek.) That is, as many as take their
-stand on legal ground--as many as are on that principle--in a word, as
-many as have to do with works of law, are, of necessity, under the
-curse. Hence we may see at a glance the terrible inconsistency of a
-Christian's maintaining the idea of being under the law as a rule of
-life and yet not being under the curse. It is simply flying in the
-face of the very plainest statements of holy Scripture. Blessed be
-the God of all grace, the Christian is not under the curse. But why?
-Is it because the law has lost its power, its majesty, its dignity,
-its holy stringency? By no means. To say so were to blaspheme the law.
-To say that any "man," call him what you please--Christian, Jew, or
-heathen--can be under the law, can stand on that ground, and yet not
-be under the curse, is to say that he perfectly fulfills the law or
-that the law is abrogated--it is to make it null and void. Who will
-dare to say this? Woe be to all who do so.
-
-But how comes it to pass that the Christian is not under the curse?
-Because he is not under the law. And how has he passed from under the
-law? Is it by another having fulfilled it in his stead? Nay; we repeat
-the statement, there is no such idea throughout the entire legal
-economy as obedience by proxy. How is it, then? Here it is, in all its
-moral force, fullness, and beauty: "_I_ through law am dead to law,
-that I might live unto God."[16]
-
- [16] The omission of the article adds immensely to the force,
- fullness, and clearness of the passage. It is +dia nomou nomo
- apethanon+. A wonderful clause, surely. Would that it were better
- understood! It demolishes a vast mass of human theology. It leaves the
- law in its own proper sphere; but takes the believer completely from
- under its power, and out of its range, by death. "Wherefore, my
- brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ;
- that ye should be married to another, even to Him who is raised from
- the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God" (which we never
- could do if under the law). "For when we were in the flesh"--a
- correlative term with being under the law--"the motions of sins, which
- were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto
- death." Mark the melancholy combination--"under the law"--"in the
- flesh"--"motions of sins"--"fruit unto death"! Can any thing be more
- strongly marked? But there is another side, thank God, to this
- question--His own bright and blessed side. Here it is: "But now _we
- are delivered from the law_." How? Is it by another's having fulfilled
- it for us? Nay; but, "_Having died to that_ [+apothanontes en
- ho] wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit,
- and not in the oldness of the letter." How perfect and how lovely is
- the harmony of Romans vii. and Galatians ii.! "I through law am dead
- to law, that I might live unto God."]
-
-Now, if it be true, and the apostle says it is, that we are _dead to
-law_, how can the law, by any possibility, be a rule of life to us? It
-proved _only_ a rule of death, curse, and condemnation to those who
-were under it--those who had received it by the disposition of angels.
-Can it prove to be aught else to us? Did the law ever produce a single
-cluster of living fruit, or of the fruits of righteousness, in the
-history of any son or daughter of Adam? Hear the apostle's
-reply--"When we were in the flesh," that is, when we were viewed as
-men in our fallen nature, "the motions of sins, which were by the law,
-did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death."
-
-It is very important for the reader to understand the real force of
-the expression, "in the flesh." It does not, in this passage, mean "in
-the body." It simply sets forth the condition of unconverted men and
-women responsible to keep the law. Now, in this condition, all that
-was or ever could be produced was "fruit unto death"--"motions of
-sins." No life, no righteousness, no holiness, nothing for God,
-nothing right at all.[17]
-
- [17] It is needful to bear in mind that although the Gentile was
- never, by the dispensational dealings of God, put under the law, yet,
- in point of fact, all baptized professors take that ground. Hence
- there is a vast difference between christendom and the heathen in
- reference to the question of the law. Thousands of unconverted people,
- every week, ask God to incline their hearts to keep the law. Surely,
- such persons stand on very different ground from the heathen who never
- heard of the law, and never heard of the Bible.
-
-But where are we now, as Christians? Hear the reply--"I through law am
-dead to law, that I might live unto God. I am crucified with Christ:
-nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the life
-which I now live in the flesh" (here it means in the body) "I
-live"--how? By the law, as a rule of life? Not a hint at such a thing,
-but "by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself
-for me."
-
-This, and nothing else, is Christianity. Do we understand it? do we
-enter into it? are we in the power of it? There are two distinct evils
-from which we are completely delivered by the precious death of
-Christ, namely, legality on the one hand and licentiousness on the
-other. Instead of those terrible evils, it introduces us into the holy
-liberty of grace--liberty to serve God--liberty to "mortify our
-members which are upon the earth"--liberty to deny "ungodliness and
-worldly lusts"--liberty to "live soberly, righteously, and
-godly"--liberty to "keep under the body and bring it into subjection."
-
-Yes, beloved Christian reader, let us remember this; let us deeply
-ponder the words, "I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live;
-yet not I, but Christ liveth in me." The old "I" dead--crucified,
-buried: the new "I" alive in Christ. Let us not mistake this. We know
-of nothing more awful, nothing more dangerous, than for the old "I" to
-assume the new ground; or, in other words, the glorious doctrines of
-Christianity taken up in the flesh--unconverted people talking of
-being free from the law, and turning the grace of God into
-lasciviousness. We must confess we would rather, a thousand times,
-have legality than licentiousness. It is this latter that many of us
-have to watch against with all possible earnestness. It is growing
-around us with appalling rapidity, and paving the way for that dark
-and desolating tide of infidelity which shall, ere long, roll over the
-length and breadth of christendom.
-
-To talk of being free from the law in any way save by being dead to
-it, and alive to God, is not Christianity at all, but licentiousness,
-from which every pious soul must shrink with holy horror. If we are
-dead to the law, we are dead to sin also; and hence we are not to do
-our own will, which is only another name for sin; but the will of God,
-which is true practical holiness.
-
-Further, let us ever bear in mind that if we are dead to the law, we
-are dead to this present evil world also, and linked with a risen,
-ascended, and glorified Christ. Hence, we are not of the world, even
-as Christ is not of the world. To contend for position in the world is
-to deny that we are dead to the law; for we cannot be alive to the one
-and dead to the other. The death of Christ has delivered us from the
-law, from the power of sin, from this present evil world, and from
-the fear of death. But then all these things hang together, and we
-cannot be delivered from one without being delivered from all. To
-assert our freedom from the law, while pursuing a course of carnality,
-self-indulgence, and worldliness, is one of the darkest and deadliest
-evils of the last days.
-
-The Christian is called to prove, in his daily life, that grace can
-produce results that law could never reach. It is one of the moral
-glories of Christianity to enable a man to surrender self and live for
-others. Law never could do this. It occupied a man with himself. Under
-its rule, every man had to do the best he could for himself. If he
-tried to love his neighbor, it was to work out a righteousness for
-himself. Under grace, all is blessedly and gloriously reversed--self
-is set aside as a thing crucified, dead, and buried; the old "I" is
-gone, and the new "I" is before God in all the acceptability and
-preciousness of Christ; He is our life, our righteousness, our
-holiness, our object, our model, our all; He is in us and we are in
-Him, and our daily practical life is to be simply Christ reproduced in
-us by the power of the Holy Ghost. Hence, we are not only called to
-love our neighbor, but our enemy; and this, not to work out a
-righteousness, for we have become the righteousness of God in Christ:
-it is simply the outflow of the life which we possess--which is in us,
-and this life is Christ. A Christian is a man who should live Christ.
-He is neither a Jew "under law" nor a Gentile "without law," but "a
-man in Christ," standing in grace, called to the same character of
-obedience as that which was rendered by the Lord Jesus Himself.
-
-We shall not pursue this subject further here, but we earnestly
-entreat the Christian reader to study attentively the fifteenth
-chapter of Acts and the epistle to the Galatians. Let him drink in the
-blessed teaching of these scriptures, and we feel assured he will
-arrive at a clear understanding of the great question of the law. He
-will see that the Christian is not under the law for any purpose
-whatsoever; that his life, his righteousness, his holiness, are on a
-different ground or principle altogether; that to place the Christian
-under law in any way is to deny the very foundations of Christianity
-and contradict the plainest statements of the Word. He will learn,
-from the third chapter of Galatians, that to put ourselves under the
-law is to give up Christ, to give up the Holy Ghost, to give up faith,
-to give up the promises.
-
-Tremendous consequences! But there they are, plainly set forth before
-our eyes; and truly, when we contemplate the state of the professing
-church, we cannot but see how terribly those consequences are being
-realized.
-
-May God the Holy Ghost open the eyes of all Christians to the truth of
-these things. May He lead them to study the Scriptures, and to submit
-themselves to their holy authority in all things. This is the special
-need of this our day. We do not study Scripture sufficiently; we are
-not governed by it; we do not see the absolute necessity of testing
-every thing by the light of Scripture, and rejecting all that will not
-stand the test; we go on with a quantity of things that have no
-foundation whatever in the Word--yea, that are positively opposed to
-it.
-
-What must be the end of all this? We tremble to think of it. We know,
-blessed be God, that our Lord Jesus Christ will soon come and take His
-own beloved and blood-bought people home to the prepared place in the
-Father's house, to be forever with Himself, in the ineffable
-blessedness of that bright home; but what of those who shall be left
-behind? what of that vast mass of baptized worldly profession? These
-are solemn questions, which must be weighed in the immediate presence
-of God, in order to have the true, the divine answer. Let the reader
-ponder them there, in all tenderness of heart and teachableness of
-spirit, and the Holy Ghost will lead him to the true answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having sought to set forth, from various parts of Scripture, the
-glorious truth that believers are not under law, but under grace, we
-may now pursue our study of this fifth chapter of Deuteronomy. In it
-we have the ten commandments, but not exactly as we have them in the
-twentieth chapter of Exodus. There are some characteristic touches
-which demand the reader's attention.
-
-In Exodus xx, we have history; in Deuteronomy v, we have not only
-history, but commentary. In the latter, the lawgiver presents moral
-motives, and makes appeals which would be wholly out of place in the
-former. In the one, we have naked facts; in the other, facts and
-comments--facts and their practical application. In a word, there is
-not the slightest ground for imagining that Deuteronomy v. is intended
-to be a literal repetition of Exodus xx; and hence the miserable
-arguments which infidels ground upon their apparent divergence just
-crumble into dust beneath our feet. They are simply baseless, and
-utterly contemptible.
-
-Let us, for instance, compare the two scriptures in reference to the
-subject of the Sabbath. In Exodus xx, we read, "Remember the Sabbath
-day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work;
-but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou
-shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy
-man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger
-that is within thy gates: _for in six days the Lord made heaven and
-earth, the sea, and all that in them is_, and rested the seventh day;
-wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it."
-
-In Deuteronomy v, we read, "Keep the Sabbath day to sanctify it, _as
-the Lord thy God hath commanded thee_. Six days thou shalt labor, and
-do all thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
-God; in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy
-daughter, nor thy man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, _nor thine ox,
-nor thine ass_, nor any of thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is
-within thy gates; that thy man-servant and thy maid-servant may rest
-as well as thou. _And remember that thou wast a servant in the land of
-Egypt, and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence, through a
-mighty hand and by a stretched-out arm; therefore the Lord thy God
-commanded thee to keep the Sabbath day._" (Ver. 12-15.)
-
-Now, the reader can see at a glance the difference between the two
-passages. In Exodus xx, the command to keep the Sabbath is grounded on
-_creation_; in Deuteronomy v, it is grounded on _redemption_, without
-any allusion to creation at all. In short, the points of difference
-arise out of the distinct character of each book, and are perfectly
-plain to every spiritual mind.
-
-With regard to the institution of the Sabbath, we must remember that
-it rests wholly upon the direct authority of the word of God. Other
-commandments set forth plain moral duties. Every man knows it to be
-morally wrong to kill or steal; but as to the observance of the
-Sabbath, no one could possibly recognize it as a duty had it not been
-distinctly appointed by divine authority. Hence its immense importance
-and interest. Both in our chapter and in Exodus xx. it stands side by
-side with all those great moral duties which are universally
-recognized by the human conscience.
-
-And not only so, but we find, in various other scriptures, that the
-Sabbath is singled out and presented, with special prominence, as a
-precious link between Jehovah and Israel, a seal of His covenant with
-them, and a powerful test of their devotedness to Him. Every one could
-recognize the moral wrong of theft and murder; only those who loved
-Jehovah and His word would love and honor His Sabbath.
-
-Thus, in the sixteenth chapter of Exodus, in connection with the
-giving of the manna, we read, "And it came to pass, that on the sixth
-day they gathered twice as much bread, two omers for one man; and all
-the rulers of the congregation came and told Moses. And he said unto
-them, 'This is that which the Lord hath said, To-morrow is _the rest
-of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord_: bake that which ye will bake
-to-day, and seethe that ye will seethe; and that which remaineth over
-lay up for you, to be kept until the morning.'... And Moses said,
-'Eat that to-day; for to-day is _a Sabbath unto the Lord_; to-day ye
-shall not find it in the field. Six days ye shall gather it; but on
-the seventh day, which is the Sabbath, in it there shall be none.' And
-it came to pass,"--so little were they capable of appreciating the
-high and holy privilege of keeping Jehovah's Sabbath--"that there went
-out some of the people on the seventh day for to gather, and they
-found none. And the Lord said unto Moses, 'How long refuse ye to keep
-My commandments and My laws?'" Their neglect of the Sabbath proved
-their moral condition to be all wrong--proved them to be astray as to
-all the commandments and laws of God. The Sabbath was the great
-touchstone--the measure and gauge of the real state of their hearts
-toward Jehovah. "See, for that the Lord hath _given you_ the Sabbath,
-therefore He giveth you on the sixth day the bread of two days; abide
-ye every man in his place; let no man go out of his place on the
-seventh day. So the people rested on the seventh day." They found rest
-and food on the holy Sabbath.
-
-Again, at the close of chapter xxxi, we have a very remarkable passage
-in proof of the importance and interest attaching to the Sabbath in
-the mind of Jehovah. A full description of the tabernacle and its
-furniture had been given to Moses, and he was about to receive the two
-tables of testimony from the hand of Jehovah; but, as if to prove the
-prominent place which the holy Sabbath held in the divine mind, we
-read, "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 'Speak thou also unto
-the children of Israel, saying, Verily My Sabbaths ye shall keep: _for
-it is a sign between Me and you throughout your generations_; that ye
-may know that I am the Lord that doth sanctify you. Ye shall keep the
-Sabbath therefore; for it is holy unto you: every one that defileth it
-shall surely be put to death; for whosoever doeth any work therein,
-that soul shall be cut off from among his people. Six days may work be
-done; but in the seventh is the Sabbath of rest, holy to the Lord:
-whosoever doeth any work in the Sabbath day, he shall surely be put to
-death. Wherefore the children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to
-observe the Sabbath throughout their generations, _for a perpetual
-covenant_. _It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel
-forever_: for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and on the
-seventh day He rested, and was refreshed." (Exod. xxxi. 12-17.)
-
-Now, this is a very important passage. It proves very distinctly the
-abiding character of the Sabbath. The terms in which it is spoken of
-are quite sufficient to show that it was no mere temporary
-institution.--"A sign between Me and you throughout your
-generations."--"A perpetual covenant."--"A sign forever."
-
-Let the reader carefully mark these words. They prove, beyond all
-question, first, that the Sabbath was for Israel; secondly, that the
-Sabbath is, in the mind of God, a permanent institution. It is needful
-to bear these things in mind in order to avoid all vagueness of
-thought and looseness of expression on this deeply interesting
-subject.
-
-The Sabbath was distinctly and exclusively for the Jewish nation. It
-is spoken of emphatically as a sign between Jehovah and His people
-Israel. There is not the most remote hint of its being intended for
-the Gentiles. We shall see, further on, that it is a lovely type of
-the times of the restitution of all things, of which God has spoken by
-the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began; but this in
-no wise touches the fact of its being an exclusively Jewish
-institution. There is not so much as a single sentence of Scripture to
-show that the Sabbath had any reference whatever to the Gentiles.
-
-Some would teach us that inasmuch as we read of the Sabbath day in the
-second chapter of Genesis, it must, of necessity, have a wider range
-than the Jewish nation. But let us turn to the passage and see what it
-says.--"And on the seventh day God ended His work which He had made;
-and He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made.
-And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it; because that in it
-He had rested from all His work which God created and made."
-
-This is simple enough. There is no mention here of man at all. We are
-not told that man rested on the seventh day. Men may infer, conclude,
-or imagine that he did so; but the second of Genesis says nothing
-about it. And not only so, but we look in vain for any allusion to the
-Sabbath throughout the entire book of Genesis. The very first notice
-we have of the Sabbath in connection with man, is in the sixteenth of
-Exodus, a passage already quoted; and there we see, most distinctly, that
-it was given to Israel, as a people in recognized covenant-relationship
-with Jehovah. That they did not understand or appreciate it is
-perfectly plain; that they never entered into it is equally plain,
-according to psalm xcv. and Hebrews iv. But we are now speaking of
-what it was in the mind of God; and He tells us it was a sign between
-Him and His people Israel, and a powerful test of their moral
-condition and of the state of their heart as to Him. It was not only
-an integral part of the law, as given by Moses to the congregation of
-Israel, but it is specially referred to and singled out, again and
-again, as an institution holding a very peculiar place in the mind of
-God.
-
-Thus, in the book of the prophet Isaiah, we read, "Blessed is the man
-that doeth this, and the son of man that layeth hold on it; that
-keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and keepeth his hand from doing
-any evil. Neither let the son of the stranger, that hath joined
-himself to the Lord, speak, saying, The Lord hath utterly separated me
-from His people; neither let the eunuch say, Behold I am a dry tree.
-For thus saith the Lord unto the eunuchs that keep My Sabbaths, and
-choose the things that please Me, and take hold of My covenant; even
-unto them will I give in Mine house, and within My walls, a place and
-a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an
-everlasting name that shall not be cut off. Also the sons of the
-stranger," (here, of course, viewed in connection with Israel, as in
-Numbers xv. and other scriptures,) "that join themselves to the Lord,
-to serve Him, and to love the name of the Lord, to be His servants,
-every one that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it, and taketh hold
-of My covenant; even them will I bring to My holy mountain, and make
-them joyful in My house of prayer: their burnt-offerings and their
-sacrifices shall be accepted upon Mine altar; for Mine house shall be
-called a house of prayer for all people."
-
-Again, "If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy
-pleasure on My holy day; and call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of
-the Lord, honorable; and shalt honor Him, not doing thine own ways,
-nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words: then
-shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord; and I will cause thee to ride
-upon the high places of the earth, and feed thee with the heritage of
-Jacob thy father; for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it." (Isaiah
-lviii. 13, 14.)
-
-The foregoing quotations are amply sufficient to show the place which
-the Sabbath holds in the mind of God. It is needless to multiply
-passages, but there is just one to which we must refer the reader, in
-connection with our present subject, namely, Leviticus xxiii.--"And
-the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 'Speak unto the children of Israel,
-and say unto them, Concerning the feasts of the Lord, which ye shall
-proclaim to be holy convocations, even these are My feasts. Six days
-shall work be done; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of rest, a holy
-convocation; ye shall do no work therein: it is the Sabbath of the
-Lord in all your dwellings." (Ver. 1-3.)
-
-Here it stands at the head of all the feasts given in this marvelous
-chapter, in which we have foreshadowed the entire history of God's
-dealings with His people Israel. The Sabbath is the expression of
-God's eternal rest, into which it is His purpose yet to bring His
-people, when all their toils and sorrows, their trials and
-tribulations, shall have passed away--that blessed "Sabbath-keeping
-[+sabbatismos+]" which "remaineth for the people of God." In
-various ways He sought to keep this glorious rest before the hearts of
-His people; the seventh day, the seventh year, the year of
-jubilee--all these lovely sabbatic seasons were designed to set forth
-that blessed time when Israel shall be gathered back to their own
-beloved land, when the Sabbath shall be kept, in all its deep, divine
-blessedness, as it never has been kept yet.
-
-And this leads us, naturally, to the second point in connection with
-the Sabbath, namely, its permanency. This is plainly proved by such
-expressions as, "perpetual," "a sign forever," "throughout your
-generations." Such words would never be applied to any merely
-temporary institution. True it is, alas! that Israel never really kept
-the Sabbath according to God; they never understood its meaning, never
-entered into its blessedness, never drank into its spirit. They made
-it a badge of their own righteousness; they boasted in it as a
-national institution, and used it for self-exaltation; but they never
-celebrated it in communion with God.
-
-We speak of the nation as a whole. We doubt not there were precious
-souls who, in secret, enjoyed the Sabbath, and entered into the
-thoughts of God about it; but as a nation, Israel never kept the
-Sabbath according to God. Hear what Isaiah says, "Bring no more vain
-oblations; incense is an abomination unto Me; the new moons and
-_Sabbaths_, the calling of assemblies, I cannot away with; it is
-iniquity, even the solemn meeting." (Chap. i. 13.)
-
-Here we see that the precious and beautiful institution of the Sabbath
-which God had given as a sign of His covenant with His people, had, in
-their hands, become a positive abomination, perfectly intolerable to
-Him. And when we open the pages of the New Testament, we find the
-leaders and heads of the Jewish people continually at issue with our
-Lord Jesus Christ in reference to the Sabbath. Look, for example, at
-the opening verses of Luke vi.--"And it came to pass on the second
-Sabbath after the first, that He went through the corn-fields; and His
-disciples plucked the ears of corn, and did eat, rubbing them in their
-hands. And certain of the Pharisees said unto them, 'Why do ye that
-which is not lawful to do on the Sabbath days?' And Jesus answering
-them said, 'Have ye not read so much as this, what David did, when
-himself was a hungred, and they which were with him; how he went into
-the house of God, and did take and eat the show-bread, and gave also
-to them that were with him; which it is not lawful to eat, but for the
-priests alone?' And He said unto them that the Son of Man is Lord also
-of the Sabbath."
-
-And again, we read, "It came to pass also on another Sabbath, that He
-entered into the synagogue and taught; and there was a man whose right
-hand was withered. And the scribes and Pharisees _watched Him_,
-whether He would heal on the Sabbath day, that they might find an
-accusation against Him." (Only conceive, an accusation for healing a
-poor, afflicted fellow-mortal!) "But He knew their thoughts"--yes, He
-read their hearts through to their very centre, "and said to the man
-which had the withered hand, 'Rise up, and stand forth in the midst.'
-And he arose and stood forth. Then said Jesus unto them, 'I will ask
-you one thing, Is it lawful on the Sabbath day to do good, or to do
-evil? to save life, or to destroy it?' And looking round about upon
-them all, He said unto the man, 'Stretch forth thine hand.' And he did
-so; and his hand was restored whole as the other. And they were filled
-with madness; and communed one with another what they might do to
-Jesus."
-
-What an insight we have here into the hollowness and worthlessness of
-man's Sabbath-keeping! Those religious guides would rather let the
-disciples starve than have _their_ Sabbath interfered with; they would
-allow the man to carry his withered hand to the grave rather than have
-him healed on _their_ Sabbath. Alas! alas! it was indeed their
-Sabbath, and not God's. His rest could never comport with hunger and
-withered hands. They had never read aright the record of David's act
-in eating the show-bread. They did not understand that legal
-institutions must give way in the presence of divine grace meeting
-human need. Grace rises, in its magnificence, above all legal
-barriers, and faith rejoices in its lustre; but mere religiousness is
-offended by the activities of grace and the boldness of faith. The
-Pharisees did not see that the man with the withered hand was a
-striking commentary upon the nation's moral condition, a living proof
-of the fact that they were far away from God. If they were as they
-ought to be, there would have been no withered hands to heal; but they
-were not, and hence their Sabbath was an empty formality--a powerless,
-worthless ordinance--a hideous anomaly, hateful to God, and utterly
-inconsistent with the condition of man.
-
-Take another instance, in Luke xiii.--"And He was teaching in one of
-the synagogues on the Sabbath." (Assuredly, the Sabbath was no day of
-rest to Him.) "And, behold, there was a woman which had a spirit of
-infirmity eighteen years, and was bowed together, and could in no wise
-lift up herself. And when Jesus saw her, He called her to Him, and
-said unto her, 'Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity.' And He
-laid His hands on her, and _immediately she was made straight, and
-glorified God_." Beautiful illustration of the work of grace in the
-soul, and the practical result, in every case. All on whom Christ lays
-His blessed hands are "immediately made straight," and enabled to
-glorify God.
-
-But man's Sabbath was touched. "The ruler of the synagogue answered
-with indignation, because that Jesus had healed on the Sabbath day."
-He was indignant at the gracious work of healing, though quite
-indifferent as to the humiliating case of infirmity; and he "said unto
-the people, 'There are six days in which men ought to work: in them
-therefore come and be healed, and not on the Sabbath day.'" How little
-this poor hollow religionist knew that he was in the very presence of
-the Lord of the true Sabbath! How utterly insensible he was to the
-moral inconsistency of attempting to keep a Sabbath while man's
-condition called aloud for divine work! "The Lord then answered him,
-and said, 'Thou hypocrite, doth not each one of you on the Sabbath
-loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead him away to
-watering? And ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, whom
-Satan hath bound, lo, these eighteen years, be loosed from this bond
-on the Sabbath day?'"
-
-What a withering rebuke! What an opening up of the hollowness and
-utter wretchedness of their whole system of Judaism! Only think of the
-glaring incongruity of a Sabbath and a daughter of Abraham bound by
-the cruel hand of Satan for eighteen years! There is nothing in all
-this world so blinding to the mind, so hardening to the heart, so
-deadening to the conscience, so demoralizing to the whole being, as
-religion without Christ. Its deceiving and degrading power can only be
-thoroughly judged in the light of the divine presence. For aught that
-the ruler of the synagogue cared, that poor woman might have gone on
-to the end of her days bowed together and unable to lift up herself.
-He would have been well content to let her go on as a sad witness of
-the power of Satan, provided he could keep his Sabbath. His religious
-indignation was excited, not by the power of Satan as seen in the
-woman's condition, but by the power of Christ as seen in her complete
-deliverance.
-
-But the Lord gave him his answer. "And when He had said these things,
-all His adversaries were ashamed" (as well they might); "and all the
-people rejoiced for all the glorious things that were done by Him."
-What a striking contrast! The advocates of a powerless, heartless,
-worthless religion unmasked and covered with shame and confusion on
-the one hand, and on the other, all the people rejoicing in the
-glorious actings of the Son of God, who had come into their midst to
-deliver them from the crushing power of Satan, and fill their hearts
-with the joy of God's salvation, and their mouths with His praise!
-
-We must now ask the reader to turn to the gospel of John for further
-illustration of our subject. We earnestly desire that this vexed
-question of the Sabbath should be thoroughly examined in the light of
-Scripture. We are convinced that there is very much more involved in
-it than many professing Christians are aware.
-
-At the opening of John v, we are introduced to a scene strikingly
-indicative of Israel's condition. We do not here attempt to go fully
-into the passage, we merely refer to it in connection with the subject
-before us.
-
-The pool of Bethesda, or "house of mercy"--while it was undoubtedly
-the expression of the mercy of God toward His people--afforded
-abundant evidence of the miserable condition of man in general, and of
-Israel in particular. Its five porches were thronged with "a great
-multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the
-moving of the water." What a sample of the whole human family, and of
-the nation of Israel! What a striking illustration of their moral and
-spiritual condition as viewed from a divine stand-point. "Blind, halt,
-withered"--such is man's real state, if he only knew it.
-
-But there was one man in the midst of this impotent throng so far
-gone--so feeble and helpless, that the pool of Bethesda could not meet
-his case. "A certain man was there, which had an infirmity thirty and
-eight years. When Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been now a
-long time in that case, He saith unto him, 'Wilt thou _be made_
-whole?'" What grace and power in this question! It went far beyond the
-utmost stretch of the impotent man's thoughts. He thought only of
-human help, or of his own ability to get into the pool. He knew not
-that the speaker was above and beyond the pool, with its occasional
-movement--beyond angelic ministry--beyond all human help and effort,
-the Possessor of all power in heaven and on earth. "The impotent man
-answered Him, 'Sir, I have no man, when the water is troubled, to put
-me into the pool; but while I am coming, another steppeth down before
-me.'" What a true picture of all those who are seeking salvation by
-ordinances! Each one doing the best he could for himself. No care for
-others. No thought of helping them. "Jesus saith unto him, 'Rise, take
-up thy bed, and walk.' And immediately the man was made whole, and
-took up his bed, and walked: _and on the same day was the Sabbath_."
-
-Here we have man's Sabbath again. It certainly was not God's Sabbath.
-The miserable multitude gathered around the pool proved that God's
-full rest had not yet come--that His glorious antitype of the Sabbath
-had not yet dawned on this sin-stricken earth. When that bright day
-comes, there will be no blind, halt, and withered folk thronging the
-porches of the pool of Bethesda. God's Sabbath and human misery are
-wholly incompatible.
-
-But it was man's Sabbath. It was no longer the seal of Jehovah's
-covenant with the seed of Abraham (as it was once, and will be again),
-but the badge of man's self-righteousness. "The Jews therefore said
-unto him that was cured, 'It is the Sabbath day; it is not lawful for
-thee to carry thy bed.'" It was no doubt lawful enough for him to lie
-on that bed, week after week, month after month, year after year,
-while they were going on with their empty, worthless, hollow attempt
-at Sabbath-keeping. If they had had one ray of spiritual light, they
-would have seen the flagrant inconsistency of attempting to maintain
-their traditionary notions respecting the Sabbath in the presence of
-human misery, disease, and degradation. But they were utterly blind,
-and hence when the glorious fruits of Christ's ministry were being
-displayed, they had the temerity to pronounce them unlawful.
-
-Nor this only; but "therefore did the Jews persecute Jesus, and sought
-to slay Him, because He had done these things on the Sabbath day."
-What a spectacle! Religious people--yea, the leaders and teachers of
-religion--the guides of the professed people of God, seeking to slay
-the Lord of the Sabbath because He had made a man every whit whole on
-the Sabbath day!
-
-But mark our Lord's reply.--"My Father _worketh_ hitherto, and I
-work." This brief but comprehensive statement gives us the root of
-the whole matter. It opens up to us the real condition of mankind in
-general, and of Israel in particular; and, in the most affecting
-manner, presents the grand secret of our Lord's life and ministry.
-Blessed be His name, He had not come into this world to rest. How
-could He rest? how could He keep a Sabbath in the midst of human need
-and misery? Ought not that impotent, blind, halt, and withered
-multitude which thronged the porches of the pool of Bethesda have
-taught "the Jews" the folly of their notions about the Sabbath? For
-what was that multitude but a sample of the condition of the nation of
-Israel, and of the whole human family? and how could divine love rest
-in the midst of such a condition of things? Utterly impossible. Love
-can only be a worker in a scene of sin and sorrow. From the moment of
-man's fall, the Father had been working; then the Son appeared to
-carry on the work; and now, the Holy Ghost is working. Work, and not
-rest, is the divine order in a world like this. "There remaineth
-therefore a rest to the people of God."
-
-The blessed Lord Jesus went about doing good on the Sabbath day as
-well as on every other day; and finally, having accomplished the
-glorious work of redemption, He spent the Sabbath in the grave, and
-rose on the first day of the week, as the First-begotten from the
-dead, and Head of the new creation, in which all things are of God,
-and to which, we may surely add, the question of "days and months and
-times and years" can have no possible application. No one who
-thoroughly understands the meaning of death and resurrection could
-sanction for a moment the observance of days. The death of Christ put
-an end to all that order of things, and His resurrection introduces us
-into another sphere entirely, where it is our high privilege to walk
-in the light and power of those eternal realities which are ours in
-Christ, and which stand in vivid contrast with the superstitious
-observances of a carnal and worldly religiousness.
-
-But here we approach a very interesting point in our subject, namely,
-the difference between the Sabbath and the Lord's day, or first day of
-the week. These two are often confounded. We frequently hear, from the
-lips of truly pious people, the phrase, "Christian Sabbath," an
-expression no where to be found in the New Testament. It may be that
-some who make use of it mean a right thing; but we should not only
-mean right, but also seek to express ourselves according to the
-teaching of holy Scripture.
-
-We are persuaded that the enemy of God and of His Christ has had a
-great deal more to do with the conventionalisms of christendom than
-many of us are aware; and this it is which makes the matter so very
-serious. The reader may perhaps feel disposed to pronounce it mere
-hair-splitting to find any fault with the term "Christian Sabbath;"
-but he may rest assured it is nothing of the sort: on the contrary, if
-he will only calmly examine the matter in the light of the New
-Testament, he will find that it involves questions not only
-interesting, but also weighty and important. It is a common saying,
-"There is nothing in a name;" but in the matter now before us, there
-is much in a name.
-
-We have already remarked that our Lord spent the Sabbath in the grave.
-Is not this a telling and deeply significant fact? We cannot doubt it.
-We read in it, at least, the setting aside of the old condition of
-things, and the utter impossibility of keeping a Sabbath in a world of
-sin and death. Love could not rest in a world like this; it could only
-labor and die. This is the inscription which we read on the tomb where
-the Lord of the Sabbath lay buried.
-
-But what of the first day of the week? Is not it the Sabbath on a new
-footing--the Christian Sabbath? It is never so called in the New
-Testament. There is not so much as a hint of any thing of the kind. If
-we look through the Acts of the Apostles, we shall find the two days
-spoken of in the most distinct way. On the Sabbath, we find the Jews
-assembled in their synagogues for the reading of the law and the
-prophets: on the first day of the week, we find the Christians
-assembled to break bread. The two days were as distinct as Judaism and
-Christianity; nor is there so much as a shadow of Scripture foundation
-for the idea that the Sabbath was merged in the first day of the week.
-Where is the slightest authority for the assertion that the Sabbath is
-changed from the seventh day to the eighth, or first, day of the week?
-Surely, if there be any, nothing is easier than to produce it; but
-there is absolutely none.
-
-And be it remembered that the Sabbath is not merely _a_ seventh day,
-but _the_ seventh day. It is well to note this, inasmuch as some
-entertain the idea that provided a seventh portion of time be given to
-rest and the public ordinances of religion, it is quite sufficient,
-and it does not matter what you call it; and thus different nations
-and different religious systems have their Sabbath day. But this can
-never satisfy any one who desires to be taught exclusively by
-Scripture. The Sabbath of Eden was _the_ seventh day: the Sabbath for
-Israel was _the_ seventh day. But the eighth day leads our thoughts
-onward into eternity; and, in the New Testament, it is called "the
-first day of the week," as indicating the beginning: of that new order
-of things of which the cross is the imperishable foundation, and a
-risen Christ the glorious Head and Centre. To call this day the
-"Christian Sabbath" is simply to confound things earthly and heavenly;
-it is to bring the Christian down from his elevated position as
-associated with a risen and glorified Head in the heavens, and occupy
-him with the superstitious observance of days, the very thing which
-made the blessed apostle stand in doubt of the assemblies in Galatia.
-
-In short, the more deeply we ponder the phrase "Christian Sabbath,"
-the more we are convinced that its tendency is, like many other
-formularies of christendom, to rob the Christian of all those grand
-distinctive truths of the New Testament which mark off the Church of
-God from all that went before and all that is to follow after. The
-Church, though on the earth, is not of this world, even as Christ is
-not of this world. It is heavenly in its origin, heavenly in its
-character, heavenly in its principles, walk, and hope. It stands
-between the cross and the glory. The boundaries of its existence on
-earth are, the day of Pentecost, when the Holy Ghost came down to form
-it, and the coming of Christ to receive it to Himself.
-
-Nothing can be more strongly marked than this; and hence, for any one
-to attempt to enjoin upon the Church of God the legal or superstitious
-observance of "days and months and times and years," is to falsify the
-entire Christian position, mar the integrity of divine revelation, and
-rob the Christian of the place and portion which belong to him through
-the infinite grace of God and the accomplished atonement of Christ.
-
-Does the reader deem this statement unwarrantably strong? If so, let
-him ponder the following splendid passage from Paul's epistle to the
-Colossians--a passage which ought to be written in letters of gold:
-"As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in
-Him; rooted and built up in Him, and stablished in the faith, as ye
-have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving. Beware lest any man
-spoil [or make a prey of] you through _philosophy and vain
-deceit_"--mark the combination! not very flattering to philosophy--"after
-the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after
-Christ. For in Him dwelleth _all the fullness of the Godhead_
-[+theotes+, deity] bodily. And ye are complete in Him, which is the
-head of all principality and power." What more can we possibly want?
-"In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision _made without
-hands_, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the
-circumcision of Christ: buried with Him in baptism, wherein also ye
-are risen with Him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath
-raised Him from the dead. And you, being dead in your sins and the
-uncircumcision of your flesh, hath He quickened together with Him,
-_having forgiven you all trespasses_; blotting out the handwriting of
-ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it
-out of the way, nailing it to His cross; and having spoiled
-principalities and powers, He made a show of them openly, triumphing
-over them in it."
-
-Magnificent victory! A victory gained single-handed--gained for us!
-Universal and eternal homage to His peerless name! What remains? "Let
-no man _therefore_ judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a
-holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath: which are a shadow of
-things to come; but the body is of Christ."
-
-What can one who is complete and accepted in a risen and glorified
-Christ have to do with meats, drinks, or holy days? what can
-philosophy, tradition, or human religiousness do for him? What can
-passing shadows add to one who has grasped, by faith, the eternal
-substance? Surely nothing; and hence the blessed apostle
-proceeds--"Let no man beguile you of your reward, in a voluntary
-humility, and worshiping of angels, intruding into those things which
-he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, and _not
-holding the Head_, from which all the body by joints and bands having
-nourishment ministered, and knit together, increaseth with the
-increase of God. Wherefore _if ye be dead with Christ_ from the
-rudiments of the world, why, _as though living in the world_, are ye
-subject to ordinances, [such as,] 'Touch not [this],' 'Taste not
-[that],' 'Handle not [the other]'; which all are to perish with the
-using; after the commandments and doctrines of men? Which things have
-indeed a show of wisdom in will-worship, and humility, and neglecting
-of the body; not in any honor to the satisfying of the flesh;" that
-is, not giving the measure of honor to the body which is due to it as
-God's vessel, but puffing up the flesh with religious pride, fed by a
-hollow and worthless sanctimoniousness. (Col. ii. 6-23.)
-
-We do not dare to offer any apology for this lengthened quotation. An
-apology for quoting Scripture! Far be the thought! It is not possible
-for any one to understand this marvelous passage and not have a
-complete settlement, not only of the Sabbath question, but also of
-that entire system of things with which this question stands
-connected. The Christian who understands his position, is done
-forever with all questions of meats and drinks, days and months and
-times and years. He knows nothing of holy seasons and holy places. He
-is dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, and as such, is
-delivered from all the ordinances of a traditionary religion. He
-belongs to heaven, where new moons, holy days, and Sabbaths have no
-place. He is in the new creation, where all things are of God; and
-hence he can see no moral force in such words as "Touch not, taste
-not, handle not." They have no possible application to him. He lives
-in a region where the clouds, vapors, and mists of monasticism and
-asceticism are never seen. He has given up all the worthless forms of
-mere fleshly pietism, and got, in exchange, the solid realities of
-Christian life. His ear has been opened to hear, and his heart to
-understand, the powerful exhortation of the inspired apostle, "If ye
-then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where
-Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. Set your affection on things
-above, not on things on the earth. For _ye are dead_, and your life is
-hid with Christ in God. When Christ, our life, shall appear, then
-shall ye also appear with Him in glory. Mortify therefore your members
-which are upon the earth."
-
-Here we have unfolded before our eyes some of the glories of true,
-practical, vital Christianity, in striking contrast with all the
-barren and dreary forms of carnal and worldly religiousness. Christian
-life does not consist in the observance of certain rules,
-commandments, or traditions of men. It is a divine reality. It is
-Christ in the heart, and Christ reproduced in the daily life, by the
-power of the Holy Ghost. It is the new man, formed on the model of
-Christ Himself, and displaying itself in all the most minute details
-of our daily history--in the family, in the business, in all our
-intercourse with our fellow-men, in our temper, spirit, style,
-deportment, all. It is not a matter of mere profession, or of dogma,
-or of opinion, or of sentiment; it is an unmistakable, living reality.
-It is the kingdom of God, set up in the heart, asserting its blessed
-sway over the whole moral being, and shedding its genial influence
-upon the entire sphere in which we are called to move from day to day.
-It is the Christian walking in the blessed footsteps of Him who went
-about doing good; meeting, so far as in him lies, every form of human
-need; living not for himself, but for others; finding his delight in
-serving and giving; ready to soothe and sympathize wherever he finds a
-crushed spirit or a bereaved and desolate heart.
-
-This is Christianity. And oh, how it differs from all the forms in
-which legality and superstition clothe themselves! How different from
-the unintelligent and unmeaning observance of days and months and
-times and years, abstaining from meats, forbidding to marry, and such
-like! How different from the vaporings of the mystic, the gloom of the
-ascetic, and the austerities of the monk! How totally different from
-all these! Yes, reader; and we may add, how different from the
-unsightly union of high profession and low practice--lofty truths held
-in the intellect, professed, taught, and discussed, and worldliness,
-self-indulgence, and unsubduedness! The Christianity of the New
-Testament differs alike from all these things. It is the divine, the
-heavenly, and the spiritual, displayed amid the human, the earthly,
-and the natural. May it be the holy purpose of the writer and the
-reader of these lines to be satisfied with nothing short of that
-morally glorious Christianity revealed in the pages of the New
-Testament.
-
-It is needless, we trust, to add more on the question of the Sabbath.
-If the reader has at all seized the import of those scriptures which
-have passed before us, he will have little difficulty in seeing the
-place which the Sabbath holds in the dispensational ways of God. He
-will see that it has direct reference to Israel and the earth--that it
-was a sign of the covenant between Jehovah and His earthly people, and
-a powerful test of their moral condition.
-
-Furthermore, he will see that Israel never really kept the Sabbath,
-never understood its import, never appreciated its value. This was
-made manifest in the life, ministry, and death of our Lord Jesus
-Christ; who performed many of His works of healing on the Sabbath day,
-and, at the end, spent that day in the tomb.
-
-Finally, he will clearly understand the difference between the Jewish
-Sabbath and the first day of the week, or the Lord's day; that the
-latter is never once called the Sabbath in the New Testament, but on
-the contrary, is constantly presented in its own proper distinctness:
-it is not the Sabbath changed or transferred, but a new day
-altogether, having its own special basis and its own peculiar range of
-thought, leaving the Sabbath wholly untouched, as a suspended
-institution, to be resumed by and by, when the seed of Abraham shall
-be restored to their own land. (See Ezek. xlvi. 1, 12.)
-
-But we cannot happily turn from this interesting subject without a few
-words on the place assigned, in the New Testament, to the Lord's day,
-or first day of the week. Though it is not the Sabbath; and though it
-has nothing to do with holy days, or new moons, or "days and months
-and times and years;" yet it has its own unique place in Christianity,
-as is evident from manifold passages in the scriptures of the New
-Testament.
-
-Our Lord rose from the dead on that day; He met His disciples again
-and again on that day; the apostle and the brethren at Troas came
-together to break bread on that day (Acts xx. 7.); the apostle
-instructs the Corinthians, and all that in every place call on the
-name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to lay by their offerings on that day;
-thus teaching us, distinctly, that the first day of the week was _the_
-special day for the Lord's people to assemble for the Lord's supper,
-and the worship, communion, and ministry connected with that most
-precious institution. The blessed apostle John expressly tells us that
-he was in the Spirit on that day, and received that marvelous
-revelation which closes the Divine Volume.[18]
-
- [18] Some are of opinion that the expression, "on the Lord's day"
- ought to be rendered, "on the day of the Lord," meaning that the
- apostle was in the spirit of that day when our Lord Christ shall take
- to Himself His great power and reign. But to this view there are two
- grave objections. In the first place, the words +te kuriake
- hemera+, rendered, in Revelation i. 10, "The Lord's day," are quite
- distinct from +e hemera kurion+, in 1 Thessalonians v. 2; 2
- Thessalonians ii. 2; 2 Peter iii. 10, properly rendered, "The day of
- the Lord."
-
- This we consider a very weighty objection, and one quite sufficient to
- settle the question. But in addition to this, we have the argument
- based on the fact that by far the greater portion of the book of
- Revelation is occupied, not with "the day of the Lord," but with
- events prior thereto.
-
- Hence, therefore, we feel persuaded that "the Lord's day" and "the
- first day of the week" are identical; and this we deem a very
- important fact, as proving that that day has a very special place in
- the Word of God--a place which every intelligent Christian will
- thankfully own.
-
-Thus, then, we have a body of Scripture evidence before us amply
-sufficient to prove to every pious mind that the Lord's day must not
-be reduced to the level of ordinary days. It is, to the true
-Christian, neither the Jewish Sabbath on the one hand, nor the Gentile
-Sunday on the other; but the Lord's day, on which His people gladly
-and thankfully assemble around His table, to keep that precious feast
-by which they show forth His death until He come.
-
-Now, it is needless to say that there is not a shade of legal bondage
-or of superstition connected with the first day of the week. To say
-so, or to think so, would be to deny the entire circle of truths with
-which that day stands connected. We have no direct commandment
-respecting the observance of the day, but the passages already
-referred to are amply sufficient for every spiritual mind; and
-further, we may say that the instincts of the divine nature would lead
-every true Christian to honor and love the Lord's day, and to set it
-apart, in the most reverent manner, for the worship and service of
-God. The very thought of any one professing to love Christ engaging in
-business or unnecessary traveling on the Lord's day, would, in our
-judgment, be revolting to every pious feeling. We believe it to be a
-hallowed privilege to retire, as much as possible, from all the
-distractions of natural things, and to devote the hours of the Lord's
-day to Himself and to His service.
-
-It will perhaps be said that the Christian ought to devote every day
-to the Lord. Most surely; we are the Lord's, in the very fullest and
-highest sense. All we have and all we are belongs to Him; this we
-fully, gladly own. We are called to do every thing in His name and to
-His glory. It is our high privilege to buy and sell, eat and drink,
-yea, to carry on all our business, under His eye, and in the fear and
-love of His holy name. We should not put our hand to any thing, on any
-day in the week, on which we could not, with the fullest confidence,
-ask the Lord's blessing.
-
-All this is most fully admitted. Every true Christian joyfully owns
-it. But, at the same time, we deem it impossible to read the New
-Testament and not see that the Lord's day gets a unique place; that it
-is marked off for us, in the most distinct way; that it has a
-significance and an importance which cannot, with justice, be claimed
-for any other day in the week. Indeed, so fully are we convinced of
-the truth of all this, that even though it were not the law of England
-that the Lord's day should be observed, we should deem it to be both
-our sacred duty and holy privilege to abstain from all business
-engagements, save such as were absolutely unavoidable.
-
-Thanks be to God, it is the law of England that the Lord's day should
-be observed. This is a signal mercy to all who love the day for the
-Lord's sake. We cannot but own His great goodness in having wrested
-the day from the covetous grasp of the world, and bestowed it upon His
-people and His servants to be devoted to His worship and to His work.
-
-What a boon is the Lord's day, with its profound retirement from
-worldly things! What should we do without it? What a blessed break in
-upon the week's toil! How refreshing its exercises to the spiritual
-mind! How precious the assembly around the Lord's table to remember
-Him, to show forth His death, and celebrate His praise! How delightful
-the varied services of the Lord's day, whether those of the
-evangelist, the pastor, the teacher, the Sunday-school worker, or the
-tract distributor! What human language can adequately set forth the
-value and interest of all these things? True it is that the Lord's day
-is any thing but a day of bodily rest to His servants; indeed, they
-are often more fatigued on that day than on any other day of the
-week. But oh! it is a blessed fatigue--a delightful fatigue--a fatigue
-which will meet its bright reward in the rest that remains for the
-people of God.
-
-Once more, then, beloved Christian reader, let us lift up our hearts
-in a note of praise to our God for the blessed boon of the Lord's day.
-May He continue it to His Church until He come. May He countervail, by
-His almighty power, every effort of the infidel and the atheist to
-remove the barriers which English law has erected around the Lord's
-day. Truly, it will be a sad day for England when those barriers are
-removed.
-
-It may perhaps be said by some that the Jewish Sabbath is done away,
-and is therefore no longer binding. A large number of professing
-Christians have taken this ground, and pleaded for the opening of the
-parks and places of public recreation on the Sunday. Alas! it is
-easily seen where such people are drifting to, and what they are
-seeking. They would set aside the law, in order to procure a license
-for fleshly indulgence. They do not understand that the only way in
-which any one can be free from the law is by being dead to it; and if
-dead to the law, we are also, of blessed necessity, dead to sin and
-dead to the world.
-
-This makes it a different matter altogether. The Christian is, thank
-God, free from the law; but if he is, it is not that he may amuse and
-indulge himself, on the Lord's day or any other day, but that he may
-live to God. "I through law am dead to law, that I might live unto
-God." This is Christian ground, and it can only be occupied by those
-who are truly born of God. The world cannot understand it; neither can
-they understand the holy privileges and spiritual exercises of the
-Lord's day.
-
-All this is true; but, at the same time, we are thoroughly convinced
-that were England to remove the barriers which surround the Lord's
-day, it would afford a melancholy proof of her abandonment of that
-profession of religion which has so long characterized her as a
-nation, and of her drifting away in the direction of infidelity and
-atheism. We must not lose sight of the weighty fact that England has
-taken the ground of being a Christian nation--a nation professing to
-be governed by the Word of God. She is therefore much more responsible
-than those nations wrapped in the dark shades of heathenism. We
-believe that nations, like individuals, will be held responsible for
-the profession they make; and hence those nations which profess and
-call themselves Christian shall be judged, not merely by the light of
-creation, nor by the law of Moses, but by the full-orbed light of that
-Christianity which they profess--by all the truth contained within the
-covers of that blessed book which they possess, and in which they make
-their boast. The heathen shall be judged on the ground of creation;
-the Jew, on the ground of the law; the nominal Christian, on the
-ground of the truth of Christianity.
-
-Now this grave fact renders the position of England, and all other
-professing Christian nations, most serious. God will most assuredly
-deal with them on the ground of their profession. It is of no use to
-say they do not understand what they profess; for why profess what
-they do not understand and believe? The fact is, they profess to
-understand and believe; and by this fact they shall be judged. They
-make their boast in this familiar sentence, that "the Bible, and the
-Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants."
-
-If this be so, how solemn is the thought of England judged by the
-standard of an open Bible! What will be her judgment?--what her end?
-Let all whom it may concern ponder the appalling answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We must now turn from the deeply interesting subject of the Sabbath
-and the Lord's day, and draw this section to a close by quoting for
-the reader the remarkable paragraph with which our chapter ends. It
-does not call for any lengthened comment, but we deem it profitable,
-in these "Notes on Deuteronomy," to furnish the reader with very full
-quotations from the book itself, in order that he may have before him
-the very words of the Holy Ghost, without even the trouble of laying
-aside the volume which he holds in his hand.
-
-Having laid before the people the ten commandments, the lawgiver
-proceeds to remind them of the solemn circumstances which accompanied
-the giving of the law, together with their own feelings and utterances
-on the occasion.
-
-"These words the Lord spake unto all your assembly in the mount out of
-the midst of the fire, of the cloud, and of the thick darkness, with
-a great voice; and He added no more. And He wrote them in two tables
-of stone, and delivered them unto me. And it came to pass, when ye
-heard the voice out of the midst of the darkness, (for the mountain
-did burn with fire,) that ye came near unto me, even all the heads of
-your tribes, and your elders; and ye said, 'Behold, the Lord our God
-hath showed us His glory and His greatness, and we have heard His
-voice out of the midst of the fire: we have seen this day that God
-doth talk with man, and he liveth. Now therefore why should we die?
-for this great fire will consume us: if we hear the voice of the Lord
-our God any more, then we shall die. For who is there of all flesh,
-that hath heard the voice of the living God speaking out of the midst
-of the fire, as we have, and lived? Go thou near, and hear all that
-the Lord our God shall say; and speak thou unto us all that the Lord
-our God shall speak unto thee, and _we will hear it and do it_.' And
-the Lord heard the voice of your words, when ye spake unto me; and the
-Lord said unto me, 'I have heard the voice of the words of this
-people, which they have spoken unto thee: they have well said all that
-they have spoken. O that there were such a heart in them, that they
-would fear Me, and keep _all_ My commandments _always_, that it might
-be well with them, and with their children forever! Go say to them,
-Get you into your tents again. But as for thee, stand thou here by Me,
-and I will speak unto thee all the commandments, and the statutes,
-and the judgments, which thou shalt teach them, that they may do them
-in the land which I give them to possess it.' Ye shall observe to do
-therefore as the Lord your God hath commanded you: ye shall not turn
-aside either to the right hand or to the left. Ye shall walk in _all
-the ways_ which the Lord your God hath commanded you, that ye may
-live, and that it may be well with you, and that ye may prolong your
-days in the land which ye shall possess."
-
-Here the grand principle of the book of Deuteronomy shines out with
-uncommon lustre. It is embodied in those touching and forcible words
-which form the very heart's core of the splendid passage just
-quoted.--"O that there were _such a heart in them, that they would
-fear Me_, and keep all My commandments always, that it might be well
-with them, and with their children forever!"
-
-Precious words! They set before us, most blessedly, the secret spring
-of that life which we, as Christians, are called to live from day to
-day--the life of simple, implicit, and unqualified obedience, namely,
-a heart fearing the Lord--fearing Him, not in a servile spirit, but
-with all that deep, true, adoring love which the Holy Ghost sheds
-abroad in our hearts. It is this that delights the heart of our loving
-Father. His word to us is, "My son, give Me thine heart." Where the
-heart is given, all follows, in lovely moral order. A loving heart
-finds its very deepest joy in obeying all God's commandments; and
-nothing is of any value to God but what springs from a loving heart.
-The heart is the source of all the issues of life; and hence, when it
-is governed by the love of God, there is a loving response to all His
-commandments. We love His commandments because we love Him. Every word
-of His is precious to the heart that loves Him. Every precept, every
-statute, every judgment--in a word, His whole law is loved,
-reverenced, and obeyed, because it has His name and His authority
-attached to it.
-
-The reader will find in psalm cxix. an uncommonly fine illustration of
-the special point now before us--a most striking example of one who
-blessedly answered to the words quoted above--"O that there were _such
-a heart_ in them, that they would fear Me, and keep _all_ My
-commandments _always_!" It is the lovely breathing of a soul who found
-its deep, unfailing, constant delight in the law of God. There are no
-less than one hundred and seventy allusions to that precious law,
-under some one title or another. We find scattered along the surface
-of this marvelous psalm, in rich profusion, such gems as the
-following:--
-
-"Thy Word have I _hid_ in mine _heart_, that I might not sin against
-Thee." "I have rejoiced in the way of Thy testimonies as much as in
-all riches." "I will meditate in Thy precepts, and have respect unto
-Thy ways." "_I will delight myself_ in Thy statutes; I will not forget
-Thy Word." "My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath unto Thy
-judgments at all times." "_Thy testimonies_ are also _my delight_, and
-my counselors." "_I have stuck_ unto Thy testimonies." "Behold, _I
-have longed_ after Thy precepts." "_I trust_ in Thy Word." "_I have
-hoped_ in Thy judgments." "_I seek_ Thy precepts." "_I will delight
-myself_ in Thy commandments, which _I have loved_." "_I remembered_
-Thy judgments." "_Thy statutes_ have been _my songs_ in the house of
-my pilgrimage." "I turned _my feet_ unto _Thy testimonies_." "_I have
-believed_ Thy commandments." "_The law of Thy mouth_ is better unto me
-than thousands of gold and silver." "_I have hoped_ in Thy Word."
-"_Thy law_ is _my delight_." "_Mine eyes_ fail for _Thy Word_." "_All_
-Thy commandments are faithful." "Forever, O Lord, Thy Word is settled
-in heaven." "_I will never forget_ Thy precepts." "_I have sought_ Thy
-precepts." "_I will consider_ Thy testimonies." "Thy commandment is
-exceeding broad." "O how love I _Thy law_! it is _my meditation_ all
-the day." "How sweet are _Thy words_ unto _my taste_! yea, sweeter
-than honey to my mouth." "_Thy testimonies_ have I taken as a
-_heritage forever_; for they are _the rejoicing of my heart_." "I will
-have respect unto Thy statutes _continually_." "I love Thy
-commandments above gold, yea, above find gold." "I esteem _all_ Thy
-precepts concerning _all_ things to be _right_." "Thy testimonies are
-wonderful." "I opened my mouth and _panted_, for I _longed_ for Thy
-commandments." "Upright are Thy judgments." "Thy testimonies ... are
-righteous, and very faithful." "Thy Word is very pure." "Thy law is
-the truth." "The righteousness of thy testimonies is everlasting."
-"All Thy commandments are truth." "Thy Word is _true from the
-beginning_; and every one of Thy righteous judgments _endureth
-forever_." "_My heart_ standeth _in awe_ of _Thy Word_." "_I rejoice_
-at Thy Word, as one that findeth great spoil." "Great peace have they
-that love Thy law." "_My soul_ hath kept _Thy testimonies_; and I love
-them exceedingly." "I have chosen Thy precepts." "Thy law is my
-delight."
-
-Truly, it does the heart good, and refreshes the spirit, to transcribe
-such utterances as the foregoing, many of which are the suited
-utterances of our Lord Himself, in the days of His flesh. He ever
-lived upon the Word. It was the food of His soul, the authority of His
-path, the material of His ministry. By it He vanquished Satan; by it
-He silenced Sadducees, Pharisees, and Herodians; by it He taught His
-disciples; to it He commended His servants, as He was about to ascend
-into the heavens.
-
-How important is all this for us! How intensely interesting! How
-deeply practical! What a place it gives the holy Scriptures! For we
-remember that it is, in very deed, the blessed Volume of inspiration
-which is brought before us in all those golden sentences culled from
-psalm cxix. How strengthening, refreshing, and encouraging for us to
-mark the way in which our Lord uses the holy Scriptures at all times,
-the place He gives them, and the dignity He puts upon them! He appeals
-to them on all occasions as a divine authority from which there can be
-no appeal. He, though Himself as God over all, the Author of the
-Volume, having taken His place as man on the earth, sets forth with
-all possible plainness what is man's bounden duty and high privilege,
-namely, to live by the Word of God, to bow down in reverent subjection
-to its divine authority.
-
-And have we not here a very complete answer to the oft-raised question
-of infidelity, "How do we know that the Bible is the Word of God?" If
-indeed we believe in Christ--if we own Him to be the Son of God, God
-manifest in the flesh, very God and very man, we cannot fail to see
-the moral force of the fact that this divine Person constantly appeals
-to the Scriptures--to Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, as to a
-divine standard. Did He not know them to be the Word of God?
-Undoubtedly. As God, He had given them; as Man, He received them,
-lived by them, and owned their paramount authority, in all things.
-
-What a weighty fact is here for the professing church! What a
-withering rebuke to all those so-called Christian doctors and writers
-who have presumed to tamper with the grand fundamental truth of the
-plenary inspiration of the holy Scriptures in general, and of the five
-books of Moses in particular! How terrible to think of the professed
-teachers of the Church of God daring to designate as spurious,
-writings which our Lord and Master received and owned as divine!
-
-And yet we are told, and we are expected to believe that things are
-improving! Alas! alas! it is a miserable delusion. The degrading
-absurdities of ritualism, and the blasphemous reasonings of
-infidelity, are rapidly increasing around us; and where these
-influences are not actually dominant, we observe, for the most part, a
-cold indifference, carnal ease, self-indulgence, and worldliness--any
-thing and every thing, in short, but the evidence of improvement. If
-people are not led away by infidelity on the one hand, or by ritualism
-on the other, it is, for the most part, owing to the fact that they
-are too much occupied with pleasure and gain to think of any thing
-else. And as to the religion of the day, if you subtract money and
-music, you will have a lamentably trifling balance.
-
-Hence, therefore, it is impossible to shake off the conviction that
-the combined testimony of observation and experience is directly
-opposed to the notion that things are improving. Indeed, for any one,
-in the face of such an array of evidence to the contrary, to cling to
-such a theory, can only be regarded as the fruit of a most
-unaccountable credulity.
-
-But perhaps some may feel disposed to say that we must not judge by
-the sight of our eyes; we must be hopeful. True, provided only we have
-a divine warrant for our hopefulness. If a single line of Scripture
-can be produced to prove that the present system of things is to be
-marked by gradual improvement, religiously, politically, morally, or
-socially, then, by all means, be hopeful. Yes; hope against hope. A
-single clause of inspiration is quite sufficient to form the basis of
-a hope which will lift the heart above the very darkest and most
-depressing surroundings.
-
-But where is such a clause to be found? Simply no where. The testimony
-of the Bible, from cover to cover; the distinct teaching of holy
-Scripture, from beginning to end; the voices of prophets and apostles,
-in unbroken harmony--all, without a single divergent note, go to
-prove, with a force and clearness perfectly unanswerable, that the
-present condition of things, so far from gradually improving, will
-rapidly grow worse; that ere the bright beams of millennial glory can
-gladden this groaning earth, the sword of judgment must do its
-appalling work. To quote the passages in proof of our assertion would
-literally fill a volume; it would simply be to transcribe a large
-portion of the prophetic scriptures of the Old and New Testament.
-
-This, of course, we do not attempt. There is no need. The reader has
-his Bible before him; let him search it diligently. Let him lay aside
-all his preconceived ideas, all the conventionalisms of christendom,
-all the ordinary phraseology of the religious world, all the dogmas of
-the schools of divinity, and come, with the simplicity of a little
-child, to the pure fountain of holy Scripture, and drink in its
-heavenly teaching. If he will only do this, he will rise from the
-study with the clear and settled conviction that the world will, most
-assuredly, not be converted by the means now in operation--that it is
-not the gospel of peace, but the besom of destruction that shall
-prepare the earth for glory.
-
-Is it, then, that we deny the good that is being done? Are we
-insensible to it? Far be the thought! We heartily bless God for every
-atom of it. We rejoice in every effort put forth to spread the
-precious gospel of the grace of God; we render thanks for every soul
-gathered within the blessed circle of God's salvation. We delight to
-think of eighty-five millions of Bibles scattered over the earth. What
-human mind can calculate the results of all these, yea, the results of
-a single copy? We earnestly wish Godspeed to every true-hearted
-missionary who goes forth with the glad tidings of salvation, whether
-into the lanes and court-yards of London, or to the most distant parts
-of the earth.
-
-But, admitting all this, as we most heartily do, we nevertheless do
-not believe in the conversion of the world by the means now in
-operation. Scripture tells us that it is when the divine judgments are
-in the earth, the inhabitants of the world shall learn righteousness.
-This one clause of inspiration ought to be sufficient to prove that it
-is not by the gospel that the world is to be converted; and there are
-hundreds of clauses which speak the same language and teach the same
-truth. It is not by grace, but by judgment, that the inhabitants of
-the world shall learn righteousness.
-
-What, then, is the object of the gospel? If it be not to convert the
-world, for what purpose is it preached? The apostle James, in his
-address at the memorable council at Jerusalem, gives an answer, direct
-and conclusive, to the question. He says, "Simeon hath declared how
-God at the first did visit the Gentiles." For what? To convert them
-all? The very reverse--"_To take out of them_ a people for His name."
-Nothing can be more distinct than this. It sets before us that which
-ought to be the grand object of all missionary effort--that which
-every divinely sent and divinely taught missionary will keep before
-his mind in all his blessed labors. It is "to take out a people for
-His name."
-
-How important to remember this! How needful to have ever before us a
-true object in all our work! Of what possible use can it be to work
-for a false object? Is it not much better to work with a direct view
-to what God is doing? Will it cripple the missionary's energies, or
-clip his wings, to keep before his eyes the divine purpose in his
-work? Surely not. Take the case of two missionaries going forth to
-some distant mission-field: the one has for his object the conversion
-of the world; the other, the gathering out of a people. Will the
-latter, by reason of his object, be less devoted, less energetic, less
-enthusiastic, than the former? We cannot believe it; on the contrary,
-the very fact of his being in the current of the divine mind will
-impart stability and consistency to his work, and, at the same time,
-encourage his heart in the face of the difficulties and hindrances
-which surround him.
-
-But however this may be, it is perfectly plain that the apostles of
-our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ had no such object, in going forth
-to their work, as the conversion of the world. "Go ye into all the
-world, and preach the gospel to every creature; he that believeth and
-is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be
-damned."
-
-This was to the twelve. The world was to be their sphere. The aspect
-of their message was, unto every creature; the application, to him
-that believeth. It was pre-eminently an individual thing. The
-conversion of the whole world was not to be their object; that will be
-effected by a different agency altogether, when God's present action
-by the gospel shall have resulted in the gathering out of a people for
-the heavens.[19] The Holy Ghost came down on the day of Pentecost, not
-to convert the world, but to "_convict_ [+elenxei+]" it, or
-demonstrate its guilt in having rejected the Son of God.[20] The
-effect of His presence was to prove the world guilty; and as to the
-grand object of His mission, it was to form a body composed of
-believers from amongst both Jews and Gentiles. With this He has been
-occupied for the last eighteen hundred years. This is "the mystery" of
-which the apostle Paul was made a minister, and which he unfolds, so
-fully and blessedly, in his epistle to the Ephesians. It is
-impossible for any one to understand the truth set forth in this
-marvelous document, and not see that the conversion of the world and
-the formation of the body of Christ are two totally different things,
-which could not possibly go on together.
-
- [19] We would commend to the reader's attention psalm lxvii. It is one
- of a large class of passages which prove that the blessing of the
- nations is consequent upon Israel's restoration. "God be merciful unto
- us [Israel], and bless us; and cause His face to shine upon us, that
- Thy way may be known upon earth, Thy saving health among _all
- nations_.... God shall bless us; and _all the ends of the earth_ shall
- fear Him." There could not be a more lovely or forcible proof of the
- fact that it is Israel, and not the Church, that will be used for the
- blessing of the nations.
-
- [20] The application of John xvi. 8-11 to the Spirit's work in the
- individual is, in our judgment, a serious mistake. It refers to the
- effect of His presence on earth, in reference to the world as a whole.
- His work in the soul is a precious truth, we need hardly say, but it
- is not the truth taught in this passage.
-
-Let the reader ponder the following beautiful passage: "For this cause
-I Paul, the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles, if ye have
-heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which is given me to
-you-ward: how that by revelation He made known unto me the mystery;
-(as I wrote afore in few words, whereby, when ye read, ye may
-understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ) which in other ages
-was not made known unto the sons of men"--not made known in the
-scriptures of the Old Testament, nor revealed to the Old-Testament
-saints or prophets--"as it is now revealed unto His holy apostles and
-prophets" (that is, to the New-Testament prophets) "by the Spirit;
-that the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and
-partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel: whereof I was made a
-minister according to the gift of the grace of God given unto me by
-the effectual working of His power. Unto me, who am less than the
-least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among
-the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ; and to make all men
-see what is the dispensation [+oikonomia+] of the mystery,
-which _from the beginning of the world_ hath been _hid in God_, who
-created all things by Jesus Christ: to the intent that now unto the
-principalities and powers in the heavenlies might be known by the
-Church the manifold wisdom of God." (Eph. iii. 1-10.)
-
-Take another passage from the epistle to the Colossians.--"If ye
-continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from
-the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to
-every creature which is under heaven, whereof I Paul am made a
-minister, who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that
-which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for His
-body's sake, which is the Church: whereof I am made a minister,
-according to the dispensation of God which is given to me for you, to
-complete the Word of God; even the mystery which hath been hid from
-ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to His saints: to
-whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this
-mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory:
-whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all
-wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus:
-whereunto I also labor, striving according to His working, which
-worketh in me mightily." (Chap. i. 23-29.)
-
-From these and numerous other passages, the reader may see the special
-object of Paul's ministry. Assuredly he had no such thought in his
-mind as the conversion of the world. True, he preached the gospel, in
-all its depth, fullness, and power--preached it "from Jerusalem and
-round about unto Illyricum"--"preached among the Gentiles the
-unsearchable riches of Christ," but with no thought of converting the
-world. He knew better. He knew and taught that the world was ripening
-for judgment--yes, ripening rapidly; that "evil men and seducers shall
-wax worse and worse;" that "in _the latter times_ some shall depart
-from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doctrines of
-devils; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared
-with a hot iron; forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from
-meats, which God had created to be received with thanksgiving of them
-which believe and know the truth."
-
-And further still, this faithful and divinely inspired witness taught
-that "in _the last days_"--far in advance of "the latter
-times"--"perilous [or difficult] times shall come. For men shall be
-lovers of their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers,
-disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, without natural affection,
-truce-breakers, false accusers, incontinent, fierce, despisers of
-those that are good, traitors, heady, high-minded, _lovers of
-pleasures rather than lovers of God_; having a form of godliness, but
-denying the power thereof." (Compare 1 Tim. iv. 1-3 with 2 Tim. iii.
-1-5.)
-
-What a picture! It brings us back to the close of the first of Romans,
-where the same inspired pen portrays for us the dark forms of
-heathenism; but with this terrible difference, that in 2 Timothy it
-is not heathenism, but nominal Christianity--"a form of godliness."
-
-And is this to be the end of the present condition of things? Is this
-the converted world of which we hear so much? Alas! alas! there are
-false prophets abroad; there are those who cry, Peace, peace, when
-there is no peace; there are those who attempt to daub the crumbling
-walls of christendom with untempered mortar.
-
-But it will not do. Judgment is at the door. The professing church has
-utterly, shamefully failed; she has grievously departed from the Word
-of God, and revolted from the authority of her Lord. There is not a
-single ray of hope for christendom. It is the darkest moral blot in
-the wide universe of God, or on the page of history. The same blessed
-apostle from whose writings we have already so largely quoted, tells
-us that "the mystery of iniquity doth already work;" hence it has been
-working now for over eighteen centuries. "Only He that now hindereth
-will hinder until He be taken out of the way. And then shall that
-Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of His
-mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of His coming: even him,
-whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs
-and lying wonders, and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in
-them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth,
-that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them
-strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: that they all might
-be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
-unrighteousness." (2 Thess. ii. 7-12.)
-
-How awful is the doom of christendom! Strong delusion! Dark damnation!
-And all this in the face of the dreams of those false prophets who
-talk to the people about "the bright side of things." Thank God, there
-is a bright side for all those who belong to Christ. To them, the
-apostle can speak in bright and cheering accents.--"We are bound to
-give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord,
-because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through
-sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth: whereunto He
-called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord
-Jesus Christ." (2 Thess. ii. 13, 14.)
-
-Here we have, most surely, the bright side of things--the bright and
-blessed hope of the Church of God--the hope of seeing "the bright and
-morning Star." All rightly instructed Christians are on the look-out,
-not for an improved or a converted world, but for their coming Lord
-and Saviour, who has gone to prepare a place for them in the Father's
-house, and is coming again to receive them to Himself, that where He
-is, there they may be also. This is His own sweet promise, which may
-be fulfilled at any moment. He only waits, as Peter tells us, in
-long-suffering mercy, not willing that any should perish, but that all
-should come to repentance. But when the last member shall be
-incorporated, by the Holy Ghost, into the blessed body of Christ, then
-shall the voice of the archangel and the trump of God summon _all_
-the redeemed, from the beginning, to meet their descending Lord in the
-air, to be forever with Him.
-
-This is the true and proper hope of the Church of God--a hope which He
-would have ever shining down into the hearts of all His beloved
-people, in its purifying and elevating power. Of this blessed hope the
-enemy has succeeded in robbing a large number of the Lord's people.
-Indeed, for centuries it was well-nigh blotted out from the Church's
-horizon; and it has only been partially recovered within the last
-fifty years. And, alas! how partially! Where do we hear of it,
-throughout the length and breadth of the professing church? Do the
-pulpits of christendom ring with the joyful sound, "Behold the
-Bridegroom cometh"? Far from it. Even the few beloved servants of
-Christ who are looking for His coming, hardly dare to preach it,
-because they fear it would be utterly rejected. And so it would. We
-are thoroughly persuaded that, in the vast majority of cases, men who
-should venture to preach the glorious truth that the Lord is coming
-for His Church, would speedily have to vacate their pulpits.
-
-What a solemn and striking proof of Satan's blinding power! He has
-robbed the Church of her divinely given hope, and instead thereof, he
-has given her a delusion--a lie. Instead of looking out for "the
-bright and morning Star," he has set her looking for a converted
-world--a millennium without Christ. He has succeeded in casting such a
-haze over the future, that the Church has completely lost her
-bearings. She does not know where she is. She is like a vessel tossed
-on the stormy ocean, having neither compass nor rudder, seeing neither
-sun nor stars. All is darkness and confusion.
-
-And how is this? Simply because the Church has lost sight of the pure
-and precious word of her Lord, and accepted instead those bewildering
-creeds and confessions of men which so mar and mutilate the truth of
-God that Christians seem utterly at sea as to their proper standing
-and their proper hope.
-
-And yet they have the Bible in their hands. True; but so had the Jews,
-and yet they rejected that blessed One who is the great theme of the
-Bible from beginning to end. This was the moral inconsistency with
-which our Lord charged them in John v.--"Ye search the Scriptures; for
-in them ye think ye have eternal life; and they are they which testify
-of Me; and ye will not come to Me, that ye might have life."[21]
-
- [21] The word +ereunate+ maybe either imperative or indicative;
- but the context, we judge, demands the latter. They had the
- Scriptures; they were read in their synagogues every Sabbath day; they
- professed to believe that in them they had eternal life; they
- testified of Him; and yet they would not come to Him. Here was the
- flagrant inconsistency. Now, if +ereunate+ be taken as a
- command, the whole force of the passage is lost.
-
- Need we remind the reader that there are plenty of arguments and
- inducements leading us to search the Scriptures, without appealing to
- what we believe to be an inaccurate rendering of John v. 39?
-
-And why was this? Simply because their minds were blinded by religious
-prejudice. They were under the influence of the doctrines and
-commandments of men. Hence, although they had the Scriptures, and
-boasted of having them, they were as ignorant of them, and as little
-governed by them, as the poor dark heathen around them. It is one
-thing to have the Bible in our hands, in our homes, and in our
-assemblies, and quite another thing to have the truths of the Bible
-acting on our hearts and consciences, and shining in our lives.
-
-Take, for instance, the great subject now before us, and which has led
-us into this very lengthened digression. Can any thing be more plainly
-taught in the New Testament than this, namely, that the end of the
-present condition of things will be terrible apostasy from the truth,
-and open rebellion against God and the Lamb? The gospels, the
-epistles, and the Revelation all agree in setting forth this most
-solemn truth, with such distinctness and simplicity that a babe in
-Christ may see it.
-
-And yet how few, comparatively, believe it! The vast majority believe
-the very reverse. They believe that by means of the various agencies
-now in operation all nations shall be converted. In vain we call
-attention to our Lord's parables in Matthew xiii.--the tares, the
-leaven, and the mustard-seed. How do these agree with the idea of a
-converted world? If the whole world is to be converted by a preached
-gospel, how is it that tares are found in the field at the end of the
-age? how is it that there are as many foolish virgins as wise ones
-when the Bridegroom comes? If the whole world is to be converted by
-the gospel, then on whom will "the day of the Lord so come as a thief
-in the night"? or what mean those awful words, "For when they shall
-say, Peace and safety; then sudden destruction cometh upon them, as
-travail upon a woman with child; and they shall not escape"? In view
-of a converted world, what would be the just application, what the
-moral force, of those most solemn words in the first of Revelation,
-"Behold, He cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see Him, and they
-also which pierced Him; and _all kindreds of the earth shall wail_
-because of Him"? Where are all those wailing kindreds to be found if
-the whole world is to be converted?
-
-Reader, is it not as clear as a sunbeam that the two things cannot
-stand for a moment together? Is it not perfectly plain that the theory
-of a world converted by the gospel is diametrically opposed to the
-teaching of the entire New Testament? How is it, then, that the vast
-majority of professing Christians persist in holding it? There can be
-but the one reply, and that is, they do not bow to the authority of
-Scripture. It is most sorrowful and solemn to have to say it; but it
-is, alas! too true. The Bible is read in christendom, but the truths
-of the Bible are not believed--nay, they are persistently rejected;
-and all this in view of the oft-repeated boast that "the Bible, and
-the Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants."
-
-But we shall not pursue this subject further here, much as we feel its
-weight and importance. We trust the reader may be led by the Spirit of
-God to feel its deep solemnity. We believe the Lord's people every
-where need to be thoroughly roused to a sense of how entirely the
-professing church has departed from the authority of Scripture. Here,
-we may rest assured, lies the real cause of all the confusion, all the
-error, all the evil, in our midst. We have departed from the Word of
-the Lord, and from Himself. Until this is seen, felt, and owned, we
-cannot be right. The Lord looks for true repentance, real brokenness
-of spirit, in His presence. "_To this man_ will I look, even to him
-that is _poor_, and of a _contrite_ spirit, and trembleth at My Word."
-
-This always holds good. There is no limit to the blessing when the
-soul is in this truly blessed attitude. But it must be a reality. It
-will not do to talk of being "poor and contrite," we must be in the
-condition. It is an individual matter. "_To this man_ will I look."
-
-Oh may the Lord, in His infinite mercy, lead us, every one, into true
-self-judgment, under the action of His Word. May our ears be open to
-hear His voice. May there be a real turning of our hearts to Himself
-and to His Word. May we turn our backs, in holy decision, once and
-forever, upon every thing that will not stand the test of Scripture.
-This, we are persuaded, is what our Lord Christ looks for on the part
-of all who belong to Him, amid the terrible and hopeless _debris_ of
-christendom.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-"Now these are the commandments, the statutes, and the judgments,
-which the Lord your God commanded to teach you, that ye might do them
-in the land whither ye go to possess it: that thou mightest fear the
-Lord thy God, to keep all His statutes and His commandments, which I
-command thee, thou, and thy son, and thy son's son, all the days of
-thy life; and that thy days may be prolonged. Hear therefore, O
-Israel, and observe to do it; that it may be well with thee, and that
-ye may increase mightily, as the Lord God of thy fathers hath promised
-thee, in the land that floweth with milk and honey. Hear, O Israel:
-The Lord our God is one Lord."
-
-We have here presented to us that great cardinal truth which the
-nation of Israel was specially responsible to hold fast and confess,
-namely, the unity of the Godhead. This truth lay at the very
-foundation of the Jewish economy. It was the grand centre around which
-the people were to rally. So long as they maintained this, they were a
-happy, prosperous, fruitful people; but when it was let go, all was
-gone. It was their great national bulwark, and that which was to mark
-them off from all the nations of the earth. They were called to
-confess this glorious truth in the face of an idolatrous world, with
-"its gods many, and lords many." It was Israel's high privilege and
-holy responsibility to bear a steady witness to the truth contained
-in that one weighty sentence, "The Lord our God is one Lord," in
-marked opposition to the false gods innumerable of the heathen around.
-Their father Abraham had been called out from the very midst of
-heathen idolatry, to be a witness to the one true and living God, to
-trust Him, to walk with Him, to lean on Him, and to obey Him.
-
-If the reader will turn to the last chapter of Joshua, he will find a
-very striking allusion to this fact, and a very important use made of
-it, in his closing address to the people.--"And Joshua gathered all
-the tribes of Israel to Shechem, and called for the elders of Israel,
-and for their heads, and for their judges, and for their officers; and
-they presented themselves before God. And Joshua said unto all the
-people, 'Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, Your fathers dwelt on the
-other side of the flood in old time, even Terah, the father of
-Abraham, and the father of Nachor; and _they served other gods_. And I
-took your father Abraham from the other side of the flood, and led him
-throughout all the land of Canaan, and multiplied his seed, and gave
-him Isaac.'"
-
-Here Joshua reminds the people of the fact that their fathers had
-served other gods--a very solemn and weighty fact most surely, and one
-which they ought never to have forgotten, inasmuch as the remembrance
-of it would have taught them their deep need of watchfulness over
-themselves, lest by any means they should be drawn back into that
-gross and terrible evil out of which God, in His sovereign grace and
-electing love, had called their father Abraham. It would have been
-their wisdom to consider that the self-same evil in which their
-fathers had lived, in the olden time, was just the one into which they
-themselves were likely to fall.
-
-Having presented this fact to the people, Joshua brings before them,
-with uncommon force and vividness, all the leading events of their
-history, from the birth of their father Isaac, down to the moment in
-which he was addressing them; and then sums up with the following
-telling appeal: "Now therefore fear the Lord, and serve Him in
-sincerity and in truth; and _put away the gods which your fathers
-served on the other side of the flood, and in Egypt_; and serve ye the
-Lord. And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this
-day whom ye will serve; whether _the gods which your fathers served
-that were on the other side of the flood_, or the gods of the Amorites
-in whose land ye dwell; but as for me and my house, we will serve the
-Lord."
-
-Mark the repeated allusion to the fact that their fathers had
-worshiped false gods; and further, that the land into which Jehovah
-had brought them had been polluted, from one end to the other, by the
-dark abominations of heathen idolatry.
-
-Thus does this faithful servant of the Lord, evidently by the
-inspiration of the Holy Ghost, seek to set before the people their
-danger of giving up the grand central and foundation truth of the one
-true and living God, and falling back into the worship of idols. He
-urges upon them the absolute necessity of whole-hearted decision.
-"Choose you _this day_ whom ye will serve." There is nothing like
-plain, out-and-out decision for God. It is due to Him always. He had
-proved Himself to be unmistakably for them in redeeming them from the
-bondage of Egypt, bringing them through the wilderness, and planting
-them in the land of Canaan; hence, therefore, that they should be
-wholly for Him was nothing more than their reasonable service.
-
-How deeply Joshua felt all this for himself is evident from those very
-memorable words, "As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord."
-Lovely words! Precious decision! National religion might, and, alas!
-did, go to ruin; but personal and family religion could, by the grace
-of God, be maintained every where and at all times.
-
-Thank God for this! May we never forget it. "Me and my house" is
-Faith's clear and delightful response to God's "Thou and thy house."
-Let the condition of the ostensible, professed people of God, at any
-given time, be what it may, it is the privilege of every true-hearted
-man of God to adopt and act upon this immortal decision: "As for me
-and my house, we will serve the Lord."
-
-True, it is only by the grace of God, continually supplied, that this
-holy resolution can be carried out; but we may rest assured that where
-the bent of the heart is to follow the Lord fully, all needed grace
-will be ministered, day by day; for those encouraging words must ever
-hold good, "_My_ grace is sufficient for _thee_; for My strength is
-made perfect in weakness."
-
-Let us now look for a moment at the apparent effect of Joshua's
-soul-stirring appeal to the congregation. It seemed very promising.
-"The people answered and said, 'God forbid that we should forsake the
-Lord, to serve other gods; for the Lord our God, He it is that brought
-us up and our fathers out of the land of Egypt, from the house of
-bondage, and which did those great signs in our sight, and preserved
-us in all the way wherein we went, and among all the people through
-whom we passed: and the Lord drave out from before us all the people,
-even the Amorites which dwelt in the land; therefore will we also
-serve the Lord, for He is our God."
-
-All this sounded very well, and looked very hopeful. They seemed to
-have a clear sense of the moral basis of Jehovah's claim upon them for
-implicit obedience. They could accurately recount all His mighty deeds
-on their behalf, and make very earnest and no doubt sincere
-protestations against idolatry, and promises of obedience to Jehovah,
-their God.
-
-But it is very evident that Joshua was not particularly sanguine about
-all this profession, for he "said unto the people, 'Ye cannot serve
-the Lord: for He is a holy God; He is a jealous God; He will not
-forgive your transgressions nor your sins. If ye forsake the Lord, and
-serve strange gods, then He will turn and do you hurt, and consume
-you, after that He hath done you good.' And the people said unto
-Joshua, 'Nay; but we will serve the Lord.' And Joshua said unto the
-people, 'Ye are witnesses against yourselves that ye have chosen you
-the Lord, to serve Him.' And they said, 'We are witnesses.' 'Now
-therefore put away,' said he, '_the strange gods which are among you_,
-and _incline your heart unto the Lord God of Israel_.' And the people
-said unto Joshua, 'The Lord our God will we serve, and His voice will
-we obey.'"
-
-We do not now stop to contemplate the aspect in which Joshua presents
-God to the congregation of Israel, inasmuch as our object in referring
-to the passage is to show the prominent place assigned, in Joshua's
-address, to the truth of the unity of the Godhead. This was the truth
-to which Israel was called to bear witness, in view of all the nations
-of the earth, and in which they were to find their moral safeguard
-against the ensnaring influences of idolatry.
-
-But, alas! this very truth was _the_ one as to which they most
-speedily and signally failed. The promises, vows, and resolutions made
-under the powerful influence of Joshua's appeal soon proved to be like
-the early dew and the morning cloud, that passeth away. "The people
-served the Lord all the days of Joshua, and all the days of the elders
-that outlived Joshua, who had seen all the great works of the Lord,
-that He did for Israel. And Joshua, the son of Nun, the servant of the
-Lord, died, being a hundred and ten years old.... And also all that
-generation were gathered unto their fathers; and there arose another
-generation after them, which knew not the Lord, nor yet the works
-which He had done for Israel. And the children of Israel did evil in
-the sight of the Lord, _and served Baalim_; and they forsook the Lord
-God of their fathers, which brought them out of the land of Egypt,
-_and followed_ other gods, of the gods of the people that were round
-about them, _and bowed themselves unto them_, and provoked the Lord to
-anger. And they forsook the Lord, and served Baal and Ashtaroth."
-(Judges ii. 7-13.)
-
-Reader, how admonitory is all this! how full of solemn warning to us
-all! The grand, all-important, special, and characteristic truth so
-soon abandoned! The one only true and living God given up for Baal and
-Ashtaroth! So long as Joshua and the elders lived, their presence and
-their influence kept Israel from open apostasy; but no sooner were
-those moral embankments removed than the dark tide of idolatry rolled
-in and swept away the very foundations of the national faith. Jehovah
-of Israel was displaced by Baal and Ashtaroth. Human influence is a
-poor prop, a feeble barrier. We must be sustained by the power of God,
-else we shall, sooner or later, give way. The faith that stands merely
-in the wisdom of men, and not in the power of God, must prove a poor,
-flimsy, worthless faith. It will not stand the day of trial; it will
-not bear the furnace; it will most assuredly break down.
-
-It is well to remember this. Second-hand faith will never do. There
-must be a living link connecting the soul with God. We must have to do
-with God for ourselves individually, else we shall give way when the
-testing-time comes. Human example and human influence may be all very
-good in their place. It was all very well to look at Joshua and the
-elders, and see how they followed the Lord. It is quite true that "as
-iron sharpeneth iron, so doth the countenance of a man his friend." It
-is very encouraging to be surrounded by a number of truly devoted
-hearts--very delightful to be borne along upon the bosom of the tide
-of collective loyalty to Christ--to His Person and to His cause. But
-if this be all,--if there be not the deep spring of personal faith and
-personal knowledge,--if there be not the divinely formed and the
-divinely sustained link of individual relationship and communion, then
-when the human props are removed,--when the tide of human influence
-ebbs,--when general declension sets in, we shall be, in principle,
-like Israel following the Lord all the days of Joshua and the elders,
-and then giving up the confession of His name and returning to the
-follies and vanities of this present world--things no better, in
-reality, than Baal and Ashtaroth.
-
-But, on the other hand, when the heart is thoroughly established in
-the truth and grace of God,--when we can say--as it is the privilege
-of each true believer to say--"I know _whom_ I have believed, and am
-persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him
-against that day," then, although all should turn aside from the
-public confession of Christ,--although we should find ourselves left
-without the help of a human countenance or the support of a human arm,
-we shall find "the foundation of God" as sure as ever, and the path of
-obedience as plain before us as though thousands were treading it with
-holy decision and energy.
-
-We must never lose sight of the fact that it is the divine purpose
-that the professing church of God should learn deep and holy lessons
-from the history of Israel. "Whatsoever things were written aforetime
-were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of
-the Scriptures might have hope." Nor is it by any means necessary, in
-order to our thus learning from the Old-Testament scriptures, that we
-should occupy ourselves in searching out fanciful analogies, curious
-theories, or far-fetched illustrations. Many, alas! have tried these
-things, and instead of finding "comfort" in the Scriptures, they have
-been led away into empty and foolish conceits, if not into deadly
-errors.
-
-But our business is with the living facts recorded on the page of
-inspired history. These are to be our study; from these we are to draw
-our great practical lessons. Take, for example, the weighty and
-admonitory fact now before us--a fact standing out in characters deep
-and broad on the page of Israel's history from Joshua to Isaiah--the
-fact of Israel's lamentable departure from that very truth which they
-were specially called to hold and confess--the truth of the unity of
-the Godhead. The very first thing they did was to let go this grand
-and all-important truth, this key-stone of the arch, the foundation
-of the whole edifice, the very heart of their national existence, the
-living centre of their national polity. They gave it up, and turned
-back to the idolatry of their fathers on the other side of the flood,
-and of the heathen nations around them. They abandoned that most
-glorious and distinctive truth on the maintenance of which their very
-existence as a nation depended. Had they only held fast this truth,
-they would have been invincible; but in surrendering it, they
-surrendered all, and became much worse than the nations around them,
-inasmuch as they sinned against light and knowledge--sinned with their
-eyes open--sinned in the face of the most solemn warnings and earnest
-entreaties, and, we may add, in the face of the most vehement and
-oft-repeated promises and protestations of obedience.
-
-Yes, reader, Israel gave up the worship of the one true and living
-God, Jehovah-Elohim, their covenant-God; not only their Creator, but
-their Redeemer--the One who had brought them up out of the land of
-Egypt, conducted them through the Red Sea, led them through the
-wilderness, brought them across the Jordan, and planted them in
-triumph in the inheritance which He had promised to Abraham their
-father--"a land flowing with milk and honey, which is the glory of all
-lands." They turned their backs upon Him, and gave themselves up to
-the worship of false gods; "they provoked Him to anger with their high
-places, and moved Him to jealousy with their graven images."
-
-It seems perfectly wonderful that a people who had seen and known so
-much of the goodness and loving-kindness of God--His mighty acts, His
-faithfulness, His majesty, His glory, could ever bring themselves to
-bow down to the stock of a tree; but so it was. Their whole history,
-from the days of the calf at the foot of Mount Sinai, to the day in
-which Nebuchadnezzar reduced Jerusalem to ruins, is marked by an
-unconquerable spirit of idolatry. In vain did Jehovah, in His
-long-suffering mercy and abounding goodness, raise up deliverers for
-them, to lift them from beneath the terrible consequences of their sin
-and folly. Again and again, in His inexhaustable mercy and patience,
-He saved them from the hand of their enemies. He raised up an Othniel,
-an Ehud, a Barak, a Gideon, a Jephthah, a Samson--those instruments of
-His mercy and power--those witnesses of His deep and tender love and
-compassion toward His poor infatuated people. No sooner had each judge
-passed off the scene than back the nation plunged into their besetting
-sin of idolatry.
-
-So, also, in the days of the kings; it is the same melancholy,
-heart-rending story. True, there were bright spots here and
-there--some brilliant stars shining out through the deep gloom of the
-nation's history; we have a David, an Asa, a Jehoshaphat, a Hezekiah,
-a Josiah--refreshing and blessed exceptions to the dark and dismal
-rule. But even men like these failed to eradicate from the heart of
-the nation the pernicious root of idolatry. Even amid the unexampled
-splendors of Solomon's reign, that root sent forth its bitter shoots,
-in the monstrous form of high places to Ashtaroth, the goddess of the
-Zidonians; Milcom, the abomination of the Ammonites; and Chemosh, the
-abomination of Moab.
-
-Reader, only think of this. Pause for a moment, and contemplate the
-astounding fact of the writer of the Canticles, Ecclesiastes, and
-Proverbs bowing at the shrine of Molech! Only conceive, the wisest,
-the wealthiest, and the most glorious of Israel's monarchs burning
-incense and offering sacrifices upon the altar of Chemosh!
-
-Truly, there is something here for us to ponder. It was written for
-our learning. The reign of Solomon affords one of the most striking
-and impressive evidences of the fact which is just now engaging our
-attention, namely, Israel's complete and hopeless apostasy from the
-grand truth of the unity of the Godhead--their unconquerable spirit of
-idolatry. The truth which they were specially called out to hold and
-confess was the very truth which they first of all and most
-persistently abandoned.
-
-We shall not pursue the dark line of evidence further, neither shall
-we dwell upon the appalling picture of the nation's judgment in
-consequence of their idolatry. They are now in the condition of which
-the prophet Hosea speaks--"The children of Israel shall abide many
-days without a king, and without a prince, and without a sacrifice,
-and without an image, and without an ephod, and without teraphim."
-"The unclean spirit of idolatry has gone out of them," during these
-"many days," to return, by and by, with "seven other spirits more
-wicked than himself"--the very perfection of spiritual wickedness. And
-then will come days of unparalleled tribulation upon that long
-misguided and deeply revolted people--"the time of Jacob's trouble."
-
-But deliverance will come, blessed be God! Bright days are in store
-for the restored nation--"days of heaven upon earth"--as the same
-prophet Hosea tells us, "Afterward shall the children of Israel
-return, and seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall
-fear the Lord and His goodness in the latter days." All the promises
-of God to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and David shall be blessedly
-accomplished; all the brilliant predictions of the prophets, from
-Isaiah to Malachi, shall be gloriously fulfilled. Yes, both promises
-and prophecies shall be literally and gloriously made good to restored
-Israel, in the land of Canaan; for "the Scripture cannot be broken."
-The long, dark, dreary night shall be followed by the brightest day
-that has ever shone upon this earth; the daughter of Zion shall bask
-in the bright and blessed beams of "the Sun of Righteousness;" and
-"the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord as the
-waters cover the sea."
-
-It would indeed be a most delightful exercise to reproduce upon the
-pages of this volume those glowing passages from the prophets which
-speak of Israel's future; but this we cannot attempt; it is not
-needful; and we have a duty to fulfill which, if not so pleasing to us
-or so refreshing to the reader, will, we earnestly hope, prove not
-less profitable.
-
-The duty is this: to press upon the attention of the reader (and upon
-the attention of the whole Church of God) the practical application of
-that solemn fact in Israel's history on which we have dwelt at such
-length--the fact of their having so speedily and so completely given
-up the great truth set forth in Deuteronomy vi. 4, "Hear, O Israel;
-the Lord our God is one Lord."
-
-We may perhaps be asked, What bearing can this fact have upon the
-Church of God? We believe it has a most solemn bearing; and further,
-we believe we should be guilty of a very culpable shirking of our duty
-to Christ and to His Church if we failed to point it out. We know that
-all the great facts of Israel's history are full of instruction, full
-of admonition, full of warning, for us. It is our business, our
-bounden duty, to see that we profit by them--to take heed that we
-study them aright.
-
-Now, in contemplating the history of the Church of God as a public
-witness for Christ on the earth, we find that hardly had it been set
-up, in all the fullness of blessing and privilege which marked the
-opening of its career, ere it began to slip away from those very
-truths which it was specially responsible to maintain and confess.
-Like Adam in the garden of Eden; like Noah in the restored earth; like
-Israel in Canaan; so the Church, as the responsible steward of the
-mysteries of God, was no sooner set in its place than it began to
-totter and fall. It almost immediately began to give up those grand
-truths which were characteristic of its very existence, and which were
-to mark off Christianity from all that had gone before. Even under the
-eyes of the apostles of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, errors and
-evils had begun to work which sapped the very foundations of the
-Church's testimony.
-
-Are we asked for proofs? Alas! we have them in melancholy abundance.
-Hear the words of that blessed apostle who shed more tears and heaved
-more sighs over the ruins of the Church than any man that ever lived.
-"I marvel," he says, and well he might, "that ye are _so soon_ removed
-from Him that called you into the grace of Christ, unto another
-gospel: which is not another." "O foolish Galatians, who hath
-bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth, before whose eyes
-Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth, crucified among you?"
-"Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service to them which by
-nature are no gods. But now, after that ye have known God, or rather
-are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements,
-whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage? Ye observe days and months
-and times and years;" Christian festivals, so called, very imposing
-and gratifying to religious nature; but, in the judgment of the
-apostle, the judgment of the Holy Ghost, it was simply giving up
-Christianity and going back to the worship of idols. "I am afraid of
-you"--and no wonder, when they could thus so speedily turn away from
-the grand characteristic truths of a heavenly Christianity, and occupy
-themselves with superstitious observances. "I am afraid of you, lest I
-have bestowed upon you labor in vain." "Ye did run well; who did
-hinder you, that ye should not obey the truth? This persuasion cometh
-not of Him that calleth you. A little leaven leaveneth the whole
-lump."
-
-And all this in the apostle's own day. The departure was even more
-rapid than in Israel's case; for they served the Lord all the days of
-Joshua, and all the days of the elders that outlived Joshua; but in
-the Church's sad and humiliating history, the enemy succeeded almost
-immediately in introducing leaven into the meal, tares among the
-wheat. Ere the apostles themselves had left the scene, seed was sown
-which has been bearing its pernicious fruit ever since, and shall
-continue to bear till angelic reapers clear the field.
-
-But we must give further proof from Scripture. Let us hearken to the
-same inspired witness, near the close of his ministry, pouring out his
-heart to his beloved son Timothy, in accents at once pathetic and
-solemn. "This thou knowest, that all they which are in Asia be turned
-away from me." Again, "Preach the Word; be instant in season, out of
-season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine.
-For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but
-after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having
-itching ears; and _they shall turn away their ears from the truth_,
-and shall be turned unto fables."
-
-Here is the testimony of the man who, as a wise master-builder, had
-laid the foundation of the Church. And what was his own personal
-experience? He was, like his blessed Master, left alone, deserted by
-those who had once gathered around him in the freshness, bloom, and
-ardor of early days. His large loving heart was broken by Judaizing
-teachers, who sought to overturn the very foundations of Christianity,
-and to overthrow the faith of God's elect. He wept over the ways of
-many who, while they made a profession, were nevertheless "the enemies
-of the cross of Christ."
-
-In a word, the apostle Paul, as he looked forth from his prison at
-Rome, saw the hopeless wreck and ruin of the professing body. He saw
-that it would happen to that body as it had happened to the ship in
-which he had made his last voyage--a voyage strikingly significant and
-illustrative of the Church's sad history in this world.
-
-But here let us just remind the reader that we are dealing now only
-with the question of the Church as a responsible witness for Christ on
-the earth. This must be distinctly seen, else we shall greatly err in
-our thoughts on the subject. We must accurately distinguish between
-the Church as the body of Christ, and as His light-bearer or witness
-in the world. In the former character, failure is impossible; in the
-latter, the ruin is complete and hopeless.
-
-The Church as the body of Christ, united to her living and glorified
-Head in the heavens, by the presence and indwelling of the Holy Ghost,
-can never, by any possibility, fail--never be smashed to pieces, like
-Paul's ship, by the storms and billows of this hostile world. It is as
-safe as Christ Himself. The Head and the body are one--indissolubly
-one. No power of earth or hell--men or devils can ever touch the
-feeblest and most obscure member of that blessed body. All stand
-before God, all are under His gracious eye, in the fullness, beauty,
-and acceptability of Christ Himself. As is the Head, so are the
-members--all the members together--each member in particular. All
-stand in the full eternal results of Christ's finished work on the
-cross. There is, there can be, no question of responsibility here. The
-Head made Himself responsible for the members. He perfectly met every
-claim, and discharged every liability. Nothing remains but love--love,
-deep as the heart of Christ, perfect as His work, unchanging as His
-throne. Every question that could possibly be raised against any one
-or all of the members of the Church of God was raised, gone into, and
-definitively settled, between God and His Christ, on the cross. All
-the sins, all the iniquities, all the transgressions, all the guilt,
-of each member in particular, and all the members together--yes, all,
-in the fullest and most absolute way, was laid on Christ and borne by
-Him. God, in His inflexible justice, in His infinite holiness, in His
-eternal righteousness, dealt with every thing that could ever, in any
-possible manner, stand in the way of the full salvation, perfect
-blessedness, and everlasting glory of every one of the members of the
-body of Christ--the assembly of God. Every member of the body is
-permeated by the life of the Head; every stone in the building is
-animated by the life of the Chief Corner-Stone. All are bound together
-in the power of a bond which can never--no, never be dissolved.
-
-And furthermore, let it be distinctly understood that the unity of the
-body of Christ is absolutely indissoluble. This is a cardinal point
-which must be tenaciously held and faithfully confessed. But obviously
-it cannot be held and confessed unless it is understood and believed;
-and, judging from the expressions which one sometimes hears in
-speaking on the subject, it is very questionable indeed if people so
-expressing themselves have ever grasped in a divine way the glorious
-truth of the unity of the body of Christ--a unity maintained on earth
-by the indwelling of the Holy Ghost.
-
-Thus, for example, we sometimes hear people speak of "rending the body
-of Christ." It is a complete mistake. Such a thing is utterly
-impossible. The Reformers were accused of rending the body of Christ
-when they turned their backs upon the Romish system. What a gross
-misconception! It simply amounted to the monstrous assumption that a
-vast mass of moral evil, doctrinal error, ecclesiastical corruption,
-and debasing superstition was to be owned as the body of Christ! How
-could any one with the New Testament in his hand regard the so-called
-church of Rome, with its numberless and nameless abominations, as the
-body of Christ? How could any one possessing the very faintest idea of
-the true Church of God ever think of bestowing that title upon the
-darkest mass of wickedness, the greatest masterpiece of Satan the
-world has ever beheld?
-
-No, reader; we must never confound the ecclesiastical systems of this
-world--ancient, medieval, or modern; Greek, Latin, Anglican; national
-or popular, established or dissenting--with the true Church of God,
-the body of Christ. There is not, beneath the canopy of heaven, this
-day, nor ever was, a religious system, call it what you please,
-possessing the very smallest claim to be called "the Church of God,"
-or "the body of Christ." And, as a consequence, it can never be
-rightly or intelligently called schism, or rending the body of Christ,
-to separate from such systems; nay, on the contrary, it is the bounden
-duty of every one who would faithfully maintain and confess the truth
-of the unity of the body to separate, with the most unqualified
-decision, from every thing falsely calling itself a church. It can
-only be viewed as schism to separate from those who are unmistakably
-and unquestionably gathered on the ground of the assembly of God.
-
-No body of Christians can now lay claim to the title of the body of
-Christ, or Church of God. The members of that body are scattered every
-where; they are to be found in all the various religious organizations
-of the day, save such as deny the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ. We
-cannot admit the idea that any true Christian could continue to
-frequent a place where his Lord is blasphemed. But although no body of
-Christians can lay claim to the title of the assembly of God, all
-Christians are responsible to be gathered on the ground of that
-assembly, and on no other.
-
-And if we be asked, How are we to know--where are we to find this
-ground? We reply, "If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be
-full of light." "If any man _will do_ His will, he shall know of the
-doctrine." "_There is a path_" (thanks be to God for it!) though "no
-fowl knoweth, and the vulture's eye hath not seen it. The lion's
-whelps have not trodden it, nor the fierce lion passed by it."
-Nature's keenest vision cannot see this path, nor its greatest
-strength tread it. Where is it, then? Here it is: "_Unto man_"--to the
-reader and to the writer, to each, to all--"He said, 'Behold, _the
-fear of the Lord_, that is wisdom; and _to depart from evil_ is
-understanding.'" (Job xxviii.)
-
-But there is another expression which we not unfrequently hear from
-persons from whom we might expect more intelligence, namely, "Cutting
-off the members of the body of Christ."[22] This, too, blessed be God,
-is impossible. Not a single member of the body of Christ can ever be
-severed from the Head, or ever disturbed from the place into which he
-has been incorporated by the Holy Ghost, in pursuance of the eternal
-purpose of God, and in virtue of the accomplished atonement of our
-Lord Jesus Christ. The divine Three in One are pledged for the eternal
-security of the very feeblest member of the body, and for the
-maintenance of the indissoluble unity of the whole.
-
- [22] The expression, "Cutting off the members of Christ's body" is
- generally applied in cases of discipline; but it is quite a
- misapplication. The discipline of the assembly can never touch the
- unity of the body. A member of the body may so fail in morals or err
- in doctrine as to call for the action of the assembly in putting him
- away from the table, but that has nothing to do with his place in the
- body. The two things are perfectly distinct.
-
-In a word, then, it is as true to-day as it was when the inspired
-apostle penned the fourth chapter of his epistle to the Ephesians,
-that "there is one body," of which Christ is Head, of which the Holy
-Ghost is the formative power, and of which all true believers are
-members. This body has been on earth since the day of Pentecost, is on
-earth now, and shall continue on earth until that moment, so rapidly
-approaching, when Christ shall come and take it to His Father's house.
-It is the same body, with a continual succession of members, just as
-we speak of a certain regiment of her majesty's army having been at
-Waterloo, and now quartered at Aldershot, though not a man in the
-regiment of to-day appeared at the memorable battle of 1815.
-
-Does the reader feel any difficulty as to all this? It may be that he
-finds it hard, in the present broken and scattered condition of the
-members, to believe and confess the unbroken unity of the whole. He
-may feel disposed, perhaps, to limit the application of Ephesians iv.
-4 to the day in which the apostle penned the words, when Christians
-were manifestly one, and when there was no such thing thought of as
-being a member of this church or a member of that church, because all
-believers were members of _the_ one Church.[23]
-
- [23] The unity of the Church may be compared to a chain thrown across
- a river; we see it at each side, but it dips in the middle. But though
- it dips, it is not broken; though we do not _see_ the union in the
- middle, we _believe_ it is there all the same. The Church was seen in
- its unity on the day of Pentecost, and it will be seen in its unity in
- the glory; and although we do not see it now, we nevertheless believe
- it most surely.
-
- And be it remembered that the unity of the body is a great practical,
- formative truth; and one very weighty practical deduction from it is
- that the state and walk of each member affect the whole body. "If one
- member suffer, all the members suffer with it." A member of what? Some
- local assembly? Nay; but a member of the body. We must not make the
- body of Christ a matter of geography.
-
- But, we may be asked, are we affected by what we do not see or know?
- Assuredly. Are we to limit the grand truth of the unity of the body,
- with all its practical consequences, to the measure of our personal
- knowledge and experience? Far be the thought. It is the presence of
- the Holy Ghost that unites the members of the body to the Head and to
- one another; and hence it is that the walk and ways of each affect
- all. Even in Israel's case, where it was not a corporate but a
- national unity, when Achan sinned, it was said, "Israel hath sinned;"
- and the whole congregation suffered a humiliating defeat on account of
- a sin of which they were ignorant.
-
- It is perfectly marvelous how little the Lord's people seem to
- understand the glorious truth of the unity of the body, and the
- practical consequences flowing from it.
-
-In reply, we must protest against the very idea of limiting the Word
-of God. What possible right have we to single out one clause from
-Ephesians iv. 4-6, and say it only applied to the days of the
-apostles? If one clause is to be so limited, why not all? Are there
-not still "one Spirit, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and
-Father of all"? Will any question this? Surely not. Well, then, it
-follows that there is as surely one body as there is one Spirit, one
-Lord, one God. All are intimately bound up together, and you cannot
-touch one without touching all. We have no more right to deny the
-existence of the one body than we have to deny the existence of God,
-inasmuch as the self-same passage that declares to us the one declares
-to us the other also.
-
-But some will doubtless inquire, Where is this one body to be seen? Is
-it not an absurdity to speak of such a thing, in the face of the
-almost numberless denominations of christendom? Our answer is this: We
-are not going to surrender the truth of God because man has so
-signally failed to carry it out. Did not Israel utterly fail to
-maintain, confess, and carry out the truth of the unity of the
-Godhead? and was that glorious truth, in the smallest degree, touched
-by their failure? Was it not as true that there was one God, though
-there were as many idolatrous altars as streets in Jerusalem, and
-every housetop sent up a cloud of incense to the queen of heaven, as
-when Moses sounded forth, in the ears of the whole congregation, those
-sublime words, "Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord"? Blessed
-be God, His truth does not depend upon the faithless, foolish ways of
-men. It stands in its own divine integrity; it shines in its own
-heavenly, undimmed lustre, spite of the grossest human failure. Were
-it not so, what should we do? whither should we turn? or what would
-become of us? In fact, it comes to this: if we were only to believe
-the measure of truth which we see practically carried out in the ways
-of men, we might give up in despair, and be of all men most
-miserable.
-
-But how is the truth of the one body to be practically carried out? By
-refusing to own any other principle of Christian fellowship--any other
-ground of meeting. All true believers should meet on the simple ground
-of membership of the body of Christ, and on no other. They should
-assemble, on the first day of the week, around the Lord's table, and
-break bread, as members of the one body, as we read in 1 Corinthians
-x, "For we, being many, are one loaf, one body; for we are all
-partakers of that one loaf." This is as true and as practical to-day
-as it was when the apostle addressed the assembly at Corinth. True,
-there were divisions at Corinth as there are divisions in christendom;
-but that did not in any wise touch the truth of God. The apostle
-rebuked the divisions--pronounced them carnal. He had no sympathy with
-the poor, low idea which one sometimes hears advocated, that divisions
-are good things, as superinducing emulation. He believed they were
-very bad things--the fruit of the flesh, the work of Satan.
-
-Neither, we feel persuaded, would the apostle have accepted the
-popular illustration that divisions in the Church are like so many
-regiments, with different facings, all fighting under the same
-commander-in-chief. It would not hold good for a moment; indeed, it
-has no application whatever, but rather gives a flat contradiction to
-that distinct and emphatic statement, "There is one body."
-
-Reader, this is a most glorious truth. Let us ponder it deeply. Let us
-look at christendom in the light of it. Let us judge our own position
-and ways by it. Are we acting on it? Do we give expression to it, at
-the Lord's table, every Lord's day? Be assured it is our sacred duty
-and high privilege so to do. Say not there are difficulties of all
-sorts, many stumbling-blocks in the way, much to dishearten us in the
-conduct of those who profess to meet on this very ground of which we
-speak.
-
-All this is, alas! but too true. We must be quite prepared for it. The
-devil will leave no stone unturned to cast dust in our eyes, so that
-we may not see God's blessed way for His people. But we must not give
-heed to his suggestions or be snared by his devices. There always have
-been, and there always will be difficulties in the way of carrying out
-the precious truth of God; and perhaps one of the greatest
-difficulties is found in the inconsistent conduct of those who profess
-to act upon it.
-
-But then we must ever distinguish between the truth and those who
-profess it--between the ground and the conduct of those who occupy it.
-Of course, they ought to harmonize, but they do not; and hence we are
-imperatively called to judge the conduct by the ground, not the ground
-by the conduct. If we saw a man farming on a principle which we knew
-to be thoroughly sound, but he was a bad farmer, what should we do? Of
-course, we should reject his mode of working, but hold the principle
-all the same.
-
-Not otherwise is it in reference to the truth now before us. There
-were heresies at Corinth, schisms, errors, evils of all sorts. What
-then? Was the truth of God to be surrendered as a myth, as something
-wholly impracticable? was it all to be given up? Were the Corinthians
-to meet on some other principle? were they to organize themselves on
-some new ground? were they to gather around some fresh centre? No,
-thank God! His truth was not to be surrendered for a moment, although
-Corinth was split up into ten thousand sects, and its horizon darkened
-by ten thousand heresies. The body of Christ is one; and the apostle
-simply displays in their view the banner with this blessed
-inscription: "Ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular."
-
-Now, these words were addressed, not merely "unto the church at
-Corinth," but also "to all that in every place call upon the name of
-Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and ours." Hence, the truth of the
-one body is abiding and universal. Every true Christian is bound to
-recognize it and to act on it, and every assembly of Christians,
-wherever convened, should be the local expression of this grand and
-all-important truth.
-
-Some might perhaps feel disposed to ask how it could be said to any
-one assembly, "Ye are the body of Christ." Were there not saints at
-Ephesus, Colosse, and Philippi? No doubt; and had the apostle been
-addressing them on the same subject, he could have said to them
-likewise, "Ye are the body of Christ," inasmuch as they were the
-local expression of the body; and not only so, but, in addressing
-them, he had before his mind all saints, to the end of the Church's
-earthly career.
-
-But we must bear in mind that the apostle could not possibly address
-such words to any human organization, ancient or modern. No; nor if
-all such organizations, call them what you please, were amalgamated
-into one, could he speak of it as "the body of Christ." That body, let
-it be distinctly understood, consists of all true believers on the
-face of the earth. That they are not gathered on that only divine
-ground, is their serious loss and their Lord's dishonor. The precious
-truth holds good all the same--"There is one body," and this is the
-divine standard by which to measure every ecclesiastical association
-and every religious system under the sun.
-
-We deem it needful to go somewhat fully into the divine side of the
-question of the Church, in order to guard the truth of God from the
-results of misapprehension, and also that the reader may clearly
-understand that in speaking of the utter failure and ruin of the
-Church, we are looking at the human side of the subject. To this
-latter we must return for a moment.
-
-It is impossible to read the New Testament with a calm and
-unprejudiced mind and not see that the Church as a responsible witness
-for Christ on the earth has most signally and shamefully failed. To
-quote all the passages in proof of this statement would literally
-fill a small volume; but let us glance at the second and third
-chapters of the book of Revelation, where the Church is seen under
-judgment. We have, in these solemn chapters, what we may call a divine
-Church-history. Seven assemblies are taken up, as illustrative of the
-various phases of the Church's history, from the day in which it was
-set up, in responsibility, on the earth, until it shall be spued out
-of the Lord's mouth, as something utterly intolerable. If we do not
-see that these two chapters are prophetic, as well as historic, we
-shall deprive ourselves of a vast field of most valuable instruction.
-For ourselves, we can only assure the reader that no human language
-could adequately set forth what we have gathered from Revelation ii.
-and iii., in their prophetic aspect.
-
-However, we are only referring to them now as the last of a series of
-Scripture proofs of our present thesis. Take the address to Ephesus,
-the self-same church to which the apostle Paul wrote his marvelous
-epistle, opening up so blessedly the heavenly side of things, God's
-eternal purpose respecting the Church--the position and portion of the
-Church, as accepted in Christ and blessed with all spiritual blessings
-in the heavenlies in Him. No failure here; no thought of such a thing;
-no possibility of it. All is in God's hands here. The counsel is His;
-the work His. It is His grace, His glory, His mighty power, His good
-pleasure; and all founded upon the blood of Christ. There is no
-question of responsibility here. The Church was "dead in trespasses
-and sins;" but Christ died for her; He placed Himself judicially where
-she was morally; and God, in His sovereign grace, entered the scene
-and raised up Christ from the dead, and the Church in Him. Glorious
-fact! Here all is sure and settled. It is the Church in the heavenlies
-_in_ Christ, not the Church on earth _for_ Christ,--it is _the body_
-"_accepted_," not _the candlestick judged_. If we do not see both
-sides of this great question, we have much to learn.
-
-But there is the earthly side as well as the heavenly--the human as
-well as the divine--the candlestick as well as the body. Hence it is
-that in the judicial address in Revelation ii. we read such solemn
-words as these: "_I have against thee_, that thou hast left thy first
-love."
-
-How very distinct! Nothing like this in Ephesians; nothing against the
-body, nothing against the bride; but there is something against the
-candlestick. The light had even already become dim. Hardly had it been
-lighted ere the snuffers were needed.
-
-Thus, at the very outset, symptoms of decline showed themselves,
-unmistakably, to the penetrating eye of Him who walked amongst the
-seven golden candlesticks; and when we reach the close, and
-contemplate the last phase of the Church's condition--the last stage
-of its earthly history, as illustrated by the assembly at
-Laodicea--there is not a single redeeming feature. The case is almost
-hopeless. The Lord is outside the door.--"Behold, I stand at the
-door, and knock." It is not here as at Ephesus, "I have somewhat
-against thee." The whole condition is bad. The whole professing body
-is about to be given up.--"I will spue thee out of My mouth." He still
-lingers, blessed be His name, for He is ever slow to leave the place
-of mercy, or enter the place of judgment. It reminds us of the
-departure of the glory, in the opening of Ezekiel. It moved with a
-slow and measured pace, loth to leave the house, the people, and the
-land. "Then the glory of the Lord went up from the cherub, and stood
-over the threshold of the house; and the house was filled with the
-cloud, and the court was full of the brightness of the Lord's glory."
-"Then the glory of the Lord departed from off the threshold of the
-house, and stood over the cherubim." And finally, "the glory of the
-Lord went up from the midst of the city, and stood upon the mountain
-which is on the east side of the city." (Ezek. x. 4, 18; xi. 23.)
-
-This is deeply affecting. How striking the contrast between this slow
-departure of the glory and its speedy entrance, in the day of
-Solomon's dedication of the house in 2 Chronicles vii. 1. Jehovah was
-quick to enter His abode in the midst of His people; slow to leave it.
-He was, to speak after the manner of men, forced away by the sins and
-hopeless impenitence of His infatuated people.
-
-So also with the Church. We see in the second of Acts His rapid
-entrance into His spiritual house. He came like a rushing mighty wind
-to fill the house with His glory. But in the third of Revelation, see
-His attitude: He is outside. Yes; but He is knocking. He lingers, not
-indeed with any hope of corporate restoration, but if haply "_any man_
-would hear His voice and open the door." The fact of His being outside
-shows what the church is. The fact of His knocking shows what He is.
-
-Christian reader, see that you thoroughly understand this whole
-subject: it is of the very last importance that you should. We are
-surrounded on all sides with false notions as to the present condition
-and future destiny of the professing church. We must fling these all
-behind our backs, with holy decision, and listen, with circumcised ear
-and reverent mind, to the teaching of holy Scripture. That teaching is
-as clear as noonday. The professing church is a hopeless ruin, and
-judgment is at the door. Read the epistle of Jude; read 2 Peter ii.
-and iii.; read 2 Timothy. Just lay aside this volume and look closely
-into those solemn scriptures, and we feel persuaded you will rise from
-the study with the deep and thorough conviction that there is nothing
-whatever before christendom but the unmitigated wrath of Almighty God.
-Its doom is set forth in that brief but solemn sentence in Romans xi.,
-"Thou also shalt be cut off."
-
-Yes; such is the language of Scripture.--"Cut off"--"spued out." The
-professing church has utterly failed as Christ's witness on the earth.
-As with Israel, so with the Church, the very truth which she was
-responsible to maintain and confess, she had faithlessly surrendered.
-Hardly had the canon of New-Testament scripture closed, hardly had the
-first set of laborers left the field, ere gross darkness set in, and
-settled down upon the whole professing body. Turn where you will,
-range through the ponderous tomes of "the fathers," as they are
-called, and you will not find a trace of those grand characteristic
-truths of our glorious Christianity. All, all was shamefully
-abandoned. As Israel in Canaan abandoned Jehovah for Baal and
-Ashtaroth, so the Church abandoned the pure and precious truth of God
-for puerile fables and deadly errors. The rapid departure is perfectly
-astounding; but it was just as the apostle Paul forewarned the elders
-of Ephesus.--"Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the
-flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed
-the Church of God, which He hath purchased with His own blood. For I
-know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in
-among you, not sparing the flock. Also from among your own selves
-shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples
-after them." (Acts xx.)
-
-How truly deplorable! The holy apostles of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
-Christ almost immediately succeeded by "grievous wolves" and teachers
-of perverse things; the whole Church plunged into thick darkness; the
-lamp of divine revelation almost hidden from view; ecclesiastical
-corruption in every form; priestly domination with all its terrible
-accompaniments. In short, the history of the Church--the history of
-christendom is the most appalling record ever penned.
-
-True it is, thanks be to God, He left not Himself without a witness.
-Here and there, from time to time, just as in Israel of old, He raised
-up one and another to speak for Him. Even amid the deepest gloom of
-the middle ages, an occasional star appears upon the horizon. The
-Waldenses and others were enabled, by the grace of God, to hold fast
-His Word and to confess the name of Jesus in the face of Rome's dark
-and terrible tyranny, and diabolical cruelty.
-
-Then came that gracious season, in the sixteenth century, when God
-raised up Luther and his beloved and honored fellow-laborers to preach
-the great truth of justification by faith, and to give the precious
-volume of God to the people, in their own tongue wherein they were
-born. It is not within the compass of human language to set forth the
-blessing of that memorable time. Thousands heard the glad tidings of
-salvation--heard, believed, and were saved. Thousands, who had long
-groaned beneath the intolerable weight of Romish superstition, hailed,
-with profound thankfulness, the heavenly message. Thousands flocked,
-with intense delight, to draw water from those wells of inspiration
-which had been stopped for ages by papal ignorance and intolerance.
-The blessed lamp of divine revelation, so long hidden by the enemy's
-hand, was permitted to cast its rays athwart the gloom, and thousands
-rejoiced in its heavenly light.
-
-But while we heartily bless God for all the glorious results of what
-is commonly called the reformation, in the sixteenth century, we
-should make a very grave mistake indeed were we to imagine that it was
-any thing approaching to a restoration of the Church to its original
-condition. Far--very far from it. Luther and his companions, if we are
-to judge from their writings--precious writings, many of them--never
-grasped the divine idea of the Church as the body of Christ. They did
-not understand the unity of the body; the presence of the Holy Ghost
-in the assembly, as well as His indwelling in the individual believer;
-they never reached the grand truth of ministry in the Church, "its
-nature, source, power, and responsibility;" they never got beyond the
-idea of human authority as the basis of ministry; they were silent as
-to the specific hope of the Church, namely, the coming of Christ for
-His people--the bright and morning Star; they failed to seize the
-proper scope of prophecy, and proved themselves incompetent rightly to
-divide the word of truth.
-
-Let us not be misunderstood. We love the memory of the reformers.
-Their names are familiar household words amongst us. They were dear,
-devoted, earnest, blessed servants of Christ. Would that we had their
-like amongst us in this day of revived popery and rampant infidelity.
-We would yield to none in our love and esteem for Luther, Melanchthon,
-Farel, Latimer, and Knox. They were truly bright and shining lights in
-their day; and thousands--yea, millions will thank God throughout
-eternity that they ever lived and preached and wrote. And not only
-so, but, looked at in their private life and public ministry, they put
-to shame many of those who have been favored with a range of truth for
-which we look in vain in the voluminous writings of the reformers.
-
-But, admitting all this, as we most freely and gratefully do, we are
-nevertheless convinced that those beloved and honored servants of
-Christ failed to seize, and therefore failed to preach and teach, many
-of the special and characteristic truths of Christianity; at least, we
-have failed to find these truths in their writings. They preached the
-precious truth of justification by faith; they gave the holy
-Scriptures to the people; they trampled under foot much of the rubbish
-of Romish superstition.
-
-All this they did, by the grace of God, and for all this we bow our
-heads in deep thankfulness and praise to the Father of mercies. But
-Protestantism is not Christianity; nor are the so-called churches of
-the reformation, whether national or dissenting, the Church of God.
-Far from it. We look back over the course of eighteen centuries, and
-spite of the occasional revivals, spite of the brilliant lights which
-at various times have shone upon the Church's horizon--lights which
-appeared all the brighter in contrast with the deep gloom that
-surrounded them--spite of the many gracious visitations of God's
-Spirit, both in Europe and America, during the past and present
-century--spite of all these things, for which we most heartily bless
-God, we return with decision to the statement already advanced, that
-the professing church is a hopeless wreck; that christendom is rapidly
-hastening down the inclined plane, to the blackness of darkness
-forever; that those highly favored lands, where much evangelical truth
-has been preached, where Bibles have been circulated in millions, and
-gospel tracts in billions, shall yet be covered with thick
-darkness--given over to strong delusion to believe a lie.
-
-And then?--ah, what then? _A converted world?_ Nay, but a _judged
-church_. The true saints of God, scattered throughout christendom--all
-the true members of the body of Christ, will be caught up to meet
-their coming Lord--the dead saints raised, the living changed, in a
-moment, and all taken up together to be forever with the Lord. Then
-the mystery will rise to a head in the person of the man of sin--the
-lawless one, the Antichrist. The Lord Jesus shall come, and all His
-saints with Him, to execute judgment on the beast, or revived Roman
-empire, and the false prophet, or Antichrist--the former in the west,
-the latter in the east.
-
-This will be a summary act of direct warrior judgment, without any
-judicial process whatever, inasmuch as both the beast and false
-prophet shall be found in open rebellion and blasphemous opposition to
-God and the Lamb. Then comes the sessional judgment of the living
-nations, as recorded in Matthew xxv. 31-46.
-
-Thus, all evil having been put down, Christ shall reign, in
-righteousness and peace, for a thousand years. A bright and blessed
-time! the true Sabbath for Israel and the whole earth--a period marked
-by the grand facts, Satan bound and Christ reigning. Glorious facts!
-The very reference to them causes the heart to overflow in praise and
-thanksgiving. What will the reality be?
-
-But Satan shall be loosed from his thousand years' captivity, and
-allowed to make one more effort against God and His Christ.--"And when
-the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his
-prison, and shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four
-quarters of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to
-battle, the number of whom is as the sand of the sea.[24] And they
-went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed the camp of the
-saints about, and the beloved city; and fire came down from God out of
-heaven, and devoured them. And the devil that deceived them was cast
-into the lake of fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false
-prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night forever and ever."
-(Rev. xx. 7-10.)
-
- [24] The reader must distinguish between the Gog and Magog of
- Revelation xx. and those of Ezekiel xxxviii. and xxxix. The former are
- post-millennial; the latter, pre-millennial.
-
-This will be Satan's last effort, issuing in his eternal perdition.
-Then we have the judgment of the dead, "small and great"--the
-sessional judgment of all those who shall have died in their sins,
-from the days of Cain down to the last apostate from millennial glory.
-Tremendous scene! No heart can conceive, no tongue--no pen set forth,
-its awful solemnity.
-
-Finally, we have unfolded to the vision of our souls the everlasting
-state--the new heaven and the new earth wherein righteousness shall
-dwell, throughout the golden ages of eternity.
-
-Such is the order of events as set forth, with all possible clearness,
-on the page of inspiration. We have given a brief summary of them in
-connection with the line of truth on which we have been dwelling--a
-line, as we are fully aware, by no means popular; but we dare not
-withhold it on that account. Our business is to declare the whole
-counsel of God, not to seek popularity. We do not expect the truth of
-God to be popular in christendom; so far from this, we have been
-seeking to prove that just as Israel abandoned the truth which they
-were responsible to maintain, so the professing church has let slip
-all those great truths which characterize the Christianity of the New
-Testament. And we may assure the reader that our one object in
-pursuing this line of argument is to arouse the hearts of all true
-Christians to a sense of the value of those truths, and of their
-responsibility, not only to receive them, but to seek a fuller
-realization and a bolder confession of them. We long to see a band of
-men raised up, in these closing hours of the Church's earthly history,
-who shall go forth, in true spiritual power, and proclaim, with
-unction and energy, the long-forgotten truths of the gospel of God.
-May God, in His great mercy to His people, raise up such and send
-them forth. May the Lord Jesus knock louder and louder at the door, so
-that many may hear and open to Him, according to the desire of His
-loving heart, and taste the blessedness of deep personal communion
-with Himself, while waiting for His coming.
-
-Blessed be God, there is no limit whatever to the blessing of the
-individual soul who hears Christ's voice and opens the door; and what
-is true of one is true of hundreds or thousands. Only let us be real
-and simple and true, feeling and owning our utter feebleness and
-nothingness, laying aside all assumption and empty pretension, not
-seeking to be any thing or to set up any thing, but holding fast
-Christ's word and not denying His name, finding our happy place at His
-feet, our satisfying portion in Himself, and our real delight in
-serving Him in any little way. Thus we shall get on harmoniously,
-lovingly, and happily together, finding our common centre in Christ,
-and our common object in seeking to further His cause and promote His
-glory. O that it were thus with all the Lord's beloved people in this
-our day! we should then have a very different tale to tell, and
-present a very different aspect to the world around. May the Lord
-revive His work.
-
-It may perhaps seem to the reader that we have wandered a long way
-from the sixth chapter of Deuteronomy; but we must remind him, once
-for all, that it is not merely what each chapter _contains_ that
-demands our attention, but also what it _suggests_. And further, we
-may add that, in sitting down to write, from time to time, it is our
-one desire to be led by God's Spirit into the very line of truth which
-may be suited to the need of all our readers. If only the beloved
-flock of Christ be fed, instructed, and comforted, we care not whether
-it be by well-connected notes or broken fragments.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now proceed with our chapter.
-
-Moses having laid down the grand foundation-truth contained in the
-fourth verse--"Hear, O Israel; the Lord our God is one Lord," proceeds
-to press upon the congregation their sacred duty in respect to this
-blessed One. It was not merely that there was _a_ God, but He was
-_their_ God. He had deigned to link Himself with them, in
-covenant-relationship. He had redeemed them, borne them on eagles'
-wings, and brought them unto Himself, in order that they might be to
-Him a people, and that He might be their God.
-
-Blessed fact! Blessed relationship! But Israel had to be reminded of
-the conduct suited to such a relationship-conduct which could only
-flow from a loving heart. "Thou shalt love the Lord _thy_ God with
-_all_ thy _heart_, and with _all_ thy soul, and with _all_ thy might."
-Here lies the secret of all true practical religion. Without this, all
-is valueless to God. "My son, give me thine heart." Where the heart is
-given, all will be right. The heart may be compared to the regulator
-of a watch, which acts on the hair-spring, and the hair-spring acts on
-the main-spring, and the main-spring acts on the hands, as they move
-around the dial. If your watch goes wrong, it will not do merely to
-alter the hands, you must touch the regulator. God looks for real
-heart-work, blessed be His name! His word to us is, "My little
-children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue; but in deed and
-in truth."
-
-How we ought to bless Him for such touching words! they do so reveal
-His own loving heart to us. Assuredly, He loved us in deed and in
-truth, and He cannot be satisfied with any thing else, whether in our
-ways with Him or our ways one with another: all must flow straight
-from the heart.
-
-"And these words which I command thee this day, shall be _in thine
-heart_"--at the very source of all the issues of life. This is
-peculiarly precious. Whatever is in the heart comes out through the
-lips and in the life. How important, then, to have the heart full of
-the Word of God--so full, that we shall have no room for the vanities
-and follies of this present evil world. Thus shall our conversation be
-always with grace, seasoned with salt. "Out of the abundance of the
-heart the mouth speaketh." Hence we can judge of what is in the heart
-by what cometh out of the mouth. The tongue is the organ of the
-heart--the organ of the man. "A good man out of the good treasure of
-the heart bringeth forth good things; and an evil man out of the evil
-treasure bringeth forth evil things." When the heart is really
-governed by the Word of God, the whole character reveals the blessed
-result. It must be so, inasmuch as the heart is the main-spring of
-our entire moral condition; it lies at the centre of all those moral
-influences which govern our personal history and shape our practical
-career.
-
-In every part of the divine volume, we see how much importance God
-attaches to the attitude and state of the heart, with respect to Him
-or to His Word, which is one and the same thing. When the heart is
-true to Him, all is sure to come right; but on the other hand, we
-shall find that where the heart grows cold and careless as to God and
-His truth, there will, sooner or later, be open departure from the
-path of truth and righteousness. There is, therefore, much force and
-value in the exhortation addressed by Barnabas to the converts at
-Antioch--"He exhorted them all, that with _purpose of heart_ they
-would cleave unto the Lord."
-
-How needful then, now, always! This "purpose of heart" is most
-precious to God. It is what we may venture to call the grand moral
-regulator. It imparts a lovely earnestness to the Christian character
-which is greatly to be coveted by all of us. It is a divine antidote
-against coldness, deadness, and formality, all of which are so hateful
-to God. The outward life may be very correct, and the creed may be
-very orthodox; but if the earnest purpose of heart be lacking--the
-affectionate cleaving of the whole moral being to God and His Christ,
-all is utterly worthless.
-
-It is through the heart that the Holy Ghost instructs us. Hence, the
-apostle prayed for the saints at Ephesus, that "the eyes of their
-_heart_ [+kardias+, not +dianoias+] might be enlightened;" and again,
-"That Christ may dwell in your _heart_ by faith."
-
-Thus we see how all Scripture is in perfect harmony with the
-exhortation recorded in our chapter, "And these words which I command
-thee this day, shall be in thine heart." How near this would have kept
-them to their covenant-God! How safe, too, from all evil, and
-specially from the abominable evil of idolatry--their national sin,
-their terrible besetment! If Jehovah's precious words had only found
-their right place in the heart, there would have been little fear of
-Baal, Chemosh, or Ashtaroth. In a word, all the idols of the heathen
-would have found their right place, and been estimated at their true
-value, if only the word of Jehovah had been allowed to dwell in
-Israel's heart.
-
-And be it specially noted here how beautifully characteristic all this
-is of the book of Deuteronomy. It is not so much a question of keeping
-up a certain order of religious observances, the offering of
-sacrifices, or attention to rites and ceremonies. All these things, no
-doubt, had their place, but they are by no means the prominent or
-paramount thing in Deuteronomy. No; THE WORD is the all-important
-matter here. It is _Jehovah's word_ in _Israel's heart_.
-
-The reader must seize this fact if he really desires to possess the
-key to the lovely book of Deuteronomy. It is not a book of ceremonial;
-it is a book of moral and affectionate obedience. It teaches, in
-almost every section, that invaluable lesson, that the heart that
-loves, prizes, and honors the Word of God is ready for every act of
-obedience, whether it be the offering of a sacrifice or the observance
-of a day. It might so happen that an Israelite would find himself in a
-place and under circumstances in which a rigid adherence to rites and
-ceremonies would be impossible; but he never could be in a place or in
-circumstances in which he could not love, reverence, and obey the Word
-of God. Let him go where he would--let him be carried, as a captive
-exile, to the ends of the earth, nothing could rob him of the high
-privilege of uttering and acting on those blessed words, "Thy Word
-have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against Thee."
-
-Precious words! They contain, in their brief compass, the great
-principle of the book of Deuteronomy, and, we may add, the great
-principle of the divine life, at all times and in all places. It can
-never lose its moral force and value: it always holds good. It was
-true in the days of the patriarchs, true for Israel in the land, true
-for Israel scattered to the ends of the earth, true for the Church as
-a whole, true for each individual believer amid the Church's hopeless
-ruins. In a word, obedience is always the creature's holy duty and
-exalted privilege--simple, unhesitating, unqualified obedience to the
-Word of the Lord. This is an unspeakable mercy for which we may well
-praise our God, day and night. He has given us His Word, blessed be
-His name, and He exhorts us to let that Word dwell in us
-richly--dwell in our hearts, and assert its holy sway over our entire
-course and character.
-
-"And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine
-heart: and thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and
-shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou
-walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.
-And thou shalt bind them for a sign upon thine hand, and they shall be
-as frontlets between thine eyes. And thou shalt write them upon the
-posts of thy house, and on thy gates."
-
-All this is perfectly beautiful. The Word of God hidden in the heart;
-flowing out in loving instruction to the children, and in holy
-conversation in the bosom of the family; shining out in all the
-activities of daily life, so that all who came inside the gates or
-entered the house might see that the Word of God was the standard for
-each, for all, and in every thing.
-
-Thus it was to be with Israel of old, and surely thus it ought to be
-with Christians now. But is it so? Are our children thus taught? Is it
-our constant aim to present the Word of God, in all its heavenly
-attractiveness, to their young hearts? Do they see it shining out in
-our daily life? do they see its influence upon our habits, our temper,
-our family intercourse, our business transactions? This is what we
-understand by binding the Word as a sign upon the hands, having it as
-a frontlet between the eyes, writing it upon the door-posts and upon
-the gates.
-
-Reader, is it thus with us? It is of little use attempting to teach
-our children the Word of God if our lives are not governed by that
-Word. We do not believe in making the blessed Word of God a mere
-school-book for our children; to do so is to turn a delightful
-privilege into a wearisome drudgery. Our children should see that we
-live in the very atmosphere of Scripture; that it forms the material
-of our conversation when we sit in the bosom of the family, in our
-moments of relaxation.
-
-Alas! how little is this the case! Have we not to be deeply humbled in
-the presence of God when we reflect upon the general character and
-tone of our conversation at table, and in the family circle? How
-little there is of Deuteronomy vi. 7! How much of "foolish talking and
-jesting, which are not convenient"! How much evil-speaking of our
-brethren, our neighbors, our fellow-laborers! How much idle gossip!
-How much worthless small talk!
-
-And from what does all this proceed? Simply from the state of the
-heart. The Word of God, the commandments and sayings of our Lord and
-Saviour Jesus Christ, are not dwelling in our hearts; and hence they
-are not welling up and flowing out in living streams of grace and
-edification.
-
-Will any one say that Christians do not need to consider these things?
-If so, let him ponder the following wholesome words: "Let no corrupt
-communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the
-use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers." And
-again, "Be filled with the Spirit; speaking to yourselves in psalms
-and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart
-to the Lord; giving thanks always for all things unto God and the
-Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ." (Eph. iv. 29; v. 18-20.)
-
-These words were addressed to the saints at Ephesus; and, most
-assuredly, we should apply our hearts diligently to them. We are
-little aware, perhaps, of how deeply and constantly we fail in
-maintaining the habit of spiritual conversation. It is specially in
-the bosom of the family, and in our ordinary intercourse, that this
-failure is most manifest. Hence our need of those words of exhortation
-which we have just penned. It is evident the Holy Spirit foresaw the
-need, and graciously anticipated it. Hear what He says "to the saints
-and faithful brethren in Christ at Colosse,"--"Let the peace of Christ
-rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one body; and
-be ye thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all
-wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and
-spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord." (Col.
-iii.)
-
-Lovely picture of ordinary Christian life! It is but a fuller and
-higher development of what we have in our chapter, where the Israelite
-is seen in the midst of his family, with the Word of God flowing forth
-from his heart in loving instruction to his children--seen in his
-daily life, in all his intercourse at home and abroad, under the
-hallowed influence of Jehovah's words.
-
-Beloved Christian reader, do we not long to see more of all this in
-our midst? Is it not, at times, very sorrowful and very humbling to
-mark the style of conversation that obtains in the midst of our family
-circles? Should we not sometimes blush if we could see our
-conversation reproduced in print? What is the remedy? Here it is--a
-heart filled with the peace of Christ, the word of Christ, Christ
-Himself: nothing else will do. We must begin with the heart, and where
-that is thoroughly preoccupied with heavenly things, we shall make
-very short work with all attempts at evil-speaking, foolish talking,
-and jesting.
-
-"And it shall be, when the Lord thy God shall have brought thee into
-the land which He sware unto thy fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to
-Jacob, to give thee great and goodly cities which thou buildedst not,
-and houses full of all good things which thou filledst not, and wells
-digged which thou diggedst not, and vineyards and olive-trees which
-thou plantedst not; when thou shalt have eaten and be full; then
-beware lest thou forget the Lord, which brought thee forth out of the
-land of Egypt, from the house of bondage." (Ver. 10-12.)
-
-Amid all the blessings, the mercies, and the privileges of the land of
-Canaan, they were to remember that gracious and faithful One who had
-redeemed them out of the land of bondage. They were to remember, too,
-that all these things were His free gift. The land, with all that it
-contained, was bestowed upon them in virtue of His promises to
-Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Cities built and houses furnished, flowing
-wells, fruitful vineyards and olive-yards, all ready to their hand,
-the free gift of sovereign grace and covenant mercy. All they had to
-do was to take possession, in simple faith, and to keep ever in the
-remembrance of the thoughts of their hearts the bounteous Giver of it
-all. They were to think of Him, and find in His redeeming love the
-true motive-spring of a life of loving obedience. Wherever they turned
-their eyes, they beheld the tokens of His great goodness--the rich
-fruit of His marvelous love. Every city, every house, every well,
-every vine, olive and fig-tree, spoke to their hearts of Jehovah's
-abounding grace, and furnished a substantial proof of His infallible
-faithfulness to His promise.
-
-"Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God, and serve Him, and shalt swear by
-His name. Ye shall not go after other gods, of the gods of the people
-which are round about you; (for the Lord thy God is a jealous God
-among you) lest the anger of the Lord thy God be kindled against thee,
-and destroy thee from off the face of the earth."
-
-There are two great motives set before the congregation, in our
-chapter, namely, "love," in verse 5, and "fear," in verse 13. These
-are found all through Scripture; and their importance in guiding the
-life and forming the character cannot possibly be too highly
-estimated. "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." We are
-exhorted to be "in the fear of the Lord all the day." It is a grand
-moral safeguard against all evil. "Unto man He said, 'Behold, the fear
-of the Lord, that is wisdom; and to depart from evil is
-understanding.'"
-
-The blessed Book abounds in passages setting forth, in every possible
-form, the immense importance of the fear of God. "How," says Joseph,
-"can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?" The man who
-walks habitually in the fear of God is preserved from every form of
-moral pravity. The abiding realization of the divine presence must
-prove an effectual shelter from every temptation. How often do we find
-the presence of some very holy and spiritual person a wholesome check
-upon levity and folly; and if such be the moral influence of a
-fellow-mortal, how much more powerful would be the realized presence
-of God!
-
-Christian reader, let us give our serious attention to this weighty
-matter. Let us seek to live in the consciousness that we are in the
-immediate presence of God. Thus shall we be preserved from a thousand
-forms of evil, to which we are exposed from day to day, and to which,
-alas! we are predisposed. The remembrance that the eye of God rests
-upon us would exert a far more powerful influence upon our life and
-conversation than the presence of all the saints upon earth and all
-the angels in heaven. We could not speak falsely, we could not utter
-with our lips what we do not feel in the heart, we could not talk
-folly, we could not speak evil of our brother or our neighbor, we
-could not speak unkindly of any one, if only we felt ourselves in the
-presence of God. In a word, the holy fear of the Lord, of which
-Scripture speaks so much, would act as a most blessed restraint upon
-evil thoughts, evil words, evil ways, evil in every shape and form.
-
-Moreover, it would tend to make us very real and genuine in all our
-sayings and doings. There is a sad amount of sham and nonsense about
-us. We frequently say a great deal more than we feel. We are not
-honest; we do not speak, every man, truth with our neighbor; we give
-expressions to sentiments which are not the genuine utterance of the
-heart; we act the hypocrite one with another.
-
-All these things afford melancholy proof of how little we live, move,
-and have our being in the presence of God. If we could only bear in
-mind that God hears us and sees us--hears our every word and sees our
-every thought, our every way, how differently we should carry
-ourselves! What holy watchfulness we should maintain over our
-thoughts, our tempers, and our tongues! What purity of heart and mind!
-What truth and uprightness in all our intercourse with our fellows!
-What reality and simplicity in our deportment! What happy freedom from
-all affectation, assumption, and pretension! What deliverance from
-every form of self-occupation! O, to live ever in the deep sense of
-the divine presence! to walk in the fear of the Lord all the day long!
-
-And then to prove the "vast constraining influence" of His love! To be
-led out in all the holy activities which that love would ever
-suggest! To find our delight in doing good! To taste the spiritual
-luxury of making hearts glad! To be continually meditating plans of
-usefulness! To live close by the fountain of divine love, so that we
-must be streams of refreshing in the midst of this thirsty scene--rays
-of light amid the moral gloom around us! "The love of Christ," says
-the blessed apostle, "constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if
-one died for all, then were all dead; and that He died for all, that
-they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto
-Him which died for them, and rose again."
-
-How morally lovely is all this! "Would that it were more fully
-realized and faithfully exhibited amongst us! May the fear and love of
-God be continually in our hearts, in all their blessed power and
-formative influence, that thus our daily life may shine to His praise
-and the real profit, comfort, and blessing of all who come in contact
-with us, whether in private or in public. God, in His infinite mercy,
-grant it, for Christ's sake!
-
-The sixteenth verse of our chapter demands our special attention.--"Ye
-shall not tempt the Lord your God, as ye tempted Him in Massah." These
-words were quoted by our blessed Lord when tempted by Satan to cast
-Himself from the pinnacle of the temple.--"Then the devil taketh Him
-up into the holy city, and setteth Him on a pinnacle of the temple,
-and saith unto Him, 'If Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down; for
-it is written, He shall give His angels charge concerning Thee; and
-in their hands they shall bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy
-foot against a stone.'"
-
-This is a very remarkable passage. It proves how Satan can quote
-Scripture when it suits his purpose. But he omits a most important
-clause--"To keep Thee in all Thy ways." Now, it formed no part of the
-ways of Christ to cast Himself from the pinnacle of the temple. It was
-not the path of duty. He had no command from God to do any such thing,
-and hence He refused to do it. He had no need to tempt God--to put Him
-to the test. He had, as a man, the most perfect confidence in God--the
-fullest assurance of His protection.
-
-Moreover, He was not going to abandon the path of duty in order to
-prove God's care of Him; and herein He teaches us a most valuable
-lesson. We can always count on God's protecting hand when we are
-treading the path of duty; but if we are walking in a self-chosen
-path--if we are seeking our own pleasure or our own interest, our own
-ends or objects, then to talk of counting on God would be simply
-wicked presumption.
-
-No doubt, our God is very merciful, very gracious, and His tender
-mercy is over us, even when we wander off the path of duty; but this
-is another thing altogether, and it leaves wholly untouched the
-statement that we can only count on divine protection when our feet
-are in the pathway of duty, if a Christian goes out boating for his
-amusement, or if he goes clambering over the Alps merely for
-sight-seeing, has he any right to believe that God will take care of
-him? Let conscience give the answer. If God calls us to cross a stormy
-lake to preach the gospel, if He summons us to cross the Alps on some
-special service for Him, then, assuredly, we can commit ourselves to
-His mighty hand to protect us from all evil. The grand point for all
-of us is, to be found in the holy path of duty. It may be narrow,
-rough, and lonely; but it is a path overshadowed by the wings of the
-Almighty and illumined by the light of His approving countenance.
-
-Ere turning from the subject suggested by verse 16, we would briefly
-notice the very interesting and instructive fact that our Lord, in His
-reply to Satan, takes no notice whatever of his misquotation of psalm
-xci. 11. Let us carefully note this fact and seek to bear it in mind.
-In place of saying to the enemy, You have left out a most important
-clause of the passage which you undertake to quote, He simply quotes
-another passage, as authority for His own conduct. Thus He vanquished
-the tempter, and thus He left us a blessed example.
-
-It is worthy of our special notice that the Lord Jesus Christ did not
-overcome Satan in virtue of His divine power. Had He done so, it could
-not be an example for us. But when we see Him as a man using the Word
-as His only weapon, and thus gaining a glorious victory, our hearts
-are encouraged and comforted; and not only so, but we learn a most
-precious lesson as to how we, in our sphere and measure, are to stand
-in the conflict. The Man Christ Jesus overcame by simple dependence
-upon God and obedience to His Word.
-
-Blessed fact! A fact full of comfort and consolation for us. Satan
-could do nothing with one who would only act by divine authority, and
-by the power of the Spirit. Jesus never did His own will, though, as
-we know, (blessed be His holy name!) His will was absolutely perfect.
-He came down from heaven, as He Himself tells us, in John vi, not to
-do His own will, but the will of the Father that sent Him. He was a
-perfect servant, from first to last. His rule of action was the Word
-of God; His power of action, the Holy Ghost; His only motive for
-action, the will of God; hence the prince of this world had nothing in
-Him. Satan could not, by all his subtle wiles, draw Him out of the
-path of obedience, or out of the place of dependence.
-
-Christian reader, let us consider these things; let us deeply ponder
-them; let us remember that our blessed Lord and Master left us an
-example that we should follow His steps. Oh, may we follow them
-diligently during the little while that yet remains. May we, by the
-gracious ministry of the Holy Ghost, enter more fully into the great
-fact that we are called to walk even as Jesus walked. He is our great
-Exemplar in all things. Let us study Him more profoundly, so that we
-may reproduce Him more faithfully.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We shall now close this lengthened section by quoting for the reader
-the last paragraph of the chapter on which we have been dwelling; it
-is a passage of singular fullness, depth, and power, and strikingly
-characteristic of the entire book of Deuteronomy.
-
-"Ye shall _diligently_ keep the commandments of the Lord your God, and
-His testimonies, and His statutes, which He hath commanded thee. And
-thou shalt do that which is right and good in the sight of the Lord;
-that it may be well with thee, and that thou mayest go in and possess
-the good land which the Lord sware unto thy fathers; to cast out all
-thine enemies from before thee, as the Lord hath spoken. And when thy
-son asketh thee in time to come, saying, What mean the testimonies and
-the statutes and the judgments which the Lord our God hath commanded
-you? Then thou shalt say unto thy son, We were Pharaoh's bondmen in
-Egypt; and the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand; and
-the Lord showed signs and wonders, great and sore, upon Egypt, upon
-Pharaoh, and upon all his household, before our eyes; and He brought
-us out from thence, that He might bring us in, to give us the land
-which He sware unto our fathers. And the Lord commanded us to do all
-these statutes, to fear the Lord our God, for our good always, that He
-might preserve us alive, as it is at this day. And it shall be our
-righteousness, if we observe to do all these commandments before the
-Lord our God, as He hath commanded us."
-
-How prominently is the Word of God kept before the soul, in every page
-and every paragraph of this book! It is the one great subject on the
-heart and in all the discourses of the revered lawgiver. It is his one
-aim to exalt the Word of God, in all its aspects, whether in the form
-of testimonies, commandments, statutes, or judgments; and to set forth
-the moral importance, yea, the urgent necessity of whole-hearted,
-earnest, diligent obedience, on the part of the people. "Ye shall
-_diligently_ keep the commandments of the Lord your God." And again,
-"Thou shalt do that which is _right_ and _good_ in the sight of the
-Lord."
-
-All this is morally lovely. We have here unfolded before our eyes
-those eternal principles which no change of dispensation, no change of
-scene, place, or circumstances can ever touch. "That which is right
-and good" must ever be of universal and abiding application. It
-reminds us of the words of the apostle John to his beloved friend
-Gaius--"Beloved, follow not that which is evil, but that which is
-good." The assembly might be in a very low condition; there might be
-very much to try the heart and depress the spirit of Gaius; Diotrephes
-might be carrying himself most unbecomingly and unwarrantably toward
-the beloved and venerable apostle and others; all this might be true,
-and much more--yea, the whole professing body might go wrong. What
-then? What remained for Gaius to do? Simply to follow that which was
-right and good; to open his heart and his hand and his house to every
-one who brought _the truth_; to seek to help on the cause of Christ in
-every right way.
-
-This was the business of Gaius in his day, and this is the business of
-every true lover of Christ at all times, in all places, and under all
-circumstances. We may not have many to join us; we may perhaps find
-ourselves, at times, almost alone; but we are still to follow what is
-good, cost what it may. We are to _depart_ from iniquity--_purge_
-ourselves from dishonorable vessels--_flee_ youthful lusts--_turn
-away_ from powerless professors. And what then? "Follow righteousness,
-faith, love, peace"--How? In isolation? Nay. I may find myself alone
-in any given place for a time, but there can be no such thing as
-isolation so long as the body of Christ is on earth, and that will be
-till He comes for us. Hence we never expect to see the day in which we
-cannot find a few that call on the Lord out of a pure heart; whoever
-they are and wherever they are, it is our bounden duty to find them,
-and, having found them, to walk with them in holy fellowship "until
-the end."
-
- * * * * *
-
-_P.S._--We must reserve the remaining chapters of Deuteronomy for
-another volume. May the Lord be graciously pleased to grant His rich
-blessing upon our meditations thus far. May He clothe these pages with
-the power of the Holy Ghost, and make them to be a direct message from
-Himself to the hearts of His people throughout the whole world. May He
-also grant spiritual power to unfold the truth contained in the
-remaining sections of this most profound, comprehensive, and
-suggestive book.
-
-We earnestly beseech the Christian reader to join us in prayer as to
-all this, remembering those most precious words, "If two of you shall
-_agree_ on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall
-be done for them by My Father which is in heaven."
-
- _C. H. M._
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-Greek is enclosed in +Greek+.
-
-Small capital text has been replaced with all capitals.
-
-Variations in spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been retained
-except in obvious cases of typographical error.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy,
-Volume I, by Charles Henry Mackintosh
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